Wednesday, August 31, 2016
NOT BAD
So far, 153 views of the first Kant lecture. This is what we call going viral in Luxemburg. :)
HERE IT IS! GET IT WHILE IT IS HOT!
OK, folks. Here is the link to the first Kant lecture. I would be very interested in any commnents or suggestions.
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
UPDATED LINK ON TPP
I screwed up. Sorry. Here is the link to the TPP story I referenced in the previous post.
JUST PASSING THE TIME
While I am waiting for the video of my first Kant lecture to
be posted on YouTube so that I can give the world a link, I thought I would
draw together several stories I have been reading about and give them a Marxist
gloss. [Think of this as a stroll down
memory lane.] The three stories are the
kerfuffle about the Clinton Foundation, the welcome decision by the French high
court to overturn the ban on so-called burkinis on French beaches [cover-up
swimming outfits favored by Muslim women], and a very interesting account of an
aspect of the TPP with which I was completely unfamiliar. All three affairs strike me as examples, in
very different ways, of what we might call the perfection of capitalism.
One of Marx’s many useful insights was his description of
the revolutionary impact of capitalism on eighteenth and nineteenth century
Europe and by extension the rest of the world.
Capitalism, Marx observed perceptively, corrosively eats away at all
existing long established institutions and arrangements, destroying everything
that stands in the way of its relentless expansion. It is for this reason that he describes capitalism
as the most revolutionary force ever loosed upon the world. Capitalism broke down the age old division
between the city and the countryside; it hollowed out and eventually brought
down both aristocracy and monarchy; it destroyed traditional craft skills,
replacing them with semi-skilled machine labor; it ate into the structure of
the family; and it reduced religion to a weekend amusement, turning cathedrals
into tourist attractions and priests into serial child abusers. Capitalism flirted with racial disparities,
using them when it could to drive down wages, but its inner logic pushed it
eliminate racial distinctions, because they reduce the size of the available
work force, thus keeping wages aloft.
Capitalism broke down patriarchy, and tried its best to bring childhood
to an end, all in the service of expanding the labor force. Capitalism’s most formidable enemy has been the
autonomy of the nation state, but even that is now beginning to crumble.
The Clinton Foundation is not different from other
charitable foundations in its essential functions, but it has been strikingly successful
at undermining the walls between capital and state. An enormous accumulation of money acquired
from foreign government officials and deployed on the world stage by a former
United States President and a sitting United States Secretary of State on her
way to the Presidency is almost a cartoon diagram of the social relations of
production, as Marx called them, integrated with the political and ideological
superstructure. Am I shocked by the
revelation that foreign government officials made multi-million dollar
donations to the foundation and then sought access to the American government
in return? Only about as much as Claude Raines was
shocked in Casablanca to learn that
there was gambling at Rick’s saloon.
The TPP story is rather more complex, involving as it does
an obscure provision of the treaty. This link to a Truthdig story tell you
everything I know about the matter. It
details the way in which the treaty allows private companies to sue and extort
money from sovereign nations, thus furthering the subordination of the state to
capital.
As for the burkini
matter, it is a micro-example of capitalism’s success in destroying
religion. The conflict between church
and state has a long history in the west, going at least as far back as the
fourth century conversion of Constantine and Charlemagne’s decision to crown
himself head of his newly formed empire on Christmas Day in the year 800 A. D. I confess that I have always been offended by
France’s efforts to enforce secularism. The
case of the burkini ban and that of the hajib as well strikes me as especially
egregious. In effect, the French state
says that if a young woman chooses to sunbathe topless in a thong, with nipple
rings, obscene tattoos, purple spiked hair, and pierced ears, nose, and tongue,
that is her inviolable right, but if another young woman chooses to dress
modestly in a bathing costume that would have been considered de rigeur a century ago, the full force
of the state must be brought to bear to stop her from so scandalous a
display. Puleeeze!
And there you have it, my meditation for the day. Now to check on that link.
Monday, August 29, 2016
SAD NEWS
Gene Wilder has passed way. He gave me some of my favorite cinematic moments, in Young Frankenstein, in The Producers, in Blazing Saddles, and in many other films. He was a year older than I am now. He was a gem.
Sunday, August 28, 2016
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
Tomorrow at one p.m. I shall give the first Kant lecture. In a day or two thereafter, it will be posted on YouTube. There is no assigned reading for tomorrow's class, for those valiant souls planning to follow along. We shall see whether anyone shows up. I plan to do my best to register those who do show up to vote. Waste not, want not.
MAKING MYSELF CLEAR, I HOPE
The comments on my post about Rawls and reading a
philosophical text indicates that I failed to make myself clear, so let me try
one more time. S. Wallerstein asks “Couldn't
you say that Plato's Republic is one educated Greek's sense of justice? Does that make it any less worth reading? If
that is the case, why does the fact that Rawls’ Theory of Justice is one
educated person's sense of justice make it any less worth reading?”
Of course you can say, if you believe it, that Plato’s
Republic is one educated Greek’s sense of justice. And if that makes the Republic an interesting work for you, then by all means read it
that way. The same for A Theory of Justice [although no one is
going to suggest that they are equally great works.] My point was that powerful works of
philosophy can sustain competing and even diametrically opposed readings
because their authors are struggling with the articulation of insights that may
not be entirely compatible with one another and which they may have difficulty
bringing to the surface of their writing.
Inasmuch as “powerful” in this context is not descriptive but rather
evaluative, serious readers will differ not only about how to interpret certain
texts but even about which texts deserve the encomium “powerful.”
Why am I not interested in reading A Theory of Justice as “one (educated) person’s” sense of
justice? Because I do not find John Rawls
to be in this regard an interesting person.
Jack was very smart and very widely educated, but his writing exhibits
no influence of Freud, of Marx, of Mannheim, of Durkheim, no easy familiarity
with the concepts of ideology, repression, projection, displacement, little or
no evidence of having been powerfully influenced by great novelists or
poets. His perspective is transparently
that of an upper middle class member of the privileged professoriate. Indeed, as I show in my book [but cannot go
into here as it involves some technical mathematics], his argument for maximin
as the principle of choice in the Original Position makes sense only if one assumes that the person
deliberating is just such an upper middle class professional pretty well satisfied
with his place in the income pyramid.
BUT THAT IS JUST ME.
That is not intended as an argument that no one else should find Rawls’s
book interesting as a meditation on one (educated) person’s reflection on his
sense of justice. It would be absurd to
say to someone, “You ought not to find that interesting, even though you say
you do.”
By the way, is there anyone out there sophisticated enough
as a reader to understand the deep significance of the brackets around the word
“educated?” I say no more.
Saturday, August 27, 2016
A REPLY TO LFC
LFC offered a long
and very interesting comment in response to my post about the old Rawls
letter. Since I have written a book
about this subject, my natural response would be simply to suggest that anyone
wishing to pursue the subject simply read the book. But the comment raises an issue that lies at
the heart of my interpretation of the Critique
of Pure Reason, about which I shall start lecturing on Monday. So mas a kind of preparation for those
lectures, I have decided to write a rather lengthy response to LFC. Let me ask that you first read the comment,
which I reproduce here. Then I will
begin my extended response.
LFC said...
“It seems to me that one way to think of the argument in A
Theory of Justice might be as follows:
1) Most people want to act justly: they have a 'sense of justice' and at least some
desire to act in accordance w/ it.
2) But most people are too busy in their daily lives to have thought in a systematic way about what their largely intuitive sense of justice actually leads to or means for the way in which society should be set up.
3) The hypothetical contract situation of the original position, although presented in parts of the book as an exercise in bargaining theory, is actually a mechanism or a means for getting the reader to think more carefully about what his/her intuitions about justice (and desert) require or lead to.
