Monthly Archives: December 2022

Hanukkah Kitsch and Christmas Shopping

I spent most of this afternoon Christmas shopping. I can make that align with this article about Hanukkah kitsch. New York Times, 18 Dec 2022: Potato Latke Cocktail, Anyone?

Posted in Culture, Personal history, Religion | Comments Off on Hanukkah Kitsch and Christmas Shopping

One More Book Story

The Washington Post did a list about two weeks ago about this: Washington Post, Alyssa Rosenberg, 6 Dec / updated 19 Dec 2022: Opinion | To build a delightful library for kids, start with these 99 books Then today posted … Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Personal history | Comments Off on One More Book Story

Two Tales About Books

There is a wide range of attitudes about books. Many people read no books at all. Some read books but only by borrowing from libraries; some people buy and read books but treat them as disposable objects (these are the … Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Personal history | Comments Off on Two Tales About Books

Progress, Its Implementation, and Trust

A long piece today, from the Jan/Feb 2023 issue of The Atlantic. The Atlantic, Derek Thompson, 12 Dec 2022: Why the Age of American Progress Ended, subtitled “Invention alone can’t change the world; what matters is what happens next.”

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Human Progress, Science | Comments Off on Progress, Its Implementation, and Trust

Assorted Items on Friday the 16th

About evidence and reason; conservative book bans; automobiles as creators of inequality; anti-vaxxers and traffic crashes; Trump as the emblem of a half population of semi-literates. I’ve seen this comment on Facebook before, but have never quoted it. It’s apocryphal, … Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Culture | Comments Off on Assorted Items on Friday the 16th

Longtermism (and its implications), part 3

Here’s one more leftover saved link to an article about Sam Bankman-Fried and longtermism. It’s from a Salon writer who did two previously pieces about it/them (which I discussed on 14 Sep and on on 22 Aug), giving me the … Continue reading

Posted in longtermism, Philosophy | Comments Off on Longtermism (and its implications), part 3

Longtermism (and Science Fiction), part 2

More about “longermism,” Effective Altruism, how they relate to science fiction, and whether or not books can be reduced to six-paragraph summaries.

Posted in longtermism, Philosophy, science fiction | Comments Off on Longtermism (and Science Fiction), part 2

Longtermism and Science Fiction, part 1

I’ve discussed “longtermism” before, via a book by Ari Wallach called LONGPATH, reviewed here about five weeks ago. Its ideas seemed entirely reasonable: consider long-term consequences of making decisions rather than reacting in the moment. Consider the big picture. (The … Continue reading

Posted in longtermism | Comments Off on Longtermism and Science Fiction, part 1

No Escaping Tribal Warfare

Items today about Hasidic yeshiva schools, “common good constitutionalism,” the root cause of violent crime, and the increasingly despicable Elon Musk. We like to think modern society is more advanced than societies of thousands of years ago, and it is … Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Culture, Politics | Comments Off on No Escaping Tribal Warfare

Doom and Existential Dread

About the stages of the Republican Party’s terminal illness (doom); and about why conservatives disapprove of same-sex relationships more than any number of other supposed Biblical sins (existential dread); and my explanation for the latter.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Evolution, Religion | Comments Off on Doom and Existential Dread