All entries by this author

Taliban Law Blocked in NWFP, Pakistan *

Dec 15th, 2006 | Filed by

Supreme Court instructed the provincial governor not to sign the bill.… Read the rest



Christians Sue to Block Gay Rights Legislation *

Dec 15th, 2006 | Filed by

Colin Hart of Christian Institute said concerns of religious people had been ‘trampled over.’… Read the rest



From the Researchers to the Flacks to Hitchens *

Dec 15th, 2006 | Filed by

In today’s public discourse, science is treated not as a search for truth, but as source of edifying fables. … Read the rest



Nigel Warburton Interviews Mel Thompson *

Dec 15th, 2006 | Filed by

‘Some of my most bored moments have been trying to read those who think that the more clever and obscure they sound, the more profound their thought.’… Read the rest



Nigel Warburton Interviews Jonathan Wolff *

Dec 15th, 2006 | Filed by

The best combine imagination and argument; a new landscape of ideas, and how to defend it.… Read the rest



Adversarial saints

Dec 14th, 2006 5:23 pm | By

Robert Irwin says some amusing things in this interview with Scott McLemee about Irwin’s book on Said’s Orientalism. Scott asked what made a criticism of Orientalism seem worthwhile or necessary enough for a book.

I got irritated by the way some people in Eng Lit departments seemed to regard themselves as adversarial saints, robed in white and “speaking truth to power” because they read Conrad, Austen and Flaubert in strange ways. Whereas academics who read Masudi, Tabari and Ibn Khaldun were necessarily robed in black.

Yep. The adversarial sainthood thing is a big – a huge – part of why descriptions of postmodernism by fans of postmodernism tend to be so irritating. The reek of self-imputed adversarial sainthood is … Read the rest



Scott McLemee Interviews Robert Irwin *

Dec 14th, 2006 | Filed by

‘Said, as literary theorist, was prone to the sweeping generalization. Irwin, as historian, is the partisan of noisome little facts.’… Read the rest



Hilary Putnam Reviews Goldstein on Spinoza *

Dec 14th, 2006 | Filed by

‘Rebecca Goldstein’s Betraying Spinoza speaks directly to my puzzlement.’… Read the rest



Arab Women Unequal in Health and Education *

Dec 14th, 2006 | Filed by

Tangled as it is with religion and culture, the issue of the status of women is a political minefield.… Read the rest



Harvard Drops ‘Reason and Faith’ Requirement *

Dec 14th, 2006 | Filed by

Philosopher notes Moral Reasoning can cover ‘what we do and do not have reason to do and believe.’… Read the rest



Secular Nepal *

Dec 14th, 2006 | Filed by

Hindu activists are demanding that Nepal be declared a Hindu state again. … Read the rest



What to Say When You’re Wrong *

Dec 14th, 2006 | Filed by

‘He just had some kind of silly positivistic notions of science, he doesn’t know what science is.’… Read the rest



No chocolate, no compass, no matches

Dec 13th, 2006 7:42 pm | By

I’ve been wondering what ‘postmodernism’ is exactly. I don’t mean what its claims are, I mean what it is itself. What kind of thing is it? What box does it go in? It’s not a discipline. It’s not a kind of philosophy, like pragmatism or utilitarianism. It’s not a kind of inquiry. What is it? I realize I don’t even know, and I’m not sure other people do either, including postmodernists themselves. Their descriptions of postmodernism tend to be notably vague around the edges. Evasive, a hostile witness might say. Like this one from the hilarious article on the reception of ‘Deconstructing the evidence-based discourse in health sciences: truth, power and fascism’ by Holmes et al. last summer, the one … Read the rest



Toppness of WTM News in Wales *

Dec 13th, 2006 | Filed by

Quiet place, Wales.… Read the rest



Shalom Lappin Replies to Jacqueline Rose *

Dec 13th, 2006 | Filed by

Criticising Zionism is entirely legitimate; attempting to pass these criticisms off as therapeutic advice is not.… Read the rest



On Debating Torture *

Dec 13th, 2006 | Filed by

‘To insist on one view at the expense of the other is necessarily to violate deeply held moral intuitions.’… Read the rest



Chen Ziming Free After 17 Years *

Dec 13th, 2006 | Filed by

Dream was to create a civil society of lobby groups and NGOs with a voice able to challenge the party.… Read the rest



Opposition to Amendments to Hudood Ordinance *

Dec 13th, 2006 | Filed by

Pakistan’s 1979 law against rape that punished rape victims and gave legal safeguards to rapists.… Read the rest



Why Truth Matters Most Underrated Book *

Dec 13th, 2006 | Filed by

Prospect cites chord struck with ‘liberal neocons’. Wot?… Read the rest



Numero Uno

Dec 12th, 2006 6:53 pm | By

Say what you will, but having the top underrated book of the year according to Prospect is pretty good fun. Also a little surprising. We’ve tended to think of it more from the other direction. Not that it was overrated! No no – don’t run away with that idea. But that we were (modest to a fault as we are) rather surprised that it got such good reviews. So good that it wasn’t like trying to find an eyelash on a football pitch to pick out extracts for quoting in advertisements. We had spares. We had more than enough. And that was a surprise. (Why? I don’t know, exactly. Maybe partly just because it’s hard to tell how a … Read the rest