Thursday, March 31, 2011
The Problem of Traditions
As someone who has practiced Buddhist meditation off and on for several years, and who has been interested in both Buddhist and Daoist philosophy (as well as the philosophy of other philosophical traditions, such as Neoplatonism), I have done a lot of thinking about whether to self-identify as a Buddhist or Daoist, or as a member of a particular Buddhist or Daoist sect or organization. Two of my friends who practice meditation or other spirital exercises, Phil Dickinson and John Gfoeller, have each identified with a particular tradition (Zen Buddhism, in the case of Phil, who is a regular at the Toledo Zen Center, and Orthodox Christianity, in the case of John), which has given me further cause for reflection.
There are several advantages to identifying with a spiritual tradition (or whatever one wishes to call it; the word "spiritual" is after all pretty vague and confusing). One advantage is access to a literary and intellectual tradition that can serve as a source of insight, inspiration, and guidance. Another set of advantages is access to the social, psychological, and material support that people affiliated with the tradition can provide.
Despite these (quite considerable) advantages, I think that there are three weighty disadvantages to identifying with a spiritual tradition. The first is that one is usually expected to adopt all of the beliefs of the tradition, and, in the case of every tradition I am familiar with, at least some of these beliefs are false. The Buddhist doctrine of reincarnation, for example, is a core doctrine of Buddhism--pace Stephen Batchelor and other Buddhists who claim that one can be agnostic or skeptical about reincarnation and still count as a Buddhist, the Pali Canon is quite adamant in its opposition to schools of philosophy which deny the doctrine of reincarnation (on the grounds that this makes mincemeat of the doctrine of karma and its fruit, and thus removes the justification for ethical conduct--a lousy argument, by the way, but not one that I can deal with here). The problem is that the doctrine of reincarnation is inconsistent with the worldview of scientific naturalism, and is therefore overwhelmingly likely to be false. Even Buddhist psychology, which a lot of scientific naturalists (such as Owen Flanagan) seem pretty comfortable with, contains views which conflict with the contemporary scientific understanding of the human mind, such as (according to Buddhists such as the Dalai Lama) an implicit mind-body dualism, and (in the Theravada Abhidhamma) an analysis of mental states into various combinations of psychological atoms. It seems pretty foolish to identify with a tradition that asserts even one false belief, let alone a whole slew of them.
The second problem with identifying with a spiritual tradition is methodological in character. Even if a spiritual tradition happened to assert only true doctrines, there is still a problem with the methodology that members of traditions are expected to employ in generating and maintaining their beliefs. As fas as I can tell, if one is a Buddhist, and insofar as one is a Buddhist, one is supposed to believe in the doctrines of Buddhism, or ar least the core doctrines of Buddhism, at least in part simply because they are a part of the tradition, and not based solely on the fact that they have been confirmed through subsequent careful and impartial investigation and analysis. Even though Buddhists pay a lot of lip service to the notion that one should test out all Buddhist doctrines for oneself to see if they are true, the expectation is that one will in fact confirm each and every one of those doctrines, and if one does not, then one has simply made some kind of mistake or missed something that one will discover later. A Buddhist who uses his own experience to reject the doctrine of reincarnation, or who is even willing to use his own experience to reject the doctrine of reincarnation, is no longer a Buddhist. Simply put, spiritual traditions do not encourage (and in many cases do not permit) their members to use scientific or other impartial and careful methods to put their traditions' doctrines to the test. Identifying with a tradition seems, at least in the vast majority of cases, to involve adopting an attitude of deference to the doctrines of the tradition, or at least its core doctrines, and to foresaking a commitment to subject the doctrines of the school to a critical and impartial testing and evaluation. And this just smacks of an abandonment of free thought and rational judgment, from my point of view--even if all of the doctrines of the tradition happened to be true.
A third problem with identifying with a spiritual tradition has to do with the nature of identification itself (rather than with the nature of spiritual traditions as such). When one identifies with something, one's ego becomes bound up with it, and it is difficult if not impossible to view the thing objectively. One becomes biased in favor of the spiritual tradition with which one has identified, such that even if one were trying to maintain a critical view towards the doctrines of the tradition (and thus even if one abandoned spiritual traditions' flawed methodology for generating and testing beliefs), in all likelihood one's judgment would still be skewed solely due to the fact that one had identified with the tradition in question, and regarded it as one's own. Just as people are biased towards sports teams and political parties with which they dientify, and just as they are biased towards their friends and family members in disputes with strangers, they are likely to be biased with respect to the doctrines and practices of the spiritual traditions which they call their own.
It is for these three reasons, and perhaps for others that I have overlooked, that I have decided not to identify with Buddhism, Daoism, or any other spiritual tradition. Such an act seems too dangerous from an epistemological point of view.
On the other hand, there are costs to not identifying with a tradition, such as the diminished access to the psychological, social, and material benefits that one could receive from fellow members of the tradition. For example, if one is a member of a church, one might receive psychological support from one's fellow members after the death of a loved one, one probably receives the opportunity to participate in shared projects such as fundraisers and charitable works (which fulfills one's need for social interaction, which is part of a flourishing human life), and one might receive financial assistance from the church in a time of hardship or a job offer from a fellow church member in a time of unemployment. These are considerable benefits, and it's a shame that they are so often bundled with the disadvantages of identification with a spiritual tradition that I described above.
This leads to the question of whether it is possible, at least in principle, to form groups or organizations that retain the benefits of affiliation with spiritual traditions while avoiding some of the drawbacks. This is a topic for a separate post, but such groups would combine solidarity with the principles of equality and liberty, such that individual members could use their own judgment to form beliefs, based on the best information and chains of reasoning they can find from others or develop themselves, while at the same time contributing to and benefiting from the shared psychological, social, and material resources of the group. Such groups would combine the virtues of intellectual autonomy with those of fellowship and shared commitment.
It is an open question whether it is psychologically possible for people in such an alternative organization to retain the same amount and quality of fellowship and commitment that are found in conventional organizations, while jettisoning the usual uncritical acceptance of core doctrines. And to the extent that committing oneself to a group involves identifying oneself with the group, then it may not be possible to avoid the third problem with identifying with spiritual traditions, even if one is able to avoid the first two problems. But forming alternative spiritually affiliated groups or organizations which do not compromise intellectual autonomy and critical thinking still seems like an attractive proposition.
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Singapore, Efficiency, and Monopoly
The economist has a profile of the government of Singapore and why it should be taken as a model for the West. The main point is that Singapore is successful not because of a heavy-handed industrial policy or because of its authoritarian restrictions on civil liberties (which, to be fair, have lessened of late), but rather because it provides quality governance at a low price (the state consumes only 19% of GDP). The efficiency of Singapore's government is what attracts foreign capital and labor. The article ends by recommending that Western nations adopt some of Singapore's methods which don't involve sacrificing liberty, such as firing teachers who don't perform well or paying civil servants more (to attract talent away from the private sector).
I don't know enough about Singapore to comment of the specifics of the article, but the focus on government efficiency got me thinking about the benefits of increasing competition between governments. One of the reasons why government is often inefficient is because it lacks sufficient competitive pressure. What's interesting is that most people have a healthy fear of business monopoly power (indeed, perhaps an excessive fear, given the difficulty of maintaining a monopoly or cartel in even imperfectly free markets), but they lack a corresponding fear of government monopoly power. In part because it is costly for people to move to a different country, most governments don't feel the pressure of competition to retain their base of residents, citizens, and corporate bases of operation. Choosing which government to pay taxes to is not like choosing a cell phone company, it's more like "choosing" a family, in that most cases one is simply born into it. If this were the case with cell phone companies, we wouldn't expect them to provide a very efficient product. Market power, whether in the form of a cartel or a monopoly, tends to increase the price and decrease the quality of a good or service, compared to cases where firms are forced to compete with rivals for market share. Why should the case of government be any different?
We tend to think that democracy works to constrain the inefficiency of governments, because bad governments can be thrown out of power. To a certain extent this is probably true, and it may explain, at least in part, why the government of modern parliamentary democracries is so much better than most governments throughout history (in terms of levels of crime, corruption, infrastructure, and so on). But there are still massive inefficiencies even in "good" governments such as those of Japan, South Korea, Europe, and North America. To begin to understand why, imagine an analgous case of non-government monopoly plus democracy. Let's say that Walmart is granted a monopoly on all retail stores through an act of Congress (historically, most monopolies are only created and maintained through government action, although that's a topic for a different post). We would of course expect Walmart to restrict supply, raise prices, and lower quality, in order to increase their profits. Why does the monopoly give Walmart the power to do this? In the absence of the monopoly, Walmart would lose customers if they increased prices and lowered quality. The only way they can continue to get customer dollars is by providing a product that is about as good and that costs about as much as those of other firms. (In fact, even if there are no other firms in the market, as long as it's possible for another firm to enter the market and seize market share, that still provides an incentive for Walmart to keep their prices relatively low and their quality relatively high, so that they don't risk losing market share to such a firm in the future; this is the disciplining effect of potential competition, as opposed to actual competition with firms currently in a market.)
Now suppose people get fed up with the Walmart molopoly and try to improve matters by replacing its current corporate government with a nationally-elected assembly. Would we expect as much benefit from democratizing a still-monopolistic Walmart as we would from simply exposing Walmart to more competition? Probably not. Sure, politicians would tend not to be re-elected if they passed laws that greatly and obviously hurt the Walmart consumer, but there are all kinds of inefficiencies that would remain. Two important sources of government inefficiency are the lack of voter decisiveness and the externalization of the costs of voting.
When a consumer decides to buy from a different firm, his choice is decisive; once he makes up his mind, he either reaps the reward of higher quality or lower price, or suffers the cost of lower quality or higher price. The case is different with democratic government, becuase a voter only gets the government he votes for if he happens to be in the majority; his vote does not decisively determine the government he receives (and, in fact, the chance that a single vote will sway an election is close to zero). Moreover, the costs of bad government are not internal to those who voted for it, but are externalized to all taxpayers, regardless of who they voted for. As Bryan Caplan has argued in his The Myth of the Rational Voter, these two factors (lack of decisiveness and externalization of costs) makes it cheaper for voters to hold irrational beliefs about the quality and cost of their favored policies or parties. A consumer with an irrational bias about a product at least feels the pinch in his pocketbook, and therefore has a standing reason to revise the irrational bias. A voter with an irrational bias about a party or policy does not receive the same feedback, both because his vote is not decisive, and because the costs of the policy or party he supports are in any case distributed throughout all of society, which makes it much cheaper for him to support a bad policy or party if he gets even a mild feeling of pleasure for doing so (or avoids the pain of having to change his mind and abandon a cherished belief or party affiliation). Irrationality is cheaper for voters than for consumers, and we should therefore expect voters to be more irrational than consumers, and to vote for less efficient policies. This is as true with a democratically run Walmart monopoly as it is true with democratically run governments.
In addition, there are other sources of inefficiency in government apart from lack of voter decisiveness and the externalization of the costs of voting, such as the fact that many unelected civil servants lack adeqaute accountability. Therefore, even though it makes sense to doubt that markets are perfectly efficient, there is good reason to believe that governments are even less efficient than markets. Opponents of the efficient markets hypothesis should also oppose the efficient government hypothesis.
So how does Singapore manage to do such a good job? It's probably a matter of the incentives facing the rulers. Singapore is not very democratic (they have a virtual one-party system, and lots of power is concentrated in the office of prime minister, of which Singapore has had only three since 1959). Usually this is a bad thing, but in the case of Singapore the rulers for some reason have felt the need to attract foreign capital and labor, which put a check on the normal tendency for authoritarian governments to simply feather their own nests at public expense. A ruler can make himself wealthy through corrupt governance, but he can't make a nation wealthy through corrupt governance. The centralization of power in Singapore has made it possible for the government to plan for the future and to commit to a consistent policy over the long-run, but centralization of power is not itself enough for government efficiency, in the absence of the incentives to rule well which the government of Singapore seems to have faced. The key thing is that, in the case of Singapore, what saved the day was not democratic competition within a polity, but competition for labor and capital between polities. In order to attract foreign wealth and labor, Singapore had to provide firms and workers reasons to move to and do business in Singapore.
