Skip to main content

Home/ PHIL479/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Chris Long

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Chris Long

2More

Art et Homme - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

  • Against this trend, Zinn contends that Ustinov and other artists have a right to voice their opinion and he emphasizes Ustinov's comments on expertise as regards war to reinforce this position: "[Ustinov] said that there are experts in little things but there are no experts in big things. There are experts in this fact and that fact but there are not moral experts."
    • Chris Long
       
      What is the role of the public figure in the sense of publicity and how does it impact the possibility of public deliberation?
7More

The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourg... - 0 views

    • Chris Long
       
      What do people think of this way of engaging other philosophers?
  • Even when  I quote a good deal and take over terminologies I am clearly aware that my use of them often has little to do with the author's original meaning...I take over other theories. Why not? One should accept others according to their strengths and then see how one can go from there
    • Chris Long
       
      What do people think about this way of engaging philosophers?
  • salons we clearly see his interest in a communicative ideal later would become the core normative standard for his moral-political theory. This ideal is characterized by: the idea of inclusive critical discussion, unencumbered by social and economic pressures, where interlocutors treat each other as equals in a cooperative attempt to reach an understanding on matters of common concern.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The rise of Bourgeois Public Sphere coincided with the emergence of the new capitalist society
    • Chris Long
       
      What is the relationship between the public sphere and capitalism? How does capitalism affect the dynamic between the private, the social and the public spheres?
2More

on marcuse: mostly thoughts on the basic concepts, and an argument that society can be ... - 0 views

  • Marcuse agreeably calculates that an average working person works 10 hours per day (this includes traveling to and from work and preparing for work), and requires 10 hours for the sleep and nourishment of his body. When doing this, he only has 4 remaining hours to do other things. Man thus "exists only part time" (47). He goes on to say that even this part time existence is mostly used for activities which are relaxing. The activities must be relaxing because of the the double effect of being tired from work coupled with the realization that one must rest in order to be prepared for work the following day. He argues that this system, which we call society, is not so much concerned with our own happiness, as it is with the insuring our role as a productive working cog in it. Marcuse stresses the idea of a conflict between the work demanded by society, and the happiness of the individual. In the second paragraph of the introduction, Marcuse states that "Happiness must be subordinated to the discipline of work as a full time occupation"
    • Chris Long
       
      Thematize the issue of work here: what about socially useful work (210, 214ff)?
4More

Sublimation Examination: Individual and Pleasure Principle - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

  • "Civilization does not once and for all terminate a 'state of nature.' What civilization masters and represses--the claim of the pleasure principle--continues to exist in civilization itself. The unconscious retains the objectives of the defeated pleasure principle." (Eros & Civ, 15-16)
    • Chris Long
       
      How does Marcuse use this insight to level an immanent critique of Freud? Think about the manner in which the defeated pleasure principle is reborn in Marcuse's text.
  • And so rather than becoming ineffectual like Adorno's individual, the pleasure principle, in its diversion through alternate outlets, ends up being the driving force for all human accomplishment
    • Chris Long
       
      Let's put this in stronger terms: the pleasure principle becomes the source of possible liberation, the root of a non-repressive civilization.
2More

Distance and the Self - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

    • Chris Long
       
      Could this be related to Benjamin on the Aura: the unique appearance of a distance, however close it may be.
3More

Irony - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

    • Chris Long
       
      What are the advantages and limitations of the term "imperative" here?
  • If justice can never be fully rendered because all normative and epistemological claims contain violence, then the imperative is the pursuit of this un-renderable justice, and with it, the least amount of violence
4More

Intellectual Emigration - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

  • express what [he has] in mind purely without regard for ends and communication.
    • Chris Long
       
