— William James
#philosophy #quotes #bot https://mastodon.lol/@Phil_O_Sophizer/109564291074074511
(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
#philosophy #quotes #bot https://mastodon.lol/@Phil_O_Sophizer/109564291074074511
But not just any human.
"…A.I. can be helpful if we're looking for a light assist. A person could ask a chatbot to rewrite a paragraph in an active voice. A nonnative English speaker could ask ChatGPT to remove grammatical errors from an email before sending it. A student could ask the bot for suggestions on how to make an essay more persuasive.
But in any situation like those, don't blindly trust the bot.
Time Is Way Weirder Than You Think The neuroscientist Dean Buonomano talks expansively about time — what it is and all the ways humans perceive its passing.
...We discuss what time would be in an empty universe without humans, why humans have not evolved to understand time the way we understand space, how our ability to predict the future differs from animals’, why time during the Covid lockdowns felt so bizarre, why scientists think time “flies” when we’re having fun but slows down when people experience near-death accidents, what humans lost when we invented very precise clocks, why some physicists believe the future is already determined for us and what that would mean for our ethical behavior, why we’re so bad at saving money, what steps we could take to feel as if we’re living longer in time, why it’s so hard — but ultimately possible — to live in the present moment and more... LISTEN https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/13/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-dean-buonomano.html?smid=em-share
A.I. can be a learning tool for schools with enough teachers and resources to use it well.
...As Plato was wrong to fear the written word as the enemy, we would be wrong to think we should resist a process that allows us to gather information more easily.
As societies responded to previous technological advances, like mechanization, by eventually enacting a public safety net, a shorter workweek and a minimum wage, we will also need policies that allow more people to live with dignity as a basic right, even if their skills have been superseded. With so much more wealth generated now, we could unleash our imagination even more, expanding free time and better working conditions for more people.
The way forward is not to just lament supplanted skills, as Plato did, but also to recognize that as more complex skills become essential, our society must equitably educate people to develop them. And then it always goes back to the basics. Value people as people, not just as bundles of skills.
And that isn’t something ChatGPT can tell us how to do...
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/15/opinion/chatgpt-education-ai-technology.html?smid=em-share
ChatGPT makes a lot of mistakes. But it’s fun to talk to, and it knows its limitations. ["Knows" as in "understands"? No.]
...One primary criticism of systems like ChatGPT, which are built using a computational technique called “deep learning,” is that they are little more than souped-up versions of autocorrect — that all they understand is the statistical connections between words, not the concepts underlying words. Gary Marcus, a professor emeritus in psychology at New York University and a skeptic of deep learning, told me that while an A.I. language model like ChatGPT makes for “nifty” demonstrations, it’s “still not reliable, still doesn’t understand the physical world, still doesn’t understand the psychological world and still hallucinates.”
... https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/16/opinion/conversation-with-chatgpt.html?smid=em-share
"When OpenAI released ChatGPT to the public last week, the first and most common reaction I saw was fear that it would upend education. "You can no longer give take-home exams," Kevin Bryan, a University of Toronto professor, posted on Twitter. "I think chat.openai.com may actually spell the end of writing assignments," wrote Samuel Bagg, a University of South Carolina political scientist. That's the fear...
Imagine worrying about the fate of take-home essay exams, a stupid format that everyone hates but nobody has the courage to kill." --Ian Bogost, Atlantic
"Philosophy isn't just in your head. Philosophy is everywhere."
"This film completely reframes the narrative of the typical 'environmental documentary', instead focusing on the behavior, trends, and impact of humanity from a psychological and ethical perspective. It is truly groundbreaking to capture such a diverse array of thought leaders and scientists in one film - offering disparate yet complementary perspectives on why we find ourselves in this current state of uncertainty and how we can all engage - do our part for positive change. From the incredible visuals, score, and narrative journey... Filmmaker Susan Kucera does a brilliant job for nimbly transcending the doc-status-quo, opting instead for a more intellectually challenging and inspiring course for this remarkable film!" - written by "aaron-13968" on IMDb.com
Final presentations are concluded, final reports should now all be posted. If you've neglected to post, or have been unable to do so, email it directly to me - phil.oliver@mtsu.edu.
Have a good break. Hope to see you in a future class. If you're graduating, good luck. Keep in touch!
William James Lecture 8
Nathan Buckley, #11
This lecture is mainly about 2 ways of pragmatic thinking, the monistic way and the pluralistic way of thinking, and how people's lives can change just by changing the way they think.
