Up@dawn 2.0 (blogger)

Delight Springs

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Zoom recordings, August-September 2020

 CoPhi Fall ‘20-

TUE 25 #10, Passcode: m&KG.0tf

TUE 25 #11, Passcode: 9&W9p%bL

[WED 26 #12 did not record, apparently]

THUR 27 #10, &7Cn28ZP

THUR 27 #11, ?93b?afH [This one starts about 26 minutes in]

MON 31 #12, Passcode: cr9u6d*1

TUE 1, #10, +*U25hTX

TUE 1, #11, Passcode: sL$s9D62

WED 2, #12, Passcode: 0kf#k^Fc

THUR 3, #10, r93a4L&4

THUR 3, #11, Q3A8f#!n

TUE 8, #10, 7+78qLk$

TUE 8, #11, ##Yn8Z9w 

WED 9, #12, nMW9ra=F   - Peace Corps

THUR 10, #10, @=m$g2Yu

THUR 10, #11, 0ITa?S1Q

MON 14, #12, D+55%PlC

TUE 15, #10, *^T!v06U

TUE 15, #11, TF=iDL&2

WED 16, #12, bUBn!$0i

THUR 17, #10, NqwW1WJ@

THUR 17, #11, 57z$XUVJ

MON 21, #12, h0GvzR!U

TUE 22, #10, R!.!b&q7 (M’boro)

TUE 22, #11, *2hip4C7 (M’boro)

WED 23, #12, +DiKf=8c

THUR 24, #10, =E!?F5R*

THUR 24, #11, +mV5x#kX

MON 28, #12, .w&x3@d0 

TUE 29, #10, Y6^ZV@a

TUE 29, #11, *8Z8T6UM

WED 30, #12, 2+U8sy$Z


Thoughts and prayers


Today's thoughts and prayers are for the democracy in the US.
Image

Today's thoughts and prayers are for the democracy in the US. https://t.co/4VajQ5uydq
(https://twitter.com/EthicsInBricks/status/1311209667079667718?s=02)

How low can he go?

No hyperbole: The incumbent's behavior this evening is the lowest moment in the history of the presidency since Andrew Johnson's racist state papers.
(https://twitter.com/jmeacham/status/1311127092453613568?s=02)

Unadmirable

Foreign policy was not mentioned. But the impact of that debate on US prestige and soft power around the world may be profound. No one admires our president or our political system this morning.
(https://twitter.com/anneapplebaum/status/1311176409713446912?s=02)

Twilight of Democracy

"Sputtering"

"Biden spent a lot of time simply laughing at Trump. That made for a good visual and it also clearly enraged the President. That spurred Trump to be even more self-injuring. It made him more spluttering." https://t.co/TVHNoj3PX7
(https://twitter.com/KBAndersen/status/1311154571444707329?s=02)

Gutenberg, Wiesel

 On this day in 1452, the first section of the Gutenberg Bible was finished in Mainz, Germany, by the printer Johannes Gutenberg.

It is unclear when Gutenberg conceived of his Bible project, though he was clearly in production by 1452. He probably produced about 180 copies — 145 that were printed on handmade paper imported from Italy and the remainder on more luxurious and expensive vellum.

Only four dozen Gutenberg Bibles remain, and of these only 21 are complete, but what Gutenberg created went far beyond the reach of those volumes. By beginning the European printing revolution, he forever changed how knowledge was spread, democratized learning, and allowed for thoughts and ideas to be widely disseminated throughout the known world. In his time, Gutenberg’s contemporaries called this “the art of multiplying books” and it was a major catalyst for the Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution, and even the Protestant Reformation in the Western world. In 1997, Time Magazine named Johannes Gutenberg “Man of the Millennium” and dubbed his movable type as the most important invention of a thousand years (notwithstanding China’s much earlier version of the same invention in the 11th century).

As Mark Twain wrote in 1900, in a congratulatory letter to mark the opening of the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz, “What the world is today, good and bad, it owes to Gutenberg.”


It’s the birthday of writer and concentration camp survivor Elie Wiesel (books by this author), born in a small village in Transylvania (1928). He grew up in a Hasidic community and learned to love reading by studying the Pentateuch and other sacred texts. When he was 15, he and his family were taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp. His mother, sister, and father were all killed before World War II was over.

Wiesel survived the camp, but he couldn’t write about his experiences for 10 years. Finally, a mentor, François Mauriac, persuaded Wiesel to write about the war. He wrote a 900-page memoir, which he condensed into the 127-page book called Night (1955). Night has become one of the most widely read books about the Holocaust. In 1986, Wiesel received the Nobel Prize in literature for his writing and teaching.

A passage from Night: “Then came the march past the victims. The two men were no longer alive. Their tongues were hanging out, swollen and bluish. But the third rope was still moving: the child, too light, was still breathing. And so he remained for more than half an hour, lingering between life and death, writhing before our eyes. And we were forced to look at him at close range. He was still alive when I passed him. His tongue was still red, his eyes not yet extinguished. Behind me, I heard the same man asking:

“For God’s sake, where is God?”

