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29 yo graduate student in philosophy, currently located in Tampa, FL.

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Karl Marx, Capital Vol. 1

Robert Brandom, Making it Explicit

Ludwig Wittgenstein, "Philosophical Investigations"

G. F. W. Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit

David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

Hermann Hesse, Steppenwolf

Tom Robbins, Still Life with Woodpecker

Henry David Thoreau, Walden

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05.31.2008: Religion and Politics: Riffing on a Van Sustren quote



I spent tonight as I often do, yelling at Fox News. But I had the strangest delight when--just for shits and giggles--I didn't quickly reach for the remote when Van Sustren opened her fugly trap. Talking about Father Michael Pfleger, the new "radical" clergyman loosely associated with Barack Obama, she said "I have a vastly different opinion [of him] than the people who know him and have lived with him in Chicago. But, so it is." I don't think that to say the statement is troubling, is quite enough. But it seems to encompass the entire strategy of the right for the last month or so. And so I thought I'd think a little with my fingers about that at little.

I'm having a hard time following along with the argument. Really. But I think it goes something like this:


1. Barack Obama associates with radical clergy

(Therefore,)

C: Barack Obama shares the radical views of these clergy members

Now, don't get bogged down in the irony of the right attacking a Democratic candidate for his religion--because it really just is too much to bear. Even my C logic students will recognize the argument as enthymematic--it's missing a premise that connects the premise to the conclusion. Something like, "One shares the views of whatever clergy member you listen to."

Now this is all very strage. First, because many sects of American Protestantism--in a real sense, both economically and socially--has been on the forefront of social change. Except for slavery (God! Did the Anglicans fuck up on slavery!), from the Quakers to the Southern Baptists, you find the churches in the forefront of the movements. So in this sense, "radical preacher" seems a little redundant. AS far as I can tell, if you're not radical, you don't really understand the gospels. But I digress--

Can a preacher have a different view than the parisioner? Surely. The most fundamental tenet of Protestantism is that the individual can interpret scripture him or herself, without awaiting the Papal edit from up high. So isn't the role of the preacher to provoke thought, such that one brings the lessons of the sermons to their understanding of scripture? But certainly not its content! Unless, of course, one were to make every Protestant church as several mini-Cathloic Churches, with dozens of "Popes."

But perhaps the best part of this argument is the blatant and fallacious use of guilt by association. Barack listened to them, therefore he is them. And Hannity is quick to retort "He sat there fro 20 years listening to this." Really? How did he find the time to go to law school, much less have children, if he never left the sermon for 20 years. Was it 20 years? Or was it (as it is for most people) a bit more like a few Sundays before and after Easter and Christmas. And did he treat it like most also do, snoozing through the service, spending more time looking at our watch than our sins? Did he go to a mediocre bourgeois church in the suburbs, where the preacher is more like Rick Warren than Martin Luther King?


[more..]

posted by faith on 05.31.08 @ 02:33 am EST


05.09.2008: "God I Love to Turn my Little Blue World Upside Down"



Life moves quickly sometimes. I accepted an offer yesterday. That means I'm officially employable (at least in the eyes of one small liberal arts college). Not three weeks ago, I was mentally preparing myself to be in Tampa for another year. Now I'm moving to Ohio in August. And it's strange.

Things generally seem to work themselves out for me; they always have. Despite my low high school GPA, I was able to work my way into a decent college. That college lead me to an up-and-coming Ph.D. program (buy low, sell high). And just as I was ready to give up on the market, once again things work themselves out on the job market. I couldn't be happier about the future--decent money, in a small town at an elite private college. And although it's just a one-year position, I think these type of credentials will give a young scholar the kind of endorsement which is vital to propel my career.

That is not to say I can spend the summer relaxing. I am still slated for two courses this summer, and need to finish the dissertation before I leave town. I also need to seriously downsize my footprint if I'm going to be moving from state to state over the next few years--remove all of the bourgeois accoutrements which tie me down. So things will be hectic. But at least I need to worry less about the prospect of failure, and can have a positive enough attitude to persevere.

[more..]

posted by faith on 05.09.08 @ 11:48 am EST

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Chris Donovan dot Com: Chris Donovan has been taking digital arts in new directions, and is an all-around swell dude.

Vague Angel's blog: A bottle of Jack and a thesaurus can go a long way.

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news

Slashdot:If you have to ask, you'll never know.

Guerrilla News Network:a cool up and coming radical site

The Economist: A right-of-center British magazine that uniquely takes political economy as seriously as it should.

my idea of fun

The Onion: A must for anyone who is coming to terms with our American social milieu

Piled Higher and Deeper: He feels my pain.

philosophy

Epistemelinks: All things philosophy

Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: a good, free research tool

American Philosophical Association: the organization of the industry of philosophy in the US.

politics

Adbusters: because all humor is gallows humor

MoveOn: Anything that pisses off the right-wingers with as much frequency and intensity as this PAC is worth linking.

what I've been listening to