https://t.co/GvehfChPyx
(https://twitter.com/KBAndersen/status/1344346151294816256?s=02)
(Successor site to CoPhilosophy, 2011-2020) A collaborative search for wisdom, at Middle Tennessee State University and beyond... "The pluralistic form takes for me a stronger hold on reality than any other philosophy I know of, being essentially a social philosophy, a philosophy of 'co'"-William James
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Almost reassuring
Saturday, December 19, 2020
"Wellness days"
We'll be taking some of those "wellness days" consecutively after seven weeks in my classes, thanks.
(https://twitter.com/OSOPHER/status/1340301413964984328?s=02)
Friday, December 18, 2020
"...until I started to grow up" (Cosmos: Possible Worlds)
Getting hold of reality and the future-
"So, why do I think we’ll make it? Well, for one thing, show me a person who didn’t seem or feel hopeless for at least some part of their adolescence. I sure did and mine lasted long beyond the usual teenage years. I was reckless and irresponsible. I caused my parents countless sleepless nights with my failure to call or show up as promised. My emotions were unpredictable. My room, and later my apartment, was usually a mess. I started things I didn’t finish. I would lose my possessions with disturbing regularity. I experimented with substances of unknown potency, flirting with danger to my brain and my life. I was careless with the facts. I was gullible because I had yet to internalize a means for thinking critically. I was selfish and couldn’t be trusted to keep my promises or to do the hard work that would get me the future I wanted. The future had no reality for me. In fact, reality had no reality to me. I couldn’t get a hold of it until I started to grow up."
-"Cosmos: Possible Worlds" by Ann Druyan
==
Science as transcendence and spiritual quest: "Do these things and the cosmos is yours..."
Science, like love, is a means to that transcendence, to that soaring experience of the oneness of being fully alive. The scientific approach to nature and my understanding of love are the same: Love asks us to get beyond the infantile projections of our personal hopes and fears, to embrace the other’s reality. This kind of unflinching love never stops daring to go deeper, to reach higher. This is precisely the way that science loves nature. This lack of a final destination, an absolute truth, is what makes science such a worthy methodology for sacred searching. It is a never ending lesson in humility. The vastness of the universe—and love, the thing that makes the vastness bearable—is out of reach to the arrogant. This cosmos only fully admits those who listen carefully for the inner voice reminding us to remember we might be wrong. What’s real must matter more to us than what we wish to believe. But how do we tell the difference? I know a way to part the curtains of darkness that prevent us from having a complete experience of nature. Here it is, the basic rules of the road for science: Test ideas by experiment and observation. Build on those ideas that pass the test. Reject the ones that fail. Follow the evidence wherever it leads. And question everything, including authority. Do these things and the cosmos is yours. If the series of pilgrimages toward understanding our actual circumstances in the universe, the origin of life, and the laws of nature are not spiritual quests, then I don’t know what could be.”
— Cosmos: Possible Worlds by Ann Druyan
https://a.co/aihtJ8g
Start reading this book for free: https://a.co/7TOjiOR
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What Is Death?
How the pandemic is changing our understanding of mortality.
Beyond fear and isolation, maybe this is what the pandemic holds for us: the understanding that living in the face of death can set off a cascade of realization and appreciation. Death is the force that shows you what you love and urges you to revel in that love while the clock ticks. Reveling in love is one sure way to see through and beyond yourself to the wider world, where immortality lives.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/18/opinion/coronavirus-death.html?smid=em-share
Thursday, December 17, 2020
Debating the value of God at a time of crisis: Leibniz vs Voltaire
Podcast for CBC.
"...Voltaire was a deist who believed God created the world but did not intervene in it. And Voltaire wrote Candide to ridicule the idea that God is somehow a source of consolation and hope in the face of terrible suffering.
Instead of praying to God and wishing for the best, Voltaire wants us to do what we can to eliminate the evil around us. In the modern context, this would imply using earthquake-resistant materials when building a church or following public-health guidelines to prevent the spread of Covid-19, suggests Eric Palmer, professor of philosophy at Allegheny College.
Returning to Candide, Palmer tells us: "Pangloss often attempts to explain to a suffering character how their suffering is bound up with the good. Pangloss sees this as a form of consolation. Yet the suffering character is always bewildered by this alleged consolation and wonders why Pangloss doesn't just lift the rock off their broken leg!"
