Saturday, November 25, 2023

Haven't Said How Much I Love The Merriam Webster Website in a While

I WAS WONDERING why no one said someone was "gormy, " now I know.

Gormless began life as the English dialect word gaumless, which was altered to the modern spelling when it expanded into wider use in the late 19th century. The origins of gaumless are easy to understand; the word derives from a combination of the dialect noun gaum, meaning "attention" or "understanding," and the suffix -less. This gaum has a related verb, also limited to dialect use, meaning "to pay attention to" and "to understand." Perhaps surprisingly, the four-letter gaum has multiple additional dialectal uses that are etymologically unrelated to these. Also noun-and-verb pairs, gaum means "a sticky or greasy mess" and "to smudge or smear especially with something sticky or greasy," as well as "a stupid doltish person" and "to behave in a stupid or awkward manner." Use of all of these pales in comparison to that of gormless, however, which is most frequently seen in British English

Merriam Webster  online

Hate Mail

THE ARTICLE mentioned in that footnote is:

 Christian Personalism vs. Utilitarianism by Peter Colosi.  Linked to through the National Institute of Health, of all places though it's published in a Catholic journal of medical issues. 

 I have major areas of disagreement with him as I did Popes JPII and Benedict XVI, I was certainly not mentioning him or them as an endorsement of all of their ideas, just as an example of how religious tradition is far more radical than secular, academic philosophy generally is.   I certainly don't agree with Colosi on Humane Vitae or on sexual morality or, in fact, many other things.   Citation isn't endorsement, I cite all kinds of things I then attack.  It's one of the things adults used to do, read things before they talked about them.   And to admit that even those I don't like much can have good ideas or make good points. 

Update:   "Citatiion isn't endorsement...even those I don't like much can have good ideas or make good points."

Oh sure, Sparky. But when I paraphrase Mencken, that means I'm as horrible a human being as he was. Thanks for clearing that up, you unself-aware hypocritical nitwit
.

No, you were a jerk before you paraphrased Mencken,  one who I doubt ever read any Mencken.  I wouldn't, by the way, fault you for not having read Mencken, he's hardly worth the time to read him.  When I read him in the 1970s to find out why everyone was "as H. L. Mencken said"ing all the time I thought he was a narrow-minded, bigoted jackass, journalistic scribbler who was a crappy reporter who had an enormous over-estimate of his self worth.  Someone who, in the cheap style of modern erudition, replaced the hard work of knowing what he was saying with a cynical style that was just a cheap substitute for substance.   Something like you and the rump community at that baby-blue blog you probably still frequent.   It surprised me not at all to find out he was a racist and antisemite, as well. 

 

Saturday Night Radio Drama - Louis Kornfeld - The Talk

 The Talk 

MR. ZUFFI - Christian Paluck
TIM - Dmitry Shein
TROY - Willy Appelman
ANGELINA - Elana Fishbein

Written by Louis Kornfeld
Produced by Jonathan Mitchell
Associate produced by Kerry Kastin

As I said a while back, The Truth is a source for excellent audio drama which was sometimes heard on the radio.  I hope they go into production again, soon.  But there is the archive. 

They're short so I'll give you another one.

Remember The Lakehouse 

 

It’s been five years since her stroke, and Ann is still struggling to make new memories. But an ancient technique might be the key she needs to put her life back together.

ANN - Ann Carr
IZZY - Dennis Pacheco
CHRISTINE - Amy Warren
RICH - Jake Smith
SOFIE - Sadie Mitchell
WAITRESS - Liz Noth
BUS DRIVER - Louis Kornfeld
WOMAN - Megan Stein
PA - Timothy Cooper

Written by Louis Kornfeld
Produced by Jonathan Mitchell
Associate produced by Sophie Yalkezian and Nichole Hill

This story is a sequel to our story Remember the Baby.

 A third one for a bonus. 

 


Friday, November 24, 2023

The Flimflam of Utilitarian Ethics

THERE ARE A NUMBER of so-called public intellectuals who I think are a lot less intellectual than they are public, Peter Singer is one of those.  I found myself thinking of the phrase "The Davos crowd" when I read this section of the interview that Daniel Gross did with him.   As it turns out for all his talk about the welfare of People in poverty he's mighty comfortable with the way things are in this billionaire ridden age.  Think of this as the just elected fascist leader of his own country blasts Pope Francis as a terrible leftist and ask who are the plutocrats and autocrats more afraid of.  Which one is more likely to advance the equality that Peter Singer goes through some minimal motions about.

Beginning in talking about his young adulthood Singer said:

You couldn’t live through that period without having seen footage of starving children—particularly from the Biafra crisis, when part of Nigeria broke away and was essentially besieged by the rest of Nigeria. We were living in Oxford, which is where Oxfam, the international aid organization, had its headquarters. They seemed to be trying to do things along the right lines, and so we started supporting them.

A lot of people thought that we don’t have to help people in extreme poverty, because we’re not responsible for their poverty. You can say, “Yes, we are responsible because we benefit from an unequal global trading system,” but that’s a complicated debate. I was trying to cut around that by saying, “Look, if you came across a child drowning in a shallow pond, and you could rescue that child at relatively minor cost to yourself, but you just decided not to do it because you didn’t want to ruin your clothes, that would be horrible.” But, then, if you accept that, you are accepting that we have responsibilities for people who are in need.



You seem to be a skeptic of Marx’s ideas in practice. Why did you write a book about Marx?

I was invited to do a book for an Oxford series. I had studied Marx when I was a graduate student, and there was this view of early Marx, largely based on some unpublished writings, that was all about alienation, and that there was a decisive break that came somewhere around 1848—first you had the kind of Hegelian-philosophy Marx, and then you had the different, scientific Marxism, and there wasn’t much of a connection between the two. In studying this, I’d been persuaded that was wrong, that there was continuity, and that you could explain what Marx was on about in his later writings by looking at the early writings—and that this also explained some of the flaws in Marx’s thinking. The idea that history is leading toward this goal, where all the contradictions will be resolved, came straight from Hegel. I think there are some interesting critiques of what’s going on in capitalist societies, but he really thinks that the revolution is inevitable. I think that was clearly wrong.

It seems like one of your least “instructive” books, in terms of how to live.

That’s true. I guess it’s one way in which we ought not to live. And that is still relevant because, very often, when I speak about global poverty, somebody gets up and says, “Well, isn’t the problem really capitalism? And shouldn’t we be doing what we can do to overthrow capitalism?”