To my mind, this is the only way we will see sustained improvements in the quality of government over time: if governments lose their monopoly character and become increasingly competitive. Libertarian anarchists, such as Murray Rothbard, David Friedman , and Roderick Long, propose a market for services normally provided by the state, with competing firms providing protection and other state services within the same geographic territory, and with no state having monopoly on any good or service provided within that territory. This might work, but I think it is unlikely ever to happen, given that states will probably never give up their monopoly privileges over their territories, at least not willingly. A much more plausible route to competitive governance is for there to be competition between states which retain monopolies over their territories, but which are disciplined by their efforts to attract freely-moving labor and capital from other states. A glimpse of this scenario may be found in the behavior of the government of Singapore; what's needed now is for more states to feel the pressure to attract individuals and firms through providing efficient government. This doesn't seem likely to happen, but on the other hand, if it happened in Singapore, it might happen elsewhere as well.
But what about democracy? What about the power of the people? And what about the authoritarian character of Singapore--should this really be a model for other states? First of all, it is not the authoritarian character of Singapore or the conservatism of its laws which have produced success; it is the fact that the rulers have actually felt a need to provide good government. In fact, insofar as firms and individuals benefit from liberty as much from the services provided by government, there is a reason for Singapore to respect liberty insofar as this attracts firms and individuals--and this may explain why Singapore has become less conservative and authoritarian in recent years.
With regards to democracy, it is over-rated as a political ideal. Empowering people is important, indeed essential, but democracy is a lousy way to give power to the people. It is more important to give people the power to choose between states than it is to give people the power to vote. The former is decisive, and internalizes costs and benefits; the latter is not decisive, and externalizes costs and benefits, and as a power is therefore pretty thin gruel.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Khan Academy
I just found out about the Khan Academy, a website that has free video lectures on math and science and software with practice exercises. Salman Khan recently did a TED talk about how he got into education and how his site works. People are saying "this is the future of education" and for once I am on the bandwagon. Khan emphasizes how his site can complement in-class instruction, but he is really understating the radical implications of his approach. First, it clarifies how poorly the field of education has been performing for some time. Second, adopting khan academy lectures and exercises in the classroom radically redefines the role of the teacher, from someone who focuses on giving static lectures to the entire class to someone who focuses on giving targeted interaction to particular students based on real-time data about their performance. Third, given the availability of free peer tutors via Khan's website, the need for traditional education institutions seems to deline at the margin.
How resistant will primary, secondary, and higher ed institutions be to this new approach to education? Khan seems to be accumulating data that might give objective evidence for the effectiveness of his methods; how much will such evidence (assuming it exists) matter in public debates over education? My prediction: traditional education institutions and their employees, from the public school district to the four year university, will dig in their heels to resist re-hauling the education system on Khanian lines. I hope I am wrong.
How resistant will primary, secondary, and higher ed institutions be to this new approach to education? Khan seems to be accumulating data that might give objective evidence for the effectiveness of his methods; how much will such evidence (assuming it exists) matter in public debates over education? My prediction: traditional education institutions and their employees, from the public school district to the four year university, will dig in their heels to resist re-hauling the education system on Khanian lines. I hope I am wrong.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Article on Transcendental Meditation in the New York Times
There was an article on transcendental meditation published Friday, March 18th in the New York Times. Evidently, there has been a mini-revival of interest in TM among some celebrities, including David Lynch (who has been practicing TM since the 1970s), Russell Brand, and Moby. The article includes several celebrity testimonials about the value of TM, including this one by Brand:
But that's not my main concern with this article. It's more troubling that the author focuses on the benefits of TM, without going into its darker side. TM was founded as a business venture by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi; in order to practice TM, you have to pay for special training sessions, in which a teacher gives you a secret mantra that you have to recite when you are meditating, and which you aren't supposed to share with anyone else. The abbreviation TM suits the business well, since they have vigorously asserted ownership over their intellectual property, for example having trademarked the term "Transcendental Meditation" itself. The TM movement has also authored studies which purport to offer scientific evidence for the health and other benefits of TM. What's disturbing to me about TM is that they seem to be ripping people off, by charging for what anyone can practice for free (mantra meditation), and by claiming, whether implicity or explicitly, that TM has some kind of special benefits not attainable through any of the various "freeware" meditation practices that are also available.
The very occasion of the New York Times article is a recent fundraiser organized by David Lynch, for the purpose of providing scholarships to pay for TM lessons for those who can't afford it. This all sounds very noble, until you realize that the only reason such a fundraiser is necessary in the first place is because of the greed and puffed-up claims of the TM movement itself. Now, I am a great admirer of Lynch's work, and am fascinated by the apparent relationship between Lynch's meditation practice and his creative output, but I believe he is doing people a great disservice by leading people to TM, when so many other, equally effective meditation practices (such as zazen or Vipassana) are available for free. On the other hand, I did learn from the article that George Lucas's Yoda character may have been based on Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, which fact alone probably made the article worth reading.
There's probably a lot of dirt on the dear old Maharishi, but my favorite is the story that he made sexual advances towards Mia Farrow and other women who traveled with the Beatles to his ashram in 1968. Sexual impropriety seems unfortunately common among people with spiritual authority (there are numerous cases from the world of Zen, for example), and to me this is another reason for being weary of gurus, especially those who charge unreasonable sums for magical mantras. If only the Maharishi could live up to the noble Yoda, who was created in his image! Now there's a guru I can't imagine charging money in exchange for teaching Jedi mind tricks, nor making a pass at Leia when Luke wasn't looking.
“Transcendental Meditation has been incredibly valuable to me both in my recovery as a drug addict and in my personal life, my marriage, my professional life,” Mr. Brand said of the technique that prescribes two 15- to 20-minute sessions a day of silently repeating a one-to-three syllable mantra, so that practitioners can access a state of what is known as transcendental consciousness. “I literally had an idea drop into my brain the other day while I was meditating which I think is worth millions of dollars.”The article also says the following about David Lynch's experiences with TM:
I was not into meditation one bit,” Mr. Lynch said, in his laconic Missoula, Mont., drawl that years of living in Los Angeles has failed to dilute. “I thought it was a fad. I thought you had to eat nuts and raisins, and I didn’t want any part of it.”I'm a fan of meditation, but such anecdotes don't really tell us much about what, if anything, meditation is good for. We don't know, for example, whether Brand's meditation was the cause of his recovery from drug addiction, or whether Moby's meditation was what enabled him to give up drinking (as he is quoted as claiming in the article), because it's possible for people to lie or to simply be mistaken about such things.
Mr. Lynch was persuaded by his sister, Martha, when he began having marital difficulties with the first of his four wives, Peggy, in the early ’70s. “I had a whole bunch of personal anger that I would take out on her,” he said. “I think I was a weak person. I wasn’t self-assured. I was not a happy camper inside. Two weeks after I started, my wife comes to me and says, ‘This anger, where did it go?’ I felt a freedom and happiness growing inside. It was like — poooft! — I felt a kind of smile from Mother Nature. The world looked better and better. It’s an ocean of unbounded love within us, so it’s real hard to get a conflict going.” (Still, a year later, the couple divorced.)
But that's not my main concern with this article. It's more troubling that the author focuses on the benefits of TM, without going into its darker side. TM was founded as a business venture by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi; in order to practice TM, you have to pay for special training sessions, in which a teacher gives you a secret mantra that you have to recite when you are meditating, and which you aren't supposed to share with anyone else. The abbreviation TM suits the business well, since they have vigorously asserted ownership over their intellectual property, for example having trademarked the term "Transcendental Meditation" itself. The TM movement has also authored studies which purport to offer scientific evidence for the health and other benefits of TM. What's disturbing to me about TM is that they seem to be ripping people off, by charging for what anyone can practice for free (mantra meditation), and by claiming, whether implicity or explicitly, that TM has some kind of special benefits not attainable through any of the various "freeware" meditation practices that are also available.
The very occasion of the New York Times article is a recent fundraiser organized by David Lynch, for the purpose of providing scholarships to pay for TM lessons for those who can't afford it. This all sounds very noble, until you realize that the only reason such a fundraiser is necessary in the first place is because of the greed and puffed-up claims of the TM movement itself. Now, I am a great admirer of Lynch's work, and am fascinated by the apparent relationship between Lynch's meditation practice and his creative output, but I believe he is doing people a great disservice by leading people to TM, when so many other, equally effective meditation practices (such as zazen or Vipassana) are available for free. On the other hand, I did learn from the article that George Lucas's Yoda character may have been based on Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, which fact alone probably made the article worth reading.
There's probably a lot of dirt on the dear old Maharishi, but my favorite is the story that he made sexual advances towards Mia Farrow and other women who traveled with the Beatles to his ashram in 1968. Sexual impropriety seems unfortunately common among people with spiritual authority (there are numerous cases from the world of Zen, for example), and to me this is another reason for being weary of gurus, especially those who charge unreasonable sums for magical mantras. If only the Maharishi could live up to the noble Yoda, who was created in his image! Now there's a guru I can't imagine charging money in exchange for teaching Jedi mind tricks, nor making a pass at Leia when Luke wasn't looking.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Government Contracts vs. Free Market Competition
Alex Taborrok had a recent blog post over at Marginal Revolution where he criticizes an argument for public trash collection made by Arnold Kling. Here is Kling's argument:
Surely, if we all lived in small mountain communities we would need less government. But imagine purely private trash collection in an urban area. If you pay for somebody to collect the trash in front of your house, then instead of paying for my trash to be removed, my strategy is to put my trash in front of your house and free ride on your trash collection.Taborrok's reply, in brief, is that there are cases of successful private trash collection, including in his own Fairfax, Virginia:
I know because my neighborhood has two private, competing garbage collectors and the service is better than I have ever experienced in any other neighborhood. I get two trash collections a week (three counting yard matter such as leaves and cuttings), they take everything including recycling, the price is low and they work on government holidays. Most of Fairfax County has private trash collection. In fact, around the United States and the world private trash collection is quite common and there are typically substantial cost savings, on the order of 20-30%.I agree with Tabarrok, in that private trash collection, at least in some contexts, does not constitute a public good problem. (Even if it did, the state is not necessarily the best solution; we must always compare imperfect free market and other imperfect consensual solutions to the imperfect state-based solutions of offer.) I am more interested, though, in the point Tabarrok makes in his following paragraph:
It is important to note that cost savings come from creating competition rather than from privatization per se–substituting a private monopoly for a public one is not very helpful but creating and maintaining a competitive environment can work wonders.A common mistake is made by both pro-business and anti-free market factions (the latter is actually a species of the former, though most people don't realize this): a "privatization" scheme in which the government pays a private contractor to perform a service will not, in general, lead to much or any improvements in the price or quality of the service. But this is not because of a failure of the free market.
A moment's contemplation should make this clear: when the government uses tax money to pay a private company for a service, this is not a free market transaction. Free markets only exist when buyers are not coerced into paying for products (which does not fit the case of taxpayers), and when sellers are free to enter the market at any time and seize market share from rival firms (which does not fit most or any government contracting schemes). That is, a free market involves competition, and that's the only reason why free markets often contribute to the common good. Take away competition, and you have the same kinds of high prices and low quality that often characterize services provided by the most obvious monopoly of all, which is government.
The fact that "pro-business" factions often push for privatization schemes of this nature should not cloud our judgment. Government contracting is not a substitute for genuine free markets, because the same kinds of incentives are not in place. Most pro-business groups are perforce anti-free-market, since the free market is never in the interest of a particular firm. The best outcome for a firm is if it receives subsidies and protections from the government, not if it has to cover all its own expenses and compete on an even footing with rival firms. It's true that people in general are benefitted by free markets, but from the perspective of a particular firm, competition is not the best situation to be in, but rather protection, subsidy, and, if possible, sweet, sweet monopoly. Support for genuine free markets is therefore a radically "anti-business" position, but this does not seem to be widely understood. (Reading Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations may help, since the godfather of the free market is excoriating in his attacks on the business interests of his day, who had paid off people in the government to restrict competition.)