4) So the argument assumes the reader starts w/ certain intuitions and that those intuitions can be clarified and systematized w/ the help of the thought experiment that is the original position. There is a passage toward the beginning (p.50, '71 edition) where Rawls says that "everyone has in himself the whole form of a moral conception." The suggestion perhaps is that, to put it metaphorically, there is a moral philosophy in embryo in everyone waiting to emerge w the help of the author-as-guide. Here's a bit more of the passage:
"...if we can describe one person's sense of grammar we shall surely know many things about the general structure of language. Similarly, if we should be able to characterize one (educated) person's sense of justice, we would have a good beginning toward a theory of justice. We may suppose that everyone has in himself the whole form of a moral conception. So for the purposes of this book, the views of the reader and the author are the only ones that count. The opinions of others are used only to clear our own heads."
One might wonder why, if R. were concerned to establish this direct, sort of intimate exchange with the reader, he proceeded to write 600 often dense pages. But perhaps this is one reason why he felt the need, much later, to publish the much shorter Justice as Fairness: A Restatement (which I haven't read).”
1) Most people want to act justly: they have a 'sense of justice' and at least some
desire to act in accordance w/ it.
2) But most people are too busy in their daily lives to have thought in a systematic way about what their largely intuitive sense of justice actually leads to or means for the way in which society should be set up.
3) The hypothetical contract situation of the original position, although presented in parts of the book as an exercise in bargaining theory, is actually a mechanism or a means for getting the reader to think more carefully about what his/her intuitions about justice (and desert) require or lead to.
4) So the argument assumes the reader starts w/ certain intuitions and that those intuitions can be clarified and systematized w/ the help of the thought experiment that is the original position. There is a passage toward the beginning (p.50, '71 edition) where Rawls says that "everyone has in himself the whole form of a moral conception." The suggestion perhaps is that, to put it metaphorically, there is a moral philosophy in embryo in everyone waiting to emerge w the help of the author-as-guide. Here's a bit more of the passage:
"...if we can describe one person's sense of grammar we shall surely know many things about the general structure of language. Similarly, if we should be able to characterize one (educated) person's sense of justice, we would have a good beginning toward a theory of justice. We may suppose that everyone has in himself the whole form of a moral conception. So for the purposes of this book, the views of the reader and the author are the only ones that count. The opinions of others are used only to clear our own heads."
One might wonder why, if R. were concerned to establish this direct, sort of intimate exchange with the reader, he proceeded to write 600 often dense pages. But perhaps this is one reason why he felt the need, much later, to publish the much shorter Justice as Fairness: A Restatement (which I haven't read).”
OK, got that? Now,
here we go.
In the middle of the twentieth century, Anglo-American moral
philosophy was locked in a seemingly endless and fruitless debate between
Utilitarianism and Intuitionism. Each
side was adept at mounting telling criticisms of the other, but was
unsuccessful in responding to its opponent’s critique. The principal defensive theoretical
innovation of the Utilitarians was the distinction between Act and Rule
Utilitarianism. The principal defensive
theoretical innovation of the Intuitionists was the concept of prima facie duties.
Into this stalemate stepped John Rawls with an idea for
resolving the standoff. Rawls’ idea,
which was really quite brilliant, was to reach back in the history of modern
philosophy to a tradition that antedated both modern Utilitarianism and
Intuitionism, namely Social Contract Theory, and marry it to a hyper-modern
branch of Economics then making a stir, Game Theory. Social Contract Theory was the foundation of
all the varieties of modern Democratic Theory, and dated from the seventeenth
century writings of Thomas Hobbes and others.
Game Theory was the brainchild of the great Hungarian-American
mathematician John Von Neumann [who was also one of the creators of the modern
computer.]
Rawls’ idea was to prove a theorem in Bargaining Theory to the
effect that a group of rationally self-interested individuals like those posited
by Social Contract Theory would, in a bargaining session, coordinate
unanimously on a pair of principles for the regulation of their social life
that captured what was best in both Utilitarianism and Intuitionism. Rawls announced his idea in a journal
article, “Justice as Fairness,” published in 1958 when he was only thirty-seven. In that article, Rawls sketched his theorem
[explicitly labeled as such], and enunciated a first version of what would in
subsequent iterations become his famous Two Principles of Justice. Rawls acknowledged that the proof needed some
more detail and development before it was nailed down, but any reader would
have concluded that it was only a matter of time before the full theorem would
be on view. [I have always believed, on
the basis of no evidence whatsoever, that Rawls dreamed of producing a
monograph as powerful as Kenneth Arrow’s brilliant Social Choice and Individual Values, a 1951 version of Arrow’s doctoral
dissertation.]
The theorem as stated in the 1958 article was invalid, a
fact that I demonstrated eight years later in a Journal of Philosophy article titled “A Refutation of Rawls’
Theorem on Justice.” The next year [but
not, I have reason to believe, in response to my refutation], Rawls published
an essay called “Distributive Justice” in which he made major changes both to
the bargaining game and to the Two Principles.
It was in this article that there appeared for the first time the Veil
of Ignorance, Life Plans, the Index of Primary Goods, and the stipulation that social
and economic inequalities were to work to the benefit not of all persons but
only to the benefit of the Least Advantaged Representative Man [there are no
women in Rawls’ theory, but then there are no women in In Defense of Anarchism
either – we all had some consciousness raising to do in those days.] The theorem implied in Rawls’ mature theory isn’t
valid either, as I demonstrated at some length in Understanding Rawls.
As LFC demonstrates in his lengthy quotation from A Theory of Justice, Rawls markedly
backs away from claims about theorems and proofs. So why do I go on about them? Why do I stubbornly, and seemingly
ungenerously, refuse to take Rawls at his word regarding what he is doing in
his philosophy? That is indeed the question. It brings me to the connection between Rawls
and my upcoming lectures on Kant, which is the real point of this post.
The simple but actually very profound answer is that if we
take Rawls at his original word and read his corpus of writings as an extended
but ultimately unsuccessful effort to prove a very powerful theorem, then what
he has to say is interesting, whereas if we take him at his mature word and
read his interminable book as a characterization of “one (educated) person's sense of justice,”
then what he has to say is boring and not really worth bothering about.
Now that is a thoroughly subjective judgment, but it is, I
think, the judgment each of us must make in deciding which pieces of philosophy
to spend time reading, puzzling over, and thinking about. Let me state flat out the conclusion I have
come to after a lifetime spent with the writings of such immortal geniuses as
Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Hume, and Kant.
Great philosophers think deeply and powerfully about important
questions, seizing on an insight and refusing to let it go, like Jacob wrestling with the Angel of
Lord, unless it bless them. These
thinkers are not overly concerned with surface consistency or neatness,
concerning themselves instead with the ideas they can see lying beneath the surface,
concealed from our eyes but not from theirs.
When we make the decision to commit our time and intelligence with their
texts, we make a gamble that the struggle will be worthwhile. And because the surface of the text is so
often puzzling or ambiguous, we must make a decision which leads to follow,
which ideas to take as central and which to set aside as distractions. This choice is always subjective, interested,
personal, and ultimately idiosyncratic. That is why, even after two and a half
millennia, modern scholars still find new threads to lead them into the depths
of a Platonic or Aristotelian text.
This is a description of what I did, sixty years ago, when I
grappled with the Transcendental Deduction of the Critique in my doctoral dissertation, and then, several years
later, in my book Kant’s Theory of Mental
Activity. It is what I shall do in
the lectures that begin on Monday. And
it is, in a lesser way, to be sure, what I do when I consider Rawls’ A Theory of Justice. It is for this reason that I persist in construing
Rawls as searching unsuccessfully for a theorem rather than articulating “one
(educated) person's sense of justice.”
Thus my response to LFC.
Friday, August 26, 2016
GETTING OLD
My son points out to me that my book on Rawls was called Understanding Rawls, not Reading Rawls, which was actually the title of a collection of essays [to which I did not contribute.] It is really bad when you cannot even remember the titles of your own books!
A LETTER FROM JOHN RAWLS
In my Autobiography and elsewhere I have written a good deal
about my personal relationship with Jack Rawls.