I'd like to say that for an "ethical" philosopher to figure that was a situation where the choice was either one or the other of those two atrocities "in practice" is just lazy.  Considering his ease with the idea of going back to infanticide you'd think he'd at least try to come up with something more "ethical" than what he has.  He doesn't even really make a stand for his supposed ethical content within the framework of capitalism but, rather, goes for the easiest targets of the moribund philosophy of Marxism.  Even the Marxists have absolutely no use for Marxism, any more, give or take a few of the more marginal figures in academia and small-media scribblage and online babbleage.  Communism turns out to be just a more oppressive form of capitalism on the steroids of state control, eminently positioned to best the old-fashioned kind in which wealth and control remains outside of the governmental apparatus.  Western capitalists and their academic and lawyerly possessions are in the business of making sure, instead, that the government apparatus is in their hands without any effective democratic involvement from the underclass.  I'm no "public intellectual," media-darling, Princeton "ethicist" but I can see that situation clearly, enough.

It seems to me that the movement that has grown up around your philosophical work has ended up being very compatible with capitalism, in the sense that some of its practitioners are people who set out to earn a lot of money—some of them are billionaires who have decided to give away the money that they’ve amassed. Was that something you expected, for capitalism to almost be incorporated into your philosophical work?

I don’t think capitalism is incorporated into my philosophical work. I think my philosophical work is neutral about what is the best economic system—but it’s also realistic, and I think we’re stuck with capitalism for the foreseeable future. We are going to continue to have billionaires, and it’s much better that we have billionaires like Bill and Melinda Gates or Warren Buffett, who give away most of their fortune thoughtfully and in ways that are highly effective, than billionaires who just build themselves bigger and bigger yachts.

I'd strenuously reject the idea that his philosophical work is neutral (that most absurd and nearly universally claimed of "enlightenment" ersatz virtues) about such preferences in economics.  I distrust anyone who doesn't start out with what is called in modern theology "a preferential option for the poor," which is intentionally not neutral and, over all, opposed to a philosophy of inserting People into a scheme of economic valuation.  As I've demonstrated here rather exhaustively, biological science under natural selection is constantly involved in setting economic value on human beings and, certainly, on animals and plants within an overt economic framing.  That that use of economics may have started to be intended as a metaphor doesn't matter as it has come to completely dominate thinking in it.  Metaphors so often seem to become mistaken for what they characterize in that way.  

That is especially true of most of the social-so-called sciences which built on scientism and its gaudiest area of growth, natural selection, though it started before that.  Economics, the earliest of those and the one which directly infected science.  Malthus was an early example on which Darwin built.  Given the ease with which science was polluted, philosophy was an even easier mark.  I completely reject any claim that any utilitarian philosophy, from Bentham to Mills to Singer is not constantly in the business of estimating economic valuations in exactly the capitalist manner, it is embedded in its most basic procedures, it is all about making premonitory statements of valuation of even human lives.  It's philosophy as a financial prospectus.   The only widely practiced alternative of that is a close and serious reading of the Gospel of Jesus in which such valuation and wealth amassing are presented as wrong.*    While I respect the efforts of using Marx's critique of capitalism, by far his best work, by liberation theology, to go past that on the basis of prescriptive Marxist theory is a mistake.  The history of Marxism in practice proves that it is as dangerous as capitalism.  As can be seen, is work is not only comfortable with capitalism, it's a boon for the most powerful and dangerous class of People in the world, billionaires, in practice.**

In regard to "neutrality," I think more than a majority of the time it's not neutral, as with the American courts it is perfectly willing to go along with the laws that keep both billionaires and the homeless from sleeping under bridges or on air vents and especially in places where the middle-class and even the affluent will see them.  As soon as it comes to applying laws that send the poor and destitute to prison, they will always carve out exceptions for the rich and powerful.  The entire judicial system in most places and certainly the United States demonstrates that cultivated and claimed "neutrality" that claims to not take the condition of People as being at all determinative ALMOST ALWAYS IS WEIGHTED IN FAVOR OF THOSE WITH WEALTH AND POWER.  Allowing the wealthy to pay lawyers to get them off,  as Trump always has, makes that "neutrality" of the law a lie, all up and down the criminal code. And the judges and, especially, "justices" are as in on the scheme as anyone.  The same is true in most other institutions, universities not much less than any others.  

Does that mean you’re not that interested in the question of whether billionaires should exist?

Look, I think it would be better if you had an economic system in which we didn’t have billionaires—but the productivity that billionaires have generated [sic] was still there,  and that money was more equitably distributed. But, really, there hasn’t been a system that has had equity in its distribution and the productivity that capitalism has had. I don’t see that happening anytime soon. If one country starts to tax billionaires so that there can’t be any billionaires, those billionaires are going to go to other countries where they can continue to be billionaires.

In short, the billionaire class, the Davos crowd, and especially those who wouldn't bother going through that exercise in cover-up publicity, have nothing to worry about from the "ethics" of Peter Singer.  Which is, I'm sure, to the economic and publicity and academic benefit of Peter Singer.  That immediately becomes friggin' obvious.   Note his next argument and note he doesn't compare C.E.O. compensation to that of the lowest paid workers, THOSE WHO ACTUAL PRODUCE THAT "PRODUCTIVITY."  As you can read in my masthead, I take the benefits of LEVELING BILLIONAIRES OUT OF EXISTENCE far more seriously than this very famous "ethicist."  It will prove impossible to retain anything like a democracy with billionaires ready to rat fuck it, as almost all of them are.  I go a lot farther and say anything but egalitarian democracy is an unstable, illegitimate government.  The United States lost the vestiges of genuine democracy we finally got under the Voting Rights Act, by court fiat last week in a judiciary bought with billionaire money.  

One thing that surprised me, in “The Life You Can Save,” is that you argue in favor of very high salaries for C.E.O.s. You also write that inequality is a problem only insofar as it leads to oppressive relationships—that inequality in itself is not wrong.

I think my point there was simply that it’s rational for corporations that are doing billions of dollars’ worth of business to be prepared to pay tens of millions of dollars to hire somebody who can maintain that level of profitability. That makes perfect sense. So I don’t think we should be surprised by the way they do it now.

If you’re asking me, “Would it be a better system if no C.E.O. would want to earn fifty million dollars?” Yeah, that would be a better ethos. But I see the difficulties in a real transformation, not only in a culture, but perhaps pushing against some aspects of human nature that a culture has emphasized and that people then come to see as natural. It’s not easy to change that.


And that aspect of the culture, in this case, is self-interest?

Yeah, and a belief in market competitiveness, I guess. And an assessment of worth in terms of how much you earn, rather than the social good that you produce. But there are lots of books that have been pointing this out and have said, “This is not good, and we should change.” But it doesn’t seem that writing books about this actually has a very lasting impact. I suppose I’ve come to think that encouraging people—wealthy people—to give fifty per cent of their income, or all the different sliding percentages that I talk about in “The Life You Can Save, ”that’s more likely to do some good.