Lecture 8 starts out with a poem titled “To You” by Walt Whitman, which James then proceeds to break down and analyze in a pragmatic manner. James describes the 2 ways to look at the poem as, a monistic way and the pluralistic way. The monistic way is the more relaxed way of looking at it, where you lie back and reflect on the past actions that you have made, and stand by your “true principle of being.”, standing by the decisions you've made and feeling safe. On the other hand, a pluralistic outlook would consist of looking back onto your life in more of a negative manner, as you reflect on your lows in life. After you assess your past mistakes or tragedies, you then pick out some high points in your life which you're proud of, then reflect on both in such a way that you accept it, and move forward knowing that it paved the way to who you are today. Both ways of reflection lead to the same end result, however, coming to terms with what you have done in the past, and painting yourself in a gold background. In the grand scheme of these ways of thinking, the pluralistic way is more in touch with pragmatism. The way it dwells into the grand scheme of things piece by piece and dissecting it to reflect on each individual concept embodies the pragmatic way of thinking a lot more. This example also helps show the difference between tough-mindedness and tender-mindedness, which James talks about as well throughout his lecture.
James later on in his lecture dives into the concept of pragmatism and how it has affected his output in life, and how important these ways of thinking were in his day to day life. A quote from the lecture that really stuck with me is when James said “ The possibility of this is involved in the pragmatistic willingness to treat pluralism as a serious hypothesis. In the end it is our faith and not our logic that decides such questions, and I deny the right of any pretended logic to veto my own faith.” James talks about how the pragmatic way of thinking shouldn't change your morals and faith, but just as a way of thinking in a progressive way to benefit yourself. That isn't to say however after changing the way you think that you would reconsider religion, as James stated “ Pragmatism has to postpone dogmatic answers, for we do not yet know which type of religion is going to work best in the long run. The various over beliefs of men, their several faith-ventures, are in fact what are needed to bring the evidence in.” Like stated before, there are the 2 types of mental strength, tough-mindedness and tender-mindedness, and depending on your own personal mental strength can affect the outlook you have on religion as a whole. James believes that the stronger your mental strength is, the less you need religion, and if you're more on the tender side and have a pluralistic outlook that you lean on religion more as an outlet for security and safety. James said “Nirvana means safety from this everlasting round of adventures of which the world of sense consists.”
Overall, James gives great insight into the different times of pragmatic thinking, and uses plenty of poems and excerpts to help heighten his points about these ways of thinking. These pragmatic ways of thinking can drastically change a person's outlook, and how they handle and approach different situations, as well as helping them reflect on situations from the past in order to grow as a person. This lecture was definitely worth reading in my opinion, and is really interesting to see how other people would think about a situation compared to myself.
Kurt Anderson is very "vocal" about his thoughts on the American government, saying:
"Dozens were elected to congress and became convulsive, tail wagging, Republican dogs"-- with a continued explanation of-- "they hate, or think they hate, the status quo, that including the government itself."
That is a lot of information to get started on (more so, lots of opinions).
Now, to provide a little bit more insight, let's look at a different quote that Anderson notes in the same chapter of his book, Fantasyland, by a talk-show host named John Zeigler. He says:
"We've effectively brainwashed the core of our audience. and now it's gone too far. Because the gatekeepers have lost all credibility in the minds of consumers, I don't see how you reverse it."
According to fantasyland, the news is what people want. They push what others want and when they realize the reality, a depression starts and people retaliate. Also, what we watch younger affects what we believe to be right. This supports the notion that conspiracies are to support one's beliefs and if it doesn't support, it is merely a conspiracy. We can see this with a fill-in-the-blank example:
_____ (Democrats/ Republicans) ______ (defend/reject) democratic favored conspiracies.
It's pretty common knowledge that not everything you find on the internet can not be considered 100% accurate, or "factual". Here, we have a source, a person in the media industry, telling us just that, and that because of the amount of non-credible information out there, it is harder for people to know what they should and shouldn't listen to. Over the years, news has become less news and more media a source of entertainment rather than information; giving people what they want to hear rather than what they want to know. The media looks into what people are interested in, and what people are more likely to watch because the audience enjoys the voice of their own thoughts. What Anderson tied this to was the people in the media. The people that hold influence because of these news reports and false scandals that people take so keenly a liking to. A person that Anderson looks to directly is previous president Trump.