Unfortunately, this is often obscured in debates over privatization. The failures of government contracting are then often blamed on the free market. What is interesting about most debates over privatization is that genuinely free market positions are never even considered: the choice is often between government provision of a good or service and provision of a good or service by a private firm on a government contract. Neither of these supports the common good.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Liberal Libertarians
There's a growing trend among libertarians to self-identify as liberals and to distance themselves from political conservatism. This trend has precedents; the economist Friedrich Hayek wrote an essay in 1960 entitled "Why I Am Not a Conservative," for example. As a previous blog post of mine might indicate, although I consider myself a libertarian, there are several things about libertarianism, at least as it is commonly understood, which I find problematic. Specifically, many libertarians are committed at the level of ethical theory to an axiomatic principle of liberty or to a theory of natural rights; this puts them in opposition to consequentialist ethical analysis, which I regard as important, particularly with respect to questions of social justice--a concept which many libertarians, including even good old Hayek, regard with suspicion or skepticism. Openness to taking social justice seriously is part of what makes for a genuinely liberal strain of libertarian; other parts include cosmopolitanism, a secular worldview (or at least a secular approach to politics), opposition to war and militarism, opposition to the war on drugs, and support for the rights of gays and other people regarded as deviant or inferior by most conservatives.
Will Wilkinson, who has been an outspoken liberal libertarian for some time now, recently blogged about Bleeding Heart Libertarians, itself a new group blog by libertarian philosophers with an interest in neoclassical liberalism, combining libertarianism with contemporary liberalism, and libertarian social justice. Special mention should go to one of the blog's contibutors, Roderick T. Long, who has been an energetic advocate of "left libertarianism" for some time now.
On a related note, Peter Jaworski, a faculty member in the philosophy department at Bowling Green State University (where I currently teach part-time), recently blogged about the liberal libertarian phenomenon, including a discussion of the ethical issues underlying questions of social justice, and why an ethical principle of social justice does not by itself provide the justification for a welfare state.
Personally, my libertarian political beliefs have been a constant source of frustration and embarassment. Culturally, I am much more liberal than conservative, so most of my friends have been liberal, and as a consequence they have been either intolerant of or at least uncomfortable with my libertarianism, should I ever bring it up. Libertarianism is simply not acceptable among liberal social circles. As is often the case when it comes to political beliefs, a libertarian is usually regarded by liberals as being, not just ignorant or mistaken in his political beliefs, but downright morally defective on account of them. It's very difficult to have a rational conversation with anyone about politics (or religion, for that matter), even with someone who is very intelligent and relatively broad-minded. This probably has something to do with the way the human mind works--specifically, the psychology of group-based identity, or in-group / out-group thinking (about which there has been a lot of fascinating psychological research in the last ten years). A person with divergent political beliefs is regarded not just as wrong, but as a threat to the faction with which we identify, and by extention a threat to ourselves and those we care about. You can imagine the political disagreements among our hunter-gatherer ancestors as often being a matter of life and death, and it still feels that way today, even when our life is not in fact at stake.
In any event, I'm glad that there are other libertarians out there of a decidedly liberal bent--in terms of their cultural proclivites, political views, and even aspects of their ethical theory (insofar as most conservative libertarians seem to be defend theories of natural rights). I regard libertarianism as a progressive political philosophy, and I hope that more people in the general public will start to view it that way as well, even if they continue to disagree with it.
Will Wilkinson, who has been an outspoken liberal libertarian for some time now, recently blogged about Bleeding Heart Libertarians, itself a new group blog by libertarian philosophers with an interest in neoclassical liberalism, combining libertarianism with contemporary liberalism, and libertarian social justice. Special mention should go to one of the blog's contibutors, Roderick T. Long, who has been an energetic advocate of "left libertarianism" for some time now.
On a related note, Peter Jaworski, a faculty member in the philosophy department at Bowling Green State University (where I currently teach part-time), recently blogged about the liberal libertarian phenomenon, including a discussion of the ethical issues underlying questions of social justice, and why an ethical principle of social justice does not by itself provide the justification for a welfare state.
Personally, my libertarian political beliefs have been a constant source of frustration and embarassment. Culturally, I am much more liberal than conservative, so most of my friends have been liberal, and as a consequence they have been either intolerant of or at least uncomfortable with my libertarianism, should I ever bring it up. Libertarianism is simply not acceptable among liberal social circles. As is often the case when it comes to political beliefs, a libertarian is usually regarded by liberals as being, not just ignorant or mistaken in his political beliefs, but downright morally defective on account of them. It's very difficult to have a rational conversation with anyone about politics (or religion, for that matter), even with someone who is very intelligent and relatively broad-minded. This probably has something to do with the way the human mind works--specifically, the psychology of group-based identity, or in-group / out-group thinking (about which there has been a lot of fascinating psychological research in the last ten years). A person with divergent political beliefs is regarded not just as wrong, but as a threat to the faction with which we identify, and by extention a threat to ourselves and those we care about. You can imagine the political disagreements among our hunter-gatherer ancestors as often being a matter of life and death, and it still feels that way today, even when our life is not in fact at stake.
In any event, I'm glad that there are other libertarians out there of a decidedly liberal bent--in terms of their cultural proclivites, political views, and even aspects of their ethical theory (insofar as most conservative libertarians seem to be defend theories of natural rights). I regard libertarianism as a progressive political philosophy, and I hope that more people in the general public will start to view it that way as well, even if they continue to disagree with it.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Conspiracy Theories
The Wall Street Journal had a recent article about the clash between patients and scientists over the cause of chronic fatigue syndrome. Evidently, some patients with CFS accuse the CDC of deliberately obstructing or delaying the publication of data showing a link between CFS and viruses such as XMRV. I personally doubt the CDC or anyone else has deliberately suppressed any information. If anything, it is the CFS patients who seem one-sided in their advocacy of a link between XMRV and CFS, given that some studies have failed to show a connection. As I indicated in a previous post, there is some evidence of a connection between CFS and chronic infections of several kinds, but the data is still spotty and I don't think anyone knows for sure what is causing cases of CFS. In addition, focusing too much on particular viruses like XMRV may direct attention away from the possible role played by other viruses, such as EBV, CMV, HHV-6, and enteroviruses, much less other pathogens such as bacteria and parasites.
Regarding the bacterial and parasitic infections, it is even possible that some CFS cases are due to infections caused by tick bites. Another recent article on msnbc's website discusses the increase in hard-to-diagnose (and often hard-to-treat) tick-born infections, and some of these have symptoms similar to CFS (including severe fatigue and "brain fog"). Since CFS is a syndrome, and not a disease with a specific etiology, it's not yet possible to say how many different types of infections or other conditions are behind CFS cases. When patients cling to one theory of CFS and attack scientists researching the syndrome, one fears that this will only hinder the pace of research. On the other hand, I haven't seen many scientists discuss the possibility of multiple infectious agents behind CFS cases, and this may represent a bias on their part which is also holding back the research. Too many people, patients and scientists included, seem to be looking for a single cause of the syndrome. I wish more studies were structured to test CFS patients for multiple pathogens using the best assays currently available.
Regarding the bacterial and parasitic infections, it is even possible that some CFS cases are due to infections caused by tick bites. Another recent article on msnbc's website discusses the increase in hard-to-diagnose (and often hard-to-treat) tick-born infections, and some of these have symptoms similar to CFS (including severe fatigue and "brain fog"). Since CFS is a syndrome, and not a disease with a specific etiology, it's not yet possible to say how many different types of infections or other conditions are behind CFS cases. When patients cling to one theory of CFS and attack scientists researching the syndrome, one fears that this will only hinder the pace of research. On the other hand, I haven't seen many scientists discuss the possibility of multiple infectious agents behind CFS cases, and this may represent a bias on their part which is also holding back the research. Too many people, patients and scientists included, seem to be looking for a single cause of the syndrome. I wish more studies were structured to test CFS patients for multiple pathogens using the best assays currently available.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Death to PEMDAS and There Is No Indigo
I have been a fan of role-playing games (rpg's) off and on since I was about 11 years old. Recenty I got into gaming again, after a hiatus of many years; I am currently playing an old-school Dungeons & Dragons campaign with my girlfriend Brenda and her sons. This blog post is not about gaming, though, except incidentally. As a result of returning to gaming, I have found a couple of really great old-school gaming blogs, one of which is Delta's D&D Hotspot. "Delta" is a mathematics professor (and rock musician) who lives in New York City; his blog posts often involve statistical analyses of game rules, or erudite discussions of concepts related to gaming (such as, most recently, the tactics of cavalry, pikemen, and archers).
Delta recently posted a surprising fact about the visible color spectrum:
Delta recently posted a surprising fact about the visible color spectrum:
Did you know that most color scientists no longer recognize "indigo" as a distinct color in the spectrum (as opposed to Newton's original 7-color scheme)?I also enjoyed his screed against the ever-popular PEMDAS acronym:
Wednesday night, I walk into a lecture room for my first-evening algebra class of the spring. And what do I see on the chalkboard? Some motherfucker has oh-so-carefully written out the PEMDAS acronym, with each associated word in a column sequence. . . . among its flaws are (1) leaving out radicals as the inverse of exponents, (2)overlooking that multiplication & division are tied, and (3) overlooking that addition & subtraction are tied.I ask you, if we can't rely on PEMDAS, what can we rely on? It makes one wonder how much of the information taught in schools and widely believed is (1) a gross over-simplification or (2) pure bunk. (In my own teaching, I've encountered a surprising number of incorrect beliefs relating to history and philosophy, many of which were picked up in schools.)
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Stephen Bachelor's Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist
Classes are canceled this week for spring break, and I was planning on getting a bunch of work done on my research and other writing projects. Unfortunately, I have been sick the past two days with a cold, and while I have gotten some work done, the pace is a lot slower than I had planned. On the other hand, I have been able to do some "light reading," namely Stephen Batchelor's latest, Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist. Batchelor is widely known in Buddhist circles; I was first introduced to him by my former dissertation advisor (and meditation teacher) Marvin Belzer, who directed me to Batchelor's Buddhism without Beliefs.
Batchelor interweaves three strands of narrative in his latest work: (1) the story of his own disovery of and ever-changing relationship with traditional Buddhism, from his ordination as a Tibetan monk in northern India in the late 1960s, to his intensive study of Zen meditation at a monastery in Korea, to his exit from ordained life and marriage to a former Buddhist nun (whom he had met at the very same monastery in Korea); (2) the story of the life of the Buddha, as revealed through scattered passages from throughout the Pali Canon and traditional commentaries, with a particular focus on the Buddha's often tumultuous relations with secular rulers and members of his family; (3) the story of Bachelor's continuing attempt to develop a secular form of Buddhism, which forges a "middle way" between a rigid and excessively subjective orthodoxy on the one hand and sterile academic objectivity on the other. Batchelor's re-telling of the Buddha's life is fresh and reveals new insights into the political, social, and economic milieu in which the Buddha operated. Batchelor ties his re-telling of the life of the Buddha into a tale of his own journey along the Buddhist pilgrim route in north India, where he hits the most important places in the life and career of the Buddha, and makes by turns droll and tender observations about the colorful people he inevitably meets along the way.
I have yet to finish reading Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist, but so far my impression is quite favorable, with one important caveat. Batchelor, it seems to me, is trying to do too much in one book. I would have preferred to have read his reconstructed life of the Buddha, together with the relevant (and genuinely thought-provoking) philosophical commentary he provides, as a separate, self-contained work; as it is, his narrative is constantly interrupted by tales from his earlier life as a Buddhist monk, and by the story of his more recent photo-essay-inspired pilgrimage through north India. So too, the autobiorgraphical material, and the material related to his re-thinking of the core principles of Buddhism in order to combine a genuinely spiritual practice with a secular worldview, are well worth reading, but would have been more compelling and easier to absorb had they been presented separately. Nevertheless, I can recommend this book without hesitation to anyone interested in Buddhism, meditation, atheism, and the relationship between secularism and spirituality.
