Up@dawn 2.0 (blogger)

Delight Springs

Friday, January 31, 2025

Audio resources

FYI-Most of our texts (including the Little History of Philosophy) are available in audio format from audible.com, and from public libraries via the Libby app.

Also, Rachel Kirk's library colleague Denise passes along this info about MTSU's audio services (etc.):

HTML articles in JEWLsearch/EDS do have an audio option that's available on the screen. EBooks get a little trickier, but some sort of browser or installed software should help. 

But if there's ever a book that just can't seem to work - either browser or DRM won't allow a full download - let me know and EBSCO can provide a different format - based on whatever software you want to use. This takes less than 24 hours. 

Read & Write
You have the ability to download chapters (or anything) as PDFs and upload them to this software. I would recommend this for eBooks the most! 

Other options to try: 
Kurzweil 
I think you need to register and then you can install. 

JAWS 
Available through DAC: https://dac.mtsu.edu/JAWSandZT/
But you'll need to go through DAC to get access, I do believe. 

NVDA 
This is a free download and not available through DAC or ATC. It works with Windows only. I run into issues with NVDA sometimes where I can't ever turn it off. 

Denise F. Quintel, Discovery Services Librarian

Middle Tennessee State University 615-898-5144 |  denise.quintel@mtsu.edu  

Feel free to contact Rachel (Rachel.Kirk@mtsu.edu) with any questions. 


Instinctive mythology

"If a man is offered a fact which goes against his instincts, he will scrutinize it closely, and unless the evidence is overwhelming, he will refuse to believe it. If, on the other hand, he is offered something which affords a reason for acting in accordance with his instincts, he will accept it even on the slenderest evidence. The origin of myths is explained in this way."

— Bertrand Russell, Proposed Roads To Freedom

Despicable

"In response to Trump's comments [on the tragic air collision in DC], Buttigieg posted: "Despicable. As families grieve, Trump should be leading, not lying. We put safety first, drove down close calls, grew Air Traffic Control, and had zero commercial airline crash fatalities out of millions of flights on our watch. President Trump now oversees the military and the FAA. One of his first acts was to fire and suspend some of the key personnel who helped keep our skies safe. Time for the President to show actual leadership and explain what he will do to prevent this from happening again."

HCR
https://open.substack.com/pub/heathercoxrichardson/p/january-30-2025?r=35ogp&utm_medium=ios

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Stoic ecology

One of the crucial Stoic concepts is that of oikeiôsis, which is often translated as "familiarization with" or "appropriation of" other people's concerns as if they were our own.

The root term is oikos, meaning "house, dwelling place, habitation," from which we get the modern words "ecology" (the study of the environment, that is, our house at large) and "economics" (initially, household management).

https://substack.com/@thephilosophygarden/note/c-89854349?r=35ogp&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Having fun isn't hard...

if you've got a library card (or student ID). Remember, on Thursday (30th) we meet in the library: 264A. 

  

"Who is Dewey?" Not John, not Tom...
Melvil
Melville Louis Kossuth "Melvil" Dewey (December 10, 1851 – December 26, 1931) was 
an influential American librarian and educator, inventor of the Dewey Decimal System


 

Book-banning etc.-
I asked ChatGPT about this. Haven't yet confirmed the total accuracy of its response,  but we'll be in the right place to do that Thursday.


Fwd: PHIL 1030 Group Me

Noah in #6 made a Group Chat and asked me to pass it along. Thanks, Noah. jpo

Questions Jan 30

Remember, we meet in the Library today. Go directly there: Room #264A. But still do the assigned reading, and post your comments.


1. How did the most extreme skeptics (or sceptics, if you prefer the British spelling) differ from Plato and Aristotle? What was their main teaching? Do you think they were "Socratic" in this regard?


2. Why did Pyrrho decide never to trust his senses? Is such a decision prudent or even possible?

3. What country did Pyrrho visit as a young man, and how might it have influenced his philosophy?

4. How did Pyrrho think his extreme skepticism led to happiness? Do you think there are other ways of achieving freedom from worry (ataraxia)?

