Monday, May 25, 2015

Why We Should Not Like Each Other

I am one of a large number of people who went into the sciences to search for The Truth.  I was raised to be self-sufficient and self-reliant.  I went into the branch of physics that announced the discovery of the Higgs Boson on July 4, 2012.  The field generated one of the Clay Mathematics Institutes Millennial problems http://www.claymath.org/millennium-problems .  My professional work and interests have touched on all the other problems.  I was very interested in being the first to prove Fermat’s Last Theorem.  At this time, only the Poincare’ Conjecture has been solved.  I was honored by my undergraduate school for “community service” in 1980 for saving the free world from the Warsaw Pact.

When I did my studies in Physics, Mathematics, and Chemistry, physics was defined in Encyclopaedia Brittannica as:

“Physics, which may be defined broadly as the study of nature, was long called natural philosophy (from the Greek physikos); its exact scope is not fixed nor easily delimited.  From decade to decade in modern times, the principal effort in physics has changed as, on the one hand, fields of scientific knowledge were reduced to practice, whereupon they were regarded as branches of engineering or applied physics; and, on the other hand, new fields were opened by fresh experimental or theoretical discoveries.  Physics may be called a point of view about the natural world and a method of attack on its problems, a method based upon certain general principles and disciplined by the close interplay between experiment and theory.  With a kind of confidence that the understanding of nature may be reduced to a few comprehensive principles, physicists seek for those central ideas by which great areas of common experience may be brought into order and coherence.  To achieve their purpose, they proceed by use of mathematical and logical tools, and by experimentation.

My education was in the 1950s and 1960s.  This was coincident with Martin Luther King, Jr.'s struggle for civil rights in the United States,.  King synthesized the teachings of Christ and Mahatma Gandhi to create a method of nonviolent resistance that carried Americans toward justice during the turbulent years of the 1950s and 1960s. King’s life and legacy are an excellent topic with which to review how far the philosophy of freedom has come. Once the province of academics, it now inspires activists and political leaders in nonviolent struggle.

In his Letter from Birmingham Jail, King has to describe how to explain violating human laws.  The letter shows how he reconciled his actions in breaking the law and going to jail with his teachings of law and order.  He had to carefully distinguish the laws that he broke from what he called the highest law of the land.   He argued that an unjust law is no law at all, as St. Aquinas said. A just law was one that squared with moral law, and an unjust law degraded human personality.  Segregation laws give the segregator a false sense of superiority, and the segregated a false sense of inferiority. Therefore they were morally wrong.


Narratives written by arithmetically-challenged people cannot be transformed into a lawful order.

You chose your career with the PSAC Report, the 1968 assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr,  and the 1969-71 RETRENCHMENT being recent historyIn 1962 the President's Science Advisory Committee published a report entitled Meeting Manpower Needs in Science and Technology.  The "PSAC Report" declared that the acceleration of graduate training in engineering, mathematics, and physical sciences, especially at the doctoral level, was a matter of urgent national priority requiring immediate action, without which severe shortages of engineers and scientists would occur. Engineering was identified as an especially crucial area. The federal government was to provide the funds needed, through increased research expenditures, provision of training grants,  and fostering of new centers of scientific excellence. The country was, of course, reacting to shocks to its prestige caused by the success of Sputnik , and was also riding the crest of the greatest economic boom in its history, and these events simultaneously provided both the motive and the means for a major expansion in engineering graduate programs. Engineering education responded immediately, and the numbers of graduate students rose to unprecedented heights. (Just eight years later, the magnificent declarations of the PSAC Report were negated by a new conventional wisdom—that Ph.D.s were a drug on the market.)

Even before the Retrenchment, I was skeptical of Government Intervention/Programs beyond its core Defense mission.

You received your B.S. degree in microbiology from the University of Florida in 1978 and your J.D. from the Stetson University College of Law in 1982.  Perhaps because your school is ranked #1 in trial advocacy, you wouldn’t recognize the truth unless it was conveniently packaged as a rhetorical narrative. You came along at a time when the narrative paradigm was being formed.  See para 3.2 http://www.lhn.uni-hamburg.de/article/narratives-rhetorical-discourse . Ms. Baccus-Horsley fed you those galore.