      Reference Adorno's style of writing here.
    • Chris Long
       
      See, #64: Morality and Style, p. 101.
  • 18th entry of Minima Moralia
11More

Hegel on Wall Street - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • Hegel’s emphatic but paradoxical way of stating this is to say that if the free market individualist acts “in [his] own self-interest, [he] simply does not know what [he] is doing, and if [he] affirms that all men act in their own self-interest, [he] merely asserts that all men are not really aware of what acting really amounts to.”
  • Hegel narrates how each formation of self and world collapses because of a mismatch between self-conception and how that self conceives of the larger world.  Hegel thinks we can see how history has been driven by misshapen forms of life in which the self-understanding of agents and the worldly practices they participate in fail to correspond.  With great drama, he claims that his narrative is a “highway of despair.”
  • holier-than-thou virtue and the self-interested Wall Street banker are making the same error from opposing points of view.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Both are wrong because, finally, it is not motives but actions that matter, and how those actions hang together to make a practical world. 
  • what makes self-interested individuality effective is not its self-interested motives, but that there is an elaborate system of practices that supports, empowers, and gives enduring significance to the banker’s actions.
  • What bankers do, Hegel is urging, is satisfy a function within a complex system that gives their actions functional significance.
  • Time matters here because what must be promoted is the practice’s capacity to reproduce itself.
  • the profit-driven actions of the financial sector became increasingly detached from their function of supporting and advancing the growth of capital.
  • What market regulations should prohibit are practices in which profit-taking can routinely occur without wealth creation; wealth creation is the world-interest that makes bankers’ self-interest possible
  • regulation is the force of reason needed to undo the concoctions of fantasy
  •  
    Very interesting discussion in light of Adorno's work in Minima Moralia
1More

Seeing The Internet As An 'Information Weapon' : NPR - 0 views

  • Last year, Russia successfully sponsored an even sharper version of its cyber disarmament proposal at a summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which includes China and four Central Asian countries as well as Russia. The accord defined "information war," in part, as an effort by a state to undermine another's "political, economic, and social systems." Using the term "mass psychologic [sic] brainwashing," the agreement said that the dissemination of information "harmful to the spiritual, moral and cultural spheres of other states" should be considered a "security threat."
1More

Domination in Dialectic of Enlightenment - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

  •  
    Collapse Civilization?
3More

Domination in Dialectic of Enlightenment - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

    • Chris Long
       
      What is the dynamic, the dialectic, at work here?
  • Not only is domination paid for with the estrangement of human beings from the dominated objects, but the relationships of human beings, including the relationship of individuals to themselves, have themselves been bewitched by the objectification of mind.  Individuals shrink to the nodal points of conventional reactions and the modes of operation objectively expected of them. (21) The countless agencies of mass production and its culture impress standardized behavior on the individual as the only natural, decent, and rational one.  Individuals define themselves now only as things, statistical elements, successes or failures.  Their criterion is self-preservation, successful or unsuccessful adaptation to the objectivity of their function and the schemata assigned to it. (21-22)
3More

The cameraman and the painter - The Digital Dialogue - 2 views

  • since it offers, precisely because of the thoroughgoing permeation of reality which mechanical equipment, an aspect of reality which is free of all equipment.
    • Chris Long
       
      I would like to understand this part of the quotation a bit more clearly.  What is that aspect of reality free from all equipment opened by equipment?
  •  
    since it offers, precisely because of the thoroughgoing permeation of reality which mechanical equipment, an aspect of reality which is free of all equipment
2More

Mechanical Reproduction and its Impact on the Individual - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

    • Chris Long
       
      Here is an indication of the notion of uniqueness associated with the aura.
5More

Benjamin and Heidegger - The Digital Dialogue - 1 views

  • In The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, Benjamin defines aura as a work of art's "uniqueness" (223).  He further explains that aura, or "the unique value of the 'authentic' work of art, has its basis in ritual, the location of its original use value" (224).  At this point, the value of authenticity in a work of art is apparent, since Benjamin argues that when authenticity is lost, the function of art changes from ritual to political (224).  According to Benjamin, the authenticity and authority of a work of art is jeopardized as it becomes mechanically reproduced and achieves a greater exhibition value, rather than a ritual value (226).
    • Chris Long
       
      Ritual value versus use value can be addressed here. See, the discussion of cult value, note 5, p. 243.
  • I believe the connection between Heidegger and Benjamin can be seen here, as both stress that works of art are authentic and ritual creations.
    • Chris Long
       
      OK, but how do the two view the importance of authenticity?
  •  
    Andrea compares Heidegger and Benjamin on art. She draws our attention to the important notion of authenticity.
3More

Mechanical Reproduction and its Impact on the Individual - The Digital Dialogue - 1 views

  • As I understand the use of the word 'Aura' here, it is the unique experience of a thing relative to its location in space and time.
    • Chris Long
       
      What happens to the notion of History and tradition here?  See, section II, 220-2.
  •  
    "This, as Benjamin gets at, draws away from the object or experiences 'Aura'. As I understand the use of the word 'Aura' here, it is the unique experience of a thing relative to its location in space and time."
2More

Walter Benjamin - 2 views

  • During long periods of history, the mode of human sense perception changes with humanity’s entire mode of existence.
2More