This reminds me of Marilynne Robinson's brilliant critique of British social thinking as a country manner weekend party in which everyone is related to everyone else and the favored party game, "Philanthropy," has the goal of ending up in exactly the same place that they all started with everyone in the same place and holding the same wealth they had, anyway.  An intrinsic part of that game is to come up with reasons that all virtuous attempts at improving the lives of those without are really disguised vices. Jeremy Bentham is one of those party guests she names.  It is one of the most spot-on intellectual critiques I've ever read and as true of today as it was for the Georgian and Victorian periods. That it came in her "Mother Country"  the one book of hers which underwent overt suppression in Britain and here by the New York Times' predictably unfavorable review death of a few crucial cuts in the U.S. isn't any real shock.  Its one of the most radical books I've ever read from what turns out to be one of the most radical intellectuals alive today.  The Gospel, indeed, is radical.  So is the Mosaic Law's economic justice.  I'm unaware of any of Peter Singer's books which underwent such a suppression or even a critical critique that affected its publication and distribution.  Marilynne Robinson gets asked a lot more about her novels than about her essays that endanger the economic order and make a Biblical and theological critique on the truth of Scripture.  They are subversive of the current holders of power in ways that those in the next list of academics who I'm familiar with can be counted on not to be.

A lot of your works cite white male academics who, for lack of a better phrase, take up a lot of space in intellectual conversations: Joshua Greene, Steven Pinker, Timothy Garton Ash, Michael Sandel, Benedict Anderson, John Rawls, to name a few. Because so much of your work is fundamentally about equity, I wonder if that is something that’s on your radar.

That’s the manner in which I was educated, I suppose, and which still is very influential in the ideas that I’m involved with. I’ve certainly worked with a lot of philosophers who are not male, but they have been white generally. I’ve got a project now about the issue of global population, with Alex Ezeh, a demographer of Nigerian origin at Drexel University. I worked with Pascal Kasimba when I was at Monash University, who is of African descent, on a project relating to in-vitro fertilization. I have also co-authored things with people of Asian descent, with Yew-Kwang Ng, for instance. But, I have to say, I want to work with people whose ideas are, you know, at a level of discussion that I’m interested in, and that I’m progressing. If you’re thinking of the work of Africans, for example, I don’t know the work of many of them that is really in the same sort of—I’m not quite sure how to put this—participating in the same discussion as the people you’ve just mentioned.

I was going to hold this passage for another post to make a fuller critique of how conventional academic scribbling is largely done within the same confines that almost all previous intellectual and, especially, academic content comes from, white, male voices on behalf of the existing order.  I would compare the situation in academic philosophy with that within even academic theology in which there are entire schools of theology springing from Women, People of Color, People of many different ethnic and, of course, religious identities.  A book I've cited here several times, Quest For The Living God by Elizabeth A Johnson is about many different theologies from Women of diverse identity, People of Color, People of various ethnicities, and from some white men that are deep and critical and important.  That is to the extent to which something so ill funded and promoted can be said to flourish under the secularist, materialist-atheist-scientistic ruling conformity of academia.  As I said, I realized quite a while ago that I found reading theology was intellectually challenging and stimulating in a way that I almost never find modern philosophy to be.  That they deal with real problems instead of ideological word juggling has a lot to do with it.  They don't start from a pose of impersonal ersatz objectivity, as well. James Cone whose theology comes directly from his knowledge of living under white supremacy is infinitely more important as a thinker than Peter Singer who can't say that about his knowing of his family history under Nazi genocide.   "Neutrality" and "objectivity" is no way to find out much of anything about real life, those don't really mean that the one posing that has not actually made a subjective choice from where they are starting.  If more people in real life find James Cone's theology speaks for them, that's because he did speak for them.  Singer speaks for little to no one.  I think People will be reading Cone when most of those others have gone the way of most of the big-name philosophers of the past and appear nowhere but in obscure academic papers and PhD dissertations and MA theses.  When their work doesn't lead to political and legal and military and financial consequences that make them, rightly, infamous.  

Singer on in-vitro fertilization.  I would like to know what utilitarian equations in regard to performing that very difficult, very expensive first-world medicine Peter Singer has come up with, especially in regard to caring for disabled infants and other currently living People.  In a world where there are so many unwanted, uncared for children who could benefit from adoption it strikes me as at least ethically challenging. Not to mention the medical resources that could be used elsewhere by living People.  Remember, the Nazis' reasoning for why they started their mass murder program with the disabled with the motive of shifting resources for their care to soldiers who would be injured in their "Lebensraum" genocidal invasion of Poland.  How does Singer view the ethics of in-vitro fertilization where the resources are spent on those who don't yet exist?    Maybe I'll look for that but I think someone who looks at it from a different framing would probably come up with a better view of it.  They might come up with a conclusion that arrives in a place they didn't start out from instead of one which I suspect by design informed is by "public intellectuals" self-interest.

*  I would note that there are certain parables which have been read to support capitalism but when I read them as just a using the common experience of those People he was talking to.  The sharp master who give his servants money to invest in his absence isn't, in the end, about God anymore than it's about the proto-capitalist.  Nor than that the judge who is nagged into giving the importunate widow is a picture of the God of Jesus and Moses and the Prophets.  

There's a reason that the founder of utilitarianism who is now a meat-poppet, Jeremy Bentham, rejected the morality of Jesus.  It was the typical British reason, that the Gospel is in the economic disinterest of the aristocrats, the wealthy, the monarchy and the so-called nobility and the power holders of Britian, including those who ran the universities. Just as it was a problem for the financial interests of the Romans who put him to death and the Temple elite who conspired in that. The materialist-atheist-scientistic rejection of Christianity is intimately tied up with British and other class systems for which the Gospel of Jesus is financially costly and making it academically and legally and sociably unfashionable is very desirable from that point of view.  One way to get a leg up in all class ridden societies is to kick down and not up.  That Marx's system which had its own motives in ideological materialism and atheism and scientism, is a pathetically inadequate replacement for the morality of the Jewish tradition and Christianity that takes Jesus seriously, it's little wonder that sharing the secondary motive of the non-Marxist rejection of Christianity, that shared motive would be fatal to implementing something like egalitarian economics or real rule by the People, democracy.  What Marxism shares with capitalism is, as well, the reason that the United States was doomed as a democracy by those "enlightenment" founders who wrote the Constitution and exercised such control from the start.  Especially those who never had to face the voters, the Courts and the Supreme Court who have, from the start, been invested in the same economic scheme.  That is such a ubiquitous scheme that it accounts for much of the most loudly media magnified "Christianity" that rejects the Gospel, if anything, even more soundly than the materialists do.   Mike Johnson, Marjorie T. Greene, the media hallelujah peddlers, "traditional Catholics," . . .

I don't see Peter Singer's philosophy as being even a baby step out of line with that scheme.  

For those who wonder about what I called Bentham, maybe one of the reasons Singer, as an Aussie, was attracted to him was he left provisions in his will to have his hide tanned when he died, as it were.  Lenin at least wanted his corpse buried instead of being turned into a materialist-atheist-scientistic side show spectacle.   I can't say that it inclined me to be less skeptical of his philosophy when I became aware of it.
 