5. In contrast to Pyrrho, most philosophers have favored a more moderate skepticism. Why?

FL
1. What did Anne Hutchinson feel "in her gut"? What makes her "so American"?

2. What did Hutchinson and Roger Williams help invent?

3. How was freedom of thought in 17th century America expressed differently than in Europe at the time?

4. Who, according to some early Puritans, were "Satan's soldiers"? DId you know the Puritans vilified the native Americans in this way? Why do you think that wasn't emphasized in your early education?

5. What extraordinary form of evidence was allowed at the Salen witch trials? What does Andersen think Arthur Miller's The Crucible got wrong about Salem?

HWT
1. Logic is simply what? Do you consider yourself logical (rational)?

2. What "law" of thinking is important in all philosophies, including those in non-western cultures that find it less compelling? Do you think it important to follow rules of thought? What do you think of the advice "Don't believe everything you think?"

3. For Aristotle, the distinctive thing about humanity is what? How does Indian philosophy differ on this point? What do you think is most distinctive about humanity?

4. According to secular reason, the mind works without what? Are you a secularist? Why or why not?

5. What debate reveals a tension in secular reason? How would you propose to resolve the tension?


And see:
==
An old post on skeptics...
==
Pyrrho was an extreme skeptic, who'd abandoned the Socratic quest for truth in favor of the view that beliefs about what's true are a divisive source of unhappiness. But most philosophers do consider themselves skeptics, of a more moderate strain. 

The difference: the moderates question everything in order to pursue truth, knowledge, and wisdom. They're skeptical, as Socrates was, that those who think they know really do know. But they're still searching.  Pyrrhonists and other extreme ancient skeptics (like the Roman Sextus Empiricus) find the search futile, and think they can reject even provisional commitment to specific beliefs. 

My view: we all have beliefs, whether we want to admit it or not. Even those who deny belief in free will, it's been said, still look both ways before crossing the street.

So let's try to have good beliefs, and always be prepared to give them up for better ones when experience and dialogue persuade us we were mistaken.


"Skepticism is the first step toward truth."
- Denis Diderot

Diderot, born #onthisday in 1713, is probably best known for editing the "Encyclopédie" - the 'dictionary of human knowledge'.

Find here Diderot's Wikipedia entry (oh irony 🙂 )
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denis_Diderot

Learn more in a 1.5 minute video about this topic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C71vkrsiyKE
==




It's hard to take the legend of Pyrrho seriously. 

"Rather appropriately for a man who claimed to know nothing, little is known about him..."*

Pyrrho

First published Mon Aug 5, 2002; substantive revision Tue Oct 23, 2018

Pyrrho was the starting-point for a philosophical movement known as Pyrrhonism that flourished beginning several centuries after his own time. This later Pyrrhonism was one of the two major traditions of sceptical thought in the Greco-Roman world (the other being located in Plato’s Academy during much of the Hellenistic period). Perhaps the central question about Pyrrho is whether or to what extent he himself was a sceptic in the later Pyrrhonist mold. The later Pyrrhonists claimed inspiration from him; and, as we shall see, there is undeniably some basis for this. But it does not follow that Pyrrho’s philosophy was identical to that of this later movement, or even that the later Pyrrhonists thought that it was identical; the claims of indebtedness that are expressed by or attributed to members of the later Pyrrhonist tradition are broad and general in character (and in Sextus Empiricus’ case notably cautious—see Outlines of Pyrrhonism 1.7), and do not in themselves point to any particular reconstruction of Pyrrho’s thought. It is necessary, therefore, to focus on the meager evidence bearing explicitly upon Pyrrho’s own ideas and attitudes. How we read this evidence will also, of course, affect our conception of Pyrrho’s relations with his own philosophical contemporaries and predecessors... (Stanford Encyclopedia, continues)

==

Pyrrho not an idiot

"Pyrrho ignored all the apparent dangers of the world because he questioned whether they really were dangers, ‘avoiding nothing and taking no precautions, facing everything as it came, wagons, precipices, dogs’. Luckily he was always accompanied by friends who could not quite manage the same enviable lack of concern and so took care of him, pulling him out of the way of oncoming traffic and so on. They must have had a hard job of it, because ‘often . . . he would leave his home and, telling no one, would go roaming about with whomsoever he chanced to meet’. 