Even before he ran for the role of president, Trump had a way of spreading news. Even before the media really- he held people's attention with outbursts of news- calling magazines and articles, and things like it, "garbage" and "trash". Kurt describes his actions as having "Kids-R-Us" syndrome, acting in a way of a "spoiled, impulsive, moody, seven-year-old brat".
The New York Times even wrote once, giving him even more publicity:
"Trump understands at least one thing better than almost everybody"- that the - "breakdown of a shared public reality, built upon widely accepted facts, represents not a hazard but an opportunity."
Trump has painted himself as an image that had to be noticed. He even admitted that he played off peopled people fantasy's by saying "I will give you everything- every dream you ever dreamt for your country." he described this as "winning". He campaigned his own voice by telling people to forget the press and to just read the internet, that it is where he gets all his info.
Looking today, Donald Trump's Twitter has been suspended once, with the official safety account tweeted "we have permanently, suspended the account due to the risk of further incitement of violence". Before his account had 88 million followers, they locked it because of the hots at the capital over conspiracies on the election.
Senator Mark Warner tweeted later in response to the suspension - "an overdue step, but it's important to remember this is much bigger than one person. It's about an entire ecosystem that allows information and hates to spread and fester unchecked."
Democrats took advantage of this comment while republicans were enraged to push back, saying things and calling it a "left platform".
In conclusion to this, the internet is a place of opinion and less fact. A place for people's voices to be recognized and observed to be factual by like-minded people. Debates will be made, and facts might be presented eventually, but be aware that not everything is a fact, but more a fantasy.
__________________________________________________________________
"You're entitled to your own opinions and your own fantasies, but not your own facts - especially if your fantastical facts hurt people"
- Thomas Jefferson.
Stemming from the phrase "you are what you eat", I believe that there is an incredible amount of influence derived from what we see, hear, and read each day. Perhaps this seems obvious, but one aspect of this view that is commonly neglected is the fact that, similar to meal intake, one's information diet begins the moment they are suitable to digest it. In fact, while one can seemingly change their mind at any point in life, neuroplasticity is nearly eliminated beyond the age of 25-26. Sure, it is certainly still possible in later adult life, but when considering why your grandfather still calls them "colored people", try to perceive the odd slur from a holistic standpoint, with the knowledge that many ideologies we hold in adult life were acquired on the foundations set forth in our youth.
If one is to assume that what they're getting is an accurate view of any given population, and the reality equates to only a fraction, then this stands as a threat to nearly all group populations.
The fall of Sam Bankman-Fried helps us see the movement’s vices, but that shouldn’t blind us to its virtues, either.
...If it would be monstrous to let a child drown in front of you because of a modest expense, then isn’t it monstrous to let a child die
a world away when the same modest expense might have saved his or her life?
If you buy into this thought experiment — and I largely do — then you face the difficult question of deciding where its logic ends. When the choice is your comfort or another’s life, then even the most modest luxuries come to seem immoral. Following this moral logic to its outer edges is manageable only for the saintliest among us — Larissa MacFarquhar’s “Strangers Drowning” is an unforgettable exploration of what that level of commitment looks like — but a bit more altruism is in reach for many of us. For me, Singer’s parable has been a provocation worth wrestling with and one that has substantially increased my annual giving..
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/04/opinion/charity-holiday-gift-givewell.html?smid=em-share
What Makes a Life Significant?
William James often
pondered the questions of whether or not life was worth living as well as what
makes a life significant. Due to these questions that James proposed, he ended
up publishing an article called “What Makes a Life Significant.”
William James was born in
1842 and eventually grew into a leading spokesperson for pragmatism. James was
one of the most influential philosophers in the United States during the late
nineteenth century. He would eventually become known as the “Father of American
Psychology.” William James also spoke out for and promoted individualism.
As far as what makes a
life significant, there is no one true answer. Most people have a different
perception of the meaning or purpose of life than that of their peers. Some
perceive the purpose of life as doing well and finding purpose. Some people
also perceive the purpose of life as contributing to their community or seeking
knowledge. While there is no specific answer to the purpose of life, many take
it at face value and view the purpose of life solely as procreation. Clearly,
procreation is not all that there is to human life as I’m sure many would
agree.
In William James’
writing, “What Makes a Life Significant,” he lays out criteria for the
components of a “significant life.” Among these components are consciously
chosen ideals, bold energetic activity, and using our minds and bodies in the
ways they were intended to be used. When James mentions consciously chosen
ideals, he means carefully chosen ideas that can be pursued. A large part of James’
thought on significant life is that one must pursue significant ideals with
determination. James uses two criteria to determine whether an ideal is
considered significant or not. William James focuses on the intellectual
conception and novelty of ideals. When he speaks about intellectual conception
James is mainly referring to someone consciously pursuing something rather than
remaining “unconscious.” James says “if we have it; and it must carry with it
that sort of outlook, uplift, and brightness that go with all intellectual
facts.” He is basically saying that an ideal is significant if it is something
that you can carry with you as a part of you and be proud of it.