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/ideas/debating-the-value-of-god-at-a-time-of-crisis-leibniz-vs-voltaire-1.5840471
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
What If You Could Do It All Over?
A man commits himself and draws his own portrait, outside of which there is nothing. No doubt this thought may seem harsh. . . . But on the other hand, it helps people to understand that reality alone counts, and that dreams, expectations, and hopes only serve to define a man as a broken dream, aborted hopes, and futile expectations.
Sartre thought we should focus on what we have done and will do, rather than on what we might have done or could do. He pointed out that we often take too narrow a census of our actions. An artist, he maintains, is not to be "judged solely by his works of art, for a thousand other things also help to define him." We do more than we give ourselves credit for; our real lives are richer than we think. This is why, if you keep a diary, you may feel more satisfied with the life you live.
And yet you may still wonder at the particular shape of that life; all stories have turning points, and it's hard not to fixate on them. Sartre advanced those ideas in a lecture called "Existentialism Is a Humanism," which he delivered in Paris in 1945, when he was only locally famous. On arriving at the venue, he discovered that he would have to push through a brawling crowd that had gathered in a sort of mini-riot. ("Probably some communists demonstrating against me," he speculated, according to Annie Cohen-Solal's "Sartre: A Life.") He considered leaving the event but then decided to press on, spending fifteen minutes making his way to the front, receiving a few kicks and blows along the way. The lecture was a sensation and made Sartre an international superstar. That might not have happened if he'd decided, reasonably, to leave...
Monday, December 14, 2020
Spring Break
(https://twitter.com/chronicle/status/1338672632548483072?s=02)
Best books on long-term thinking.
https://t.co/dmeeC9qVIZ …
(https://twitter.com/five_books/status/1338580775365730305?s=02)
Sunday, December 13, 2020
A tired old fraudulent fantasy
cc: @stuartpstevens https://t.co/mBjwfhS9Tl
(https://twitter.com/KBAndersen/status/1337789945780559873?s=02)
Thursday, December 10, 2020
Posting now closed
Final report posting for Fall 2020 has now concluded.
If you've not yet sent me your points total, or anything else, please do so ASAP.
phil.oliver@mtsu.edu
Some, at least
"All of humanity's problems stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone."
Posted for Emily K.
“What does it mean to grow up? Why should we?” “What makes life worth living?”
Neiman: The short answer as to why grow up? To stick it back to society or more so to those that control our world. “…because it’s harder than you think, so hard that it can amount to resistance…children make more compliant subjects and consumers.” (WGU 192-193) What better way to sell you a serum, surgery, seminar with a self-help guru that has the answer to your worldly problems, and constant revitalization of programs/movies from one’s childhood than to equate it to keeping someone “young” which seems to be the end all be all for our society. “Being grown-up is widely considered to be a matter of renouncing your hopes and dreams, accepting the limits of the reality you are given, and resigning yourself to a life that will be less…significant than you supposed when you began it.” (WGU 1) With our society framing being that way, it’s no wonder people fear it. But why listen to society when it cannot even DEFINE what an adult is and fluctuates even upon your very locale? Markers such as “leaving your parents’ home, paying your own bills, having successful intimate relations” are landmarks, in some cultures, of adulthood. (WGU 123) This is a narrow view and unsustainable especially in today’s climate of soaring debt, popped housing markets, and hello Covid! So perhaps turn to Kant’s definition of maturity, “the ability to think for oneself.” So grow, go out, travel, educate yourself (whether academically, experiential, or a combination thereof), and get to work! That work, those actions are what give life meaning (WGU 166) and ultimately the “ability to see your life as the whole it has become allows you to see the strengths with which you’ve lived it…” (WGU 204)
Okay okay, I know it’s High School Musical but they did have a glow up after growing up… and you know “Breaking Free”
