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March 25th, 2011 | Filed under: Philosophyne
Discovered this interesting interview with Richard Rorty from the Dutch TV series, “Van de Schoonheid en de Troost” on VPRO, first broadcast in June 2000. It’s interesting that they have a portion with him bird watching. Rorty was an avid amateur ornithologist, and spoke very directly about his appreciation for the wild.
December 5th, 2010 | Filed under: News, Philosophyne, The Written World
There’s a cottage industry that seems to grow with every new generation of scholars with the capture, tagging and release of canonical texts. From the first hermeneutics to narratology to New Historicism to the great unknown of Google Scholar and its agenda, there’s an insistent sour desire to make the “outputs” of interpreters determinate. There’s an insistent faith that as each new strata of complexity is identified as texts are burrowed into, the goods scholars produce will yield an ordered surplus to make the work of the next generation easier. Or more realistically, to render it impossible, since what’s at faith is the goal to standardize meaning in a text.
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November 19th, 2010 | Filed under: News, Philosophyne
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of the The Black Swan, former options trader, and someone who may end up this generation’s Dr.Johnson, if only for his ability to virulently and consistently upend the disingenuous, has a new book of aphorisms I’m keen to examine: The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms. Taleb is often credited with the common sense warning of not trusting narrative complexity or naively believing in determinateness. He sometimes seems a buoyant Cassandra, with the training and the articulation of someone who knows how financial analysis and trading is really done; namely, by instinct and public choice. Here he is on the Economist speaking a little more fluidly on “anti-fragility” and later on Bloomberg TV is full defiance.
May 24th, 2010 | Filed under: News, Philosophyne If anything is more pervasive in our cultures today than the concept of technology to explain, legitimate and predict or enforce visions for the future I think it is the concept of risk. Risk is a modern concept, but it can be found in the ideas of dread, threat, uncertainty… What is new today is that understanding risk is felt to be determinate. As people think they can predict their own understanding of risk — e.g. how people react, how systems develop, how forces may counter each other — so too the idea of risk somehow becomes more tame. It’s very odd. The more we try to reconcile ourselves to indeterminacy, to the irrationality of nature, the more we want to humanize risk. We can’t accept risk so we need to buffer it’s equivocalness by rationalizing our reactions.
There is a growing frustration among some people who are aware of this perhaps innate inclination to soften and frame risk in finance. Alfred North Whitehead said once that science was fundamentally an activity predicated on faith — a faith in the rational, “that there is an underlying order to the universe” that can be discovered. In our times, that faith might similarly and perversely be felt by financiers who need to convince clients and the general public that the faith in the market can likewise be rational. It’s not true.
May 17th, 2010 | Filed under: Everyday, Personal, Philosophyne It seems there are a large number of people with a wide variety of opinions about what is Philosophy even today. Simon Critchley of Dead Philosopher’s fame has started an opinion column in the NYT with the heavy title of the Stone where the opening topic is “What Is a Philosopher?” It’s a fine overview that hits the regular ideas minus the vocation. One of the conditions of possibility for Philosophy it seems are to proceed as if Time is not a commodity. In effect, it’s the old theoria vs praxis proposition something I’m interested in exploring. Basically, I want to know more about how Philosophy becomes Philosophy as a discipline.
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