As some of you may recall, he and I were colleagues for a year [1959-60,
I believe] when I was an Instructor in the Harvard Philosophy Department and he
was a Visiting Professor [he returned in 1961-62, as I recall, as a regular
member of that department where he then taught until his retirement.] Jack published his hauptwerk, A Theory of Justice,
in 1971 and six years later I published the first book-length critique, Reading Rawls. Since Rawls is widely viewed as one of the
most important 20th century philosophers to write in English, and is
perhaps world-wide the most important political philosopher of the past 150
years, there is some value in adding to the public record any information about
his views of the philosophical response to his work.
This morning I was cleaning up my office and throwing out various
things that have accumulated when I came across a letter Jack wrote to me in
1977. I am going to reproduce it here verbatim, for such interest as it may
hold to students of his work. A few
words of explanation are called for.
Stephen Strasnick was a Harvard doctoral student who wrote a
dissertation on Rawls’ theories under the directorship of a committee
consisting of Rawls himself, his philosophy colleague Robert Nozick, and the
great economist Kenneth Arrow. In his
dissertation, Strasnick undertook to produce a formal proof of Rawls’ so-called
Difference Principle. He published the
proof as an article in the Journal of Philosophy
in 1976. I read the article while I was sitting in an
airplane, returning from giving a talk somewhere in Ohio. Something seemed wrong to me about the proof,
and when I got home I took a close look at it.
In December of that year, I published a refutation. Strasnick’s error was actually rather
interesting [at least if you like that sort of thing!] His idea was to adapt the logical framework
of Arrow’s General Possibility Theorem and use it to try to prove the
Difference Principle, but he failed to note that Arrow assumes ordinal
preference whereas Rawls implicitly assumes cardinal utility functions. The result was that Strasnick’s premises,
when correctly interpreted, reduced to tautologies entailing nothing
significant and certainly not the Difference Principle. I sent a copy of my refutation to Jack when
it appeared, and what follows is his handwritten response, dated Mar(ch) 27
(1977). By the way, Jack’s reference to
Bob is to his son, who majored at UMass in an undergraduate interdisciplinary
program called Social Thought and Political Economy which I created and was
then running.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY
Emerson Hall
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
(617) 495
Dear Bob
Many
thanks for your piece on Strasnick, just received. I find myself at the moment in a tangle
trying to collect myself for a brief trip abroad, and don’t know when I shall
be able to look at it. But hope to, once
I get myself in one piece when I get back.
I was away last year and didn’t see S’s final thesis draft until after
the oral exam (Arrow & Nozick were the committee), though I knew of the
theorems. I think they are correct, but
heavens knows, they are not well presented.
Your essay interests me; because
I am puzzled by these formal proofs; and other proofs that have been formal [or
possibly, “that have been found”] There
are 4 or 5 proofs of the DP floating around now – all more or less the same, I
think. Strasnick’s were as early as
any. It’s hard to know what their real
significance is. Anyway
Thanks
for your paper -- & keep flourishing.
Yours,
Jack
PS Bob is
enjoying UMass, for which I’m grateful, and to you for a big part of that.
That was the last I heard from Jack about Strasnick and my
article.
Thursday, August 25, 2016
MILESTONES
It is my understanding that “blog” is a contraction of “web
log,” which carries with it the implication that a blog will be someone’s
account of matters personal. This blog,
for the most part, has failed at that effort, including instead extended
discussions of intellectual and political topics that can only by the loosest
construction be called “personal.” Still
and all, I feel a certain residual obligation to adopt the confessional voice,
so I am happy to announce that today Susie and I mark our twenty-ninth
anniversary. We shall celebrate by
trying out a restaurant called St.
Jacques in Raleigh that bills itself as offering authentic French cuisine. Inasmuch as it is located in a mall, I am
perhaps understandably a trifle skeptical, but the on-line menu does list frogs’
legs, which Susie particularly likes, so perhaps the evening will go well.
Twenty-nine years is a good run, but hardly remarkable. Perhaps more noteworthy is the fact that later
on in the fall, we shall reach the sixty-eighth anniversary of our first date. I was fourteen and smitten with the pretty
girl sitting at the desk in front of me in home room in Forest Hills High
School. I got up the courage to ask her
out on a date [a revival of Marcel Pagnol’s pre-war film César], and we went steady for five years. It then took me another thirty-two years to
marry her.
Nobody ever accused me of being a fast worker.
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
OUR REVOLUTION
Like Chris and others, I am disturbed by the turmoil in Bernie's new organization, even though I agree completely with I. Wallerstein's diagnosis of the Left. I am not fearful that some big donations from left-wing billionaires will soil the purity of the movement. That way of thinking is essentially religious and I have no patience with it. Rather, I think Weaver is misreading the nature of the movement he is attempting to fund. Bernie's run for the Democratic Party nomination demonstrated convincingly that in a huge rich country like America, it is quite possible to raise all the money one needs for a movement or a political campaign from on-line contributions by small donors, so long as their level of enthusiasm is sufficiently high. Five million faithful donors giving ten dollars a month will contribute six hundred million dollars a year, year after year, more than enough to underwrite a real Progressive movement. If a fifty million dollar buy-in from a billionaire chills that enthusiasm, it could easily cost two or three times as much in lost donations.
I was equally disturbed by the unrepresentative character of the top leadership of the new movement. Bernie failed to win the nomination because he could not draw a healthy share of the non-White Primary vote. The eggregious Wasserman-Schultz had nothing to do with it. If Bernie has not learned that lesson, then he is a very flawed vessal.
However [or "that said," the latest talking-head cant phrase], in the immortal words of Donald Rumsfeld, you go to war with the army you have. Bernie is the best thing to come along in a generation, warts and all, and I plan to support him as best I can. When I get to heaven, I will hold out for perfection.
To quote yet another of my favorite TV opinion makers -- Kermit the Frog -- it's not easy being green.
I was equally disturbed by the unrepresentative character of the top leadership of the new movement. Bernie failed to win the nomination because he could not draw a healthy share of the non-White Primary vote. The eggregious Wasserman-Schultz had nothing to do with it. If Bernie has not learned that lesson, then he is a very flawed vessal.
However [or "that said," the latest talking-head cant phrase], in the immortal words of Donald Rumsfeld, you go to war with the army you have. Bernie is the best thing to come along in a generation, warts and all, and I plan to support him as best I can. When I get to heaven, I will hold out for perfection.
To quote yet another of my favorite TV opinion makers -- Kermit the Frog -- it's not easy being green.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
WHY AM I NOT SURPRISED?
Clinton is far enough ahead to begin to put together her transition team. This story tells us all we need to know. It is a team straight out of the old Bill Clinton Democratic Leadership Committee, the folks who brought us NAFTA and mass incarceration and Don't Ask Don't Tell and are on board with fracking and TTP. In short, a Clinton presidency will be exactly what we anticipated. Which makes all the more important a vibrant progressive movement to elect as many leftie Senators and Representatives as possible and to keep the pressure on the White House.
Donald Trump must be defeated, but that will be the beginning of our efforts, not the end.
I am weary. If I may quote the Bible, as is my wont, "if it be possible, let this cup pass from me." [Matthew 26:39.]
Donald Trump must be defeated, but that will be the beginning of our efforts, not the end.
I am weary. If I may quote the Bible, as is my wont, "if it be possible, let this cup pass from me." [Matthew 26:39.]
Monday, August 22, 2016
IDLE SPECULATION ON A SLOW MONDAY
If recent cycles are any evidence, we can expect roughly 130
million people to vote in this election.
They will constitute about 60% of eligible voters. In off years, when there is no presidential
contest, roughly 40% of eligible voters vote.
Therefore simple math tells us that 43 million or so of those expected
to vote this year are what Donald Trump would call “low energy” voters, people
who cannot be counted on to turn out in off years. Experience also teaches us that Republicans
are more likely than Democrats to vote in off-year elections. That is why the Democrats keep winning the
White House but nevertheless lose the House big time [leaving aside
gerrymandering and residential clustering].