Two centuries after Pyrrho’s death, one of his defenders tossed aside these tales and claimed that ‘although he practised philosophy on the principles of suspension of judgement, he did not act carelessly in the details of everyday life’. This must be right. Pyrrho may have been magnificently imperturbable—Epicurus was said to have admired him on this account, and another fan marvelled at the way he had apparently ‘unloosed the shackles of every deception and persuasion’. But he was surely not an idiot. He apparently lived to be nearly ninety, which would have been unlikely if the stories of his recklessness had been true."



"The Dream of Reason: A History of Western Philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance by Anthony Gottlieb -- a very good history of western philosophy. 

==


A character in Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, identified as The Ruler of the Universe, has been called a solipsist. I think he sounds more like a Pyrrhonian skeptic... "I say what it occurs to me to say when I hear people say things. More I cannot say..."

Keep humanity weird

I agree with Agnes about Enlightenment... and her remark about individualism reminds me of Brian Cohen. "You're all individuals... I'm not!"

And helping each other figure out how to be a person? That's just CoPhilosophy.

…As an ethicist, I believe that the Enlightenment represented genuine progress in moral ideas. Human beings really do have an innate dignity, derived from our power of reason, that constrains the ways that we are permitted to treat one another. I also agree, at least in some ways, with the influential critiques put forward by thinkers such as Hegel and Nietzsche and Schopenhauer, to the effect that the Enlightenment overemphasized individualism.

Being a person is too hard a job to leave to a single person. We can't do it on our own, not even as adults. Figuring out how to be a person is a group project, and we have to help each other. But the catch is that we don't really know what we are doing, so sometimes we end up hurting each other instead. When you are weird, you experience this hurt. Social categories have been poorly constructed and fail to conduce to human happiness...



Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Aristotle's Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life by Edith Hall

Aristotle "developed a sophisticated, humane program for becoming a happy person, and it remains valid to this day. Aristotle provides everything you need to avoid the realization of the dying protagonist of Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich (1886), that he has wasted much of his life scaling the social ladder, and putting self-interest above compassion and community values, all the while married to a woman he dislikes. Facing his imminent death, he hates his closest family members, who won't even talk to him about it. Aristotelian ethics encompass everything modern thinkers associate with subjective happiness: self-realization, finding "a meaning," and the "flow" of creative involvement with life, or "positive emotion." 1 

This book presents Aristotle's time-honored ethics in contemporary language. It applies Aristotle's lessons to several practical real-life challenges: decision-making, writing a job application, communicating in an interview, using Aristotle's chart of Virtues and Vices to analyze your own character, resisting temptation, and choosing friends and partners. 

Wherever you are in life, Aristotle's ideas can make you happier. Few philosophers, mystics, psychologists, or sociologists have ever done much more than restate his fundamental perceptions. But he stated them first, better, more clearly, and in a more holistic way than anyone subsequently. 

Each part of his prescription for being happy relates to a different phase of human life, but also intersects with all the others. Becoming subjectively happy as an individual, Aristotle insisted, is your unique and momentous responsibility. It is also a great gift—it is within most people's power, regardless of their circumstances, to decide to become happier…"

— Aristotle's Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life by Edith Hall
https://a.co/e6qODqD

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Monday, January 27, 2025

Agnes Callard on Socrates

The U of Chicago prof and author of Open Socrates: The Case for a Philosophical Life, and our upcoming Lyceum speaker, interviewed by Zena Hitz, author of Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life. She defends arguing Socratically, not to be confused with arguing Monty Python-ishly...
 

And, another interview: 

Argue Your Way to a Fuller Life
Refute your friends and family, never be satisfied. Philosopher Agnes Callard on life lessons from Socrates...