Kaag: Williams James “wrote for our age: one that eschews tradition and superstition but desperately craves existential meaning; one that is defined by affluence but also depression and acute anxiety; one that valorizes icons…persistently urges, ‘Be not afraid of life. Believe that life is worth living, and your belief will help create that fact.’” This does not work all the time, not even for me, but even on the harder days it helps me keep going (SSHM 5) Being grown up is not always ideal and has its fair number of trials but to stagnate in immaturity and childhood would be another type of death. Death of your mind and what you could be. James also suggested that “the art of being wise was knowing what to overlook.” (SSHM 172) You have the choice as to what you see, what you learn, how you live and most importantly how you think; “make what we will of life.” (SSHM 171) James’s “maybe” is there for you to explore, make it worth it. So to be an adult is to be “woke” or “a person who has come to recognize the biases and prejudices of previous generations, and continues to grow of his or her own accord, with his or her eyes wide open.” (SSHM 102) Come to terms with your actions and thinking, explore new avenues and own up to them. (SSHM 152)
Anderson: “Like other fantasy-flavored impulses…nostalgia can express itself happily or fearfully, as wishful stage-set charm or they’ve-wrecked-our-stage-set rage.” (FL 429) We cling to the “better” times, the “easier” times; looking wistfully behind us in our Fantasyland. We suffer from Kids “R” Us Syndrome, childlike thinking, need for the instant gratification and we are stagnating in our immaturity. (FL 406) As Neiman referenced in her own work; Rousseau’s paradox: “cannot construct a decent society without a critical mass of real grown-ups, yet we can hardly create real grown-ups within a society to doesn’t want them.” (WGU 125) Society is winning in this front, so like Neiman, let’s stick it back to them and beat the system.
2020 in a nutshell it seems, though sometimes not so smiley.
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Final Blog Post - K Stephens - Section 10
I walk into my once familiar log cabin. There are more than several bags under my eyes and my arms droop at my sides like lead. Once again, I’ve gathered a few philosophers- though with only two is it really noteworthy? Before the room was elaborately decorated and immaculate. Gilded candelabras, and expensive wives doting the room. But now it is barren and cold. No one but these 3 are here now. The two I’ve gathered, Susan Neiman and John Kaag sit opposite from me and the door. I close it behind me and slump downwards, just barely awake. They stare, a mix of fear and pity on their faces. But mostly just pity. I begin to speak.
“You know. Maybe if it was the beginning of the semester I’d make a joke about Garfield or maybe reference back to the last kidnapping attempt. But! I’m tired. I’m on the end of another double all-nighter and still working.”
I lay down on my side.
“I need to finish this philosophy final preferably yesterday. I don’t have the time to devote to this when I have an animation final that demands I finish it to even have a chance of passing the class.”
Kaag sits forward a bit, somewhat curious. Neiman side eyes me slightly, but seems equally interested in the prospect.
‘Alright. What’s the question?’ says Kaag.
“Number 1. What does it mean to grow up. My personal opinions are that to grow up means to make peace with the world. Not in a defeatist sense, but rather to take an active role in knowing who you are and who others are. It’s a process of walking into yourself. Also, improving your own morals and understanding/appreciating others differences.”
Kaag nods.
‘In the end I don’t find that too different from my ideas. It’s just a process of learning to accept the natural laws of this world. “As one becomes an adult, it is best to come to terms with gray hair, disease, and death. It’s going to happen anyway.”
Neiman states,
I don't disagree with the ideas behind what you're saying, but I think you’re not really digging deep enough. “Philosophy, I’ve said, is inherently normative. Good philosophy recognizes this, while keeping a lookout for all it can learn from descriptions that will inevitably disappoint.” Again, you’re not wrong, but think a little more- does ‘becoming yourself’ really mean anything? A child can define a sense of self, though I think your on the right track if you focus more on that moral development.
I shrug.
“Alright, question 2. Just why should we grow up? I mean it’s hard to say cause you developing as a person definitely does not correspond to any reward you may receive in real life. You may gain from doing the exact opposite. But I think there is a personal motivation in it. The focus on growing as a person gives you a reason to exist, it can be your guiding light that can keep you going when you’ve reached the end of your rope. The idea that you are still actively trying to improve as a person can do a lot for your own self worth.”
‘Indeed. As William James said, “Be not afraid of life. Believe that life is worth living, and your belief will help create the fact.”