Let us take a flying guess, powered by nothing but unfettered
imagination, and assume therefore that 23 or 24 million of those 43 million low
energy fair weather voters are Democrats and the remaining 19 or 20 million are
Republicans.
Conventional wisdom among professional bean counters has it
that House incumbents can hope to run six or eight points in their district ahead
of a losing presidential candidate of their party, but that they are not likely
to survive a “wave” election in which the presidential candidate of the
opposing party wins by as much as ten percentage points. This far out, it is difficult to predict, but
the polls suggest that this year is shaping up as a 5-7 or 6-8 point victory
for Clinton, more than enough for a big Electoral College win but not a wave
that could be expected to win back the House.
HOWEVER: Suppose the
polls are misleading, in the following way.
There might be a rather large group of Republican voters who find Trump
unacceptably distasteful but would never consider voting for Clinton. Asked their preference now by a pollster,
they might grimace and select Gary Johnson [the Libertarian Party candidate] or
simply say “don’t know.” When polled
about Senate or House races, they will choose the Republican. If these folks are reliable off-year voters,
then they will show up even if they hate their presidential choices and, while
they are in the voting booth, they will vote for down-ticket Republican
candidates. But some of them will be “low
energy” voters who may not bother to turn out this year if they are
sufficiently turned off by Trump, and their votes will be lost to the down
ballot Republican candidates.
QUESTION: Will there
be enough of these lost votes to turn a 5-7 or 6-8 point Clinton win into a
down ballot wave that wins the House back for the Democrats? We had better hope so, because the fate of
all the progressive legislation we yearn for depends on it.
Sunday, August 21, 2016
DUMBED DOWN
I have several times observed on this blog that the rise of
modern social science can be viewed as a series of brilliant attempts by
imaginative thinkers to wrest interesting and important insights from materials
considered at the time to be beneath the notice of serious scholars. The first example of this phenomenon is the
development of economic theory by Adam Smith and others in the eighteenth
century. The “higgling and jiggling of
the market place,” as Smith called the bargaining over the price of commodities,
was widely thought to be infra dignitate,
but Smith and his successors, most notably Ricardo and then Marx, wrested from
this unpromising material theories of great power, beauty, and world historical
significance. E. B. Tylor transmuted the
popular reports of seventeenth and eighteenth century South Sea travelers into
the discipline of Anthropology. Freud
made dreams, jokes and slips of the tongue a highway to the unconscious. And literary scholars, long restricting themselves
to the elevated genres of poetry and tragedy, descended into popular culture to
find profundity and beauty in the novels that served as light amusement for the
middle classes.
With all of these inspiring exempla, I feel that I ought to
be able to find Truth, Beauty, and Goodness in the daily reports of the current
political campaign, or at least – as Esther Terry, my friend and former Chair of the W. E. B.
DuBois Department of Afro-American Studies, would have put it – to make Chicken
Salad out of chicken shit.
But I do not have the greatness of spirit that allowed
Smith, Tylor, Durkheim, Freud and so many others to transmute the commonplace
into the ennobled. This political cycle,
I fear, is making me stupid. Day after
day, I listen to Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton – and Joe Scarborough and
Mika Bzrezinski and Chuck Todd and all the other commentators and surrogates
and opinion makers – and my mind turns to sludge. Each morning, as I walk, I try out in my head
themes for a daily blog post, striving for insight, for depth, or at least for
wit, and like as not I come up short.
The election is too important to ignore, but too debased to inspire.
This morning, I carried out elaborate mental numerical
calculations in aid of a hopeful revision of Sam Wang’s rather discouraging discussion, but by the time I had returned home, my elaborate bandwagon and
parade of facts and figures had dwindled to “just a horse and a cart on
Mulberry Street.”
This too shall pass, as in fact it does not say in the Good Book.
GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS
Sam Wang at the Princeton Election Consortium has sharpened his projection of the outcome of the election. The good news is that he has upped his estimate of the Bayesian probability of a Clinton win to 95%. The bad news is that his reasoning has the secondaery implication that a Clinton blowout is much less likely, which I assume [he does not say] implies that it is also much less likely that the Democrats will retake the House. I figure you cannot pick and choose which consequences of a mathematical calculation you like and which you don't. We shall all just have to work that much harder.
Friday, August 19, 2016
IN NEED OF REHABILITATION
After struggling for moths against my obsession with the
current political campaign, I have decided to throw in the towel and yield to
it. I am not proud of this weakness, and
realize that after November 9th I shall have to go into rehab and
cleanse myself of the lingering poisons in my system, but I am simply not
strong enough to resist. Those who have
come to this site in search of elevated philosophical argument may think of its
more refined posts as my attempt to scale the heights of Aristotle’s Physics or Nicomachean Ethics and of these ruminations on Trump as my descent
to the level of De Partibus Animalia.
The latest news, breaking this morning too late for Joe
Scarborough to comment, is the resignation from the Trump campaign of the shady
character Paul Manafort. For those of
you not up to speed, this story in the Huffington Post will put you in the
picture. Trump yesterday promoted to
Campaign Chair a well-known Republican political operative named Kellyann
Conway, and in a move that has plunged Republican insiders even deeper into
despair, has brought in a genuinely creepy character named Steve Bannon who
runs Breitbart News and is chummy with a collection of racists, fascists, and
conspiracy nuts labeled the Alt-Right.
The very first result of Conway’s promotion was a scripted
teleprompter speech by Trump in which he formally apologized for unspecified
careless words that might have caused pain.
Those of us counting on a Trump campaign collapse felt a chill in the
heart at the thought that Trump might actually get his act together and make a
run for the presidency, contrary to all evidence and probability.
I have given this matter a good deal of thought, much of it
in the middle of the night, and here is my somewhat self-serving analysis of
the situation, based, needless to say, on nothing remotely resembling
evidence. I suspect Trump was moved to
make these changes by two factors:
First, his genuine discomfort with the conventional speeches Manafort
was pressuring him to deliver, including the wooden endorsement of Paul Ryan, John
McCain, and Kelly Ayotte [delivered in roughly the way that a ten year old boy,
dragged next door by his father, apologizes to the neighbors for having ridden
his bicycle over their garden]; and Second, his disastrous decline in the
polls.
The “apology” was so unTrumpian that I would bet Conway got
him to deliver it by promising him that it would translate into a poll
bounce. But the polls that will be
released in the next several days were all completed before the speech, and
they will most likely show no improvement for Trump, and perhaps even a worsening
of his already disastrous standing. I
predict that Trump will look at those polls and, having roughly the patience
and self-control of a four year old [not to disparage any four year olds out
there], he will react with another barrage of outrageous tweets and random
insults. If the Clinton campaign has the
wit to sic Elizabeth Warren on him in this moment, which they undoubtedly do,
he will be unable to control himself.
Even if Ivanka returns from vacationing with Vladimir Putin’s girlfriend
[no kidding] to calm him down, he is unlikely to be able to resist the
temptation to “hit back,” as he likes to say.
We shall see. Meanwhile,
I shall answer the call of the Clinton campaign and do data entry, while
awaiting Bernie’s August 24th launch of his new organization,
promisingly titled “Our Revolution.”
AVE ATQUE VALE
As I observed some while ago, I have taught Kant's Critique of Pure Reason fourteen times over the course of my long career, so one might think that my forthcoming lecture series on that text would be mother's milk to me, to steal a phrase from Eliza Doolittle. And yet, as I approach August 29th, the date of the first lecture, the series has a valedictory feel to me, as though I were saying farewell to a book that has been a part of my life for sixty-three years.
Growing old is strange in unexpected ways, even though, as Gertrude Stein shrewdly observed, we are always the same age inside.
Growing old is strange in unexpected ways, even though, as Gertrude Stein shrewdly observed, we are always the same age inside.