Batchelor interweaves three strands of narrative in his latest work: (1) the story of his own disovery of and ever-changing relationship with traditional Buddhism, from his ordination as a Tibetan monk in northern India in the late 1960s, to his intensive study of Zen meditation at a monastery in Korea, to his exit from ordained life and marriage to a former Buddhist nun (whom he had met at the very same monastery in Korea); (2) the story of the life of the Buddha, as revealed through scattered passages from throughout the Pali Canon and traditional commentaries, with a particular focus on the Buddha's often tumultuous relations with secular rulers and members of his family; (3) the story of Bachelor's continuing attempt to develop a secular form of Buddhism, which forges a "middle way" between a rigid and excessively subjective orthodoxy on the one hand and sterile academic objectivity on the other. Batchelor's re-telling of the Buddha's life is fresh and reveals new insights into the political, social, and economic milieu in which the Buddha operated. Batchelor ties his re-telling of the life of the Buddha into a tale of his own journey along the Buddhist pilgrim route in north India, where he hits the most important places in the life and career of the Buddha, and makes by turns droll and tender observations about the colorful people he inevitably meets along the way.
I have yet to finish reading Confessions of a Buddhist Atheist, but so far my impression is quite favorable, with one important caveat. Batchelor, it seems to me, is trying to do too much in one book. I would have preferred to have read his reconstructed life of the Buddha, together with the relevant (and genuinely thought-provoking) philosophical commentary he provides, as a separate, self-contained work; as it is, his narrative is constantly interrupted by tales from his earlier life as a Buddhist monk, and by the story of his more recent photo-essay-inspired pilgrimage through north India. So too, the autobiorgraphical material, and the material related to his re-thinking of the core principles of Buddhism in order to combine a genuinely spiritual practice with a secular worldview, are well worth reading, but would have been more compelling and easier to absorb had they been presented separately. Nevertheless, I can recommend this book without hesitation to anyone interested in Buddhism, meditation, atheism, and the relationship between secularism and spirituality.
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Zen Sourcebook
Yesterday I received an examination copy of Hackett Publishing's Zen Sourcebook, which is an anthology of scriptures and other Zen texts from China, Japan, and Korea. I have yet to read it, but judging by the table of contents alone, it looks to be an excellent anthology. It's always been somewhat difficult to track down the various texts which are essential to the Zen tradition. The Zen Sourcebook collects Hui-Neng's autobiography (from the Platform Sutra), excerpts from Huang-Po's Transmission of Mind, the Lin-chi Record, K'uo-an's Ox-Herding Poems, excerpts from the Blue Cliff Record, selections from Dogen, Bankei, and Hakuin, and much, much more, all in one convenient and low-priced package ($13.95 retail). To be honest, when I requested the exam copy, I figured there was only about a 10% chance I would actually make the book a required text for my Indian and Chinese Philosophy class next year, but I have already decided to do just that. At the risk of sounding like a corporate shill, Hackett has done a really great job making critical editions of Western and now Eastern philosophy available for a reasonable price.
Update: At today's daily meditation group at The Common Good, Phil Dickinson gave me the syllabus for the class on Zen Buddhism he is teaching next year at Bowling Green State University (the class is titled Zen Buddhism, The Arts, and Everyday Life). Phil is using an anthology by Nelson Foster and Jack Shoemaker entitled The Roaring Stream: A New Zen Reader which he claims also does a great job of collecting a bunch of Zen texts in one place. This anthology was published in 1996, so I was wrong about Hackett being the first to step up to the plate in this area. On the other hand, Hackett still has the edge in terms of list price (which is $18.00 for The Roaring Stream). Three cheers for competition!
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
I have been very ill with chronic fatigue syndrome since 2006. This is a very difficult and elusive illness, which is still not really understood by modern medicine. In my case, the fatigue and other symptoms characteristic of the disorder started several months after a severe viral illness in late 2005. But it took five years to get a correct diagnosis; at first, I was told that I had a virus that would go away on its own; then, I was told I was depressed; then, I was diagnosed with a type of inflammatory arthritis (partially on the basis of a blood test which revealed elevated autoimmune antibodies). It was only in 2010 that I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia and dysautonomia related to chronic fatigue syndrome.
As is probably obvious, this illness has made all areas of my life much more difficult. I won't bore you with the details here; the purpose of this post is not to gripe about my own difficulties with the syndrome, but rather to share with you what little useful information I have been able to find (some of which is still not widely known).
To my understanding, the most promising theory of chronic fatigue syndrome is that it is caused by chronic, unresolved infections of one sort or another. Now, there have been several studies widely reported in the media claiming a connection between various viruses and CFS. The findings of these studies have not been confirmed by subsequent research. So why believe that viruses may cause CFS? One possibility that has not been much discussed in the media is that there is not one virus, or even a single class of viruses, but rather a wide variety of viruses of different classes that are behind cases of CFS.
The view that multiple viruses may be at work seems to have received some confirmation from the research of Martin Lerner, MD, Jose Montoya, MD (of Stanford University), and John Chia, MD. Examples of viruses that these physicians and reseachers have claimed to find in CFS patients, and treatment of which they claim reduces CFS symptoms (thus indicating that the virus could be causing the CFS), include human herpes virus 6 (HHV-6), ebstein barr virus (EBV), cytomegalovirus (CMV), and enteroviruses. In addition to a variety of viruses, John Chia has found chronic bacterial infections, including chlamydia pneumoniae, and mold infections in some of his CFS patients (some of Chia's research can be found on the Research page of the EV Med website; the rest can be found by searching PubMed or Google Scholar).
If there are several types of pathogens in play in CFS, then this could explain, at least in part, why the syndrome has confounded researchers. It's impossible to replicate findings which show a link between CFS and any particular pathogen if every sample of CFS patients have arrays of different pathogens causing their symtpoms. In addition, Chia, Montoya, and Lerner claim that the particular viruses behind some CFS cases are hard to detect through conventional blood tests, because the viruses in question, such as enteroviruses, spread from cell to cell, and do not kill the cells that they invade, and thus not many copies of the virus get swept up into the bloodstream, at least in the advanced stages of infection. Chia has developed more sensitive blood tests to detect the presence of entervirus in his CFS patients, but he has also had to use endoscopies to get tissue samples from the stomach, and then stain the samples for viruses in order to detect their presence in some of his patients. (This and other some details of Chia's research are discussed in an interview he did for the website Phoenix Rising.)
Approximately 50% of Chia's CFS patients show evidence of chronic enteroviral infection. To my knowledge, the media has not reported (at least not widely) on a possible connection between enterovirus infection and CFS. Chia has found evidence for 11 different kinds of infection in his CFS patients, including viral, bacterial, and mold infections. In addition, approximately 25% of Chia's CFS patients are infected with no known pathogen, so it is at least possible that there other pathogens out there behind CFS (perhaps including parasites, for example).
Chia has had some success treating his CFS patients with antibiotics and antiviral drugs. Unfortunately, there are currently no effective antiviral drugs for use against chronic enteroviral infection, which makes up his largest class of CFS patients. Chia first tried using interferon-gamma and interferon-delta to treat the chronic enteroviral infections, which was effective, but very costly and had many side effects. He currently uses an herbal supplement called sophora to treat patients with enteroviral infection, which seems to improve symptoms in about 50% of his patients (some of his patients recover completely; others see reduction of symptoms; other see no benefit; more men than women see benefit). Sophora boosts the activity of T1 cells of the immune system, and is used in China to treat hepatitis and cancer. Chia is currently looking for other more effective treatments for chronic enteroviral infection (in a phone consultaion, he mentioned that some of the antiviral drugs currently being developed to treat polio, which is a type of enterovirus, could also be effective in treating the enteroviruses he sees in his CFS patients).
I apologize for the long blog post (there is more I could share, including .pdfs of studies; perhaps in a later post), but this information is worth sharing if you know of anyone with either chronic fatigue syndrome or fibromyalgia (which is a related syndrome). There is a lot of misinformation out there, especially on popular and alternative health websites, and it took me a while to track down any information which genuinely seemed to shed light on the disorder. I hope it proves helpful to someone.
As is probably obvious, this illness has made all areas of my life much more difficult. I won't bore you with the details here; the purpose of this post is not to gripe about my own difficulties with the syndrome, but rather to share with you what little useful information I have been able to find (some of which is still not widely known).
To my understanding, the most promising theory of chronic fatigue syndrome is that it is caused by chronic, unresolved infections of one sort or another. Now, there have been several studies widely reported in the media claiming a connection between various viruses and CFS. The findings of these studies have not been confirmed by subsequent research. So why believe that viruses may cause CFS? One possibility that has not been much discussed in the media is that there is not one virus, or even a single class of viruses, but rather a wide variety of viruses of different classes that are behind cases of CFS.
The view that multiple viruses may be at work seems to have received some confirmation from the research of Martin Lerner, MD, Jose Montoya, MD (of Stanford University), and John Chia, MD. Examples of viruses that these physicians and reseachers have claimed to find in CFS patients, and treatment of which they claim reduces CFS symptoms (thus indicating that the virus could be causing the CFS), include human herpes virus 6 (HHV-6), ebstein barr virus (EBV), cytomegalovirus (CMV), and enteroviruses. In addition to a variety of viruses, John Chia has found chronic bacterial infections, including chlamydia pneumoniae, and mold infections in some of his CFS patients (some of Chia's research can be found on the Research page of the EV Med website; the rest can be found by searching PubMed or Google Scholar).
If there are several types of pathogens in play in CFS, then this could explain, at least in part, why the syndrome has confounded researchers. It's impossible to replicate findings which show a link between CFS and any particular pathogen if every sample of CFS patients have arrays of different pathogens causing their symtpoms. In addition, Chia, Montoya, and Lerner claim that the particular viruses behind some CFS cases are hard to detect through conventional blood tests, because the viruses in question, such as enteroviruses, spread from cell to cell, and do not kill the cells that they invade, and thus not many copies of the virus get swept up into the bloodstream, at least in the advanced stages of infection. Chia has developed more sensitive blood tests to detect the presence of entervirus in his CFS patients, but he has also had to use endoscopies to get tissue samples from the stomach, and then stain the samples for viruses in order to detect their presence in some of his patients. (This and other some details of Chia's research are discussed in an interview he did for the website Phoenix Rising.)
Approximately 50% of Chia's CFS patients show evidence of chronic enteroviral infection. To my knowledge, the media has not reported (at least not widely) on a possible connection between enterovirus infection and CFS. Chia has found evidence for 11 different kinds of infection in his CFS patients, including viral, bacterial, and mold infections. In addition, approximately 25% of Chia's CFS patients are infected with no known pathogen, so it is at least possible that there other pathogens out there behind CFS (perhaps including parasites, for example).
Chia has had some success treating his CFS patients with antibiotics and antiviral drugs. Unfortunately, there are currently no effective antiviral drugs for use against chronic enteroviral infection, which makes up his largest class of CFS patients. Chia first tried using interferon-gamma and interferon-delta to treat the chronic enteroviral infections, which was effective, but very costly and had many side effects. He currently uses an herbal supplement called sophora to treat patients with enteroviral infection, which seems to improve symptoms in about 50% of his patients (some of his patients recover completely; others see reduction of symptoms; other see no benefit; more men than women see benefit). Sophora boosts the activity of T1 cells of the immune system, and is used in China to treat hepatitis and cancer. Chia is currently looking for other more effective treatments for chronic enteroviral infection (in a phone consultaion, he mentioned that some of the antiviral drugs currently being developed to treat polio, which is a type of enterovirus, could also be effective in treating the enteroviruses he sees in his CFS patients).
I apologize for the long blog post (there is more I could share, including .pdfs of studies; perhaps in a later post), but this information is worth sharing if you know of anyone with either chronic fatigue syndrome or fibromyalgia (which is a related syndrome). There is a lot of misinformation out there, especially on popular and alternative health websites, and it took me a while to track down any information which genuinely seemed to shed light on the disorder. I hope it proves helpful to someone.