Callard discovered Socrates in high school, and by the time she was a senior in college, she was obsessed. “I didn’t just want to interpret Socrates,” she writes. “I wanted to be Socrates.” She started hanging out on the front steps of the Art Institute of Chicago and would walk up to strangers and ask if they wanted to have a philosophical discussion. At first, they were intrigued, but then they just wanted to get away from her. “I’ve kind of spent my whole life since then trying to figure out how to do that but not make people run away from me,” she said with a laugh... (continues)

Questions Jan 28

Remember, you don't have to respond directly to my questions (but some of them will be on the exam, so you should in anyt case look for the texts that address them. If you can come up with relevant comments on your own, or additional discussion questions, please do.


Aristotle-LHP 2. Rec: FL 3-4. HWT Sections 1-3 

In CoPhi it's time again for Aristotle. A couple of years ago I talked about him in the Honors Fall Lecture Series [slideshow*]... and noticed some affinity between Aristotle and Socrates, maybe more than between Socrates and his supposed devotee Plato... (continues)

==

LHP 2

1. What point was Aristotle making when he wrote of swallows and summer? Do you agree?

2. What philosophical difference between Plato and Aristotle is implied by The School of Athens? Whose side are you on, Plato's or Aristotle's?

3. What is eudaimonia, and how can we increase our chances of achieving it, and in relation only to what? Do you think you've achieved it?

4. What reliance is completely against the spirit of Aristotle's research? Are there any authorities you always defer to? Why or why not?

FL
5. What did Sir Walter Raleigh help invent (other than cigarettes) that contributed to "Fantasyland" as we know it today? Was he a "stupid git," as the Beatles song says?


6. What was western civilization's first great ad campaign? Does advertising and the constant attempt to sell things to people have a negative impact on life in the USA?

7. What did Sir Francis Bacon say about human opinion and superstition? Do you ever attempt to overcome your own confirmation bias?

8. Which early settlers are typically ignored in the mythic American origin story? Also: what about the early "settlers" who were brought here against their wills and enslaved?

9. What had mostly ended in Europe, but not America, by the 1620s, and what did the Puritans think would happen "any minute now"? Why do you think people keep making this mistake?

HWT
10. What is pratyaksa in classic Indian philosophy, and how does the Upanishads say to seek it? 

11. There is widespread belief in India that the practice of yoga can lead to what? Do you think it can?

12. What is metanoetics, in Japanese philosophy?

13. What does ineffable mean?  Is it possible, though paradoxical, to use words to indicate something you can't put into words?

14. Unlike the west, religion in Japan is typically not about what? And what is it about to you?
==

Aristotle on slavery and the subjugation of women

Aristotle was generally a brilliant ethicist, BUT…

"Aristotle wrote Europe's greatest foundational works of ethics and politics, but only in the context of free Greek males: everyone else was of a lesser nature. This meant women, of course, but also those he categorized as naturally born for enslavement. The way to identify such a person, according to Aristotle, was this: "Someone is . . . a slave by nature if he is capable of becoming the property of another (and for this reason does actually become another's property) and if he participates in reason to the extent of apprehending it in another, though destitute of it himself." This last clause was mainly to distinguish enslaved people from non-human animals, who could not even recognize reason when they saw it. With that proviso, the main point here was that you could spot those who were meant to be enslaved from the fact that they were currently enslaved. For them, clearly, "the condition of slavery is both beneficial and just." Aristotle further clarified the situation by comparing enslavement to the equally natural dominance of men over women. Aristotle's "slave nature" theory was used to justify centuries of later exploitation."

— Humanly Possible: Seven Hundred Years of Humanist Freethinking, Inquiry, and Hope by Sarah Bakewell

==

Aristotle on the work of a human being

"If we posit the work of a human being as a certain life, and this is an activity of soul and actions accompanied by reason, the work of a serious person is to do these things well and nobly. …
But, in addition, in a complete life. For one swallow does not make a spring, nor does one day. And in this way, one day or a short time does not make someone blessed and happy either."
==

"Beyond the reach of social anxiety"

As Eleanor Roosevelt said, "You wouldn't worry so much about what other people think of you, if you realized how seldom they do."
"...in order to feel social anxiety, you have to believe that other people’s negative opinions of you are worth getting upset about, that it’s really bad if they dislike you and really important to win their approval. Even people  who suffer from severe social anxiety disorder (social phobia) tend to feel “normal” when speaking to children or to their close friends about trivial matters, with a few exceptions. Nevertheless, they feel highly anxious when talking to people they think are very important about subjects they think are very important. If your fundamental worldview, by contrast, assumes that your status in the eyes of others is of negligible importance, then it follows that you should be beyond the reach of social anxiety."