Thursday, August 18, 2016
THIS AND THAT
1. I have on occasion
observed that this is the first generation in the 200,000 year history of homo sapiens in which the young must
explain to the old how things work. Here
is yet another example. For some while,
it seemed that my IPhone was not ringing when I received an incoming call. This did not matter much to me, since almost
no one calls me on my cell phone, but I was worried lest my wife need to reach
me and not be able to. So I called my
son, Tobias. With infinite tact and
patience, he led me through the process of swiping the screen of my phone with
a quick upward motion to reveal a number of settings, helped me to locate the
crescent moon, and when I said that it was lit up, explained that that meant
the phone was in sleep mode and would not ring.
A simple touch of the screen turned the moon dark, and now my phone
rings when someone calls me. In the good
old days, I would have been explaining to him how to sweep with a smooth stroke
through the ripe wheat with a scythe at harvest time. He would have looked at me admiringly and
said, “Gee, Dad, you just know everything, don’t you?”
2. Matt and
Acostos had an interesting exchange in the comments section triggered by my
account of the work I have been doing in the local Clinton campaign. In this dispute, I think Matt has the better
argument. Let me explain the situation
here in North Carolina. North Carolina is
a swing state. It was trending
Democratic when I moved here in 2008, and Obama narrowly won the state in the
presidential election, with the Democrats also taking a Senate seat and the
Governorship, but in subsequent elections the state has turned hard Right and
become a poster child for reactionary politics.
The population of the state has been changing for some time
now, with an influx of northern professionals who are Democratic in their
leanings. One of the areas of heaviest
influx is the so-called Triangle area, consisting of the cities of Raleigh,
Durham, and Chapel Hill and surrounding suburbs. This area has at least four big universities –
Duke, UNC Chapel Hill, NC State, and NC Central -- and two major medical
complexes, as well as a research park that is home to a number of hi tech
companies.
The area is thus flooded with folks who will probably vote
Democratic if one can get them out to vote at all. A voter registration drive is especially
important among students both because many of them were not old enough to vote
in 2012 and because they tend to move very often, making it essential that they
re-register at their current addresses.
Every Democratic vote we can register among students counterbalances one
older white non-college educated Trump voter somewhere else in North Carolina. Orange County [home to UNC Chapel Hill] is
not a swing county at all. It is
reliably, heavily Democratic. But it is
also rich in unregistered students.
That is why, when I go to my first Kant lecture at UNC a
week from Monday, I will take with me a batch of registration forms. In a few moments after class, I may be able
to bag more newly registered voters than during long hot hours in front of
Harris-Teeter supermarkets.
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
THE GROUND GAME
If you consume a great deal of political commentary, as I
do, you constantly hear references to the “ground game.” Obama had a game-changing ground game in 2008,
Clinton this time around has an extensive ground game, Trump at the moment has
almost no ground game, that sort of thing.
The conventional wisdom is that a ground game can make a 2% difference
in the results, which is actually very large in a country this size. Two percent in a presidential year is maybe
3.2 million votes. But the conventions
of on-air political commentary being what they are, unless you have actually
volunteered for a political campaign you may not really have a very clear idea what
people engaged in the ground game do.
Since I spent some time this weekend as a very, very small cog in the
well-oiled Clinton machine, I thought I would describe the experience and
indicate the sorts of practical problems that make it difficult to crank up a ground
game overnight. When the nodding heads
on the TV cable news panels observe sagely that it is almost too late for Trump
to develop a ground game, they have a point.
Last Saturday morning, I drove to Carrboro, a funky
counter-cultural suburb of Chapel Hill, and found my way to the local office of
the Orange County Democratic Party for my third stint as a volunteer. At this point the campaign is doing “voter
reg.” Ten or so volunteers during each
two-hour period from 10 am to 4 pm on a Saturday fan out around Chapel Hill and
Carrboro to places with lots of foot traffic, holding clipboards, and accost
people in a determinedly cheerful manner asking, “Are you registered to vote,
at your present location?” The last
clause is crucial, because when you move, you must re-register, even if you
remain in the same voting precinct. This
being a college town, lots of people move between elections. For the most part, people either smile and
say yes or else hurry by without replying, but now and again someone pops up
who needs to register. Since this part
of the campaign is non-partisan, you are supposed to register Republicans as
well as Democrats and Independents or third party supporters. We foot soldiers are given strict
instructions: Make sure they check the
boxes at the top of the form saying that they are citizens and will be eighteen
by November 8th; Try to get their phone numbers, even though it is
not required; Have them sign and date the form.
My first time out, you will recall, I bagged only one registration
during two hours in front of a Harris-Teeter supermarket. The second time, I was sitting at a table
with several other volunteers on the main drag in town [Franklin Street] and
collectively we got five or six. Last
Saturday I stood for two hours in front of the Harris-Teeter across the street
from my apartment and got four, making me the champion volunteer registrar for
that two hour slot.
The next day, Sunday, I went down to Carrboro to the new Clinton
campaign office to be “trained in data entry” [which I prefer to voter
reg.] It was boiling hot, and I stood
outside the locked door for a long while before another volunteer came by and
told me we were meeting at the Orange County headquarters. Why was the campaign hq locked? Because it does not yet have internet access,
making data entry impossible there. When
I finally got to the Orange County headquarters, I found eight or nine other
volunteers, each with his or her own computer, being guided through the data
entry process. Sofia, the local paid
Clinton staffer who is my contact person, had forgotten to tell me to bring my
computer, so I had to work with a loaner, which did not have a mouse. I detest using that little pad that you rub
your finger on and gave up after ten minutes.
Next time, I will bring my own laptop and mouse.
Data entry consists of entering into the Clinton campaign
database [adapted from the Obama campaign database] all the info on the voter
reg forms before they are turned over to the Orange County branch of the state
elections bureau. Even though my four
hours of solo voter reg had only produced five filled out forms, there were big
stacks of forms to be entered, testimony to the large number of volunteers who
have turned out in Chapel Hill for the Clinton campaign.
Now, think about it.
I am describing one tiny component of a vast national campaign
network. Since North Carolina is a battleground
state, so-called, the Clinton campaign is up and running here, but there are many
hundreds of such offices all over America, and thousands or tens of thousands
of volunteers. In each location, there
are practical problems like getting internet access, discovering which stores
and coffee houses will let you stand in front doing voter reg and which will
not, staying in touch with volunteers, keeping up their spirits when they spend
two hours and bag only one registrant, all the while ensuring a steady flow of
effort and data.
After a while, we will switch from voter reg to door to door
canvassing, which will allow us to identify pro-Clinton voters [or possibles],
update our records of who lives where, and recruit new volunteers. Each day, from Clinton HQ, GoogleMaps local
maps, each with only a few streets on it, will be sent out with dots identifying
which houses to stop at when canvassing.
Each evening, the results of the canvassing will be entered into the database
by people like me. THE NEXT DAY, from
HQ, a new set of updated local maps will be sent out electronically, pointing
the next team of volunteer canvassers to houses where a successful contact has
not yet been made.
Once early voting starts, we will switch to Get Out The Vote,
or GOTV, mode, using the data we have amassed to identify our supporters and
make sure that they get to the polls.
All of this [and a good deal more] is what is meant by The
Ground Game. It takes time, money, a
high degree of intelligent coordination, and an army of volunteers to carry out
a good ground game. And remember, all of
this is in the service of changing the election results by maybe 2%.
This is why those with experience in this game say that it
is almost too late for Trump to crank up a ground game, even if someone could persuade
him that it is necessary.
Tuesday, August 16, 2016
YOU TELL ME
There are three possible explanations for this Michael Moore piece: First, that it is all true; Second, that it is a piece of ONION-style satire; and Third, that Michael Moore doesn't know what he is taking about. I confess I haven't a clue which is right. You tell me.
