1. Contingency in Intellectual History (i.e. Political Philosophy)
At the Legal History Blog, Mary Dudziak points us to a new piece by Tulane University Law School Stephen Griffin's titled "Reconceiving the War Powers Debate." The basis for this discussion, as Professor Dudziak sees it (in relation to her own work), is this passage from Michael Hogan's Cross of Iron:
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2. Nominations Are In For The Category "America's Greatest Catholic Intellectual"
Where, you ask? Benedictine College's Gregorian Institute has a blog, and at that blog they have reported on survey wherein the Institute asked "top Catholic commentators, editors and scholars" about "America's Greatest Catholic Intellectuals." The Institute is trying to create an "online Catholic Hall of Fame." Here's their tentative nomination list:
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2. John Courtney Murray (1904-1967)
3. John Senior (1923-1999)
4. Avery Dulles (1918-2008)
5. James Schall (1928-)
6. Ralph McInerny (1929-2010)
7. Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009)
8. Mary Anne Glendon (1938-)
9. George Weigel (1951-)
10. Robert P. George (1955-)
Where's John Tracy Ellis? Fulton Sheen? Where are Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day? And why do we need an intellectual star system anyway?
3. Academostars
I'd be happy to talk about Frank Donoghue's link (from immediately above) on its own merits. Here's a flavor of its content (bolds mine):
“Academostars” is a term coined by Jeffrey Williams, who edited an edition of the minnesota review on that topic in 2001. In that issue, Williams offers both a critique and a complement to David Shumway’s PMLA article, “The Star System in Literary Studies.” It’s entitled, “Name Recognition,” avoiding Shumway’s key terms.
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My hope is that hiring committees with my name in front of them will be operating on a "Moneyball" thesis and see me as a market inefficiency to be exploited.
4.a. The Intellectual Roots of OWS
The Chronicle's Dan Berrett explores those roots. Aside from discussing the appearances of "academostars" at Zuccotti Park, here's Berrett's provocative thesis:
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It's a great article even if you find the thesis off-putting. Let's discuss. [BTW #1: Here are some statistics that inform the direction of OWS. #2: Here's a bit about the relationship between Catholic identity and OWS]
4.b. OWS Signals the Unity of the Creative and Working Classes
John Russo, from the Center for Working-Class Studies, writes that OWS represents the falsification of Richard Florida's ten-year old thesis that the interests of the "creative class" are more important than, or different from, those of the working classes. In other words, the creative class is subject to the same dislocations and whimsical desires of financiers who prioritize profit over national solidarity.
5. The Cost of Certainty About Falsehoods
Axiom from William James: "There is truth-pursuit and error-avoidance. We don't want to have one without the other."
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Given some very plausible assumptions on epistemic utilities, one can prove that one needs to set more than 2.588 times (more precisely: at least 1/(log 4 − 1) times) as great a disvalue on being certain of a falsehood as the value one sets on being certain of a truth!
...Something to ponder. - TL
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