Substack latest.
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Kierkegaard on the Impotence of Earthly Power
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Polarization and Flotation in Politics
Can we avoid both polarization and a noncommittal floating above the fray that does not commit to one side or the other? I fear not. Politics is war. You must take a side. You can't play the philosopher on the battlefield. A warrior at war cannot be "a spectator of all time and existence," as noble as such spectatorship is.
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God and Morality
A short piece by Richard Swinburne.
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Divine Light, Sex, Alcohol, and Kerouac
Substack latest.
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From Bad to Worse
His johnson became his dousing rod, but it led him not to the waters of life, but to the fleshpots. This after abandoning organized religion and its hypocrisies, but also its curbs and checks on destructive behavior. So he went from bad to worse. He started on down that Lost Highway.
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A Common Mistake in the Abortion Discussion
It is often said that a human fetus is a potential human life. Not so! A human fetus is an actual human life.Consider a third-trimester human fetus, alive and well, developing in the normal way in the mother. It is potentially many things: a neonate, a two-year-old, a speaker of some language, an adolescent, an adult, a corpse. And let's be clear that a potential X is not an X. A potential oak tree is not an oak tree. A potential neonate is not a neonate. A potential speaker of Turkish is not a Turkish speaker. But an acorn, though only potentially an oak tree, is an actual acorn, not a potential acorn. And its potentialities are actually possessed by it, not potentially possessed by it.The typical human fetus is an actual, living, human biological individual that actually possesses various potentialities. So if you accept that there is a general, albeit not exceptionless, prohibition against the taking of innocent human life, then you need to explain why you think a third-trimester fetus does not fall under this prohibition. You need to find a morally relevant difference — not just any old difference, but a difference that makes a moral difference — between the fetus and any born human individual.
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On the Correct Use of ‘Begging the Question’
Substack latest.
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Sam Harris and the Higher Snobbery
A Substack article by Greg Nyquist, The Critical Realist.
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A Lesser Light, No Lucifer
The lesser light, knowing its rays to be mainly reflections and refractions, will not confuse itself with a self-effulgent source, let alone with the Sun of all suns.
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Saturday Night at the Oldies: September Songs
September's on the wane. A transitional month leading from hot August to glorious October, Kerouac month in the MavPhil 'secular liturgy.'
Dinah Washington, September in the Rain
Rod Stewart, Maggie May. "Wake up Maggie, I think I got something to say to you/It's late September and I really should be back at school."
Carole King, It Might as Well Rain Until September
And while we have Miss King cued up, lend an ear to One Fine Day.
The 'sixties forever! We were young, raw, open, impressionable, experience-hungry; we lived intensely and sometimes foolishly. We felt deeply, and suffered deeply. Youth has its truth. And our popular music put to shame the crap that came before and after. Or so we thought. And so we still think. Would I want to live though the 'sixties again? Hell no, I am having too good a time enjoying it memorially at a safe distance. Youth has its truth, but if you can make it into old age with health and intellect intact, and a modicum of the lean green, you are winning the game.
Django Reinhardt, September Song
George Shearing, September in the Rain
Walter Huston, September Song
Van Morrison, September Night
Brothers Four, Try to Remember. I do remember when I was "a tender and callow fellow."
Billie Holliday, September Song
Addendum
This from a London reader:
Thanks for linking to the George Shearing ‘September’. I had forgotten he grew up in London (in Battersea, just down the road from me). I love the Bird-like flights on the piano. Indeed I think he wrote ‘Lullaby of Birdland’. Another Londoner is Helen Shapiro who does a great version of ‘It might as well rain until September.’ Great alto voice, never made it in the US as far as I know. There is an account of her conversion to Christianity here.
I was first hipped to Shearing by Kerouac who referred to him in On the Road. I too love the 'Bird'-like flights on the piano. The allusion is to Charley 'Bird' Parker, also beloved of Kerouac. Helen Shapiro is new to me, thanks. She does a great job with the Carole King composition. Believe it or not, King's version is a demo. That's one hell of a demo. A YouTuber points out that Shapiro was not part of the 1964 'British Invasion.' I wonder why.
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Work, Money, Living, and Livelihood
Substack latest.
Paul, Baruch, and Henry had the right idea.
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The ‘Progressive’
A 'progressive' is one who has made no progress in understanding the world. If he had, he would understand that his proposed changes are not improvements. This assumes, charitably, that he understands the difference between 'change' and 'improvement.'
It’s unbelievable that people who work with the law are among the ranks of the most sophists, demagogues, and irrational…