Monday, August 15, 2016
ADVERTISEMENTS FOR MYSELF
Some of you [we few, we happy few] have been readers of this
blog almost from its inception, but most of you have joined me somewhere along
the way. I frequently refer the
materials “archived at box.net, accessible via the link at the top of the page,”
but my guess is that many of you have not been moved to check out that
archive. The purpose of this post is to
alert you to what you have been missing.
Shortly after I began blogging, I wrote, and posted
serially, an extremely long 260,000 word Memoir, or Autobiography. Divided into three volumes, it begins with my
memories of the Sunnyside Progressive School in 1936 and ends with my
retirement and move with my wife to North Carolina in 2008. As it unfolded day by day, the memoir
achieved a certain succes de scandale
in the academic community when Brian Leiter’s attention was caught by my gossip
about prominent university Philosophy departments. All three volumes of the Memoir are available
on box.net.
While I was writing and posting the memoir, I also wrote and
posted seriatim a short book entitled
The Use and Abuse of Formal Methods in
Political Philosophy, in which I give a rigorous introduction to Rational
Choice Theory, Collective Choice Theory, and Game Theory, with applications. This too is available on box.net.
When the Memoir had concluded, my fingers still itched to
write, so I conceived the idea of writing several lengthy essays or monographs,
which I called Tutorials, each in daily segments to be posted on this
blog. The first was entitled The Thought of Karl Marx, and it ran
some 30,000 words. This was followed by The Thought of Sigmund Freud, 20,000
words, The Philosophy of David Hume,
27,500 words, an Introduction to the
Critique of Pure Reason, 30,000 words, and Afro-American Studies, 24,500 words. All are available on box.net
By now, I was addicted to the charms of my own words, and
cast about for other topics to address.
I decided to write several shorter essays, which I called
Mini-Tutorials. These included “The
Study of Society” [which actually began as a response to a commenter who
described herself as “Luke’s Mom”], “Ricardo’s Principles,” “One-Dimensional
Man,” “Durkheim’s Suicide,” and “Plato’s
Gorgias.” Finally, I added several “Appreciations,” discussions
[of books] so brief they did not rise to the level of mini-tutorials.
All of this is available on box.net, together with a number
of my published and unpublished essays on a variety of topics, and four annual
collections of lesser blog posts which I call “Pebbles from The Philosopher’s
Stone.”
This material has not gone completely unnoticed. Box.net tells me that the monograph on the
thought of Karl Marx has been accessed 1232 times, the introduction to the Critique 809 times, and even my little
satirical review of Allan Bloom’s The
Closing of the American Mind has had 608 visitors. But if any of the above piques your
curiosity, I invite you to use the link at the top of this page and browse for
a bit. It is all open source, so use it
or abuse it as you see fit.
Sunday, August 14, 2016
HARK WHAT LIGHT BY YONDER WINDOW BREAKS?
Eighty-six days until the election, and none too soon to
start talking about what comes next. It
is now clear that Clinton will win. The
only question is whether it will be a solid win – 5-7 points and 350 Electoral
Votes – or a blowout – ten plus points and close to 400 Electoral Votes. Which it is makes a big difference in down-ballot
races and control of House and Senate, but that is not possible to predict at
this point.
We know what we will get with Clinton. She will choose her economic team from Wall
Street [but probably not from the executive ranks of multi-national
corporations, an interesting fact, that.]
In a desperate effort to transform herself into a caricature of a hawk,
she has now reached out to the ninety-three year old Henry Kissinger for his
wisdom on foreign affairs. As the
immortal Judi Densch says in Philomena,
I didn’t see that coming.
Polls suggest that on November 9th there will be
a great many disillusioned twenty-somethings for whom this election has been a
choice between disaster and disgust.
Which, I believe, opens the way to the first truly progressive movement
in American politics in generations. It
is actually a great boon to such a movement that Clinton will be just fine on
all issues emanating from identity politics.
She will advance women’s rights, LGBT rights, Black Lives Matter, and
immigration reform. But she will not lay
a finger on Wall Street or attempt anything dramatic to reverse the
ever-greater economic inequality that now defines American society, which
leaves the field open for us.
If Bernie’s new initiative takes off, as I hope it will, we
can start to build a left-wing movement at the local, state, and congressional
levels where some concrete changes are possible. The recent spate of judicial rulings suggests
that Republican voter suppression efforts may be defeated, and one more Supreme
Court appointment will protect what the lower courts have started to do.
None of this will change Clinton’s basic domestic and
foreign policy orientation, but she is, before all else, ambitious, and as soon
as she is inaugurated, somewhere in the bowels of the White House a re-election
team will be pulled together. Steady
pressure from the left, combined with the utter disarray of a demoralized Republican
Party, gives those of us on the left a chance for some victories.
Now, the women’s marathon at the Olympics has logged another
ten miles. Let me go back to the TV set
and watch the finale.
Saturday, August 13, 2016
A FEVERED THOUGHT
I give up. I cannot
stop obsessing about the election. I
have tried plunging into the Critique of
Pure Reason, I have tried binge watching Mozart in the Jungle, I have tried early morning walks, I have even
tried watching Beach Volleyball and Dressage at the Olympics. It just doesn’t work. So I am going to give in and blog about my
latest speculation about whether the Democrats can take back the Senate and the
House. By the way, I am now quite
convinced that Hillary Clinton will be the next president of the United States,
a thought even more depressing than Olympic Badminton. [And yes, even so, I shall continue working
here in North Carolina for Clinton. I
just did two hours of voter registration this morning.]
I have a thought that does not yet rise to the level of a
theory. Here it is, put as simply as I
am able. Let me start with some
facts. Roughly sixty percent of eligible
voters actually go out and voter in an American presidential election, only forty
percent in off-year Congressional elections.
These are rather startling numbers, for all that we have become
accustomed to them.
Now, there is a good deal of evidence that reliably
Republican voters are being turned off in large numbers by Trump. This is indicated both directly by polling
data and indirectly by the unusually large numbers of people polled who say
they intend to vote for Gary Johnson, the Libertarian candidate. In response to the data, more and more Republican
office holders and candidates are calling on the Republican National Committee
to cut Trump loose and concentrate their spending and other efforts on
down-ballot candidates in an effort to stem the bleeding.
The assumption behind this proposal is that it is possible
to get significant numbers of reliable Republicans to vote for the Republican
candidates for Senator and Representative even if they either vote for Johnson,
vote for Clinton, or simply do not cast a ballot for any presidential
candidate.
But I have begun to wonder whether that is realistic. The enormous disparity between the proportion
of eligible voters voting in presidential and off-year elections indicates that
a great many Americans – perhaps as many as fifty-five million – are only
motivated to turn out by the desire to vote for a candidate at the top of the
ticket. Once in the voting booth, they
tend to vote a straight ticket, but in the absence of a presidential race, a
third who would otherwise vote simply stay home. By the way, it seems plausible that there are
more Republicans turned off by Trump than there are Democrats turned off by
Clinton.
Now, I tend to doubt that those anti-Trump Republicans will
show up in large numbers and loyally vote for down-ballot Republicans. Surely confronted by Trump at the top of the ticket
and not really excited by Johnson, for all that they give his name when polled,
large numbers of anti-Trump Republicans who cannot be bothered to vote in
off-year elections will just stay home on November 8th.
If my hunch is correct, the Republicans may lose many more
House and Senate seats than the polls suggest, especially in light of the fact
that the Trump campaign has, even now, completely failed to stand up any kind
of on-the-ground campaign whatsoever.
Now, let us see whether Track and Field has started yet.
Friday, August 12, 2016
A REPLY TO AUSTIN HAIGLER
In a recent post, I made the following snarky remark:
"...in mature capitalism, a pyramidal structure of worker compensation would become entrenched, to a considerable degree keyed to the acquisition of formal educational credentials [but not to the acquisition of a genuine education! That is a separate matter, as I shall not try to explain here.]"