And from within me, I heard a voice answer:

“Where He is? This is where—hanging here from this gallows…”

WA

Elie Wiesel’s Timely Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech on Human Rights and Our Shared Duty in Ending Injustice

“We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”

READ ARTICL

2050: a daydream

 LISTEN. Today in Environmental Ethics, we'll begin the transition from Hope Jahren's Story of More to Bill McKibben's Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out? 

To that subtitle's scary rhetorical question, last night's "debate" debacle might frighten some with the growing likelihood of an affirmative reply. If this is a game, can we really be in the late innings already? The season just got started. Today at least I'm retreating to those green fields of the mind, in hopes of greening my resolve for the climate fight and the political fight of our lives just ahead... (continues)

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

How to write philosophy

How to write a Philosophy paper. Great advice from ⁦@PeterSmith⁩ https://t.co/fEQArS6PGU
(https://twitter.com/philosophybites/status/1310961718856736768?s=02)

Wall-e's future is now

The future is here! https://t.co/XDKuMPzhC3
(https://twitter.com/euthyphro/status/1310959544600801285?s=02)

Syncretic wisdom and the team

 LISTEN. "Japan is a syncretic culture in which different philosophies and religions meld," writes Julian Baggini in How the World Thinks (192), but Confucian pro-sociality (not anti-individualist conformism) is primus inter pares for its demotion of personal egoism and preferred emphasis on group context, relationships, and the welfare of the whole community. 

Syncretism, "the amalgamation or attempted amalgamation of different religions, cultures, or schools of thought," is a five-dollar word for what I usually just call cherry-picking. Be a stoic and a pragmatist, a freedom-loving Spinozist and a free-willing Jamesian, a fatalist and a meliorist, tough and tender by turns... (continues)

Monday, September 28, 2020

Free digital subscription to the NYTimes

https://libanswers.mtsu.edu/faq/169834

Register to vote

 A note from the provost:

There is only one week left to register to vote in Tennessee. We aim for full participation by our campus to lead the state. To encourage students, we’re engaged in the Conference USA Voting Challenge. Students can’t vote however unless they're registered, no later than this week.

 

If they think they are already registered, everyone need to confirm it, at Tennessee Voter Lookup. If they need to re-register where they can vote more conveniently in person, that needs to be handled this week. Register at mtsu.edu/vote, and there is a voter registration table 9-3 on Honors lawn across from Student Union. Students with a Tennessee driver’s license can register online at mtsu.edu/vote; students with out-of-state driver’s license can also register to vote in Tennessee by filling out a paper form at the Honors lawn registration table or getting one from American Democracy Project, amerdem@mtsu.edu.

 

MTSU’s participation in Belmont University’s Rock the Vote program last week is good musical accompaniment to motivate and inspire our students.




Virtual Happy Hour

 Happy Hour is back!

Announcing a recurrently convivial gathering of MTSU philosophers (faculty/staff), co-philosophers (students), and friends of MTSU philosophy, every other Friday at 4:30 pm beginning this week on Zoom: OCTOBER 2, 16, 30, NOV 14... Email me for the Meeting ID and Passcode. Come when you can. Spirits not provided, other than the spirit of Philosophy (and Religious Studies).

Cheers!

Economics (& social responsibility) in Bricks

Philantropy is nice.
Paying taxes is better. https://t.co/V0wr9mmIr4
(https://twitter.com/econinbricks/status/1310523413145026560?s=02)

What would Rousseau say to Drumpf?

Philantropy is nice. Paying taxes is better.
Image

Baggini update

I've only just updated my website to include my short book on Babette's Feast published in the spring and my co-authored Life: A User's Manual, published in the summer. At least I've got my Godless Gospel up a whole week pre-publication.
https://t.co/DYMu33lq69
(https://twitter.com/JulianBaggini/status/1310588519799296000?s=02)

PBS

I wish I'd had twice as much room to write this week-- better, three or four times as much room-- because I could've kept listing all the indispensable programming @PBS brings us. https://t.co/MhoqMCyTo2
(https://twitter.com/MargaretRenkl/status/1310591901473681415?s=02)

Big Bird, Reading Rainbow, Mr. Rogers, Ken Burns...

I wish I'd had twice as much room to write this week-- better, three or four times as much room-- because I could've kept listing all the indispensable programming brings us.

Spectator sports are irrelevant, and yet...

The times feel apocalyptic, the climate's going to hell, there's a lunatic in the White House... and today I'm happy my team squeaked into the postseason. Thank goodness for the green fields of the mind.
(https://twitter.com/OSOPHER/status/1310590702447984641?s=0)


Sunday, September 27, 2020

But he's a great businessman (?)

President Trump paid $750 in federal income taxes in 2016, and nothing in 10 of the prior 15 years — largely because he reported losing much more money than he made.

Read the takeaways from our exclusive look at decades of Trump's tax records. https://t.co/XpNCUbPfDn
(https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1310336685574680578?s=02)