Not as Old as You Think
A recent article in Open the Magazine, entitled "Not as Old as You Think," purports to give the lie to the notion that yoga is part of an ancient Indian tradition. The article's author, Meera Nanda, is a professor of history at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research. Nanda argues that yoga as it is practiced today is largely the creation of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and was influenced by Theosophists and by the aerobics and gymnastics of Sweden and other western countries:
Nanda is surely correct that yoga as it is currently practiced owes much to innovations in the later 19th and early 20th centuries, including influences from the West. But the article's framing seems a little misleading. The reality is, despite the modern innovations, there is continuity in the yoga tradition, as Nanda herself demonstrates in discussing the history of the yoga asanas or postures:
So, yogas is mentioned in the Upanaishads, the oldest of which were probably written in the 6th century BC, and some of the asanas were practiced at least as far back as Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, which depending upon who you ask date back to somewhere between 100 BC and 500 AD. That's at least 1,500 years of history to the asanas before the Theosophists and the Swedish gymnasts got their grubby paws onto hatha yoga. It's no doubt true that yoga as it's practiced today differs a lot from yoga as it was practiced in Patanjali's time, but that's not a very damning or suprising claim. Again, the problematic aspects of Nanda's piece stem mainly from the one-sided character of its framing or tone. One could, for example, imagine a person who completely accepts Nanda's factual account of the history of yoga writing an article with the breathless headline, "Roots of Yoga Extend Back 2,000 Years!"
Nanda herself admits that there are historical roots to modern yoga in India, but she claims that the people practicing yoga were little more than drug-addled misfits and magicians:
There's probably something to this characterization of the history of yoga in India, but Nanda postulates a pretty heavy dichotomy between the "ganja-smoking" yogis on the one hand and the "Sanskrit-speaking sages meditating in the Himalayas" on the other. Sorcery overlaps traditional Indian religion just as it did ancient Greek or Roman religion, or just as Voodoo in Haiti overlapped with Catholic Christianity. On the other hand, Nanda's piece does serve as a useful corrective to the many historical errors asserted by practitioners of yoga, such as the evidently common claim that yoga is discussed in the Vedas or that yoga has a 5,000 year history (among many others). Her point of view is worth taking seriously, even if the framing is misleading.
The reality is that postural yoga, as we know it in the 21st century, is neither eternal nor synonymous with the Vedas or Yoga Sutras. On the contrary, modern yoga was born in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. It is a child of the Hindu Renaissance and Indian nationalism, in which Western ideas about science, evolution, eugenics, health and physical fitness played as crucial a role as the ‘mother tradition’. In the massive, multi-level hybridisation that took place during this period, the spiritual aspects of yoga and tantra were rationalised, largely along the theosophical ideas of ‘spiritual science,’ introduced to India by the US-origin, India-based Theosophical Society, and internalised by Swami Vivekananda, who led the yoga renaissance.
In turn, the physical aspects of yoga were hybridised with drills, gymnastics and body-building techniques borrowed from Sweden, Denmark, England, the United States and other Western countries. These innovations were creatively grafted on the Yoga Sutras—which has been correctly described by Agehananda Bharati, the Austria-born Hindu monk-mystic, as ‘the yoga canon for people who have accepted Brahmin theology’—to create an impression of 5,000 years worth of continuity where none really exists. The HAF’s current insistence is thus part of a false advertising
campaign about yoga’s ancient Brahminical lineage.
Nanda is surely correct that yoga as it is currently practiced owes much to innovations in the later 19th and early 20th centuries, including influences from the West. But the article's framing seems a little misleading. The reality is, despite the modern innovations, there is continuity in the yoga tradition, as Nanda herself demonstrates in discussing the history of the yoga asanas or postures:
The four Vedas have no mention of yoga. The Upanishads and The Bhagvad Gita do, but primarily as a spiritual technique to purify the atman. The Bible of yoga, Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras, devotes barely three short sutras (out of 195) to physical postures, and that too only to suggest comfortable ways of sitting still for prolonged meditation. Asanas were only the means to the real goal—to still the mind to achieve the state of pure consciousness—in Patanjali’s yoga.
So, yogas is mentioned in the Upanaishads, the oldest of which were probably written in the 6th century BC, and some of the asanas were practiced at least as far back as Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, which depending upon who you ask date back to somewhere between 100 BC and 500 AD. That's at least 1,500 years of history to the asanas before the Theosophists and the Swedish gymnasts got their grubby paws onto hatha yoga. It's no doubt true that yoga as it's practiced today differs a lot from yoga as it was practiced in Patanjali's time, but that's not a very damning or suprising claim. Again, the problematic aspects of Nanda's piece stem mainly from the one-sided character of its framing or tone. One could, for example, imagine a person who completely accepts Nanda's factual account of the history of yoga writing an article with the breathless headline, "Roots of Yoga Extend Back 2,000 Years!"
Nanda herself admits that there are historical roots to modern yoga in India, but she claims that the people practicing yoga were little more than drug-addled misfits and magicians:
There are, of course, asana-centred hatha yoga texts in the Indic tradition. But they definitely do not date back 5,000 years: none of them makes an appearance till the 10th to 12th centuries. Hatha yoga was a creation of the kanphata (split-eared) Nath Siddha, who were no Sanskrit-speaking sages meditating in the Himalayas. They were (and still are) precisely those matted-hair, ash-smeared sadhus that the HAF wants to banish from the Western imagination. Indeed, if any Hindu tradition can at all claim a patent on postural yoga, it is these caste-defying, ganja-smoking, sexually permissive, Shiva- and Shakti-worshipping sorcerers, alchemists and tantriks, who were cowherds, potters and suchlike. They undertook great physical austerities not because they sought to achieve pure consciousness, unencumbered by the body and other gross matter, but because they wanted magical powers (siddhis) to become immortal and to control the rest of the natural world.
There's probably something to this characterization of the history of yoga in India, but Nanda postulates a pretty heavy dichotomy between the "ganja-smoking" yogis on the one hand and the "Sanskrit-speaking sages meditating in the Himalayas" on the other. Sorcery overlaps traditional Indian religion just as it did ancient Greek or Roman religion, or just as Voodoo in Haiti overlapped with Catholic Christianity. On the other hand, Nanda's piece does serve as a useful corrective to the many historical errors asserted by practitioners of yoga, such as the evidently common claim that yoga is discussed in the Vedas or that yoga has a 5,000 year history (among many others). Her point of view is worth taking seriously, even if the framing is misleading.
Friday, February 25, 2011
What I'm Reading
1. Edward Slingerland, Effortless Action: Wu-wei as Conceptual Metaphor and Spiritual Ideal in Early China. Slingerland analyzes the conceptual metaphors used by early Chinese philosophers to characterize the ideal of wu-wei or "not doing". He argues that these metaphors result in irresolveable paradoxes, suggesting that the concept of wu-wei may be self-contradictory.
2. Owen Flanagan, The Really Hard Problem: Meaning in a Material World. An analytic philosopher looks at the issue of the purpose of life, in the light of contemporary science and eastern and western wisdom traditions.
3. Clark Ashton Smith, A Vintage from Atlantis. This is volume 3 of the collected fantasies of Clark Ashton Smith. Smith was a writer for the pulps in the 1930s, whose poetic prose and lush imagery had a big influence on other writers of horror, fantasy, and science fiction (including H. P. Lovecraft and Jack Vance).
4. Robert E. Howard, The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian. Along with Clark Ashton Smith and H. P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard is one of the three most influential writers from the pulp magazines of the 1920s and 30s. Howard's writing is vivid and visceral, and his brooding hero is more than just the muscle-bound oaf in sandles of later pastiche, film, and television.
5. Chris Wickham, The Inheritance of Rome: Illuminating the Dark Ages 400-1000. Wickham shows the continuity and contrasts between the late Roman empire and the early Dark Ages. He helps clarify the nature of the transformation of Western Europe after the gradual collapse of Roman rule there, working extensively with both the archaeological and textual sources, and even-handedly evaluating the theories of other historians.
2. Owen Flanagan, The Really Hard Problem: Meaning in a Material World. An analytic philosopher looks at the issue of the purpose of life, in the light of contemporary science and eastern and western wisdom traditions.
3. Clark Ashton Smith, A Vintage from Atlantis. This is volume 3 of the collected fantasies of Clark Ashton Smith. Smith was a writer for the pulps in the 1930s, whose poetic prose and lush imagery had a big influence on other writers of horror, fantasy, and science fiction (including H. P. Lovecraft and Jack Vance).
4. Robert E. Howard, The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian. Along with Clark Ashton Smith and H. P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard is one of the three most influential writers from the pulp magazines of the 1920s and 30s. Howard's writing is vivid and visceral, and his brooding hero is more than just the muscle-bound oaf in sandles of later pastiche, film, and television.
5. Chris Wickham, The Inheritance of Rome: Illuminating the Dark Ages 400-1000. Wickham shows the continuity and contrasts between the late Roman empire and the early Dark Ages. He helps clarify the nature of the transformation of Western Europe after the gradual collapse of Roman rule there, working extensively with both the archaeological and textual sources, and even-handedly evaluating the theories of other historians.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
The Costs of Higher Ed
I teach philosophy at Bowling Green State University, and I like what I do, but I have to admit I don't think higher ed provides a very good bargain for students. According to a recent study, college students aren't learning much, and meanwhile the cost of getting a degree continues to rise. Tyler Cowen at Marginal Revolution recently blogged about what might be keeping higher ed costs so high, and he linked to a couple of recent posts by Matthew Yglesias on the same topic. I'm glad that more people are thinking about this issue, because it has perplexed me for a long time.
The general problem is a lack of incentive among higher ed administrators to reduce prices and improve quality. One solution might be to replace not-for-profit private universities and state-run universities with for-profit private universities, but I imagine that this would be too controversial to ever actually happen, regardless of how effective it might be. (David D. Friedman has a chapter in his anarchist manifesto Machinery of Freedom dedicated to this idea, which he titled "Adam Smith U.".)
Even in cases where universities offer a quality education (as measured in terms of actual learning outcomes), costs are often higher than they should be. Part of the problem is supposedly due to the "Baumol cost disease," which in the case of higher ed is due to the fact that salaries of professors have continued to rise despite the fact that their productivity has not. I suspect this is part of the problem, and that new technologies might be able to reduce the teacher to student ratio at higher ed institutions (and thus reduce the amount spent on faculty labor), but there are probably other factors as well, such as the amount spent on the administration, on facilities such as rec centers (et multa alia) that aren't directly connected to learning outcomes, and on building and maintaining a physical campus (as opposed to having the school operate over the internet or in un-glamorous but cheaper physical spaces). One institution dedicated to finding ways to lower the costs of higher ed while at the same time improving outcomes is The National Center for Academic Transformation. Unless the incentives facing administrators, faculty, and other people involved in higher ed change, though, I wouldn't anticipate much improvement.
The general problem is a lack of incentive among higher ed administrators to reduce prices and improve quality. One solution might be to replace not-for-profit private universities and state-run universities with for-profit private universities, but I imagine that this would be too controversial to ever actually happen, regardless of how effective it might be. (David D. Friedman has a chapter in his anarchist manifesto Machinery of Freedom dedicated to this idea, which he titled "Adam Smith U.".)
Even in cases where universities offer a quality education (as measured in terms of actual learning outcomes), costs are often higher than they should be. Part of the problem is supposedly due to the "Baumol cost disease," which in the case of higher ed is due to the fact that salaries of professors have continued to rise despite the fact that their productivity has not. I suspect this is part of the problem, and that new technologies might be able to reduce the teacher to student ratio at higher ed institutions (and thus reduce the amount spent on faculty labor), but there are probably other factors as well, such as the amount spent on the administration, on facilities such as rec centers (et multa alia) that aren't directly connected to learning outcomes, and on building and maintaining a physical campus (as opposed to having the school operate over the internet or in un-glamorous but cheaper physical spaces). One institution dedicated to finding ways to lower the costs of higher ed while at the same time improving outcomes is The National Center for Academic Transformation. Unless the incentives facing administrators, faculty, and other people involved in higher ed change, though, I wouldn't anticipate much improvement.
How to Start a Revolution
A recent article in Foreign Policy profiles Otpor, a Serbian group which overthrew Slobodon Milosevic, and which now organizes workshops on the tactics of nonviolent revolution. Otpor has taken a page from the work on the tactics of nonviolent revolution by the American political scientist Gene Sharp.