When James speaks about
the novelty of ideals he dives fairly deep. He makes a key point that the ideal
itself does not need to possess novelty, but rather, the ideal needs to be
novel “at least for him whom the ideal grasps.” However, he goes on to mention
that “ideas are relative to the lives that entertain them.” Personally, I agree
with James’ statement here. James is explaining that while not all ideals are
significant, all lives require significant ideals in order to achieve
significance. In the section of What
Makes a Life Significant I have been referring to James also states that
education is simply a matter of multiplying our ideals or introducing new ones.
This made me think about teachers or professors a bit differently because I had
never thought of them as people meant to multiply my ideals. Their ideals are
to spread knowledge and inform the following generations. This makes my ideals feel
minuscule and selfish and makes me question if I am living a significant life
in contrast to them.
While reading much of
William James’ work, I find myself questioning ideas such as the meaning of life,
if life’s worth living, and many other recurring themes in his writing. In
recent years, I have begun to perceive the true meaning of life as simply to
live it to the fullest or make the absolute most out of it. You are only here
for as long as you’re alive, so why waste any of your time? It is going to be
quite some time before we witness the development of consciousness transfer
technology so time for everyone on Earth is limited. There is no time to waste
in creating a significant life for yourself and potentially those around you.
I feel like William James
looked at life similarly. As far as how he describes a life’s significance, I
feel like, in layman’s terms, he is saying to not waste the moment, find
something you care about, stick with it, and contribute to your community. Some
of William James’ philosophy is rooted in cosmopolitanism due to the education
he received between America and Europe. Cosmopolitanism, in political theory,
is the belief that all people are entitled to equal respect and consideration
no matter what. Therefore, James was a large advocate for being well-rooted
within your community. I do enjoy the idea of cosmopolitanism. All of us humans
are in this life thing together. Everyone should be entitled to respect and
consideration, today, we see so much disrespect, hate, and intolerance.
Inequality is the largest issue in this modern age. I along with James
believe that it is important to contribute to the strength of your community.
Towards the end of James’
essay, he speaks about how people are often blind to the significance of their
peers and remain envious and greedy rather than taking action. I feel like this
is an issue that is still present today. Today so many people are full of greed
only looking to make a benefit or a profit for themselves. This is extremely common among record labels and
managers trying to steal money from artists or producers. I believe that some
people are mistaken about what makes life significant. The significance of a
life is not related to how much money you make. Your life is defined by your
actions.
In conclusion, a
significant life is defined by one's ideals and how one pursues them. While
everyone has ideals they are not always significant or pursued with diligence.
It is extremely common nowadays for people to not chase their dreams and settle
for less. In order to live a significant life you must chase your ambitions, be
active in your community, and be proud of that.
POSTED BY William James # 7
Is life worth living? That’s a question that most people if not all have wondered.
Some people find that for them it is not. So what’s the answer. Well personally for
me I think it is. However, William James the Philosopher says Maybe it is. William
James one day saw a sign that said “ life is worth living” on top of a bridge. This
made him think that ripples in the water we make ripples in the world. Everything we do
effects somebody. We effect the people we know by the way we act. If we kill
ourselves those ripples will effect the people around us. Is life worth living
William talks about life and how we effect everything around us. He uses the
analogy of the rock dropped into the water. We are the rock and when we enter the
water the rock is lost, that rock is our material life. The first wave of ripples is the
effect we leave on the people who knew us, which is our social self. Finally we look to
the our farthest ripples and those are our spiritual self. The main point that I took out
of this analogy was that there is more to life than our physical self.
If William James believed there is more to life than our physical self I do not
understand why he said that MAYBE Life is Worth Living. Seems to me that if we
effect the the people around us and the spiritual world and are not just a bunch of
nerve endings and brain matter then life is defiantly worth living.
I am going to say life is defiantly worth living. People care about you and so does
God. We are not on this earth to just live it up and then die. We are here to bless and
help others. When we go through rough times imagine getting through it and then
helping others that are going through the same thing. I do not think suicide is the right
answer and if you or someone else is thinking about it then please talk to someone or
go to the Suicide Hotline website. People are worth a lot, and life is worth living.