How to Think Like a Roman Emperor: The Stoic Philosophy of Marcus Aurelius by Donald J. Robertson


 

*

Aristotle at Existential Comics... Aristotle in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP)... The moral and intellectual virtues listed...


Walt’s wisdom

"Love the earth and sun and the animals… re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul…"

Whitman's timeless advice on living a vibrant and rewarding life

https://www.themarginalian.org/2016/05/31/walt-whitman-leaves-of-grass-preface/

Why philosophy. And how.

"…Billions of years ago, some stars exploded. The resulting heavy atoms swirled together into planets orbiting new stars. Pieces of those planets came to life, opened their eyes. Some learned to talk. They learned to wonder about their place in the cosmos, and about themselves, and about their values, and about their capacity to wonder about the cosmos, themselves and their values. They peered past the limits of their knowledge, asking ambitious questions they could not fully answer, appreciating both the importance of those questions and their incapacity to fully answer them. Each of us, when we philosophise, become the means by which the Universe, after billions of years, wakes to itself, momentarily contemplating itself in doubt and amazement. Nothing is more intrinsically valuable. Nothing is more worthy of reverence and awe."


https://aeon.co/essays/if-you-ask-why-youre-a-philosopher-and-youre-awesome

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Sunday, January 26, 2025

You Know Emerson and Thoreau. Why Not Their Female Counterparts?

…"Bright Circle" brings together five women associated with Transcendentalism — a school of thought that arose in mid-19th-century Massachusetts guided by some key tenets: a desire to connect with God through an intense encounter with the natural world; a commitment to the individual spirit; a resistance to conformity; and a sense that all people possessed the capacity to experience divine inspiration, if they nurtured the imagination to perceive it. Some of these women were related, by blood or marriage; they read one another's writings and sensed affinities, both in their thinking and in their subordinate societal position...

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/books/review/randall-fuller-bright-circle.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

How a German Thinker Explains MAGA Morality

"…While Trumpists are among the most vicious voices in the public square, merciless aggression is sadly common across the political spectrum, especially at the extremes. I've seen far-left activists utterly demonize their opponents. Any deviation from orthodoxy is perceived as evil, and evil must be utterly eradicated.

And there's no humility in cancel culture — regardless of whether it comes from left or right.

Because our civics depends on our ethics, we should be teaching ethics right alongside civics. Sadly, we're failing at both tasks, and our baser nature is telling millions of Americans that cruelty is good, if it helps us win, and kindness is evil, if it weakens our cause. That is the path of destruction. As the prophet Isaiah said, "Woe to those who call evil good and good evil."

Woe to them, yes, but as friend-enemy politics dominates our discourse, tears our families and communities to shreds and reshapes our national morality, a darker thought crosses my mind.

Woe to us all."


—David French


Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Saturday, January 25, 2025

The Best Philosophy Books of 2024 - Five Books Expert Recommendations

We ask our philosophy editor Nigel Warburton to recommend five of the most notable new books in his specialist area at the end of every year. In 2024, his nominations for the best philosophy books of 2024 include an introduction to the work of Karl Marx, a study of sentience in animals, and an examination of suicide through the work of the Greek tragedians...

https://fivebooks.com/best-books/best-philosophy-books-2024-nigel-warburton/

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

Friday, January 24, 2025

A different side of Bonnaroo

High and Dry

Sobriety and transcendence at Bonnaroo
by Barrett Swanson
 
"...I joined the Soberoo encampment, the bone-dry haven at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, the four-day concert in Manchester, Tennessee, an event otherwise known for its anything-goes spirit and Dionysian revelry.