It's encouraging that today's revolutions seem to be led by liberal and social democrats and not by the communists and socialist anarchists of old; today's revolutions seem less likely to just give rise to new authoritarian regimes of a differing ideological pedigree from the old. There are probably many reasons for this shift, but Gene Sharp has argued that the use of violent tactics makes it more likely that a revolution will result in an authoritarian regime instead of a genuinely liberal and democratic one.
It's encouraging that today's revolutions seem to be led by liberal and social democrats and not by the communists and socialist anarchists of old; today's revolutions seem less likely to just give rise to new authoritarian regimes of a differing ideological pedigree from the old. There are probably many reasons for this shift, but Gene Sharp has argued that the use of violent tactics makes it more likely that a revolution will result in an authoritarian regime instead of a genuinely liberal and democratic one.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Claims Regarding Democracy in the Middle East
From "This Is Not an Islamic Revolution," an article in the New Statesman by Olivier Roy:
But the "democracy" that is being called for is not foreign, and thereinWould democracy have come sooner to Egypt and Tunisia if the United States had never supported military dictatorships there? Has the U.S. foreign policy produced more or less stability and security on the Middle East on balance?
lies the difference from the Bush administration's attempt to promote democracy
in Iraq in 2003. That did not work, because it lacked political legitimacy and
was associated with a military intervention. Today, paradoxically, it is the
waning of US influence in the Middle East, together with the pragmatism of the
Obama administration, that has allowed a native and fully legitimate demand for
democracy to be expressed.
How-To Manual for Revolutionaries
The New York Times had an article the other day on Gene Sharp, an American political scientist who wrote several works on the tactics of nonviolent revolution. Evidently his ideas have been used by actual revolutionaries in Serbia, Ukraine, and now in the Middle East to help overthrow dictators. Evidently, activists in Burma and elsewhere are interested in his ideas as well. His foundation's website includes copies of many of his works, including the classic From Dictatorship to Democracy, which is available in over 24 languages.
Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Effectual Reasoning vs. Causal Reasoning
Inc. magazine has an article about a recent study which looks at the style of thinking used by entrepreneurs. The study also looked at the style of thinking used by corporate executives as a way of understanding what sets entrepreneurs apart:
This contrast in thinking styles seems of great interest. I'm guessing that most of us, whether in business or not, gravitate to one of these two cognitive styles. Effectual reasoning seems more flexible, causal reasoning more systematic. Do you tend toward effectual reasoning or causal reasoning? Is each thinking style better adapted to certain kinds of problems or situations? How easy is it to effectively mix both styles, either synchronically or diachronically?
Read the whole article. Hat tip to Marginal Revolution.
Sarasvathy concluded that master entrepreneurs rely on what she calls effectual reasoning. Brilliant improvisers, the entrepreneurs don't start out with concrete goals. Instead, they constantly assess how to use their personal strengths and whatever resources they have at hand to develop goals on the fly, while creatively
reacting to contingencies. By contrast, corporate executives—those in the study group were also enormously successful in their chosen field—use causal reasoning. They set a goal and diligently seek the best ways to achieve it.
This contrast in thinking styles seems of great interest. I'm guessing that most of us, whether in business or not, gravitate to one of these two cognitive styles. Effectual reasoning seems more flexible, causal reasoning more systematic. Do you tend toward effectual reasoning or causal reasoning? Is each thinking style better adapted to certain kinds of problems or situations? How easy is it to effectively mix both styles, either synchronically or diachronically?
Read the whole article. Hat tip to Marginal Revolution.
Monday, February 07, 2011
Joko
Last summer I read Charlotte "Joko" Beck's classic works Everyday Zen and Nothing Special. Joko is a Zen master with a unique gift for communicating the essence of Zen meditation in a straightforward, commonsense manner. Joko focuses on the intersection between Zen practice and everyday life. Phil Dickinson, a professor of English at Bowling Green State University and a member of the Toledo Zen Center, calls Joko's approach "no bullshit Zen," and I think that sums up her life and work quite well. Joko is clear about the difficulties of practice--the phrase "no pain, no gain" comes to mind here--and also about the true nature of the benefits of practice--e.g. getting angry a little less often, or a little less severely, or simply being more aware of when one is angry, for example.
Joki strikes me as a true Zen master, in that her considerable attainments and insights are equally matched by humility and by a sometimes painful honesty--which seems unfortunately rare in discussions of Zen meditation (at least, in my limited experience). Wheareas earlier works on Zen (such as Philip Kapleau's classic The Three Pillars of Zen) often focused on pushing hard to attain special enlightenment experiences (or satori, in the lexicon of Japanese Zen), Joko places the focus squarely on the impact of Zen practice on such everyday matters as one's relationship with one's boss, child, parent, or spouse. While seeing bright lights and attaining the brahma worlds is nice, what's the benefit if one still seethes with rage when criticized by one's employer, or belittles one's child for her lack of accomplishments, or take's one's parent's love for granted?
Joko is also refreshing in her willingness to dispense with the traditional trappings of Japanese Zen, favoring the unadorned substance of the teaching over textual exegesis and ceremonial ritual. (It is an irony, albeit par for the course in terms of the general history of religious movements, that Zen has become somewhat weighed down by its own layers of textual and ritual adornments, given that its origin lies precisely in a reaction against these attributes in the other schools of Buddhism in the China of the 7th century.) Joko even seems willing to contradict or at least question some of the traditional views of Zen Buddhism (and of Buddhism generally), such as when she raises the possibility that no person has ever been fully enlightened (that is, fully free from self-induced suffering caused by selfish craving and ignorance, and fully accepting of whatever hardships one may come across in life); strictly speaking, such a statement is heretical from the Buddhist point of view, because it calls into question the authenticity of the Buddha's enlightenment experience (and it's hard to think of a more basic view put forth by Buddhists other than the claim that the Buddha was in fact fully enlightened). Such openness and honesty, together with the sensible grounds which she gives for calling such traditional beliefs into question, makes me respect Joko a great deal; one wishes that more religious teachers would follow her example. In any event, her books are much recommended, and you can see an interview with Joko on YouTube(excerpted from a German documentary by Claudia Willke called Nothing Special) .
Joki strikes me as a true Zen master, in that her considerable attainments and insights are equally matched by humility and by a sometimes painful honesty--which seems unfortunately rare in discussions of Zen meditation (at least, in my limited experience). Wheareas earlier works on Zen (such as Philip Kapleau's classic The Three Pillars of Zen) often focused on pushing hard to attain special enlightenment experiences (or satori, in the lexicon of Japanese Zen), Joko places the focus squarely on the impact of Zen practice on such everyday matters as one's relationship with one's boss, child, parent, or spouse. While seeing bright lights and attaining the brahma worlds is nice, what's the benefit if one still seethes with rage when criticized by one's employer, or belittles one's child for her lack of accomplishments, or take's one's parent's love for granted?
Joko is also refreshing in her willingness to dispense with the traditional trappings of Japanese Zen, favoring the unadorned substance of the teaching over textual exegesis and ceremonial ritual. (It is an irony, albeit par for the course in terms of the general history of religious movements, that Zen has become somewhat weighed down by its own layers of textual and ritual adornments, given that its origin lies precisely in a reaction against these attributes in the other schools of Buddhism in the China of the 7th century.) Joko even seems willing to contradict or at least question some of the traditional views of Zen Buddhism (and of Buddhism generally), such as when she raises the possibility that no person has ever been fully enlightened (that is, fully free from self-induced suffering caused by selfish craving and ignorance, and fully accepting of whatever hardships one may come across in life); strictly speaking, such a statement is heretical from the Buddhist point of view, because it calls into question the authenticity of the Buddha's enlightenment experience (and it's hard to think of a more basic view put forth by Buddhists other than the claim that the Buddha was in fact fully enlightened). Such openness and honesty, together with the sensible grounds which she gives for calling such traditional beliefs into question, makes me respect Joko a great deal; one wishes that more religious teachers would follow her example. In any event, her books are much recommended, and you can see an interview with Joko on YouTube(excerpted from a German documentary by Claudia Willke called Nothing Special) .
Protest Tactics in Egypt
For those of us who hope for a free, peaceful Egypt, it is interesting to ponder the significance of street level tactics in determining the political outcome. There are other factors, of course, but if the pro-Mubarak protestors had beaten back the anti-Mubarak protestors last week, this could well have caused the anti-Mubarak movement to lose momentum and go the way of Iran's aborted protests.
Via Delta's D&D Hotspot, I learned of a blog post by the War Nerd, who provides an analysis of street-level tactics in Egypt as seen through the lens of military history. I should warn you that the analysis of this "War Nerd" fellow is laced with slurs and foul language, which is unfortunate (and a mark against his maturity as a human being), but having said that his discussion is quite insightful, and definitely worth thinking about for those who support protest movements like those in Egypt, Burma, and elsewhere. When the military stands by, the tactics used on the street are basically a re-creation of the tactics used in the Middle Ages by cavalry and infantry (including the cavalry charge, skirmishers, the testudo or shield wall, and so on).
Via Delta's D&D Hotspot, I learned of a blog post by the War Nerd, who provides an analysis of street-level tactics in Egypt as seen through the lens of military history. I should warn you that the analysis of this "War Nerd" fellow is laced with slurs and foul language, which is unfortunate (and a mark against his maturity as a human being), but having said that his discussion is quite insightful, and definitely worth thinking about for those who support protest movements like those in Egypt, Burma, and elsewhere. When the military stands by, the tactics used on the street are basically a re-creation of the tactics used in the Middle Ages by cavalry and infantry (including the cavalry charge, skirmishers, the testudo or shield wall, and so on).
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Kevin Kelly's 1,000 True Fans
While reading Reihan Salam's review of Tyler Cowen's new e-book on the stagnation of the American economy, I came across a link to Kevin Kelly's "1,000 True Fans" essay (or is that a blog post?). Kelly's main point is that a self-employed artist or creator can make a living if he gains and retains about 1,000 true fans who spend an average of $100 per year on the artist's product. Kelly claims that this is a reasonable goal, even in the present economy of the "long tail"--i.e., an economy in which the consumer faces an endless selection of goods (think of the amount of book titles available through Amazon, for example), and in which it is very easy for a creator's work to end up on the long, thin tail of sales, but increasingly difficult for a creator to produce a blockbuster which lies on the short, stubby torso (um, so to speak).
Anecdotally, I've seen this approach work in the role-playing game community, which has a small market, and in which independently produced games are a niche within a niche. It seems like it could work in other areas as well, such as music or visual art.
Anecdotally, I've seen this approach work in the role-playing game community, which has a small market, and in which independently produced games are a niche within a niche. It seems like it could work in other areas as well, such as music or visual art.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
People I Know
This is the first in a continuing series of blog posts devoted to sharing the traits and accomplishments of "people I know".
Marvin Belzer is a former professor of philosophy at Bowling Green State University, and currently teaches mindfulness meditation at UCLA's Mindful Awareness Research Center. He was my dissertation advisor and philosophical mentor while I was a graduate student at Bowling Green.
Marv is one of the most inspiring people I have ever met. He has done valuable work in analytic philosophy, particularly in the metaphysics of personal identity, and he also did a great job teaching introductory logic to a large (100+) class of non-philosophy majors. Marv has a unique ability to empathtize and connect with his students, and to paradoxically inspire excellent work through a gentle, patient approach.
Marv has also been practicing and teaching mindfulness meditation for several decades. His strengths as a teacher of academic philosophy are if anything even more evident in his work as a meditation instructor. Marv was also probably one of the first people to teach meditation as an undergraduate philosophy course. He introduced literally hundreds of students to mindfulness meditation in this way. Some of my most cherished memories are practicing with Marv and the rest of his class on the meditation retreats he led while an instructor at BGSU.
Marvin Belzer is a former professor of philosophy at Bowling Green State University, and currently teaches mindfulness meditation at UCLA's Mindful Awareness Research Center. He was my dissertation advisor and philosophical mentor while I was a graduate student at Bowling Green.
Marv is one of the most inspiring people I have ever met. He has done valuable work in analytic philosophy, particularly in the metaphysics of personal identity, and he also did a great job teaching introductory logic to a large (100+) class of non-philosophy majors. Marv has a unique ability to empathtize and connect with his students, and to paradoxically inspire excellent work through a gentle, patient approach.