In conclusion, we make a difference in then world whether we think we do or not.
The question of if life is worth living is not obvious all the time. Like William James
said just because we think our life is worth living does not mean you can force that
idea on others. Everyone’s life situation is different. Some people have it rough.
However, because we have influence on others and the spiritual world we should think
twice about ending our lives. Human life is valuable and we are not just nerve endings
and brain matter. I think life is worth living.
Rumi Arif Wein
What began as a gun use and safety training association has now become a large corporate factor in American politics. The National Rifle Association establishes propaganda in America through fear-mongering, media, and lobbying.
As mentioned in Kurt Andersen's "FantasyLand, How America Went Haywire",
The NRA tricks Americans into thinking that they are under a danger they can only liberate themselves from through militarization. They are particularly constantly fighting against gun laws and pushing the narrative that they won’t work to discourage mass shootings. The organization's corporatism has caused a new, uniquely American perspective on legislation: that other laws work, but laws against guns just can’t.
The NRA are known to meet gun violence protesters with confrontation and often baseless counter-arguments. Their firm belief is that gun control will create greater unsafety for the people of the United States, and they have backed these beliefs with a powerful propaganda campaign. While they have many ways to combat anti-gun opinions, a particularly influential method was to create false narratives around media coverage of school shootings. “Our freedom is under attack like never before,” said Chris Cox, executive director of the NRA Institute for Legislative Action, in the wake of the Sandy Hook massacre. “When a deranged criminal murders innocent children, they blame us.” The bill that Cox is referencing was an Obama administration body of legislature created to establish stronger background checks. The bill eventually was shot down.
The NRA has also publicly conspired that shootings were only covered so much because they secure high ratings for the media outlets, but if Americans should believe that gun legislature is taking their guns away from them, what is the solution to mass killings? During a press conference after the Sandy Hook massacre, the organization's Vice-president, Wayne LaPierre, doubled down on the NRA's solution: Armed laborers, and armed teachers in schools across America. This is an opinion some Americans now align themselves with, even though the idea has clear dangers and drawbacks.
Another and more prominent form of propaganda dissemination the organization uses is the lobbying of politicians and public servants at the congressional level. Pictured below is an eye-opening graph of the top recipients of NRA contributions in just the U.S. Senate.
The NRA has spent over 2 million dollars currently in 2022 on lobbying alone, and in 2018 spent over 5 million dollars in buying out politicians in the name of their business. Some benefitting from corporate donations by the NRA include Mitt Romney (Utah senator) who has been paid over $13 million, and Marsha Blackburn (TN senator) who earned $1.3 million in donations. Here is a source where you can find these senators, and others, listed alongside how much they've earned in NRA donations.
NRA corporatism is greatly affecting America. Other countries don’t allow the NRA to purchase their ads in politicians campaigns, and they have regulations that limit how much corporations can donate to politicians. The responsibility that comes with having platforms so large that they can sway public opinion is understood in many places. The American public is a part of why America is so unique in its mass shooting problem, they have been misled to believe gun legislature might make things worse.
Gun control works, heres how we know it works
In countries where there are stricter gun laws, much fewer people die.
In his paper with Eric Grinshteyn, Dr. David Hemenway, professor of Health Policy at Harvard, put American gun violence in comparison to other high income OECD countries. What they found was America with its more relaxed gun laws, has a gun homicide rate over 25 times higher than other countries. For children 15-24, the rate was 49 times higher. They also noted that 82% of all people killed by firearms were from the United States. These are truly horrifying statistics and can be correlated with the gun laws in these countries. The study also states that since 2003, other developed countries have decreased their gun death rate with stricter laws around guns, while the U.S.’s rate remains steady.
Another way we know gun control works is through state legislation around guns. California, for example, has heavy legislation around guns, and has a firearm death rate 37% lower than the national average- a score of 8.5 for gun deaths per 100,000 people. In contrast, Mississippi has extremely weak gun laws, and because of this it sports a death rate of 28.6. When more guns are present, more gun related deaths occur.
To conclude, America needs stricter gun laws because it will protect our people.
Gun control laws work because we have seen them lower death rates in other countries, and in our own states. And, we must recognize that the influence of corporations in America is greatly affecting our safety, as well as contributing to gun violence. This form of gun-cult narrative is being promoted by the outsized power of the NRA. Who in the service of increasing their profit margin, will spend copious amounts of money on politicians and media outlets to fear-monger, and promote anti-gun restriction laws. The problem of gun deaths in this country is influenced by criminal corporatism that stands not for the people, but for profit incentive.
