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Showing posts from 2006

Language

John Ralston Saul uses language deliberately, and many common words are given such weight that we're forced to rethink their definitions. Does the meaning of the word, "free", for example, shift when we talk about "free" trade vs. "free" speech? Our claim to language as citizens is essential to the health of civilization, and its constant exercise is essential to democracy. Perhaps in January, at our next meeting of the PCA, we can take up a few of the following words (in no particular order) which Saul uses very precisely, and whose meanings, I think, stretch our mental muscles: Management; Morality; Imagination; Intuition; Leadership; Reason; Humanism; Ideology; Legitimacy; Democracy; Knowledge; Common Sense; Ethics; Facts; Language; Science; Culture; Methods; Civilization; Citizen; Courtier; Lobbyist; Memory; Expertise; Government; God; Power; Pundit; Groups; Elite; Globalization; Specialization; Contractual Obligations; Disinterest; The Social ...

Fear itself

Fear isn't the object from which we recoil, nor is it the discomfort to which an encounter with the object might lead, nor a motivation to achieve the tranquility of its erasure. These are all rationalizations to an essentially irrational response. Fear, fundamentally, is a reaction which focuses our attention, briefly, on an object or some characteristic of a situation which might do us harm: a snake on the path; the edge of a cliff; a blackening sky and a flash of lightening. But with imagination came the possibility of chronic fear, the manifestation of its triggers in the mind and the pathological holding of them there. These became the seeds of ideology; the containment of a chronic fear became, in time, essential to tribal cohesion; the common fear, popularly nourished, reinforced tribal identity by defining what was inclusive to and what would be excluded from society. Our understanding of “other” began in empathy. The first step to comprehending individuality, self and othe...

Living with Uncertainty

Science, because its technological results are so impressive, is perceived as dealing in certainties . Force does equal mass times acceleration and F=ma is an obviously useful formula. But really, all we've done is assign a name to a conceptual quantity we invented, namely "force", and then defined it in terms of other, measurable quantities. Even the quantities one thinks of as fundamental, like mass and acceleration, are really just conceptual comparisons against some imaginary object at rest or with zero mass. Science as reductionism is the search for the fundamental quantities and relationships from which everything else can be measured. But it has been argued that all measurable quantities, from mass and charge, to space-time itself, are emergent properties which science can never adequately predict (see A Different Universe , by Robert Laughlin). The strength of the rational, scientific method, is that it pays close attention to reality and makes educated guesses a...

Something Heady To Get Us Started

Here's some "light" reading, thoughts inspired by a re-reading of some of John Ralston Saul's books that I thought might be helpful, especially if you're feeling distressed at not being able to categorize his politics or summarize his philosophy... Just as methods have no conscience as to the ends to which they are applied, so too is the written word without compunction as to its reader or conscious of its affects on that reader. The spoken, which is the living reality for which the written serves only as image, chooses its audience and is animated, augmented, pruned, enriched and directed by the Other. The word as spoken is shared, dynamic, social thought . The written word insofar as it represents thought at all is entirely dependant on its being discovered, and read attentively, by the right reader. Without the possibility of modulating form, revising or repeating content in response to the reader, the written word is at best a method for generating thought in ...

The Theme for Jan 07: John Ralston Saul

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For January’s meeting, I thought that rather than discuss a specific book by John Ralston Saul, we could take up several. His views on history, politics, economics and social policy all merge into a philosophy of “civilization” that I find very compelling. He’s also written some fiction, which I’ve never read, but you’re welcome to check those out as well. Voltaire’s Bastards is a history of western civilization, from Cardinal Richelieu to Robert McNamara, from Jesus to the Harvard Business School. On Equilibrium details his epistemological philosophy. Here’s where you learn the place of Reason among other human qualities: Common Sense; Ethics; Imagination; Intuition; and Memory. The Unconscious Civilization takes his ideas about core human qualities and consciousness, and applies them to an understanding of current western democracies. The Collapse of Globalism attacks our obsession with free trade, elevating commerce above broader and more basic social issues, and examines the me...
Thanks, Craig for setting this up and for ushering me into blog-land. Picked up a copy of Voltaire's Bastards yesterday and even though I've only read a dozen pages, it is already affecting how I'm reading the new issue of Time. "Realism" all over the place. This is a great choice for us to discuss. Thanks, Greg. Sylvia

Welcome To Our Blog!

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So - this is it - our very own blog. We can use this as a central location for presenting, collecting and referencing ideas and themes. Over time, a blog gains value as more and more materials are posted and then can be easily located. I encourage everyone in the group with interest, to accept the email invitations I will be sending to participate in this blog. By joining it, you will be able to comment on existing entries and make your own. I apologize in advance for the series of steps you may have to go through in order to create your own blog entries . I wish this could be effortless. I chose this blogger tool after reviewing and using several, and think it is among the best. Unfortunately, all of the blogger tools require some sort of registration process. I've set this blog to not be included in blog indexes. This means, that although the blog is available to anyone with the address, it will be nearly impossible for someone to find it based only on the information it contai...

Our First Meeting

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We did it! We accomplished so much in our first meeting and the PCA * is as official as it needs to be. We shared pizza and champagne and our happiness over the recent election results. We had some great discussion over a wide range of topics, and we put together a loose structure for our group. Each of our meetings will have a central theme provided by our members in the following arbitrary order: Greg, Sylvia, Stefania, Craig, Wanda, Molly. We will plan to get together on the second Fridays of alternate months. We are flexible though, and if someone has a good excuse to meet (theater, lecture, music etc...) between meetings, we will. Our next meeting has been set for Friday the 12th of January, 2007. Greg will be providing the theme for our January meeting. *Group name subject to change based on the whim of any member.