--------------------------------------------------
The two continue to speak, but I can feel my focus leave me. Before I even really understand what’s happening I’m asleep. In a void. The realization sends me reeling. All the work I’ve done won't be enough If I don’t even have the chance the turn it in. Oh well. Might as well think about the final question while I have a second to think.
“What makes life worth living?”
I pause and try to think about the advice I’ve gotten, but I blank. Then a voice separate from my own breaks the silence. They materialize in my gaze. It’s my character for my 3d animation class, fully realized.
“I mean back to a previous version of what you wrote here. Think back to your animation class. It moved you to tears. Before you had really understood what animation took, before you really knew the people there, you cried. You had never really known what passion was before. I think that experience really truly embodies what your thoughts are. The act of becoming yourself, and growing up is something beautiful and worth experiencing, even with just a passing curiosity. Even now, after being on the verge of failing this class for months, after all the difficulties encompassing my creation, after how many people you saw leave the major- you pushed on. For the passion that sparked at the beginning of the major and for the slow ember of that same passion that’s still there. I don’t know. Hopefully, this gives you a clear enough answer in time.
(Picture is of my rigging character in a default T-pose, before being textured.)
Before I’m given the chance to respond I wake. My phone alarm buzzing in my ear. I shut it off and slid upright. The other two are long gone by now, the door open in their wake. A cold chill blows through, snow flurries gliding in through the room. I look at my phone and I email my animation professor for an extension.
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Final Blog Post - Alexandra Jasso
Interview with ... a Philosopher(s) Podcast Part 2
Jasso: Hello everyone!!! Due to popular demand and so many responses, you've asked for it and now we're doing a Part 2. If you are joining us for the first time, my name is Alexandra Jasso and this is "CoPhil", the blog to which we talk about philosophy for fellow philosopher students by philosopher students. Tonight, we are joined by not one. Not two. But three philosophers to which we had the honor of reading and disscussing their works during this semester. First up, give a warm welcome back American philosopher and author of Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire, Kurt Anderson. Thank you so much joining us again.
Anderson: Thank you so much Alexandra for having me again. I had so much fun last time and I was excited when you asked me to join in again.
Jasso: Also, we have two new people joining us today. We have American philosopher and author of Why Grow Up? Subversive Thoughts for an Infantile Age, Susan Neiman.
Neiman: Hi everyone. I saw your podcast last time last October and I have got to tell you that I've loved it and I was really honored for you to ask me to come in today on the show...
Jasso: Are you kidding me? I was shocked and so happy you decided to say yes to do this episode. I loved your book and it made have so many questions.
Neiman: Oh my god. Thank you so much.
Jasso: Finally, we have John Kaag. He's a professor at the University of Massachusetts and author of Sick Souls, Healthy Minds: How William James Can Save Your Life. Thank you for joining me today.
Kaag: Thank you so much Alexandra. I quite thankful that you and your class has decided to read my book for philosophy.
Jasso: Anyway, we should get started with our questions which is: What does it mean to grow up and why should we? Also, what makes life worth living? I think we should start with Neiman. Your response?
Neiman: Of course. Well as I've discuss in my book, there's not one monolithic way in growing up. Many believe that growing up is goal we all try to reach for when in actuality is indeed a proccess. In Chapter 3 in my book,“Growing up is a process of sifting through your parent’s choices.” We try to navagate this harsh world given the few options and limitations we were given by our parents and circumstances. What we are striving towards is to seek wisdom, seek the truth, and to try and make this place a better one than the one we found it in.
Kaag: I like your response. I quite argee as maturity is all about seeing the world on what it is but for also on what it could be. While we may look upon others for advice and influence, we must also look upon ourselves. I quote I learned is that “The art of being wise is knowing what to overlook.”
Anderson: I like that. In the U.S., we have become so fixcated on the idea of creating our own beliefs that we eventually lost touch with in reality and have ended up blocking out the truth. In my book, I've disccus the idea of growing up and we tend to get attached to our childhood as adulthood gets harder.
Jasso: I have to agree and I'm a freshmen college student. That's all the time we have but thank you guys for joining us and see you next time. Bye!!!
Final Blog Post - Pedro Rojas
Final Blog Post
Anna Johnson-Section 10
Anna Johnson
Section 10
Me: What does it mean to grow up? Why should we?