Marv has also been practicing and teaching mindfulness meditation for several decades. His strengths as a teacher of academic philosophy are if anything even more evident in his work as a meditation instructor. Marv was also probably one of the first people to teach meditation as an undergraduate philosophy course. He introduced literally hundreds of students to mindfulness meditation in this way. Some of my most cherished memories are practicing with Marv and the rest of his class on the meditation retreats he led while an instructor at BGSU.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
For-Profit Primary Ed
My girlfriend Brenda Baker recently told me about a for-profit primary education school called K12 (which received a somewhat informative write-up in Forbes a couple of years ago). Now, most people probably associate the idea of for-profit education with greed, inequality, and injustice, but I think that social justice considerations actually point in support of such schools.
The issues are mainly ones of choice and accountability. Pupils in a lot of public school districts suffer from a lack of choice. Now, charter schools do provide parents in a school district with more choice, but not-for-profit charter schools don't face the same amount or kind of accountability as do for-profit schools. For-profit schools have to provide a valuable service to their customers at a low enough cost that there is at least some profit left over for investors. A for-profit school which is doing a poor job will lose pupils, lose funding, and die. A not-for-profit school doesn't face quite the same incentives to keep quality up and costs down. This is the bright side of market self-correction--waste and poor value can only persist for so long.
In a way, K12 seems to have found a loophole into the brave new world of school vouchers, in that in at least some states in which they operate they receive per-pupil funds directly from school districts (just like not-for-profit charter schools). This allows K12 to compete on an even footing with public schools and not-for-profit charter schools (which receive a government-provided subsidy, in the form of school district funds, that is not available to other private schools). It's hard to see how this is a bad deal for parents and taxpayers, since it gives parents more choice for where they send their kids to school, and since if K12 should fail, it is the investors, and not the school district and its taxpayers, who will take the loss.
If there is going to be improvement in America's primary schools, my guess is it will be through for-profit schools which operate as charter schools and slip in under the radar, as it were, of the public debate surrounding school vouchers. The public debate about school vouchers, like most political debates, is so charged with hatred, rhetoric, and ideology, not to mention warped by the lobbying of special interests, that no solution is to be expected through overt or intentional political means. As in so many other areas of social life, order or progress is often brought about through unanticipated and unintended developments. In other words, progress often occurs despite the political process, not because of it. For this reason, I'll light a stick of incense tonight to the god of spontaneous order and pray that he lets us drift unexpectedly into a superior primary education system.
The issues are mainly ones of choice and accountability. Pupils in a lot of public school districts suffer from a lack of choice. Now, charter schools do provide parents in a school district with more choice, but not-for-profit charter schools don't face the same amount or kind of accountability as do for-profit schools. For-profit schools have to provide a valuable service to their customers at a low enough cost that there is at least some profit left over for investors. A for-profit school which is doing a poor job will lose pupils, lose funding, and die. A not-for-profit school doesn't face quite the same incentives to keep quality up and costs down. This is the bright side of market self-correction--waste and poor value can only persist for so long.
In a way, K12 seems to have found a loophole into the brave new world of school vouchers, in that in at least some states in which they operate they receive per-pupil funds directly from school districts (just like not-for-profit charter schools). This allows K12 to compete on an even footing with public schools and not-for-profit charter schools (which receive a government-provided subsidy, in the form of school district funds, that is not available to other private schools). It's hard to see how this is a bad deal for parents and taxpayers, since it gives parents more choice for where they send their kids to school, and since if K12 should fail, it is the investors, and not the school district and its taxpayers, who will take the loss.
If there is going to be improvement in America's primary schools, my guess is it will be through for-profit schools which operate as charter schools and slip in under the radar, as it were, of the public debate surrounding school vouchers. The public debate about school vouchers, like most political debates, is so charged with hatred, rhetoric, and ideology, not to mention warped by the lobbying of special interests, that no solution is to be expected through overt or intentional political means. As in so many other areas of social life, order or progress is often brought about through unanticipated and unintended developments. In other words, progress often occurs despite the political process, not because of it. For this reason, I'll light a stick of incense tonight to the god of spontaneous order and pray that he lets us drift unexpectedly into a superior primary education system.
Greek Is Hard (or, Greek with Peek)
I started studying ancient Greek last semester. I've studied other languages before (Spanish, Latin, German, and French), but never enough to become fluent or to make them stick. (It's like a long string of love affairs that seemed promising but all ended in heartbreak, and none producing a lasting relationship or any offspring.)
Fortunately, Professor Philip Peek of the Bowling Green State University Romance and Classical Studies Department has let me attend his elementary Greek classes. Peek is truly a great professor--he achieves a good balance between challenging and supporting his students, for example, and he's a lot of fun to be around and work with. Unfortunately, ancient Greek is a lot harder than any other language I have tried and failed to learn. There are several reasons for this, including the complex rules for accent, rules for contracting vowels, rules for ellision and crasis, the large number of irregular conjugations and declensions (more than the number of irregular verbs and nouns that I recall seeing in Latin, for example; especialy difficult is Greek's schizophrenic third declension, in which every other word seems to be irregular), the peculiarities of Greek grammar (a middle voice in addition to the active and passive, an optative mood in addition to the subjunctive, a dual number in addition to the singular and plural, an aorist tense in addition to the imperfect and perfect), and many more reasons than I care to list right now. Learning to read a new alphabet has been simple in comparison to all these other issues.
A quote from the textbook we are using, Alston Hurd Chase and Henry Phillips' A New Introduction to Greek (first published in 1941), nicely illustrates the experience:
Fortunately, Professor Philip Peek of the Bowling Green State University Romance and Classical Studies Department has let me attend his elementary Greek classes. Peek is truly a great professor--he achieves a good balance between challenging and supporting his students, for example, and he's a lot of fun to be around and work with. Unfortunately, ancient Greek is a lot harder than any other language I have tried and failed to learn. There are several reasons for this, including the complex rules for accent, rules for contracting vowels, rules for ellision and crasis, the large number of irregular conjugations and declensions (more than the number of irregular verbs and nouns that I recall seeing in Latin, for example; especialy difficult is Greek's schizophrenic third declension, in which every other word seems to be irregular), the peculiarities of Greek grammar (a middle voice in addition to the active and passive, an optative mood in addition to the subjunctive, a dual number in addition to the singular and plural, an aorist tense in addition to the imperfect and perfect), and many more reasons than I care to list right now. Learning to read a new alphabet has been simple in comparison to all these other issues.
A quote from the textbook we are using, Alston Hurd Chase and Henry Phillips' A New Introduction to Greek (first published in 1941), nicely illustrates the experience:
A word bearing the acute upon the ultima is known as an oxytone, one with the acute upon the penult as a paroxytone, one with the acute upon the antepenult as a proparoxytone. One which bears the circumflex upon the ultima is called a perispomenon, one with the circumflex upon the penult is a properispomenon. These terms, though formidable, will save much laborious periphrasis (p. 4)."Will save much laborious periphrasis," indeed. It is only now that I understand Saint Augustine's seemingly irrational hatred of his childhood Greek grammar lessons (as described in his Confessions). We'll see what this semester will bring; reading Plato and Aristotle in the original Greek still seems a long, long way off--and the distance has seemed to only increase the more Greek that I have learned!
Article on the New Rich
Arts & Letters Daily recently linked to an article in The Atlantic describing the new global elite. This is the best article I have read on the new plutocrats. Author Chrystia Freeland takes a balanced approach, noting the real contributions which have been made by the new rich--they tend to be self-made men, creating businesses and producing wealth, instead of just living off of their family's estate--but the article does not shy away from some of the more troubling aspects of this class--noting, for example, that economic inequality has actually been growing in developed societies, creating a social as well as an economic divide between the have-some's and the have-lot's (to coin a phrase).
Passing Strange
One of the best films I saw last year was Passing Strange, Spike Lee's film of a Broadway musical's last performance at the Belasco Theatre. The musical is autobiographical, and is based on the life of its writer "Stew". Stew grew up in a middle-class black family in Los Angeles in the 1970s, but ended up passing as a ghetto black when he moved to Europe to develop his musical career. The film works on many levels, addressing issues of racial identity, prejudice both against blacks and within the black community itself, the difficulties faced by an artist attempting to find his "voice," good-old adolescent rebellion, family conflict, and more. Although he was not involved in the production of the musical itself, Spike Lee did an excellent job capturing the show's last performance on film. Highly recommended (and this from someone who ordinarily can't stand musicals of any kind).
Blogging Again
I'm not sure why I stopped blogging, or why I've decided to start again. Part of the reason for stopping is probably that I have a chronic illness (the so-called chronic fatigue syndrome), which severely restricts the amount of work I can do. Part of the reason for starting up again is probably that I often want to share articles or thoughts with my friends, and I don't use facebook much. Anyway, for anyone still following this blog, expect many new posts soon.
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
The Examined Life Is Not Worth Watching
Last Sunday, some friends and I watched Astra Taylor's Examined Life, a film which consists of interviews with well-known contemporary philosophers such as Cornell West, Judith Butler, and Martha Nussbaum. Astra Taylor deserves credit for trying to bring philosophy to a broader audience, and for all of the thought and sheer hard work that clearly went into her film. Nevertheless, Examined Life suffers from a couple of problems. There is not enough time devoted to each philosopher, so the interviews are fairly superficial. The film would have been more focused if the philosophers had at least all been speaking on the same topic. Dialogues between two or more philosophers would probably also have been more stimulating than one-on-one interviews (in particular, an encounter between rivals Martha Nussbaum and Judith Butler would probably have been electrifying). Taylor's previous film, Zizek, was a superior effort, if only because focusing on one (albeit controversial) philosopher enabled his ideas to be explored more deeply.
On the other hand, it is gratifying to see any professionally made film about philosophers, so perhaps one should simply focus on encouraging Taylor to make more films, improving her craft in the process.
On the other hand, it is gratifying to see any professionally made film about philosophers, so perhaps one should simply focus on encouraging Taylor to make more films, improving her craft in the process.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Charter Cities
Paul Romer argues that developing nations with severe economic and political problems (such as Haiti) should invite developed nations to operate charter cities within their borders. The developed nations would enforce laws that both nations had agreed to in advance.
Romer believes charter cities would help developing nations more than does foreign aid, which provides a benefit in the short-run as a one-time transfer, but which does not help the developing nation get out of poverty in the long-run. What is needed to get developing nations on the path to prosperity are better governmental institutions, and who better to provide those than nations which have already succeeded in doing so within their own territories.
This is a clever idea, but it is not clear that charter cities would fare any better than have charter schools. The problem is (at least in part) one of incentives. What is to guarantee that the government of the host nation will ask for the right kind of laws to be enforced? Do the interests of the governors of developing nations in fact represent the interests of the people as a whole? What is to guarantee that the government of the guest nation will live up to its side of the bargain? What incentive will either side have to improve the quality of government services and lower the costs of such services?
Don't let worries about developing nations' sovereignty or about neo-imperialism distract you from the even deeper problems regarding incentives. Charter cities might work, but there is plenty of reason to be skeptical.
Romer believes charter cities would help developing nations more than does foreign aid, which provides a benefit in the short-run as a one-time transfer, but which does not help the developing nation get out of poverty in the long-run. What is needed to get developing nations on the path to prosperity are better governmental institutions, and who better to provide those than nations which have already succeeded in doing so within their own territories.
This is a clever idea, but it is not clear that charter cities would fare any better than have charter schools. The problem is (at least in part) one of incentives. What is to guarantee that the government of the host nation will ask for the right kind of laws to be enforced? Do the interests of the governors of developing nations in fact represent the interests of the people as a whole? What is to guarantee that the government of the guest nation will live up to its side of the bargain? What incentive will either side have to improve the quality of government services and lower the costs of such services?
Don't let worries about developing nations' sovereignty or about neo-imperialism distract you from the even deeper problems regarding incentives. Charter cities might work, but there is plenty of reason to be skeptical.
Friday, February 05, 2010
What's Wrong with Libertarianism (A Continuing Series)
The title of this post is apt for a book, not a blog entry.
Nevertheless, I might as well start getting some of this stuff off of my chest, to clarify the sense in which I am and am not a libertarian.