Apart from camping together in a labyrinth of tents, Soberoovians—as the local argot has it—hold a quartet of daily twelve-step-style meetings, although they claim no official affiliation with Al-Anon, NA, or AA. Since 2002, this assortment of music lovers has vowed to remain sober for the duration of the festival, and while they cater mostly to veterans of the recovery community, the group also functions as a makeshift relief effort, an asylum for those regular Bonnaroovians whom the week of hallucinogenic indulgence will bring to a genuine rock bottom..." (continues)

https://harpers.org/archive/2025/02/high-and-dry-sobriety-transcendence-bonnaroo-barrett-swanson/

College Students Need to Grow Up. Schools Need to Let Them.

We should look at this later this semester, when we read Why Grow Up by Susan Neiman.

"… the majority of college students — 84 percent, according to one study — don't view themselves as full adults, nor do their parents…"

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/03/opinion/college-students-adulting.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

==
And in the NYTimes Magazine:

‘The Rizzler’ and the Creeping Childishness of Pop Culture
Some corners of American entertainment are becoming worrisomely infantile

"...Today, at age 30, I often feel ancient — not because my 20s are behind me but because I routinely fail to understand some of my peers. It seems to me that many of them are exhibiting troubling preoccupations with infantilism. Perpetual adolescence seems to fit them like a glove.

We aren’t wholly to blame for succumbing to protracted states of arrested development; they have, to some extent, been inflicted upon us by our environment. Inflation, the cost of housing and epic student debt make it feel too expensive to aspire to adult responsibilities like property or children, or else it’s too hard to promise yourself hockey-stick career growth when layoffs loom around every corner. Still, I refuse to accept the ease with which an entire generation appears to have embraced baby stuff as a balm.

The most nagging example of this, unfortunately, requires me to discuss an actual child: a feisty social media phenomenon called “the Rizzler.” I should specify in advance that I do not wish to spearhead a smear campaign against someone who probably can’t do fractions yet; what I fear and abhor is what the Rizzler’s widespread popularity represents..." https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/22/magazine/the-rizzler-costco-guys.html

Moral holidays

I said the other day in class that if I had to pick just one word for my personal philosophy, it would be meliorism

If I could have two more words, they'd be moral holiday... A "license to chill," in the late Jimmy Buffet's language. But don't mistake that for moral license.


"I fully believe in the legitimacy of taking moral holidays." William James 

"You need a holiday." James William Buffet

 
 

"...we have a right ever and anon to take a moral holiday, to let the world wag in its own way, feeling that its issues are in better hands than ours and are none of our business.

The universe is a system of which the individual members may relax their anxieties occasionally, in which the don't-care mood is also right for men, and moral holidays in order—that, if I mistake not, is part, at least, of what the Absolute is 'known-as,' that is the great difference in our particular experiences which his being true makes for us, that is part of his cash-value when he is pragmatically interpreted... 

My belief in the Absolute, based on the good it does me, must run the gauntlet of all my other beliefs. Grant that it may be true in giving me a moral holiday. Nevertheless, as I conceive it,—and let me speak now confidentially, as it were, and merely in my own private person,—it clashes with other truths of mine whose benefits I hate to give up on its account. It happens to be associated with a kind of logic of which I am the enemy, I find that it entangles me in metaphysical paradoxes that are inacceptable, etc., etc.. But as I have enough trouble in life already without adding the trouble of carrying these intellectual inconsistencies, I personally just give up the Absolute. I just TAKE my moral holidays; or else as a professional philosopher, I try to justify them by some other principle.

If I could restrict my notion of the Absolute to its bare holiday-giving value, it wouldn't clash with my other truths. But we cannot easily thus restrict our hypotheses. They carry supernumerary features, and these it is that clash so. My disbelief in the Absolute means then disbelief in those other supernumerary features, for I fully believe in the legitimacy of taking moral holidays..." William James, Pragmatism Lec. 2-What Pragmatism Means


 

My late mentor John Lachs, on Royce and James and "moral holidays"...