** I may write about a paper I read from, of all People, a conservative Catholic, which shows that even those most arch-conservatives among recent popes, John Paul II and Benedict XVI argued out of a far more radical alternative to any philosophical position that holds people as means to an end, something else intrinsic to utilitarianism whether it admits that or not.  And, as I have noted, I didn't like either of those two Popes and have been, if anything, more consistently critical of them than I have ever been to Peter Singer.  I suspect I have little to nothing much in common with the writer of the article, perhaps Singer and I overlap more.  I'll have to look farther into the sources of those quotes to see how consistent their arguments are, though, like Singer, they both were more accommodating to the practice of right wing governments and billionaires and their AstroTurf operation, "traditional Catholics" than are compatible with their personal integrity on those points.  Even conventional Catholic social teaching is radical in comparison to most secular social-thought on most points.  I think Francis has been far more consistent in applying Catholic social teaching as if it really matters.  

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

College Credentialed Philosphers Seem To Prefer Academic Folly Over Wisdom

MORE OF THE interview with Peter Singer.

How did your family first come to live in Australia?

My parents were both living in Vienna in the nineteen-thirties. They were around thirty years old when Hitler marched into Austria, and they were both Jewish. They realized very rapidly that they had no future in Austria. Jews could not own businesses under Nazi laws, and my mother was just qualified as a physician. The Nazis said that Jewish doctors could only treat Jewish patients. I don’t think they actually, at that stage anyway, really thought that they could be murdered. But my father wrote to an uncle in America, and said, “Could you provide a sponsorship for me and my wife?” And the uncle wrote back, saying, “I’m very happy to sponsor you. But, unfortunately, as I’ve not had the opportunity to meet your wife, I can’t sponsor her.” So, obviously, that was a pretty devastating blow.

My mother then remembered that she had met an Australian who had come to Austria to ski, and she’d been invited to join him and some friends at one of the wine bars on the edge of Vienna. He had then sent her a card from Australia, thanking her for the company. She thought she would write to this man. He was not Jewish. He was a Catholic of Irish descent, but he was very supportive and moved rapidly to organize visas for my father and for her. And that’s why they came to Australia. We went to see the man who sponsored them, Jerry Donovan, in Melbourne, when I was a child.

Of my four grandparents, one, my mother’s mother, survived the Holocaust and came to Australia just about when I was born, in 1946. She lived until 1955. We were very close. We had other Jewish friends in Melbourne, some of whom had concentration-camp numbers tattooed on their arms. I wondered what that meant.


Did your family history influence your views of ethics?

I’m sure, but I can’t say that I was really conscious of it. The elements that I was conscious of were an abhorrence of racism and violence. I read a lot of history of the coming of Fascism in Europe, and how the Holocaust was conceived and planned. Some people have said, “Well, if you’re aware of this kind of sheer physical suffering being inflicted on your family, then it’s easier to empathize with the suffering that’s being inflicted on nonhuman animals.” Isaac Bashevis Singer, who is no relation to me, said the same kind of thing—in one of his stories, he has a character saying, “For the animals, every day is Treblinka.


This might be the most incredible passage of the entire interview.  How could such a family history NOT knowingly influence his view of ethics?  Both of my parents and a couple of my uncles were in the American military during World War Two, none of them saw the death camps though they learned of them earlier than most and knew those who did see them.  They all saw terrible things, no one in my family died because of Nazi eugenics, no one of them was ever in a German prisoner of war or a death camp but I've been aware of the role that the Nazis' genocides, the genocides of the fascist Italian and French Vichy regime and other European gangster run countries, the Japanese Imperial crimes against humanity played in virtually every conclusion about morality those are related to which I've ever come to.  I will include other genocides under other regimes, those derived from Marxism, certainly.  I can honestly say that every political and legal area I've thought about is highly influenced by knowing that history.  There is no philosophical or theological or academic area in which I've thought that is uninfluenced by knowing that history.

Surely, a world-promoted Ivy-League and big-press anointed expert" in "ethics" should be more aware of such a thing than "I’m sure, but I can’t say that I was really conscious of it."  

That Peter Singer can't tell you that when he's world famous as an 'ethicist' and philosopher has to be the most unbelievable thing I've heard or read this month, and I follow the news of the lying Republican-fascists quite closely.   I think that his response to that is to cite the evils and cruelty of animal husbandry and the meat industry without making the connection between that treatment of non-human beings and the equally objectifying, materialistic, devaluation of human beings into objects for use or disposal is pathological.  And I do mean that word literally,  to be so detached from such proximate history which is such an important part of your own family history is exactly that.  If nothing else in his professional discourse led me to be skeptical of his ideological framing, that would make me highly doubtful as to its depth or attachment to reality.  I have come to have such skepticism about a good part of current academic discourse, probably most of all that which mimics the methods of science or mathematics, though as the thinking of lawyers and judges and "justices" is more exposed, I think that is probably more immediately dangerous.  

In a book about your maternal grandfather, “Pushing Time Away,” you write that he met your grandmother, in part, because he was attracted to men, and she was attracted to women, and they were meeting to discuss that. That seemed like a real discovery.

That was a real discovery, yes. I learned about it only when I obtained letters that my grandfather had written to my grandmother, which had been brought to Australia. I found this whole stack of letters in my aunt’s apartment. I read German, but this earlier style of handwriting was a lot of trouble to read. When I got somebody to transcribe them, I was completely amazed. I had no idea that their original connection was because of attractions to people of their own sex.


What motivated you to go through all that, and write a book about it in the end?

I originally was interested in learning more about my grandfather, because he was the person in my family who I could perhaps most see as a forerunner to myself. I knew that he had been a member of Freud’s Wednesday circle, that he had co-authored a paper with Freud, and that then he had been involved with Alfred Adler, the founder of Individual Psychology. I wanted to see: Were there any parallels between his thinking and mine? But then I found out other things that I didn’t expect.

I got the sense, from the book, that you questioned whether it was worthwhile to write about your family history.

That’s right. And I still have that feeling a little bit. Which of my works have done the most good? It’s not going to be “Pushing Time Away.” It’s going to be “Animal Liberation” or “The Life You Can Save.” I think it’s good for my children and grandchildren, but from an impartial calculation of how I can do the most good, this was something of an indulgence.

Peter Singer calls himself a consequentialist: he believes that actions should be judged by their consequences.


This reminds me of a disability rights advocate's critique of Oliver Sachs that called him "The Man Who Mistook His Patients For A Literary Career."  Only Peter Singer used his grandparents in that way.  I have to question the ethics of revealing so much about private people who were not there to give their grandson permission to use their intimate lives to do that.  I don't know if he got the permission of their living descendants to do it, though, of course, the two who mattered the most aren't around to give him that permission.

