(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
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Metaphysical Animals
Monday, March 14, 2022
something more
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In praise of William James
“The Varieties of Religious Experience” is a generous and endlessly insightful book about human nature.
About 10 years ago I was hurting; not from a broken heart so much as an exhausted one, having spent several of the previous years caring about people whose own hearts and minds were in states of distress. When I picked up “The Varieties of Religious Experience,” an edited version of 20 lectures that James delivered in Edinburgh in 1901 and 1902, I wasn’t expecting it to be a profound balm, but that’s what it was.
I immediately read more work by and about James. I began to verbally annotate everyday life to friends by referring to things he had done or said, with the same frequency with which I had once (no less annoyingly, I’m sure) called on scenes from “The Simpsons.” He was a Swiss Army knife of psychological and emotional insight.
It’s a cliché for people unswayed by religion to still believe in William James, to allow him access to their souls because of the way he sneaks in through their brains. A psychologist and philosopher (and oldest brother of the novelist Henry), James was not a follower of any church, and had little academic interest in institutional religion, but he was obsessively curious about the inner experiences of believers... (continues, nyt)
Beyond ‘Varieties’: A William James Starter Kit
‘A PLURALISTIC UNIVERSE’ Another series of lectures; a bit more wonky in its case against absolute idealism in philosophy, but still accessible.
‘PRAGMATISM’ James was one of the originators of this school of philosophy, and here he describes and defends it.
‘THE SELECTED LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES’ Elizabeth Hardwick writes in her introduction that James’s letters show him to be “benevolent, loving, loyal and completely without pompousness or self-importance.”
‘WILLIAM JAMES: IN THE MAELSTROM OF AMERICAN MODERNISM’ If you’re like me, reading James will make you want to know more about him. Robert D. Richardson’s first-rate biography is the place to start.
nyt
Sunday, March 13, 2022
Fantasyland, Putin-style
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Saturday, March 12, 2022
Dewey knew how to teach democracy and we must not forget it
Friday, March 11, 2022
The Return of Metaphysics: Hegel vs Kant » IAI TV
Philosophy is not an empirical enterprise. Its traditional claim is to be a form of knowledge about reality, even though it does not rely on observation about that reality. If there is philosophical knowledge, it is a priori knowledge, and if it is knowledge, it claims something true about reality not accessible to empirical observation or confirmation. Philosophy's claims to a priori knowledge seems to lead us inevitably to what has always been, until the last two-hundred and fifty years or so, the center of philosophy, its inescapable "big" question: metaphysics... (continues)
Questions MAR 15
LH
1. What did John Rawls call the thought experiment he believed would yield fair and just principles, and what was its primary device?
3. What was the Imitation Game, and who devised a thought experiment to oppose it?
4. What, according to Searle, is involved in truly understanding something?
5. How do some philosophers think we might use computers to achieve immortality?
6. What does Peter Singer say we should sacrifice, to help strangers?
7. Why did Singer first become famous?
8. How does Singer represent the best tradition in philosophy?
Susan Neiman, Why Grow Up? Subversive Thoughts for an Infantile Age (WGU -p.35)
1. Being grown-up is widely considered to be what?
2. Why did Kant say we choose immaturity?
3. Why is judgement important?
4. What is "the most pernicious bit of idealization"?
5. What is philosophy's greatest task?
FL
1. What changed for pro wrestling in the 1980s?
2. What happened in the 1980s to make dressing up for Halloween a "thing"?
3. What former child star had a ranch called Neverland in middle age?
4. How did the advent of home video, cable, and the Internet make adults more childlike?
Discussion Questions:- Do you think of growing up as "a matter of renouncing your hopes and dreams"? 1
- Do you like the "well-meaning Uncle's" advice? Or the Rolling Stones'? 4
- Is Kant right, in "What is Enlightenment?," about why people "choose immaturity"? 5
- If distractions, especially "since the invention of cyberspace," are "literally limitless," is Enlightenment in Kant's sense a realistic goal for most people? 9
- Do you agree that it takes courage to think for yourself? 11
- Is travel necessary for growing up? 13-16
- Is Larry Summers wrong about language-learning? 16
- Do you believe the best time of life is between the ages of 18 and 28? 20
- How innocent should childhood be? What do you think of the way French children were raised in the 17th century? 24
- Do you wish you'd had a Samoan childhood? Do you think tests in school prepare you for life? 27
- Is it bad to be "WEIRD" (In the sense of the acronym)? 32
- COMMENT?: "...the important decisions are made by others we cannot even name. Or did you choose a world in which oil companies profit from wrecking the planet? Women are stoned for adultery or murdered for going to school? Children die of easily preventable diseases or are collaterally damaged by drones? Do your choices make a difference to any of these?" 34
Arts & Letters Daily search results for “john rawls” (3)
Arts & Letters Daily search results for “ alan turing” (2)
Arts & Letters Daily search results for “john searle” (2)
Turing believes machines think
Turing lies with men
Therefore machines do not think."
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Jaron Lanier on the future of virtual reality etc. - and he says AI is not a thing... On Point 11.29.17... Dawn of the New Everything
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“To protest about bullfighting in Spain, the eating of dogs in South Korea, or the slaughter of baby seals in Canada while continuing to eat eggs from hens who have spent their lives crammed into cages, or veal from calves who have been deprived of their mothers, their proper diet, and the freedom to lie down with their legs extended, is like denouncing apartheid in South Africa while asking your neighbors not to sell their houses to blacks.”
- Out for
#GivingTuesday, Animal Charity Evaluators has a new list of recommended organizations working for animals: animalcharityevaluators.org/blog/introduci…
Peter Singer (@PeterSinger) | |
"Philosophy Changing Lives" - an interview with me on Why? Radio: goo.gl/ztR4m9 |