Aura and Art - The Digital Dialogue - 1 views

  • In reproduction, there is a sort of separation that happens between the initial object and the reproduced one. What is not very clear to me is the example that Benjamin uses on page 222-223, where he writes about the notion of aura and nature.
    • Chris Long
       
      What is the nature of the separation that opens between an original and the reproduction?
10More

Poetically, Man Dwells - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

  • I want to seize upon this "oceanic feeling" that Freud rejects as a cause of religious sentiment and investigate its significance further. In fact, it seems to me that the inspiration for all poetry might very well have its source in this feeling
  • Wallace Stevens blurs the distinction between emotions, the inner world, and the environment, the outer world
  • That was not ours although we understood,
  • ...4 more annotations...
    • Chris Long
       
      Perhaps we can discuss this post with that of Joe Balay Freud on Beauty.
  • Art is a form of communication, one which enables greater understanding among people
    • Chris Long
       
      Let's investigate the Death instinct and Eros, p. 77, 80ff.
  • And so, the distinction between the destructive impulse and Eros could perhaps be more accurately characterized as a distinction between the destructive impulse and the creative impulse.
  •  
    I want to seize upon this "oceanic feeling" that Freud rejects as a cause of religious sentiment and investigate its significance further. In fact, it seems to me that the inspiration for all poetry might very well have its source in this feeling.
5More

Freud & Feuerbach: the role of religion - The Digital Dialogue - 2 views

  • "The whole thing is so patently infantile, so foreign to reality, that to anyone with a friendly attitude to humanity it is painful to think that the great majority of mortals will never be able to rise above this view of life.  It is more humiliating to discover how larger a number of people living to-day, who cannot but see that this religion is not tenable, nevertheless try to defend it piece by piece in a series of pitiful rearguard actions..." (Freud, 22)
  • The only reason that we hold onto this make-believe fantasy is because it offers us a sense of happiness.
    • Chris Long
       
      How does Freud understand the meaning of happiness? (p. 25)? -- two senses of happiness Religion as "mass delusion" (32)
  •  
    "The whole thing is so patently infantile, so foreign to reality, that to anyone with a friendly attitude to humanity it is painful to think that the great majority of mortals will never be able to rise above this view of life.  It is more humiliating to discover how larger a number of people living to-day, who cannot but see that this religion is not tenable, nevertheless try to defend it piece by piece in a series of pitiful rearguard actions..." (Freud, 22).
5More

Freud on Beauty - The Digital Dialogue - 0 views

  • 1. Freud departs from the consideration of the beautiful within a distinctly modern position, associating aesthetics with the field that studies the "feeling" of the beautiful. This is quite different from say the Greek conception of the beautiful. 2. This modern handling of the beautiful is also seen in Freud's separation of the beautiful from knowledge or truth, again by his emphasis on its lack of usefulness and status as a feeling. 3. Freud places the beautiful within a long list of defenses, sublimations, and repressions that redirect our true libidinal impulses. He counts beauty as a derivation of sexual gratification, as a milder form of substitute intoxication that helps make the pain of life and its refusal to grant maximum pleasure, acceptable.
  • Thus there is in Freud an interesting, if inverted, parallel to the Greek (especially Platonic) conception of Beauty here on the one hand, and a clear manifestation of its modern development through the rise of the science of aesthetics and positivism. Freud seems uncertain about what else psychoanalytic theory can say about beauty. However, if he were to borrow from this Greek tradition, rather than from its modern development, he might be tempted to suggest that beauty is not so much a distraction from the truth of psychoanalytic theory, but the light that shines in the very confrontation of the conscious with the unconscious, and the intoxicating emergence of a truth (not a substitute feeling) that we find there
    • Chris Long
       
      There are a number of important issues here: 1) Anamnesis versus the Freudian unconscious - to what degree is the unconscious in Freud dependent on a modern conception of subjectivity? 2) Can we bring the notion of feeling into relation to truth here? 3) The role of Eros in Plato and Freud.
  •  
    "Thus there is in Freud an interesting, if inverted, parallel to the Greek (especially Platonic) conception of Beauty here on the one hand, and a clear manifestation of its modern development through the rise of the science of aesthetics and positivism. Freud seems uncertain about what else psychoanalytic theory can say about beauty. However, if he were to borrow from this Greek tradition, rather than from its modern development, he might be tempted to suggest that beauty is not so much a distraction from the truth of psychoanalytic theory, but the light that shines in the very confrontation of the conscious with the unconscious, and the intoxicating emergence of a truth (not a substitute feeling) that we find there."
1 - 20 of 24 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page