However, that's just my sense of morality.  But I don't think the consequences of what he did in violating his grandparents privacy , which he apparently believes are minimal, are the only matters to consider.  One is the devaluation of personal and family privacy which such uses of other private People by writers and others leads to.  It normalizes it and presents it as acceptable.  I think there has been a devaluation of privacy that is ongoing throughout the modern period in which tabloids and cabloids and the publicity industry and the gossip industry have led to a disturbing number of People to have no sense of value for their own privacy and the privacy of those around them.  The internet has made that quite consequential.  I remember having long, drawn out arguments with people freaking out about the NSA collecting very general data about their online behavior when they, themselves, gave away much larger parts of their privacy voluntarily.  Giving it away to companies and online forums in forms that anyone, from greedy corporations, malicious gossips to the worst dictatorships and gangsters in the world could read about their most intimate lives.  I think celebrities who use the private lives of other People to get something published contribute to that.  It does have malignant consequences in real lives of real, living People.   When there is a person who has chosen to have a public life, especially people in politics, in the judiciary, those who chose to be in a position to have an impact on many others, involuntarily, the right to an expectation of privacy is a quite different matter.  I would not be commenting on Peter Singer or his use of his grandparents if he didn't take it on himself to have a career in prescriptive disposal of other peoples' lives.  

I realized about ten years ago that I was finding reading contemporary theology a lot more compelling than much if any contemporary philosophy I tried to read was.  About the same time I realized that the field of "ethics" was anything but what it used to be.   These points are relatively minor compared to his advocacy of killing people but they're of a piece in why I conclude he and his colleagues are such asses.

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Just What The World Needs

 a song from an angry old rich white guy.

I don't remember how many decades it was, probably sometime in the 1990s when some old geezer with one of those sleazy little long braids asked me if I was going to hear the Stones on their then current tour.  I don't remember what the theme was but I remember making a comment about Mick and his old Stones doing the Oxygen Tank Tour.   If you want to know what geezers my age who never grew up and developed musical taste will be doing a decade from now. 

My brother told me about it, we had a good laugh and a discussion of how greedy those guys are, Mick with his old stones, Eric Clapton, Jon Bon Jovi . . . 

The list of what I'd rather listen to could fill this blog.  I mean all eleven years of it.  

Update: Simels Says:

You were born an old fogey, you poor sad bastard. To paraphrase Menken, you're obsessed with the idea that somebody, somewhere may be enjoying themselves..

Poor sad that I'm uninterested in what the 80 year old Mick and his old stones are putting out for unreconstructed teeny-boppers to buy?   What's to be sad about? 

And you really want to go with Mencken?  That's M-e-n-C-k-e-n, by the way.  

Doris Grumbach said when she reluctantly faced the truth about him after that annoyingly repetitive "as H.L. Mencken said" 70s fashion and his diaries started to be published (the editor admitted he was forced by editing them to come to the same conclusions): 


. . . Mencken asked that his diaries be withheld from publication until 25 years after his death. Now we have them, or at least, one-third of them (I shudder to think what nastiness the editor has withheld from us in the other two-thirds), and we can learn once again of the Sage of Baltimore's mean-spirited intolerance on many subjects: mill-workers, whom he calls "lintheads"; blacks; Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt and all Roosevelt's Cabinet and advisers; historians ("if any good ones ever appear in America"); his neighbors ("complete morons"); a few Methodists; a few Catholics; his writer-friends, who are almost without exception portrayed as drunks, fools, mad or incompetent; Winston Churchill; women writers; women; doctors; lawyers; other journalists.

But far and away the strongest bigotry is against Jews. There are 24 racial labels, attributed stories and direct insults in the recently published diaries. Some seem to be intended as journalistic accuracy: "Lawrence Spivak is a young Harvard Jew"; Charles Angoff, "like most of the young Jewish intellectuals"; Simon Sobeloff of Baltimore, "a smart Jew"; George Boas of Johns Hopkins, "a brisk, clever Jew"; Morris Fishbein, a "shrewd Jew."

Sometimes Mencken uses the hated designation inaccurately for a whole group: Sinclair Lewis wanted to sell a novel to Hollywood: "The Jews have offered him $30,000." Communists are all Jews, the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (he quotes a Mrs. Reed, who headed a garment factory) is operated by New York Jews. He speaks to a club in Baltimore and is angry at the questions directed to him. "Most of the questioners were radicals and it was apparent, in the rather dim light, that most of them were Jews." Union members are all "Jewish communists." Mencken seems pleased to be able to record that Johns Hopkins turned down an offer to have the Institute for Advanced Study on its campus because "the donors were Jews." The quality of a Baltimore distillery's product deteriorated after it was bought by Jews.

Sometimes he is uncertain, perhaps because the name is not indicative, but still, he wishes to make clear his suspicions: James Hunecker's wife Josephine, "who I believe is a Jew"; Julius Haldeman, "a highly dubious Jew"; and Sinclair Lewis's new wife, who, he suggests, is hiding her true identity. "She is a young Jewess rejoicing in the name of Marcella Powers. ... " On the other hand, he is pleased to note that an editor, Richard Danielson, whose name aroused his suspicions, "is not a Jew."

To me, the most offensive references are to Mencken's pleasure at the exclusiveness of his club. Walking to the Maryland Club one day he hears from S. Blount Mason Jr., its secretary, the horrendous story of a man named Winter, a high official in a shipbuilding plant, who "seemed to be a presentable fellow," and was elected to the club. One day Winter entertained an elderly "and palpably Jewish gentleman in the dining room," who turned out to be his father. Mason investigated, found the member's true name was Winternitz. He was asked to resign, and did.

Mencken follows this narrative with another unlovely paragraph: "Mason told me there was no objection in the board of governors to bringing an occasional Jew to a meal in the club, but that this only applied to out-of-town Jews, not to local ones. There was a time when the club always had one Jewish member, but the last was Jacob Ulman. Ulman was married to a Christian woman, a great-granddaughter of Thomas Jefferson, and had little to do with the other Jews of Baltimore. When he died the board of governors decided that he should be the last of the Chosen on the club roll. There is no other Jew in Baltimore who seems suitable." The "Chosen" is one of Mencken's milder designations. He calls a well-known Baltimore businessman "a dreadful kike."

There is more of this ugly stuff in the book and apparently even more in the unprinted diaries. "The litany could go on," writes Charles A. Fecher, the editor, whose own sense of decency makes him admit "clearly and unequivocably: Mencken was an anti-Semite." The Post's critic denies this, claiming Mencken makes "exceptionally, generous appreciative comments ... about specific individuals who happen to be Jewish ... " It is true that Mencken never labels his publisher Alfred Knopf as a Jew or Walter Winchell, people who, it is only fair to note, were in a position to affect his career.

I must say this, reluctant as I am to characterize his recent defenders on this issue. (Some of my best friends are antisemites.) Generations later, in a climate that is still rife with threats and destructive acts against Jews and Jewish institutions, those who defend a writer such as H. L. Mencken must be said to possess an antisemitic sensibility themselves.

That the kind of "good times" you mean?  

