Monday, May 30, 2011

Obama’s Flawed Approach to the Israel/Palestine Conflict

From Richard Falk’s blog:

There is no world leader that is more skilled at speechmaking than Barack Obama, especially when it comes to inspiring rhetoric that resonates with deep and widely held human aspirations. And his speech on Middle East policy, symbolically delivered to a Washington audience gathered at the State Department, was no exception, and it contained certain welcome reassurances about American intentions in the region. I would point to his overall endorsement of the Arab Spring as a demonstration that the shaping of political order ultimately is a prerogative of the people. Further that populist outrage if mobilized is capable of liberating an oppressed people from the yoke of brutal and corrupt dictatorships, and amazingly to do so without recourse to violence. Obama also was honest enough to acknowledge that the national strategic interests of the United States sometimes take precedence over this preferential option for democracy and respect for human rights. Finally, his proposed $1 billion in debt relief for Egypt was a concrete expression of support for the completion of its revolutionary process, although the further $1 billion tied to an opening to outside investment and a free trade framework was far more ambiguous, threatening the enfeebled Egyptian economy with the sort of competitive intrusions that have been so devastating for indigenous agriculture and industry throughout the African continent.

But let’s face it, when the soaring language is taken away, we should not be surprised that Obama continues to seek approval, as he has throughout his presidency, from the hawks in the State Department, the militarists in the Pentagon, and capitalist true believers on Wall Street. Such are the fixed parameters of his presidency with respect to foreign policy and explain why there is so much disappointment among his former most ardent followers during his uphill campaign for the presidency, who were once energized and excited by the slogan “change, yes we can!” [....]

The rest of the post is here.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Early Summer Reading

Early summer (non-fiction) reading recommendations:

Andreou, Chrisoula and Mark D. White, eds. The Thief of Time: Philosophical Essays on Procrastination (2010). Professor White is one of my co-bloggers at The Literary Table and, in any case, I’m prone to buying any edited collection with contributions from either George Ainslie or Jon Elster.

Bartha, Paul F.A. By Parallel Reasoning: The Construction and Evaluation of Analogical Arguments (2010). Essential reading.

Bortolotti, Lisa. Delusions and Other Irrational Beliefs (2010). Timely, to put it mildly.

Graham, George. The Disordered Mind: An Introduction to Philosophy of Mind and Mental Illness (2010). While the link is to a hardbound version, I was able to find it in paperback.

Nichols, John. The “S” Word: A Short History of an American Tradition…Socialism (2011). Should be read with Charles Nordhoff’s classic, The Communistic Societies of the United States... (New York: Schocken, 1965; originally published in 1875).

Radden, Jennifer. On Delusion (2011). Incidentally, both this and the Bortolotti book above are part of excellent publisher’s series: Oxford’s “International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry” and Routledge’s “Thinking in Action” respectively.

Silva, Padmasiri de Silva. An Introduction to Buddhist Psychology (4th ed., 2005). One need not be a Buddhist to benefit from the material in this classic work, accessible to non-specialists.

Tauber, Alfred I. Freud: The Reluctant Philosopher (2010). Tauber’s book, Patient Autonomy and the Ethics of Responsibility (2005) is one of the few indispensable books (another being Carl Schneider's 1998 volume, The Practice of Autonomy) for exploring the notion of autonomy in a clinical setting or within a generous rendering of bioethics. His latest book does not disappoint. Highly recommended!

Thornton, Tim. Essential Philosophy of Psychiatry (2007). I know, it’s a few years old, but you might have missed it.

Wright, Erik Olin. Envisioning Real Utopias (2010). See too all the other volumes in the Real Utopias series edited by Wright.

Friday, May 20, 2011

The Power of Narcissism & Mind-Forg’d Manacles


Please see this post at ReligiousLeftLaw.com: The Power of Narcissism & Mind-Forg’d Manacles

Monday, May 16, 2011

The Elusive Psychology of Well-Being

I’ve finally gotten around to reading a truly exceptional book: The Pursuit of Unhappiness: The Elusive Psychology of Well-Being (2008) by Daniel M. Haybron. And having read a fair amount of books (on related and unrelated topics) over the past several years, this is clearly among the best of the lot. As I said in response to a query from Chris Panza on Facebook on whether the book “is essentially on positive psychology:” In Haybron’s words, it is “basically a part of...the dark side of positive psychology, as it were.” But the method and tone is thoroughly philosophical and he makes important conceptual distinctions and clarifications about the meanings of happiness, well-being, and the good life, including a helpful taxonomy of the five predominant approaches to well-being. The glowing comments (blurbs) on the back of the book from the likes of Roger Crisp, John Doris and David Chalmers (among others) are not hyperbole. I should note that I’m not quite finished with the book but hope to discuss it in more depth here when I do.

Saturday, May 07, 2011

The Good & Capitalism: Toward an Appreciation of the Meaning of Socialism

Sunday, May 01, 2011

Happy May Day!


Please see these prior posts from yours truly: here, here, and here.

I hope to have another celebratory post up later in the day.

Update: It’s now clear that my post won’t make it up today so it will be a belated May Day post. The topic? An introduction to KOR, the Workers’ Defense Committee (later: Komitet Samoobrony Społecznej, Social Self-Defense Committee/KOR, KSS-‘KOR’) in Poland that played a direct “service” role in the emergence of Solidarity (or Solidarność, the first non-Communist party-controlled trade union in the Warsaw Pact countries) in 1980.