Then Beggars Would Ride

Feb 10th, 2004 11:13 pm | By

If wishes were horses, if pigs had wings. The world is one way, our desires are another. Hence the joy of fantasy, daydreaming, fairy tales – magic. The book I want is upstairs – how I wish it were here in my hand. The food is in the refrigerator, uncooked – how I wish it were cooked, on plates, on the table. The dishes are dirty, I wish they were clean. X, Y and Z are dead, how I wish they were alive. A and B are ill, I wish they were well. The world is full of suffering, I wish it were not. The suffering is useless, I wish it were useful. Bad things happen, I wish they didn’t.… Read the rest



Socrates was all the Rage

Feb 10th, 2004 10:13 pm | By

I’ve had one or two more thoughts about hipness – or at least fashion. The two are not identical, in fact I suppose you could argue that they’re often opposites – and yet they’re not, are they. They’re both about being Correct in some pathetically slavish way. One a majoritarian sort of way, the other in a minoritarian sort of way – but in each case, slavishly other-directed. Either one involves looking anxiously around the room all the time to check what everyone else is doing. Both involve not wanting to be dorky or geeky or nerdy or out of it; both are all about presentation of self, which has some limitations as an organizing principle for how to live … Read the rest



Desire Under the Skepticism

Feb 10th, 2004 8:21 pm | By

This is an interesting opinion piece from the New York Times yesterday. There are a great many like it out there – the point it makes is of such obvious relevance at the moment.

Our current dispute over the intelligence that led to the invasion of Iraq seems to be yet another illustration of this eternal principle: presidents and other decision makers usually get the intelligence they want. This doesn’t mean that intelligence reports should be ignored, but that they must be viewed with skepticism. And in my years in government service, I had the misfortune to see desire win out over skepticism too many times.

The intelligence they want, you see. The verb is important. It indicates a … Read the rest



Romano on Habermas and Derrida *

Feb 10th, 2004 | Filed by

Both are ‘burdened by chronic philosopher’s ailments.’… Read the rest



French MPs Back Headscarf Ban *

Feb 10th, 2004 | Filed by

Massive majority vote in favour.… Read the rest



Hipness Through the Ages

Feb 9th, 2004 7:06 pm | By

I see that Scott McLemee has a link to B&W on his site – on account of how I had links to his site. It’s like ping-pong. No but really, I feel like mentioning it because he mentions the hipness thing.

We share a distaste for that “hipness unto death” which has become such a nuisance of urban life. Maybe it always was? I don’t know. On reflection, it does seem that Rousseau was complaining about it, quite a while back.

Yeah. And Elizabethan satirists, too, come to think of it. Ben Jonson had great fun with the subject in ‘Every Man in his Humour’ and Ditto Out of his Humour. He was really interested in fashion, and wickedly funny … Read the rest



Seeing Desire Defeat Skepticism *

Feb 9th, 2004 | Filed by

Never forget: we are more likely to ‘know’ what we want to know than what we don’t want to know… Read the rest



GM Crops Blocked *

Feb 9th, 2004 | Filed by

Wales and Scotland reject GM crops.… Read the rest



Low redefinition

Feb 9th, 2004 | By

"Why do wars begin? The simple answer is that they never end."

Tom Palaima, Times Higher Education Supplement, December 12 2003

One of the most commented upon headlines in the world’s press the day after
9/11 appeared in the liberal French newspaper Le Monde: "We are all Americans".
It was a powerful expression of the solidarity of democrats everywhere in the
face of an apparently new and terrifying threat.

No-one who read it, however, would have been foolish enough to take it literally.
Had the article then gone on to claim that, since we were all Americans, French
citizens should be able to vote for US presidents and have the other rights
of US citizens, the absurdity would have been … Read the rest



Religion Aims, Again

Feb 9th, 2004 3:32 am | By

Section 3 of Allen Orr’s review of Richard Dawkins’ A Devil’s Chaplain reminded me of a review of the same book by Michael Ruse. I commented on Ruse’s review last month. Section 3 of Orr’s review deals with Dawkins’ criticisms of religion, and what Orr thinks is wrong with them.

You might argue that what conflicts did occur between science and religion were due to misunderstandings of one or the other. Indeed you might argue that Dawkins’s belief that science and religion can conflict reflects a misconstrual of the nature of religious belief: while scientific beliefs are propositions about the state of the world, religious beliefs are something else—an attempt to attach meaning or value to the world. Religion and

Read the rest


Vitamins

Feb 8th, 2004 9:47 pm | By

Well, we all have our ups and downs. Only natural. Something to do with ions, isn’t it? Or was it ozone? Or the tides? Phases of the moon? Harmonic convergence? Something like that. Or maybe all of them. Who knows.

Anyway, I’m in a pessimistic phase. Or a discouraged one. Nobody reads B&W, I should save my breath to cool my porridge, people who used to like B&W have gone off it, etc. I have a N&C in mind – I have the articles that suggested it at hand, all ready to quote from…But. The brain is on strike. It’s downed tools and is marching up and down with a sign – ‘What am I, a robot?!’ It would write … Read the rest



Another ‘Not a Bright Idea’ *

Feb 8th, 2004 | Filed by

Surprise: hardly anyone wants to be called a ‘Bright’.… Read the rest



New York Review of Books on Dawkins *

Feb 8th, 2004 | Filed by

Discussion of religion unfortunately evasive.… Read the rest



Scientists Criticise Tissue Law *

Feb 8th, 2004 | Filed by

Law requiring written consent for tissue samples from dead will undermine reseach, say scientists.… Read the rest



Amateur Cultural Revolution *

Feb 7th, 2004 | Filed by

Someone is killing off Iraq’s educated class – doctors, intellectuals, human rights workers.… Read the rest



Deepak, Oprah, Merlin, Chicken Soup and All *

Feb 7th, 2004 | Filed by

The sleep of reason begets people who pay attention to gurus.… Read the rest



He’s Not Making This Up *

Feb 7th, 2004 | Filed by

David McKie reviews Francis Wheen’s How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the WorldRead the rest



Where Do Oranges Come From? *

Feb 7th, 2004 | Filed by

What does it mean that George Monbiot has a bowlful? Are they the only fruit?… Read the rest



What is ‘Occidentalism’? *

Feb 6th, 2004 | Filed by

Ian Buruma on dreams of local authenticity and cultural uniqueness.… Read the rest



Conviction Quashed in Abuse Case *

Feb 6th, 2004 | Filed by

More than 100 doubtful cases being investigated by Historic Abuse Appeals Panel.… Read the rest