You really should have read more when you were younger, the deficit in your store of knowledge really tells whenever you try to pick a brawl with me, Stupy.

 

Monday, November 20, 2023

The Stupid Philosophy of Utilitarianism - A response

First, a thought for American Thanksgiving Week which I'm reminded of by the man I'm criticizing, Peter Singer.   

What do they know-all these scholars, all these philosophers, all the leaders of the world - about such as you? They have convinced themselves that man, the worst transgressor of all the species, is the crown of creation. All other creatures were created merely to provide him with food, pelts, to be tormented, exterminated. In relation to them, all people are Nazis; for the animals it is an eternal Treblinka.
Isaac Bashevis Singer.  The Letter Writer 


Note:  This isn't another post primarily about Darwinism, it's about the materialist-atheist replacement for morality, utilitarianism and its most famous proponent right now. 


WHEN I WAS WRITING for a blog that got a lot more readers I often set off storms of controversy, some of those topics have become major focuses of what I concentrate on, the reasons the American and other "lefts" have been so remarkably unsuccessful in politics.  One of the things that got People riled up didn't start in a piece I wrote for one of the blogs I was invited to write for, it was a comment made on one of the Science Blogs in which I stated the obvious truth, the theory of natural selection was the origin of eugenics including the German strain of that that found its fullest implementation in the Holocaust and other genocidal murder regimes of the Nazis.  The reaction that my presentation of long passages from Darwin and Darwinists in support of my claims got led to the first of the scores of posts on Darwinism that were written after that one incident.

In one of the earliest pieces I wrote about I dealt with the monumentally hypocritical statement of Charles Darwin in The Descent of Man in which he compared human beings to animals in a farm operation, which inevitably is a judgement of human beings' economic utility.  In short, he was abstractly assigning a financial value to human beings in order to determine which ones of them having children would be profitable for the country or, in his claims "the human species" in which they lived and which of them would be less profitable or, as in the nightmare of the Pharaoh in the last tales of Genesis, which would actually be a net loss.  Darwin's presentation of those he deemed dangerous their danger was for the quality of ALL future human beings.  He built on Malthus and presented entire groups of human beings as more than merely unprofitable, but a clear danger to humanity.  Including entire races and other groups.  

As Darwin was hypocritical in his call for the culling of the disabled, the ill those of lesser intelligence, and those whose only known disability was their ability to get money in Victorian Britain, in other 19th century gangster ruled lands and the huge populations who were under the colonial rule of Western Europeans, he couched his would-be science among some pathetically weak calls for providing sustenance for the very people he was telling his readers were a danger to the future of the human species and a drag on its improvement.

I was able in that, my first series of posts on Darwinism to point out that a few pages after scientifically encouraging the culling of those he deemed unprofitable he brushed aside the "worthless drones" who the powerful, ruling aristocracy produced, the Prince Andrews,  Edward VII's and others like him as having, on balance, no real danger of the kind he held poor peoples' children to be.  In my critical reading of Darwin's books and letters I came across that kind of hypocrisy many times.  He pooh-poohed Darwinian valuation as applied to the aristocracy.  I noted in that early piece that though he listed vaccinations as one of the catastrophe producing produces of civilization, along with medical care and merely feeding the hungry, none of the Darwins in his direct control seems to have contracted small pox, not his eugenicist son Leonard who unsuccessfully ran for Parliament on an anti-vaxx platform, he was the RJK jr. of his day. I suspect that none of Darwin's children went without small pox vaccination.  Darwin, himself, who was a famous valetudinarian and likely a hypochondriac, as well,  who may well have passed on his own maladies to the future through his many children, did nothing to limit his own reproduction.  Ironically, most of his eugenicist sons don't seem to have had children of their own.  George, one of the earliest proponents of Darwinist law in which the state could involuntarily divorce couples if one of them was judged to have a mental illness, did have a particularly hard case of a scientist son who was proposing eugenics even after the crimes of the Nazis were exposed to the world.

But this started in me thinking of how to answer a complaint I got when I dissed utilitarianism, recently.  Darwinism certainly exists within a scheme of utility, from On the Origin of Species, especially in The Descent of Man and right down to the most recent academic writing.  It also pervades much if not almost all English language intellectualism so I could hardly avoid commenting on it.  And going into its most notable implementations in eugenics and genocide.  

In reviewing a criticism of my criticism of the Australian utilitarian philosopher Peter Singer I came across an interview with Daniel A. Gross, for the New Yorker and I found that Singer, as well, was guilty of arguing out of both sides of his mouth on a number of the issues I've dealt with in my study of how the left has failed so continually since about 1968.  I think any thinker and writer who prescribes things for other people is rightly held up to criticism for how well their own choices in life match what they want others to do and have done to them.  

What is so interesting to me is that Singer and I have come to some similar though, as well, quite different conclusions about a few things.  I can claim that I became a vegetarian about ten years younger than he did and for much the same reason, I was appalled by the practices of the meat industry, both its cruelty and the fact that to eat meat is to murder obviously sentient creatures who are capable of pain and fear and love.   I grew up on a farm, I saw animals slaughtered I knew the conditions that was done under and how they were kept before they were killed.  

I will credit Singer in the article for the quote from Issac Bashevis Singer, from a story which I read decades ago, it seems worth noting in this week of American Thanksgiving which I abhor because it is a holiday that has come to mean eating animals and watching American blood sports, American football.  I also came to an early view that large-scale animal husbandry, factory farming was a danger from those being a breeding ground for human pandemic diseases.  I don't remember when I first read about the relationship of massive concentration camps for ducks being related to the variably fatal annual influenza pandemics but it must have been at least in the early 1970s, that's when I remember first realizing it.  I think it was after that that I read about the pandemic after WWI originating in concentration camps for pigs.  

It's worth it to go through the whole interview because Daniel Gross asked some very astute and cutting questions and he made some very good observations.  In doing that I think he showed he is a deeper thinker than the guy who is world famous in the business of thinking.  The interview exposes a lot of what's wrong with modern academia, the stupidity of extending scientific abstraction into real life and real lives too complex and unknowable to make even very plausible, critique resistant pseudo-science of.   I also think that some of the stands that Singer philosophized himself into is a great demonstration of the problem with a would-be materialist-atheist-scientistic attempt at replacing revealed morality with something more congenial to that ideological framing.  How he could see the free promotion of ideas as more important than the persons targeted by those ideas, the basis of American and so much other secular libertarianism.  Privileging ideas targeting them for death and oppression over their safety.  I will definitely go into the attempt to reduce that to "being offended," one of the typical dishonest dodges and smokescreens of such discourse.  I will be going over it this week, a series I'll probably have a lot easier time finishing because it doesn't require me to do much transcribing.  I will not be taking things up in the order of the interview, you might want to read that yourself.

I will say that I think a lot of the "ethics" of Peter Singer ends up being pretty depraved just as much science does, especially the more inexact sciences such as evolutionary biology.*  I'll start with one of those applications, the one that is probably the most controversial of Peter Singer's stuff in which he advocates murder.

