Friday, May 27, 2022

Self-Encounter: Jen Psaki’s legacy? One of the best press secretaries ever

 XI’S GOTTA HAVE IT! Ironic: Communist-Owned TikTok Censors My Fox News Video Telling People Not To Trust the Government.





Jen Psaki’s legacy? One of the best press secretaries ever.

During her last week at the White House, we look back on her tenure and the integrity she brought to the job.


Things to Look Forward to: An Illustrated Celebration of Living with Presence in Uncertain Times, Disguised as a Love Letter to the Future

Love, laundry, and the miraculous in the mundane.

  1. “Faddish calls to… ‘center the most marginalized,’ which abound in the academic and leftist activist circles… ‘never sat well with me’” — a profile of Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò (Georgetown) in New York Magazine
  2. “If any woman could realize Sartre’s picture of self-defining ‘man,’ Iris might have fancied her chances” — When Iris Murdoch met Jean-Paul Sartre
  3. “For better or worse, most contemporary philosophers must engage either directly or indirectly with racist philosophers” — Brandon Hogan (Howard) on how to do it better
  4. How to participate in a philosophical discussion — a guide for students by Olivia Bailey (Berkeley)
  5. The television show that introduced existentialism to to Americans — the 10-episode series, “Self-Encounter,” aired in 1961 and was hosted by Hazel Barnes
  6. “All of this applying takes an incalculable toll… Maybe we need to imagine whole new worlds where people-picking happens very differently” — Adam Mastroianni (Columbia) on the costs of, and alternatives to, all the applying for everything we all do (via The Browser)
  7. Some people think that humans matter more than non-human animals because of what we can do, or what we’re like — but, argues Jeff Sebo (NYU) this “human exceptionalism has it backwards: if anything, we increasingly have capacities-based and relationship-based grounds for prioritising nonhuman animals”

  1. Philosophy of International Law, by John Tasioulas and Guglielmo Verdirame.

Revised: 

  1. Dutch Book Arguments Susan Vineberg.
  2. Plato’s Timaeus Donald Zeyl and Barbara Sattler.
  3. Panpsychism Philip Goff, William Seager, and Sean Allen-Hermanson.
  4. William Heytesbury Miroslav Hanke and Elzbieta Jung.
  5. Sociobiology Catherine Driscoll.
  6. Port Royal Logic  Alan Nelson and Jill Buroker.
  7. Philosophy of Systems and Synthetic Biology by Sara Green.

IEP     ∅           

NDPR     

  1. Liberal Self-Determination in a World of MIgration by Laura Ferracioli is reviewed by David Miller.
  2. Materialism from Hobbes to Lockeby Stewart Duncan is reviewed by Nicholas Jolley.

1000-Word Philosophy     

  1. Why Be Moral?: Plato’s ‘Ring of Gyges’ Thought Experiment by Spencer Case.        

Project Vox     ∅ 

Recent Philosophy Book Reviews in Non-Academic Media   

  1. Private Notebooks: 1914-1916 by Ludwig Wittgenstein is reviewed by Nikhil Krishnan at The New Yorker.
  2. The Good Life Method: Reasoning Through the Big Questions of Happiness, Faith, and Meaning by Meghan Sullivan and Paul Blaschko is reviewed by Pamela Hieronymi at Los Angeles Review of Books
  3. Nasty, Brutish, and Short: Adventures in Philosophy with My Kids by Schott Hershovitz is reviewed by Thuy Dinh at National Public Radio.
  4. Reconstructing Pragmatism: Richard Rorty and the Classical Pragmatistsby Chris Voparil is reviewed by Crispin Sartwell at The Times Literary Supplement
  5. Spying Through a Glass Darkly: The Ethics of Espionage and Counter-Intelligence by Cécile Fabre is reviewed anonymously at The Times Literary Supplement

Compiled by Michael Glawson

BONUS: Liberated by dualism