One of the more compelling elements of the yoga tradition are sources that suggest we change the world when we understand more about it. Our actions, intentions, feelings are driven by feelings and impressions, and often incomplete and lazy arguments. The tasks that demand rigor, seriousness, a conscientious appeal to facts—best we can discern—and...
Continue readingAn Average Essay
Ah, the inevitable Back to School essay in today’s Sunday New York Times with all its earnest and undesigning intendments. It cites the renowned physicist making the point that if you are an average person who applies themselves diligently you’ll get very good at something and that that’s a real something. Thank goodness most...
Continue readingMore About Complexity and Learning
School is on the horizon and I mourn more than the loss of a summer largely lost, but that’s all too personal a matter to matter much. I don’t lament my shrinking university enrollments, they mean I can pay closer attention to students in the classes and that I will have fewer papers to...
Continue readingTowards a Humanist World
Ross Douthat in the NYTimes writes today about how the humanities are on life-support, at best, in colleges and universities. I am here not merely to confirm anecdotally those enrollment facts—my classes for the first time in 30+ years are under enrolled when once they bursted at seams. The crisis in teaching the humanities...
Continue readingIt’s Not the Economy: Structures and the Deeper State
We live in structures and, rightwing conspiracies notwithstanding, the deeper formations of the state as culture and ethos will determine who we are. Who do we want to be is a difficult question because it takes time and thought and effort to think about what that means. So first a few facts. Wages are...
Continue readingThe Alternative “Arc” and the Avalanche
Let’s start here: there is no arc of justice bending towards justice, there is no promise or guarantee that rights will not be oppressed, ignored, or reversed. You can _believe_ in that arc bending or you can ask for a more honest, likely less “faithful” view. We’re at a turning point. The oligarchs and...
Continue readingMorning Note to Self
Six Faces of Muruga A Look in the Mirror, at Least for this Morning 1. Trump isn’t changing America, he’s showing us who we have always been. Rejecting that with “but not me” is also true. Now, look around you. Really look. See?2. Justice is a shakedown, as we used to say in the...
Continue readingReligion, Not Merely the “Misuse” of Religion
Who are these people who can incarcerate and traumatize children, debase our society, and claim it the proper interpretation of the law? That it is God’s law that gives them authority? It’s important to note that Trump and his sociopaths are deliberately and self-consciously using religion to justify their behaviors. Sessions and Sanders cite...
Continue readingThe Light of Liberty and The Shadow America Refuses to See
At the core of America’s history, in the armature of the collective social structure, are the issues of race and class. If the light is justice, liberty and opportunity, the shadow is race and class. Built as we were on slavery, a civil war, and failed reconstruction, the civil rights movement brought the conversation...
Continue readingVote Blankenship or Why No Persuasion Matters
Living in the wild with Trump voters I can assure you that _none_ of the Giuliani mayhem makes any difference to them. In fact, it serves a principal purpose: to put everything in terms of a partisan “witch hunt” that is nothing more than Clinton-like scandal contrived to defeat Trump. The key is there:...
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