Note: the interviewer's text is in bold, Singers' answers are in bold italics, my interjections are in unbolded, plain text.
-----------------------
 

 I wanted to ask you about your work on disability, and your views on what is permissible for a parent to do if their child is born with a disability. This is a set of ideas that has made you very controversial, and in some circles very unpopular. And I wonder whether you’ve ever regretted wading into that arena, because it might make people less likely to come to your other ideas.

Yes. I’ve wondered whether the effects were good or bad. The first public protests against my views on disability were in Germany, starting in 1989. After all the attention that I got because of the protests—mostly very critical media; you know, a terrible double-page in Der Spiegel with photos of the trucks that took Jews to prison camps—the sales multiplied ten times. My views in Germany became far better known. As you say, I became very unpopular in some circles, and some of my talks got cancelled. It’s unfortunate that I get associated with these so-called “ableist” views—and, of course, in Germany there was this horrendous link with the Nazi so-called euthanasia program. It’s not that I haven’t ever regretted it. I have. But, other times, when I reflect on the over-all impact, I’m not sure that it’s been bad. I do get letters, both from people with disabilities and parents of people with disabilities, who support my views.

Would you mind summarizing what your view was then, and whether it’s changed at all?

My view then was that parents of children born with serious disabilities ought to have the option of ending the life of their child, immediately after birth or as soon as the diagnosis has been properly established. It’s not true to say that I support euthanasia for disabled infants. It’s not true that I think that disabled infants ought to be killed. I think the parents ought to have that option.

Let me say a couple of things in relation to that. First, parents do have that option, right now, in every country that allows abortion when a prenatal diagnosis has shown that there’s a disability. I don’t draw a big distinction between abortion and infanticide. Those who think that it’s O.K. for women to have an abortion need to show why there’s such an important difference between the fetus before birth and the newborn infant after birth. Second, parents, right now, have the option of withdrawing life support for an infant with a serious disability. I think that both of these cases convey exactly the same attitude to disability that I’m defending. You can say that is ableist. But some have said that I’m simply representative of the ableist society as a whole, which supports both of these things. And I think that’s true.

I'll break in to point out that there is a huge difference between killing a born person and the choice of a Woman to determine the state of her own body in the matter of abortion.  That is a crucial and complete difference between the two.  That Singer obviously can't see the Woman and her position while concentrating on a fetus, is a pretty big lapse.  That he considers parents have a rightful role in determining to kill a child and doesn't consider the right of a Woman to her bodily autonomy as the decisive difference is a pretty huge gap in his understanding of an issue he's supposedly thought through to the level attributed to him.

I think it’s wrong to discriminate against disabled people in employment or housing or other areas where their disability is not relevant to their ability to perform the job. I fully support rights for disabled people in those respects, and for them to be in normal schools. I think it’s a complete mistake to think that I’m opposed to people with disabilities in some way. This is specifically something about euthanasia for newborn infants, who are not able to have any kind of input into what they want their lives to be like, or whether they want to live it.

I have to say that comparing abortion at six months to infanticide is the sort of argument that one’s political opponents could use against you—the sort of argument that, as we were talking about a minute ago, might not be worth making because of the potential backlash.

Absolutely, and I’m glad Joe Biden didn’t make it before the last election! I’m not advocating that any political party with a serious chance should make this policy, although in some parts of the world, this is not so crazy. It actually is public policy in the Netherlands.

Harriet McBryde Johnson, the disability-rights lawyer who debated you and wrote about it in a remarkable piece for the Times Magazine, in 2003, had a lot of criticisms, but one that stayed with me is the idea that you might not be in a position to evaluate whether her life involves more suffering than yours, or whether she is worse off than you are—that there might be an element of subjectivity inherent in any calculation of suffering.

I totally agree with that. And, of course, I fully supported Harriet’s right to continue to live and to have the best possible life she could. And her death was a sad loss. [Johnson, whose piece for the Times Magazine began “He insists he doesn’t want to kill me,” died in 2008, in her sleep, at the age of fifty.]

However, Singer would not have supported her right to continue to live as an infant. You have to wonder how he'd explain where a right that wasn't there then came to be there later and how such a deliniated "right" could ever be secure in the judgement of someone else.   I suppose he tries to do that in his next statement.  

But that doesn’t really help the parent trying to make a decision for their newborn infant, because their newborn infant doesn’t have the subjectivity to express a view on it. They have to make the decision. . .

I have absolutely no confidence in the idea that a "right to live" is based in possessing "the subjectivity to express a view of it."  I especially reject the idea that some allegedly superior thinker,  be it a philosophy prof, a scientist, a lawyer or judge has a reliably superior ability to identify what "the subjectivity to express a view of it" that is superior to someone they'd rule lacked it.  If that's the case with disabled infants, why not healthy infants?  Why not infants the parents think is ugly or they decide they don't want, after all?  The Darwinian literature is full of proposals for killing infants and praising the practice of, especially, the Spartans for deciding to leave such infants to die of exposure in the typical Mediterranean way that was ubiquitous among many different civilizations, the Jews and, later, Christians a marked exception to that.  If I were critically ill, a utilitarian philosopher is someone I'd want kept as far away from me as possible.  Especially one who deemed himself capable of declaring me to lack such "subjectivity."   I think the word "subjectivity" as used by Singer here is especially problematic on even a definitional level.  

I'll come out and say it,  his use of the attainment of "subjectivity" is a smokescreen to cover what this really is, a division of People into objects of utility and judging them on the basis of their economic value.  Whether that's by him or someone else or the parents he gives such godlike powers to.

. . . You asked me before whether my position has changed. It hasn’t fundamentally changed, but I do accept exactly this point that Harriet and others have made to me—that it’s not good enough for the parents considering this decision to talk to their doctors. They ought to talk to people with a disability that their child has, or, if that’s not possible, because the child has an intellectual disability, then the parents of children with that disability. I accept that our society does have this bias—thinking, Oh, I wouldn’t like to live that life. And you don’t really know what that life is like nearly as well as people who are living it or the parents of people who are living it. That applies to abortion as well, by the way.

The bias that you described—the assumption that a person with a disability is worse off—is that something that you recognized in yourself as these conversations were happening?

To some extent, yeah, I think so. I thought Harriet was a very good example of somebody who lived a rich and fulfilling life despite a severe disability. No intellectual disability in her case, of course. She was very sharp.

Did she change your mind in some way?

Maybe a bit. Maybe a bit.