Austin Haigler posted this comment:
"I would love to have that last point elaborated on, or directed to where it has previously been done. As a current grad student, one steeped in philosophy, political science, and interdisciplinary studies generally, I am always defending the merits of (what I hope is) the genuine education. In a non capitalist society, say, a fully fledged socialist society, how would, ideally, the approach between mere educational credential acquisition vs genuine education, be drawn up so that the latter is what is actually sought after?"
I was pretty sure I had actually said something about that somewhere, and after a little thought I found it: a talk I gave at Teacher's College at Columbia University, archived on box.net and accessible by the link at the top of this page.
Take a look, and we can talk.
"...in mature capitalism, a pyramidal structure of worker compensation would become entrenched, to a considerable degree keyed to the acquisition of formal educational credentials [but not to the acquisition of a genuine education! That is a separate matter, as I shall not try to explain here.]"
Austin Haigler posted this comment:
"I would love to have that last point elaborated on, or directed to where it has previously been done. As a current grad student, one steeped in philosophy, political science, and interdisciplinary studies generally, I am always defending the merits of (what I hope is) the genuine education. In a non capitalist society, say, a fully fledged socialist society, how would, ideally, the approach between mere educational credential acquisition vs genuine education, be drawn up so that the latter is what is actually sought after?"
I was pretty sure I had actually said something about that somewhere, and after a little thought I found it: a talk I gave at Teacher's College at Columbia University, archived on box.net and accessible by the link at the top of this page.
Take a look, and we can talk.
Thursday, August 11, 2016
PERSONAL BEST
On Sunday morning, while I was moving around the bed, making it, I caught a little toe on my right foot on a bedpost and broke it. This morning, I managed my daily four mile walk with only a seven minute delay off my usual time. I spent the extra minutes planning my first lecture on Kant.
Waste not, want not.
Waste not, want not.
TRANSCENDENTAL MUSINGS
This morning, I finished re-reading my book, Kant’s Theory of Mental Activity, as
part of the preparation for my up-coming series of videotaped lectures on the Critique of Pure Reason. It has been a curious experience. I think this actually is the first time since
I corrected the page proofs in 1962 that I have read the book straight through. I had two reactions. The first was, “Good grief, did I really say
all that? I have forgotten so much of
it!” The second was, “But where is my
discussion of such-and-such? That is really
important. I thought I had included it in
the book. Did I maybe not think of it
until after the book came out?”
It was all so long ago.
When I scheduled these lectures, I thought of them as a
casual stroll down memory lane but I now realize that I have committed myself
to a seriously challenging undertaking.
This should be interesting.
By the way, I have concluded that there is no way that I can
deal with the entire Critique in ten
or twelve one hour and forty-five minute lectures, so I shall only lecture on
the Aesthetic and Analytic this semester.
If anyone at all shows up to the last lecture I will consider doing the
Dialectic in the Spring.
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
GIVE CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUE
Ordinarily I find Thomas Friedman tedious and irritating, but on occasion he speaks the truth with some eloquence. Today's NY TIMES column is one such instance. Friedman quite plausibly compares Donald Trump's statement yesterday about Hillary Clinton to the right-wing violent language in Israel that got Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin assassinated.
American is awash in guns and filled with tens of millions of Trump supporters, a good many of whom are clearly unhinged and armed. It will be a miracle if we get through this election without some serious and potentially devastating violence.
American is awash in guns and filled with tens of millions of Trump supporters, a good many of whom are clearly unhinged and armed. It will be a miracle if we get through this election without some serious and potentially devastating violence.
Tuesday, August 9, 2016
BIG NEWS
On August 24th, Bernie Sanders will launch a new organization, called Our Revolution. I got an email and right away gave a hundred dollars. This is it, folks. Time to stop complaining and join the movement! Give money, if like me you are on Easy Street. Give time and energy if you are not. But get involved. This is the best chance in half a century to make a real difference in America. Bernie is not my ideal movement leader -- not far enough to the left -- but he is the best we will get, and at this moment we have a chance to mobilize tens of millions of people. If you don't get on this bandwagon, then you lose your bitching rights.
All aboard!
All aboard!
Monday, August 8, 2016
YET AGAIN A REPLY TO JERRY FRESIA
Jerry Fresia posts this comment.
“I find it interesting that on the left, we have been
forever exhorted to study the dynamics of "race, gender, and class" -
but the injuries of class, particularly among white men, has been, in reality,
treated as a monstrous irrelevance.”
I should like to offer some reflections on this provocative
observation. I have written about this
before, but I believe that it bears repeating, especially as it relates to the
prospects for a serious progressive movement built on Bernie’s extraordinary
run for the Democratic Party nomination.
Capitalism rests on the
exploitation of the working class.
That is, I believe, a foundational truth for the discovery, articulation,
and demonstration of which we owe Karl Marx an eternal debt. Because capitalism exists to extract a
surplus from those whose labor creates material wealth, it naturally,
inexorably, and almost irresistibly
creates large and ever-greater inequalities of wealth and income. Capitalism is also prone to instabilities and
crises rooted in its essential nature, although the experience of the past
century demonstrates that it has within it the resources to cope with at least
some of the self-destructive consequences of that tendency.
Racial, gender, ethnic, religious, national and other social
differentiations play a complex role in the development and operations of
capitalism. Capitalism has routinely
used these differentiations to set different portions of the working class
against one another in ways that assist in the accumulation of wealth and the
inequality of income, but these differentiations, although useful to
capitalism, are not essential to it.
Capitalism is quite well able to flourish in a socially homogeneous
society in which even the inevitable gender differences are not made the basis
of differential worker compensation or access to the commanding heights of the
economy.
That is stated rather abstractly and formulaically, so I
should like to pause and emphasize the point. The United States is a large country with a
quite diverse population, so we are accustomed to economic divisions along
racial, ethnic, gender, and other lines.
But a little thought will make it obvious that capitalism can quite well
flourish in a society that is, let us say, all white, all Protestant, and all
Anglo-Irish. Even in a homogeneous capitalist
society, there will necessarily be a few who exploit and many who are
exploited. That, as Marx taught us, is the
genius and the revolutionary potential of capitalism.
The great liberation movements of the past seventy years
that have defined post-war American politics have sought to achieve equal
treatment and complete incorporation into the American capitalist economy for
one or another social group previously excluded or disadvantaged. The Civil Rights Movement, Women’s
Liberation, Gay Liberation, the movement for Native American rights, the
growing demand for inclusion of Latinos and Latinas into the American economy –
one and all – have demanded inclusion into the existing social and economic
order. Not one of them, save in its fringe
manifestations, has challenged capitalism itself. As I have observed in this space before, this
is why the great multi-national corporations find it so comfortable to adopt
uncompromisingly “progressive” public positions on affirmative action, gay
rights, even women’s rights. Those
positions do not in any way threaten their core interest, which is the
continuation of the exploitation of the working class.
Marx failed to foresee [as I argue at some length in my
essay, “The Future of Socialism”] that in mature capitalism, a pyramidal
structure of worker compensation would become entrenched, to a considerable
degree keyed to the acquisition of formal educational credentials [but not to
the acquisition of a genuine education! That
is a separate matter, as I shall not try to explain here.]
Consider now the worsening economic situation of white
working class non-college education men.
That their condition is bad and getting worse is obvious to anyone who
looks at the statistics. That their
condition is a direct consequence of the routine and efficient operations of
capitalism seems to me also obvious, although I shall be happy to discuss that
claim if called upon to do so. It is hardly surprising that these men are
deeply angry about their ever-worsening economic situation. It is also hardly surprising that they focus
their anger on those – Blacks, Latinos, Women – who now occupy some of the good
jobs that previously were occupied only by white men. You may find that reprehensible, but you
surely do not find it surprising.
What can these men do?