I count as a libertarian, broadly speaking, because I am a fan of the free market, and of traditional, meat and potatoes, Enlightenment-era civil liberties such as the right to free speech, the freedom of religion, and all that sort of thing. It is also fair to call me a classical liberal or neoliberal.
What's wrong, then, with libertarianism? Libertarianism is primarily a political theory about the nature of liberty and the proper role of government, but many libertarians also as a matter of fact have ethical beliefs that I find suspect. Robin Hanson, though he may be a sex-obsessed misogynist (hey! I said may be), is right about this: an axiom about the value of liberty (as conceived of by most libertarians) should not be taken as the basis for libertarian political theory. The reasons for this are many, but one of them is that the theory risks becoming question-begging. Why is it wrong for the government to restrict a person's liberty? The libertarian axiomatist's reply: because it's always wrong to restrict liberty! It would seem that the putative libertarian axiom is in fact the conclusion which is need of prior justification. Moreover, there is liberty and then there is liberty. Even if the normative value of liberty were quite fundamental to our political theory, we need an argument for why we should adopt the libertarians' conception of liberty, and some alternative conception (such as the Marxist).
Nevertheless, I might as well start getting some of this stuff off of my chest, to clarify the sense in which I am and am not a libertarian.
I count as a libertarian, broadly speaking, because I am a fan of the free market, and of traditional, meat and potatoes, Enlightenment-era civil liberties such as the right to free speech, the freedom of religion, and all that sort of thing. It is also fair to call me a classical liberal or neoliberal.
What's wrong, then, with libertarianism? Libertarianism is primarily a political theory about the nature of liberty and the proper role of government, but many libertarians also as a matter of fact have ethical beliefs that I find suspect. Robin Hanson, though he may be a sex-obsessed misogynist (hey! I said may be), is right about this: an axiom about the value of liberty (as conceived of by most libertarians) should not be taken as the basis for libertarian political theory. The reasons for this are many, but one of them is that the theory risks becoming question-begging. Why is it wrong for the government to restrict a person's liberty? The libertarian axiomatist's reply: because it's always wrong to restrict liberty! It would seem that the putative libertarian axiom is in fact the conclusion which is need of prior justification. Moreover, there is liberty and then there is liberty. Even if the normative value of liberty were quite fundamental to our political theory, we need an argument for why we should adopt the libertarians' conception of liberty, and some alternative conception (such as the Marxist).
The Link between Ayn Rand and Karl Marx
I have been sitting in on Fred Miller's Economics and Political Philosophy seminar here at Bowling Green State University. The seminar is for graduate students in philosophy, but is also attended by faculty members like me and visiting scholars such as Stephen Hicks and James Otteson. The purpose of the seminar is to help its attendees design introductory PP&E courses (that's philosophy, politics, and economics, for the unititiated). PP&E programs have recently been sprouting up in the United States, in imitation of the famous program at Oxford (which shines like a Platonic form in the heavenly firmament, and compared to which our best efforts are no doubt merely degraded imitations).
The central issue of the seminar is whether capitalism is morally defensible. Now, for those of you not in the know, Fred Miller is a director of the Social Philosophy and Policy Center, a research center which is to capitalism roughly as the Dominicans are to Catholicism. Therefore, one expects to confront more dogmatism than skepticism in the matter of the moral defense of capitalism. Nevertheless, the sessions of the seminar have seemed both fair-minded and intellectually stimulating (albeit from the point of view of this dyed-in-the-wool free marketer). For example, this week we talked about Karl Marx's theory of capitalism and alienation, and I think we did a pretty good job of just trying to understand the theory and its place in the history of ideas, as opposed to trying to just mercilessly rip it to shreads. In particular, we disucssed the inspiration Marx took from some of Aristotle's passages in the Nicomachean Ethics and Politics about justice in exchange and the nature of money.
It turns out that both Karl Marx and Ayn Rand were influenced by the man nicknamed "the Brain" while he was a student as Plato's Academy. It's worth noting that Marx and Rand, like Aristotle, were both empiricists, and they were also both materialists and atheists. In addition, Chris Matthew Sciabarra has argued that both Marx and Rand shared a dialectical methodology. Of more direct relevance with respect to their economic and political views, both Rand and Marx share a similar conception of human flourishing, derived ultimately from that of Aristotle.
Now, on the Objectivist end of the spectrum, Neo-Aristotelians such as Douglas Rasmussen and Douglas Den Uyl have taken more than a page from Rand in their attempt to apply an Aristotelian ethic to a defense of capitalism and liberal political institutions. But it was not until yesterday that I realized that Neo-Marxists have done the same with regard to Aristotle and Marx. In particular, Paul Gomberg has done a great job developing a broadly Aristotelian reading of Marx's conception of the good life, and fleshing out the relationship between this conception and a Marxist theory of justice which he calls "contributive justice". I have only read three chapters from Gomberg's book, but I already want to buy it and read the whole thing. Gomberg makes good use of insights from psychological research on human happiness, from shop-worn bits such as the relative independence of income and happiness (once subsistence has been taken care of), to rarer gems such as the importance of a sense of self-efficacy to well-being, the importance of the perceptions of others to decisions we make that might at first seem purely self-interested (such as what car to buy or what career to pursue), the use of social norms to police behavior within traditional and contemporary societies, et multa alia. In particular, Gombeg makes a compelling case for the regarding labor as a good worthy of choosing for its own sake, partially constitutive of human flourishing, following Aristotle's conception of the function of man as an activity involving reason, and against Smith and the other classical economists' narrow view of labor as little more than an odious burden.
And the best part is that Gomberg is scheduled to present to us next week as part of the Economics and Political Philosophy seminar. I look forward to sitting back and letting him entertain us with insights from his book. From each according to ability, to each according to need.
Of course, Marxism is still rubbish. But 'tis a small man who is unable to learn great lessons from his greatest opponents. Besides, I met Gomberg once, long ago when he was visiting Bowling Green for a conference, and he seemed a swell sort of chap. One wishes for more Marxists of his character and intellectual calliber!
The central issue of the seminar is whether capitalism is morally defensible. Now, for those of you not in the know, Fred Miller is a director of the Social Philosophy and Policy Center, a research center which is to capitalism roughly as the Dominicans are to Catholicism. Therefore, one expects to confront more dogmatism than skepticism in the matter of the moral defense of capitalism. Nevertheless, the sessions of the seminar have seemed both fair-minded and intellectually stimulating (albeit from the point of view of this dyed-in-the-wool free marketer). For example, this week we talked about Karl Marx's theory of capitalism and alienation, and I think we did a pretty good job of just trying to understand the theory and its place in the history of ideas, as opposed to trying to just mercilessly rip it to shreads. In particular, we disucssed the inspiration Marx took from some of Aristotle's passages in the Nicomachean Ethics and Politics about justice in exchange and the nature of money.
It turns out that both Karl Marx and Ayn Rand were influenced by the man nicknamed "the Brain" while he was a student as Plato's Academy. It's worth noting that Marx and Rand, like Aristotle, were both empiricists, and they were also both materialists and atheists. In addition, Chris Matthew Sciabarra has argued that both Marx and Rand shared a dialectical methodology. Of more direct relevance with respect to their economic and political views, both Rand and Marx share a similar conception of human flourishing, derived ultimately from that of Aristotle.
Now, on the Objectivist end of the spectrum, Neo-Aristotelians such as Douglas Rasmussen and Douglas Den Uyl have taken more than a page from Rand in their attempt to apply an Aristotelian ethic to a defense of capitalism and liberal political institutions. But it was not until yesterday that I realized that Neo-Marxists have done the same with regard to Aristotle and Marx. In particular, Paul Gomberg has done a great job developing a broadly Aristotelian reading of Marx's conception of the good life, and fleshing out the relationship between this conception and a Marxist theory of justice which he calls "contributive justice". I have only read three chapters from Gomberg's book, but I already want to buy it and read the whole thing. Gomberg makes good use of insights from psychological research on human happiness, from shop-worn bits such as the relative independence of income and happiness (once subsistence has been taken care of), to rarer gems such as the importance of a sense of self-efficacy to well-being, the importance of the perceptions of others to decisions we make that might at first seem purely self-interested (such as what car to buy or what career to pursue), the use of social norms to police behavior within traditional and contemporary societies, et multa alia. In particular, Gombeg makes a compelling case for the regarding labor as a good worthy of choosing for its own sake, partially constitutive of human flourishing, following Aristotle's conception of the function of man as an activity involving reason, and against Smith and the other classical economists' narrow view of labor as little more than an odious burden.
And the best part is that Gomberg is scheduled to present to us next week as part of the Economics and Political Philosophy seminar. I look forward to sitting back and letting him entertain us with insights from his book. From each according to ability, to each according to need.
Of course, Marxism is still rubbish. But 'tis a small man who is unable to learn great lessons from his greatest opponents. Besides, I met Gomberg once, long ago when he was visiting Bowling Green for a conference, and he seemed a swell sort of chap. One wishes for more Marxists of his character and intellectual calliber!
The Placebo Effect
Aaron's comment about the placebo effect got me thinking. This question shows my ignorance, but do all clinical trials that use a placebo have some other kind of control? They better, right? If not, how do you tell the difference between a true placebo effect (where the mechanism is the expectations of the subject) and a person getting better (off the drug being tested) for some other kind of reason (such as time passing)? Or are all trials that use a placebo also designed so as to have a "no treatment" control, such that there would be three experimental treatments: the drug to be tested, the placebo, and no treatment (that is, neither drug nor placebo)?
See, this is what happens when you have the training of a philosopher but to try to think about scientific studies.
Nevertheless, in conversation, people have often confused a placebo effect where the mechanism is the expectations of the subject with any improvement in a subject's condition that has not caused by the drug to be tested.
See, this is what happens when you have the training of a philosopher but to try to think about scientific studies.
Nevertheless, in conversation, people have often confused a placebo effect where the mechanism is the expectations of the subject with any improvement in a subject's condition that has not caused by the drug to be tested.
Wednesday, February 03, 2010
Antidepressants Work No Better Than a Placebo
An article in Newseek discusses meta-analyses by Irving Kirsch and others which show that anti-depressants work no better than a placebo. There are lessons to be learned about the methodology of medical research and about the marketing strategies of drug companies. Also of interest is the role played by the FDA:
Libertarian critics of the FDA often claim that the FDA is risk-averse when permitting potentially beneficial remedies and procedures, because the political cost to the regulators of unsuccessful applications of a remedy or procedure outweighs the political benefit to regulators of successful applications of the remedy or procedure. One death caused by a drug ignites a political firestorm, even if the the drug has saved hundreds or thousands.
Why, then, did the FDA give a pass to antidepressants in the absence of evidence of effectiveness? Perhaps the FDA does not have as much an incentive to care about effectiveness as about risk. If the FDA has no reason to suspect politically dangerous amounts of ill effects from a remedy, perhaps they will permit it even if there is insufficient evidence that it is effective. In both cases, though, the FDA does not seem to function the way in which its supporters claim.
Two other factors are at work in the widespread rejection of Kirsch's (and, now, other scientists') findings about antidepressants. First, defenders of the drugs scoff at the idea that the FDA would have approved ineffective drugs. (Simple explanation: the FDA requires two well-designed clinical trials showing a drug is more effective than a placebo. That's two, period—even if many more studies show no such effectiveness. And the size of the "more effective" doesn't much matter, as long as it is statistically significant.)
Libertarian critics of the FDA often claim that the FDA is risk-averse when permitting potentially beneficial remedies and procedures, because the political cost to the regulators of unsuccessful applications of a remedy or procedure outweighs the political benefit to regulators of successful applications of the remedy or procedure. One death caused by a drug ignites a political firestorm, even if the the drug has saved hundreds or thousands.
Why, then, did the FDA give a pass to antidepressants in the absence of evidence of effectiveness? Perhaps the FDA does not have as much an incentive to care about effectiveness as about risk. If the FDA has no reason to suspect politically dangerous amounts of ill effects from a remedy, perhaps they will permit it even if there is insufficient evidence that it is effective. In both cases, though, the FDA does not seem to function the way in which its supporters claim.
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