I would hope that if I held Singer's opinions and done his thinking about this that encountering Harriet McBryde Johnson making the point that someone else cannot decide if someones' life is not worth living would have been a decisive refutation of it.  That's one of the secondary problems with the calculations of utilitarianism, of "utility," that it's impossible to decide, ultimately, the desideratum of utilitarianism, the most happiness, or benefit or, in Singer's brand of it, "preference" resulting in an action of that kind is impossible to calculate.  It's impossible to calculate if someone's living, someone having children and leading to a line of descendants will make life in the world better or worse.  One of the most absurd assumptions of that utilitarian, Malthusian, Darwinist programs is that ALL OF US HAD TO HAVE HAD ANCESTORS WHO SOME UTILITARIAN OR DARWINIST WOULD HAVE LIKED TO REMOVE FROM THE HUMAN SPECIES.  OR SUCH ENABLED, INFANTICIDAL PARENTS. 

I've mentioned one of my great-great-great grandmothers who was incarcerated in the British death camps, those work houses that Darwin feared wouldn't kill off enough of the poor of Britain to prevent them from leaving issue and infecting the future of the world with in that post linked to above.   While it would certainly have offended the tender sensibilities of the Darwin-Wedgwoods, or their cousins the Galtons or his proto-Nazi disciple in German, Haeckel, it is mathematically impossible for any living human being for it not to have been the case considering how many direct ancestors we have, all of whom contributed to the fact of our being alive right now. 

The Germans who murdered most of Singers' grandparents were directly in the business of deciding that.  They'd already had children, two of whom were able to escape to Australia which inevitably demands asking of how many of the young people, children, babies, murdered in the Nazi's calculations of human utility and worth and cost-benefit analysis would have produced children who would have given far more to the world than they ever "cost" it.  And every, single one of those Nazis had people in their own line who they would have killed,  believing on the basis of their "applied biology, Nazism" as much in the virtue of their act as any that any utilitarian can imagine as "ethical."  Including the willful idiot, Peter Singer.  They clearly judged his entire family as being expendable on their own utilitarian valuation.  Those who came to such decisions often had superb training in science and medicine and philosophy.  Though they left the actual murdering mostly to those they considered the underclass, though superiors of their victims, not a few of them as educated as the Nazi elite, great scholars, scientists, artists, philosophers. . .    I am especially dubious about those with academic and professional credentials when they start drawing up lists of who it's OK to kill.

I think you have to be a particularly stupid philosopher to not have understood that to be a fatal flaw of every form of utilitarianism. You have to have made a major investment in your professional training and getting published and promoted in the "enlightenment" era university racket to not have understood or ignored the things that Singer and his allies have to have to arrive at their position.   The Nazi genocides started with what, I'm sure, they calculated would be the most widely accepted of genocides, that against the disabled which they started as soon as Hitler made war in Poland and the industrial murder of the disabled began.  The excuse was that soldiers would be in need of the resources that went to care for the ones being murdered, the propaganda campaign against those calculated to be "useless eaters" in starvation and depression wracked Germany had been ongoing for years, by then.  It was a trial run for the enormously larger scale concentration camp murders, exactly what Donald Trump and his Trumpzies are putting into the public discourse in the United States this month.  The various stink-tanks, lawyers groups, other dainty, even university aligned sources of the Republican-fascist plans for how to destroy democracy had their exact counterparts in Nazi planning, that effort preceded the establishment of the Nazi party.  

That Peter Singer has changed his mind no more than "maybe a bit" that "You asked me before whether my position has changed. It hasn’t fundamentally changed," is proof of the character of materialism, of scientism and the depravity of the modern university system is not capable of overturning philosophical and ideological positions that, despite being held by would-be liberals and libertarians, lead to things not different in kind but only in listing who to kill, than were on display in the American, Canadian and other eugenics programs and the most successful attempt to exclude millions of people from the future which found inspiration from that, the one the Nazis put into effect.  The Holocaust IS the most successful eugenic program, it is the one that did what all such murderous meliorizing philosophers theorize.

I wonder if someone ever asked Peter Singer why ideas as well as People can't be culled from the human future, even on the basis of their failure at producing "optimal happiness, optimal benefit" even, as he might put it, "optimal preference."  That he rejects the idea that some ideas have such obviously malignant intentions and such a malignant history of effectively destroying lives, of leading to oppression and enslavement and using up those people in a different program of utilitarian use, is also clear from the interview and his professional activities.  In the discussion of his "Journal of Controversial Ideas" Gross put the question to him in a more journalistically acceptable way:

No, I think offering a platform for reasoned argument is not participating in oppression. I think it’s trying to get to the truth.

If, through truth-seeking, you conclude that the person’s argument has an oppressive effect, what comes next? If it turns out that an argument published in the Journal of Controversial Ideas causes more harm than good, what comes next?

That is quite possible—that an individual argument might cause more harm than good. What I and my co-editors believe is that promoting freedom of thought and discussion, on the whole, will do more good than harm, even if occasionally an individual article does cause more harm than good.

What do you think is the role of accountability in this enterprise?

The way to hold academics accountable is to expose the flaws in their argument.


This is one of the best demonstrations of the sheer stupidity of his position, IT ELEVATES IDEAS ABOVE THE PEOPLE THOSE IDEAS ADVOCATE HARMING, OPPRESSING AND EVEN MURDERING!  It's as stupid as the "more speech" slogan of the American "civil liberties industry with a little gloss of "ethics" attached. 

Does he think no one pointed out the flaws in the arguments of the eugenicists?  The Buck v. Bell decision? The Nazis?  The ones who were made accountable for those weren't the proponents, they were their stated victims.  Many of them "academics" with university positions higher than he's ever attained.   He might consider the success of his critiques of the meat industries and other cruelties in making changes in the world.  That's what his kind of free discourse and pathetically impotent critique leads to.

I will, in light of what "free speech-press" absolutism and the lies and promotion of depravity permitted under it has brought the United States to, soon go into this section more.

* As the careers of Richard Lewontin and Stephen Jay Gould showed, there is a valid critique of that kind to be made in even genuine biological science.  Lewontin, in his essay-review "Billions of Demons" noted that the rejection of evolution by American fundamentalists is inevitably tied to class, regional and economic snobbery and insults.  He also noted that in the early 20th century it was just those areas which later became rigidly ruled by such fundamentalism where the greatest support for the Socialist Party were to be found.  I'd love to go into that more, sometime, and how Socialism lost its progress when the academics and journalistic scribblers took it over, insisted on fitting it into Marxism and made it abhorrent to those who should have been its chief proponents.  I don't think any socialism anywhere has much of a chance as a result, which is too bad.  Singer has, unsurprisingly, got good things to say about the billionaires and capitalism, if he didn't he'd probably not get on the chat shows and to speak nearly as often.  Like so many academics, I think he's pretty much a publicity whore. Since he's mentioned in the interview, I can't think of Stephen Pinker without thinking of Gilderoy Lockhart after reading Harry Potter And The Chamber of Secrets.



Sunday, November 19, 2023

Why Aren't You Answering Simps Anymore?

 OH, THERE ARE plenty of Simels' comments I haven't used, most of them are too stupid to even think of answering them.   Maybe the week after Christmas I might use some of them, it's always slow that week so I might as well make slow the theme of it.