Well, they can take a cue from Black, Latino, Female, and Gay Americans
and form a Liberation Movement. Which appears to be exactly what they have
done! What else is the Donald Trump
candidacy to them [but not, of course, to Trump] but a white male non-college
educated liberation movement? They are getting
screwed, they know they are getting screwed, and those who are doing better
than they have no advice for them save “go to college.”
Now, when sanctimonious well-to-do white men tell African-Americans
that their disadvantages are their own fault, how do they respond? With anger, with resentment, with bitterness,
of course. How do you imagine
non-college educated white men respond when told that their problems are their
own fault, and that they should have stayed in school?
Which brings me to Bernie.
It is, as we used to say in the good old days, no accident that Bernie
describes himself as a socialist. Never
mind that the magic words, “collective ownership of the means of production,”
never pass his lips. Simply the label “socialist”
sets Bernie off from all the liberation movements and all the progressive
movements that have graced American society and made it even marginally bearable. Simply by calling himself a socialist, Bernie
raises the unutterable question that looms like Voldemort over all of our
political debates: Why capitalism?
If you conceive of progressive politics as the struggle to
perfect capitalism by including all races, genders, ethnicities, religions, and
sexual orientations in its warm embrace, then it is natural to view as your
enemy anyone who resists that inclusion.
But if you conceive of truly transformational politics as the forging of
a broad coalition of the exploited to challenge capitalism itself, then it will
be obvious that such a coalition must include white working class non-college
educated white men.
Our challenge, and Bernie’s challenge as well, is to find a
way to fashion such a coalition.
Saturday, August 6, 2016
A VERY IMPORTANT REVIEW ESSAY
I have just finished reading this quite long and very important review essay in The Atlantic, and have taken a moment to recommend it before I go to do some registration work for the Clinton campaign here in Chapel Hill. Read it. Then we can talk about it.
Friday, August 5, 2016
A SERIOUS MATHEMATICAL QUESTION
A rash of polls favorable to Clinton has pushed the Upshot's estimate of her chances of losing down to 20%, which Nate Cohn identifies as the probability that a major league hitter will strike out. But that seems to me intuitively wrong. The implication, I guess, is that if we ran this election over and over again, with the same candidates and the same surrounding situation, Trump would win roughly one fifth of the time, and that doesn't strike me as plausible.
The comparison with hitting performance seems off somehow. First of all, if you were to ask me what the chances were that a batter would strike out, my first reaction would be to reply "Who's pitching?" I am reminded of tourist attractions like white water rafting which are advertised as very exciting and risky but on which no one has ever been lost. How can it be risky if no one has ever died?
I am really ignorant of statistical theory so I am looking for guidance here.
Thursday, August 4, 2016
WHO'S ON FIRST?
Nicholas Kristof is a superbly educated journalist who writes serious stuff for the NY TIMES. But apparently he has a splendid satirical side of which I was not aware. This is a must read Op Ed column taking off from an immortal Abbot and Costello routine. A must read.
REALITY CHECK
As Jerry Fresia and others have noted, I am fatally prone to optimism -- a Tigger in a world designed for Eeyores. One of the several number-crunching political sites, The Upshot, now has Clinton at a 77% probability of winning in November, which to my ever-hopeful heart sounds pretty good. However, they helpfully point out that this is roughly the probability that an NBA professional basketball player will make a free throw. Do I really want my future and that of the entire world to depend on whether LeBron James hits a free throw? Actually, I just checked, and James' lifetime FTA is .744, so Hillary Clinton's chance of being elected is better than LeBron James' probability of making a free throw. There, that sounds better.
Sigh. It is going to be a long Fall, Kant or no Kant.
Sigh. It is going to be a long Fall, Kant or no Kant.
A PEDAGOGICAL PUZZLE
In the course of preparing for my opening lecture on the Critique, which I shall deliver [and
record] on August 29th, I have encountered a curious problem that may
be of some interest to those of you who are serious students of early modern
philosophy. In the philosophical world
in which Kant came to intellectual maturity, there were two overlapping debates
that had dominated the scene for more than a century, and much of Kant’s
philosophical work can only be understood as an effort to arrive at a position
midway between the two compering parties.
The first of these debates was the metaphysical and scientific dispute
between Leibniz and Newton, captured brilliantly in a series of five extended
exchanges between Leibniz and Samuel Clarke, a disciple of Newton. The second debate was the epistemological
standoff between the rationalists – principally Descartes and Leibniz – and the
empiricists – Locke, Berkeley, and Hume.
The structure and organization of the Critique is a reflection of these two debates as Kant understood them and his effort to resolve them.
My problem is that three-quarters of a century of scholarship
in the latter twentieth and early twenty-first centuries has made it clear that
Kant’s view of the philosophical situation in which he found himself – a view
widely shared at the time and for 150 years after his death – was in important
ways wrong. Descartes, Leibniz, and Hume
in particular have been the subject of deep and extensive reconsideration that
has altered our contemporary understanding of their writings. Indeed, my own doctoral dissertation and the
very first serious journal article I published were early contributions to that
scholarship.
So, do I begin my lectures by explaining to my audience the philosophical
situation as Kant understood it or the rather different view of things that all
of this scholarship has provided to us?
Clearly, I must choose one or the other if I am not completely to lose
my audience before I have quite begun. I
am making an enormous demand on those who attend the lectures or watch the
videos by speaking at length and in detail about so difficult a book as the Critique. It would be intolerable to preface those
lectures with five or ten hours of discussion about recent re-evaluations of
Descartes or Leibniz or Locke or Hume.
Accordingly, I have decided to lay out Kant’s problematic as he saw it, not as we may
think he ought to have seen it. I do
hope I shall not be subjected to too much criticism by clued up viewers!
Wednesday, August 3, 2016
A SOBER RE-EVALUATION OF WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON
The chatter on the morning talk shows is all about the
disintegration of the Trump campaign and the collateral damage being done to
the Republican Party. Joe Scarborough
reports that more than a year ago, Trump had a lengthy phone conversation with
Bill Clinton, who encouraged Trump to run for the Republican nomination. It would be an understatement to say that I
dislike Bill Clinton, but I have boundless admiration for his political
skill. Is it too much of a reach to speculate
that he foresaw the sort of damage Trump could do to the Republicans?
God, I love this stuff!
I think you have to belong to FaceBook to use the link. Sorry about that. Here is what Tobias wrote:
I have been reading the Rules of the Republican National Committee. (Only the insanity of the current political landscape could lead me to do such a thing.) If the sociopathic real estate grifter decides to make an explosive scorched-earth withdrawal from the race before the election (or indeed before the debates), as I think entirely possible, the following rule grants the RNC the power to select his replacement, with state members of the Committee exercising the votes of their delegates by proxy, as I understand it. (The option also exists to convene another national convention, but that seems exceedingly unlikely.) Dahlia Lithwick, Richard Kim, are smart people thinking this scenario through already?
RULE NO. 9
Filling Vacancies in Nominations
(a) The Republican National Committee is hereby authorized and empowered to fill any and all vacancies which may
occur by reason of death, declination, or otherwise of the Republican candidate for President of the United States or the
Republican candidate for Vice President of the United States, as nominated by the national convention, or the Republican
National Committee may reconvene the national convention for the purpose of filling any such vacancies.
occur by reason of death, declination, or otherwise of the Republican candidate for President of the United States or the
Republican candidate for Vice President of the United States, as nominated by the national convention, or the Republican
National Committee may reconvene the national convention for the purpose of filling any such vacancies.
(b) In voting under this rule, the Republican National Committee members representing any state shall be entitled to
cast the same number of votes as said state was entitled to cast at the national convention.
cast the same number of votes as said state was entitled to cast at the national convention.
(c) In the event that the members of the Republican National Committee from any state shall not be in agreement in the casting of votes hereunder, the votes of such state shall be divided equally, including fractional votes, among the members of the Republican National Committee present or voting by proxy.
(d) No candidate shall be chosen to fill any such vacancy except upon receiving a majority of the votes entitled to be
cast in the election.
cast in the election.
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