Susan Neiman: “Kant’s definition of maturity as the ability to think for oneself is as good a sign of being grown-up as any that I know. If growing up is a matter of holding the is and the ought in balance, it will never be a stable position: each will always seek the upper hand. Hence growing up is not a task that ever stops.” Likely due to the negative connotations associated with growing up which has become so pervasive in our culture, we often forget that to grow up simply means to progress in life and that we’ve been doing it since we were born. To grow up is a constant process and means to seek truth and wisdom so that what we leave behind will be better.
Nigel Warburton: Since you’ve brought up Kant, it makes me think of another point which he would make here. “He argued that you should only act on maxims that were universalizable. For something to be universalizable it has to apply to everyone.” It’s quite obvious that society would collapse if everybody actively worked against growing up. Kant would say that this means it’s morally wrong to not grow up. Because we rely on others to grow up and make society work, we must do the same ourselves.
John Kaag: I also value the ability to think for oneself and believe it to be among the best parts of growing up. James once said, “The art of being wise is knowing what to overlook.” A person doesn’t need to make peace with all of the terrible things that have happened around them in order to benefit from continuing on. As we grow up, we get wiser and better at identifying the things which are holding us back.
Me: Growing up is definitely key to understanding what holds us back from improving as individuals as well as a society. But what stops me from wanting to leave it all, with no regard for the moral implications? What makes life worth living?
John Kaag: “For James, stars do not burn, much less appear, in perfect order, and human lives are not settled in advance. This is for the best: it gives us something to watch and expect and experience. Persistent variation gives rise to persistent wonder, and, for James, this sense of mystery-- of chance-- was often enough to see him through when other practical measures failed him.” So essentially, one can’t simply assume that life is worth living, but one also can’t know for sure that it isn’t worth living. There will always be a chance that what is to come will add enough value to an otherwise destitute circumstance which would make that life worth living.
Me: I think this is a really valuable point. I’m not always excited for what’s to come, but I definitely am curious. Even on the days in which I’m the most doubtful, I can always concede that there is a chance that things will be okay.
Nigel Warburton: “Socrates declared that life is only worth living if you think about what you are doing. An unexamined existence is all right for cattle, but not for human beings.” This is why I’ve dedicated so much of myself to philosophy. As a species, we were meant to seek wisdom to better ourselves and impact our community. Socrates, the father of philosophy, lives on because he asked questions as a means of seeking truth and this is what we are meant to do. In order to find value in your life, you must thoroughly examine it.
Susan Neiman: “No longer confused by baubles or shy with inexperience, we are better able to see what we see, and say it. We? All of us, including this author. It’s a process of permanent revolution. Who wants to encourage that?” As we gain better perspective with our maturity, we also gain power over ourselves and our surroundings. By progressing as an individual, we can better effect change for all and make the world a better place. With this in mind, life is unquestionably worth living, particularly as we grow up and develop more knowledge and wisdom to improve what we have.
Me: Understanding the world and our perceptions is exactly what makes life worth living. It also leads to building a better place for future generations. Even when things seem to be the most bleak, there is always a chance for change. The more grown-ups we have, fighting for reducing suffering, the greater a chance we have at succeeding to make a change. This sentiment makes me think of John Lennon’s work. In this song he wrote, he encourages people to question the world as it is and to be a part of the change.
Final Blog Post Killian Gunn Section 10
Ladies and gentlemen, WELCOME BACK!!! The last time you were here, if you can remember, you listened to my retelling of an awesome discussion I had with two well known philosophers and a great author by the name of Nigel Warburton, Kurt Andersen, and Julian Baggini. These men had an extensive timeline of philosophical debates and research under their belts and gave me the chance to fee my hunger for understanding people and their psychology.
This time around, I had the honor to talk with the three marvelous philosophers Susan Neiman, John Kaag, and John Stigall. So without further delay, Let's Get To It!!!
Similar to the last discussion, this discussion was hosted by Mr. Gunn at an art museum in Nashville called the Parthenon—a 123 year old recreation of the Ancient Athens Parthenon that was built in 480 B.C. However, this time the conversation will take place outside of the Parthenon at sunset; where as last time, it took place inside where Athena's statue towered over her visitors during the brightest time of the day.