Do you think that corporations like the NRA should be able to donate to politicians and media outlets?
Do you think that they have the public’s best interest in mind?
John Wright #12
"This feeling of sufficiency of the present moment, of its absoluteness,- this absence of all need to explain it, account for it, or justify it,- is what I call the Sentiment of Rationality."- William James
At the age of 40, James had his essay entitled "The Sentiment of Rationality" published in the Princeton Review in 1882. In roughly fifteen sentences, he gives the reader the his answer to what that means. Even so, he uses another 110 paragraphs explaining what makes his take on rationality different from other previous philosophers, and explains in detail the flaws in their own logic and emotion. He addresses two common beliefs in philosophy that he describes as "sister passions", these being the passion for simplicity and the passion for distinguishing. He points out how viewing either as an absolute answer to rationality is flawed and argues that true rationality must be a balance between these two passions.
He discredits the ideas of the pre-socratics and theologians that everything is one thing. Such as Thales belief that everything is water, and many religious thinkers vowing that everything is God. With five words he states that, "Absolute existence is absolute mystery". Here we see why he argues against simplicity. It relays no true understanding of the world, and leaves so many questions and holes that are too easily filled with an unfulfilling answer. James then goes on to show his comedic prowess by delivering a clever quip about how this very idea of simplifying objects and meaning to one answer is why so few people care for philosophy
Posted for Ardiola Medi #11
When Roe v Wade was overturned through the Dobbs v. Jackson ruling, Originalism started to make headlines. The philosophical method of interpreting the constitution played a large part in the decision that would delegitimize the precedent set for the right to privacy. Six out of nine of the current Supreme Court Justices, being Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, are proponents of this method. Although espoused by the more conservative justices, the method of Originalism has been used by liberal judges for progressive means and seems to be a standard for constitutional interpretation. So, what is Originalism?
I will explain the philosophy of Originalism through former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who made the method of interpretation popular. He says that "The Constitution that I interpret and apply is not living but dead, or as I prefer to call it, enduring. It means today not what current society, much less the court, thinks it ought to mean, but what it meant when it was adopted." As an originalist one would keep what the founding fathers intended when crafting the constitution in mind. For Originalist interpreters to understand what the founding fathers intended they are often required to view text like debates in the Constitutional Convention or the Federalist Papers. Some consider how people of the time period interpreted the constitutional for further insight. An example of Scalia using this form of interpretation is in District of Columbia v. Heller. Scalia conceded that the Second Amendment protected the right to possess firearms without being in service to a militia. He came to this conclusion by Originalist means arguing that ordinary citizens of the time understood and practiced the constitutional right in this way.
At first glance, Originalism seems like a valid way of interpreting the constitution, the philosophy supposedly would produce objective, non-politically charged rulings. Recently though it seems as if Originalism has been co-opted by Conservatives to push their own politics in terms of the right to privacy, Thomas intending to go after gay marriage next. Critics of Originalism propose that relying on the intent of the founding fathers inhibits progress. It is argued that beliefs the founding fathers may have had about women and people of color would not align with modern sentiments towards the civil rights of these groups. This critique does not hold up with those that believe the meaning of the constitution should not be misconstrued or cherrypicked to promote political values. What I believe is a more valid critique of Originalism is that it requires interpreters to be historians, and they tend to be mediocre ones at best. This is one of the reasons the rulings seem to lean conservative, they are interpreting history with bias.
Justice Alito's conceding opening in Dobbs v. Jackson is an example of this. He says, "the right (to abortion) is neither deeply rooted in the nation's history nor an essential component of "ordered liberty". He is quite wrong. From the time settlers first arrived abortion was legal. Abortions before "quickening" were openly advertised and commonly performed at the time the Constitution was adopted. It was only in the mid 19th century that states began passing laws that made abortion illegal. One of the reasons included fear that the population would be dominated by the children of newly arriving immigrants, whose birth rates were higher than those of "native" Anglo-Saxon women.
I do believe a good thing about the invasion of this form of radical originalism is that it brings critics to think about the process of amending the constitution. If you cannot possibly interpret the constitution outside the intent of its framers, then amend it. It’s a very hard process but when we cannot possibly escape our original intent it’s the best means to ensure our rights. Otherwise, promoting a pragmatic approach to interpreting the constitution along the standards of originalism is a good way to combat radical forms of originalism.