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April 27, 2003

April 20-26




  1. When Theory Gets You Shut Out Of Society's Decisions For much of the past 25 years, academic humanists have lived in a world of theory. But theory has had less and less impact on the direction of our culture, and some academics are wondering if a new direction is called for. So recently, an intellectual "town hall" was convened in Chicago to talk things over. "Has theory forsaken 'sociopolitical engagement' for a 'therapeutic turn' to ethics and the care of the psyche? Should humanists devote themselves to securing 'some space for the aesthetic in the face of the overwhelming forces of mass culture and entertainment'? Have the Internet and biotechnology rendered both human nature and printed dissertations obsolete?" Boston Globe 04/20/03

  2. I Feel, Therefore I Think (Or Something Like That) Many philosophers have divided us up into thinking and emotional sides - each often at war with the other. But "for more than a decade, neuroscientists armed with brain scans have been chipping away at the Cartesian façade. Gone is Descartes' lofty Cogito, reasoning in pristine detachment from the physical world. Fading fast are its sophisticated modern incarnations, including the once-popular 'computational model,' according to which the mind is like a software program and the brain like a hard drive. Lately, scientists have begun to approach consciousness in more Spinozist terms: as a complex and indivisible mind-brain-body system. The philosopher anticipated one of brain science's most important recent discoveries: the critical role of the emotions in ensuring our survival and allowing us to think. Feeling, it turns out, is not the enemy of reason, but, as Spinoza saw it, an indispensable accomplice." The New York Times 04/19/03

  3. Iraq Art - Where's The Loot? Two weeks after Iraq's National Museum was looted, some observers are wondering where all the art ended up. "Despite scattered rumors of artifacts turning up from Tehran to Paris, not a single one of the 90,000 or 120,000 or 170,000 plundered artifacts - no one knows for sure how many - is known to have been offered for sale anywhere in the world. And investigators and legitimate art dealers think they know why." Washington Post 04/23/03

  4. Rumsfeld: Looting Exaggerated? Last week, trying to deflect reports of looting of the Iraq National Museum, US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld declared: "The images you are seeing on television you are seeing over and over and over. And it's the same picture of some person walking out of some building with a vase. And you see it 20 times. And you think, my goodness, were there that many vases? Is it possible that there were that many vases in the whole country?" ABCNews 04/22/03

  5. Why Do We Fear Experts? Just when did we become so distrustful of people who know things? "Unfortunately, this skepticism has metamorphosed over the decades into a determination that no one with special knowledge or experience is worth listening to. If Rembrandt were alive today, he'd be reviled by art students who don't know how to prepare a canvas. Beethoven would be booed by experimental composers who couldn't identify the key of C major on a bet, while Duke Ellington would be denigrated by rappers who couldn't pick out a simple melody, much less aspire to the harmonic empyrean." St. Louis Post-Dispatch 04/20/03


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