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July 12, 2020

Apologies for being slow to post these. 

 

 

A good review of Eduardo Porter’s new book AMERICAN POISON.  

 

“There is something essential about the suffering of black people that can’t be reconciled with the suffering of other people.”...

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Small post on Big Science

July 08, 2020

Scientific collaboration is improperly characterized as “growing” these days; it is all growed up.  Most "science" in the sense of physical and natural science is done in teams and groups (this varies between disciplines, but it seems pretty common across all the sciences).  How you coordinate the discrete capacities of the individual scientists has fallen a bit into background, as the processes and their replicability speak to an extra-subjective character to the knowledge thereby produced.  I think of this by reading this morning about...

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Some links

July 05, 2020

A quiet Sunday, and are you looking for reading?  Look no more:

 

Thorstein Veblen a century ago diagnosed what is ailing the university now—too much presence of businessmen trying to run things.  These authors don’t like that.  I tend to agree, though I think they maybe don’t realize that a person with a name like “Richard F. Teichgraeber III” is as likely to appear in one...

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The Fourth

July 04, 2020

I am so deeply American, in the insecure but blustery way that some Americans are taught to be American, that it has taken me all my adult life to develop a more mature picture of what it means to be American.  (This isn't at all the fault of my parents, who were deeply committed to my sister and I becoming aware of the amplitude of the world, and the possibilities for goodness and value to be discovered everywhere; it is my adolescence.)  And of course I'm still developing into a sufficiently adequate resemblance to "maturity."  Like my country, I...

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Books I'm reading: Wordsworth's THE PRELUDE

July 03, 2020

One of the things I’ve been doing on sabbatical is reading more widely and deeply in books that I would consider classics, but which are not necessarily of immediate professional interest in my field at the moment.

I always try to do this, but sabbaticals and summer often provide the most expensive opportunities to explore such works. Even so, I do not try to go up them down, but sip them slowly reading a bit every day, slowly chipping away at...

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Edmund Burke on intergenerational responsibility (small post)

June 29, 2020

Here's a nice passage from Edmund Burke, on the idea of society as a contract across generations, though he doesn't do enough I think to distinguish society from the state.  I found the passage from the e-TOC of a weird journal I get, Population and Development Review, it's about demographics, I recognize that's not everybody's cup of tea but...

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Economic precarity and the pandemic

June 28, 2020

Reading Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year, and I come across this:

It must be confessed that though the plague was chiefly among the poor, yet were the poor the most venturous and fearless of it, and went about their employment with a sort of brutal courage; I must call it so, for it was founded neither on religion or prudence; scarce did they use any caution, but run into any business which they could get employment in, though it was the most hazardous. Such was that of tending the sick, watching houses shut up, carrying infected persons...

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