A Petition, a Retraction, a Clarification *

Dec 31st, 2006 | Filed by

Panda’s Thumb clears things up.… Read the rest



Many Muslim Women Refuse to Wear Veils *

Dec 31st, 2006 | Filed by

‘seeing younger women adopt the veil in its various forms is a strange and troubling experience.’… Read the rest



A C Grayling on the Deaths of Tyrants *

Dec 31st, 2006 | Filed by

Delay diminishes the one-time tyrant to a pathetic figure; his execution becomes a moment of bathos.… Read the rest



Wanna Believe in Ghosts *

Dec 31st, 2006 | Filed by

It’s all about how you see the world, so I’ll just see it the ghosty way.… Read the rest



How Old Grand Canyon? *

Dec 31st, 2006 | Filed by

Old Grand Canyon fine; how you?… Read the rest



Ethnification and violence

Dec 30th, 2006 7:59 pm | By

Cass Sunstein points out that ethnic hatreds are rarely primordial.

Part of what we have been witnessing is a kind of rapid “ethnification,” in the form of a social cascade…[S]ome societies show slow or rapid ethnification, as people devote more of their efforts to showcasing their ethnic identity…As Hitler obtained power, many German Jews became more closely self-identified as Jewish, in part for reasons of self-protection. A key factor here is whether the relevant social norms impose pressure to identify in ethnic terms, or not to do so. It may be “politically correct” to broadcast one’s ethnicity, or it may be politically correct to hide it. Sometimes the governing norms shift abruptly. When this is so, there can be

Read the rest


Don’t forget Hazlitt

Dec 30th, 2006 7:43 pm | By

Antonella Gambotto-Burke, reviewing A C Grayling’s new book of essays seems to appreciate the essay as a genre. Very good.

The form, as he points out, has a distinguished history in the literary and philosophical tradition: Herodotus, Pliny, Plutarch, Michel de Montaigne, Francis Bacon, Samuel Johnson, Thomas De Quincey. The premise? To essay contributions to the one great conversation is to offer “pieces for a mosaic that would in sum depict something true about the human condition…

She doesn’t include Hazlitt though. I’m guessing that Grayling did, since he’s written a book about him, and anyone who’s read even one Hazlitt essay knows he is one of the stone geniuses of the form. He’s the single most under-read under-rated unaccountably … Read the rest



Ethnic Hatreds are Rarely Primordial *

Dec 30th, 2006 | Filed by

A key factor is whether the relevant social norms impose pressure to identify in ethnic terms.… Read the rest



Hajj Pilgrims Stone the Devil *

Dec 30th, 2006 | Filed by

Good, glad that’s taken care of.… Read the rest



A C Grayling’s New Book of Essays *

Dec 30th, 2006 | Filed by

The form has a distinguished history in the literary and philosophical tradition: Montaigne, Bacon, Johnson.… Read the rest



The Best Upcoming Science Books *

Dec 30th, 2006 | Filed by

John Gribbin, Lee Smolin, Steve Jones, Oliver Morton, Marcus Chown, Heather Ewing.… Read the rest



No Shortage of Pseudoscience in 2006 *

Dec 30th, 2006 | Filed by

The Brain Gym, the Dore program to cure dyslexia, magical magnetic bandages on the NHS.… Read the rest



Queen Beatrix defends free speech

Dec 29th, 2006 9:18 pm | By

The discussion of what the Statement of Academic Freedom means, of what it means to cover and what (if anything) it doesn’t mean to cover, goes on in comments, so I wanted to add a point or two.

The trouble is that it’s rather carefully worded in such a way that it’s hard to figure out exactly what it does and doesn’t cover. ‘[A]cademics, both inside and outside the classroom, have unrestricted liberty to question and test received wisdom and to put forward controversial and unpopular opinions, whether or not these are deemed offensive’ and ‘academic institutions have no right to curb the exercise of this freedom by members of their staff’. What is ‘received wisdom’ and what are ‘opinions’? … Read the rest



Sam Harris on Ten Myths about Atheism *

Dec 29th, 2006 | Filed by

‘Atheists are arrogant.’ Nonsense; we’re far too wonderful to be arrogant.… Read the rest



Michel Thieren on Medicine on Death Row *

Dec 28th, 2006 | Filed by

On 19 December medicine, public health, and humanitarian aid were publicly executed in Libya. … Read the rest



Laurie Garrett on The Benghazi Six *

Dec 28th, 2006 | Filed by

‘The nurses were beaten with many-stranded wire, for a long time and painfully,’ Tachev said.… Read the rest



Fred Halliday: Letter from Jerusalem *

Dec 28th, 2006 | Filed by

The phrase ‘unfinished business’ is on many lips, but what this involves is less clear. … Read the rest



Eichmann was a Careerist *

Dec 28th, 2006 | Filed by

Careerism may be as lethal as idealism; ordinary vices as lethal as extraordinary ideas.… Read the rest



Freedom to Express Offensive Views *

Dec 28th, 2006 | Filed by

Statement called a ‘rebellion against the regime of political correctness.’… Read the rest



Academics for Academic Freedom *

Dec 28th, 2006 | Filed by

Ray Tallis, Norman Levitt, A C Grayling among the signers.… Read the rest