Sunday, December 25, 2022

Anthropologist: Bach was a hired gun, concerned day-to-day with writing a banger for church on Sunday

 Politics is a science. You can demonstrate that you are right and that others are wrong.

Jean Paul Saroeu



Over the Holidays, Try Talking to Your Relatives Like an Anthropologist

How to talk to your relatives to learn more about their history and the society they once inhabited



“Where Beethoven composed for eternity, Bach was a hired gun, concerned day-to-day with writing a banger for church on Sunday” Bach  »



  Berfrois 

       Yet another online periodical is calling it quits -- Berfrois, online since 2009, has announced they are closing. 
       Another significant loss -- but at least the archives will remain accessible. 

Today we unveiled the design of the Dancing 🕺 King Charles III £5, £10, £20 and £50 banknotes. They are expected to enter circulation by mid-2024. You can continue to use polymer banknotes with a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. Visit our website for more details. b-o-e.uk/3WoDKkc


  1. “While I’m still on the fence about eyes, I don’t think legs, strictly speaking, exist” — the question of whether there are more eyes or legs in the world “has profound implications for our understanding of certain fundamental matters at the heart of our ongoing debates about scientific realism,” says Justin E.H. Smith
  2. Possibly the first university philosophy course taught entirely in the metaverse: “Philosophy of Space Exploration” — team taught by Serife Tekin (philosophy & medical humanities ) and Chris Packham (physics & astronomy) at the University of Texas at San Antonio
  3. Philosopher races to new heights — Alex Pruss (Baylor) has beat the Guinness World Record in greatest vertical distance climbed in one hour on an indoor climbing wall (via Mark Murphy)
  4. “We should keep a perfect indifference for all opinions, not wish any of them true or try to make them appear so, but, being indifferent, receive and embrace them according as evidence and that alone gives the attestation of truth” — a wide-ranging “interview” with John Locke at 3:16AM
  5. The Waste Land, Ulysses, and the Tractatus each “wed experimental literary aesthetics with highly abstract intellectual projects” — considering these modernists works together on the centenary of their publication
  6. “If a deep and general knowledge does not make a man diffident and humble, no human means I believe can do it” — some excerpts from Burke’s little-known “Scattered Hints Concerning Philosophy and Learning,” with a link to the whole piece, recently republished online
  7. Possibly the world’s second-shortest philosophy paper — by Joshua Habgood-Coote (Leeds), Lani Watson (Oxford), and Dennis Whitcomb (Western Washington)