Your “formative years” coincided with Michel Foucalt’s popularity in the US.

I read Gerald Holton’s Science and Anti-Science shortly after it was published in 1998.

“Employing the case-study method and the concept of scientific themata that he has pioneered, Holton displays the broad scope of his insight into the workings of science: from the influence of Ernst Mach on twentieth century physicists, biologists, psychologists, and other thinkers to the rhetorical strategies used in the work of Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, and others; from the bickering between Thomas Jefferson and the U.S. Congress over the proper form of federal sponsorship of scientific research to philosophical debates since Oswald Spengier over whether our scientific knowledge will ever be ‘complete.’  In a masterful final chapter, Holton scrutinizes the ‘anti-science phenomenon,’ the increasingly common opposition to science as practiced today. He approaches this contentious issue by examining the world views and political ambitions of the proponents of science as well as those of its opponents-the critics of ‘establishment science’ (including even those who fear that science threatens to overwhelm the individual in the postmodern world) and the adherents of ‘alternative science’ (Creationists, New Age ‘healers,’ astrologers). Through it all runs the thread of the author’s deep historical knowledge and his humanistic understanding of science in modern culture.”

About this time, I was reviewing manuscripts prepared by my father-in-law, Paul Edward Brown, Sr., PhD.  Doctor Brown had a PhD from Drew University in New Testament and Systematic Theology.  He was/is a Theist.  Dr. Brown knew that Secular Humanism (France) was the Devil Incarnate.  He also knew that The Big Bang implied a beginning – consistent with the Judeo-Christian Creation Myth.  Dr. Brown’s two sons:  Paul Edward Brown, Jr and Samuel Isaac Brown, the First, are real doctors and have significantly more income than their PhD father (and (former) brother-in-law).

A “culture war” is a clash of ideas about what one believes to be true, and others with different viewpoints.  A person’s experiences, family, friends, education, and the media help to form your belief system, or World View.

I was shielded from the full force of the anti-science forces by being a part of the Military-Industrial Complex.  My coworkers and friends were predominately active or retired military or naval officers, many of them had graduated from the Service Academies with degrees in engineering.  From my perspective, “the enemy” looked like Postmodernism.

Dr. Paul E. Brown, Sr., described intellectual/philosophical history through David Hume.  I had watched The Ideas of Great Philosophers, 1st Edition by Daniel N. Robinson and had taken an interest in philosophy about 1969.  I purchased two paperback books by the Sahakians one being comparable to http://www.amazon.com/Ideas-Great-Philosophers-William-Sahakian/dp/1566192714 .  From the two, I identified 17 Conceptions of/theories of Truth.  The reviewer cautions that although the first chapter gives a very cleanly written summary of the mechanics of epistemology: listing many of the criteria of truth, the problems of truth, and the main fallacies of reasoning, it is still selective rather than exhaustive (category errors for instance are not mentioned). But most egregiously, the essential philosophical definitions needed to understand the explanations are not given here: but are "assumed to be understood" by the reader.  The second Sahakian book is described as having been “one of the most important books of my life. Not only does it provide an introductory survey of the field of philosophy, but it covers truth and fallacies. In fact, for decades it was the only source to reference Negative Pragmatism, a superior criterion of truth that was developed in the early 20th century and explained in detail by Nobel Prize winning physicist, Richard Feynman in 1964.” My second Sahakian book did not Include Negative Pragmatism.

The Teaching Company’s new set and format meshed well with Professor Lawrence Cahoone’s Modern Intellectual Tradition: From Descartes to Derrida.  I felt that watching this course sort of completed my studies in philosophy.  I recently completed watching Cahoone’s The Modern Political Tradition:  From Hobbes to Habermas.

The term “postmodernism” first entered the philosophical lexicon in 1979, with the publication of The Postmodern Condition by Jean-François Lyotard.  Another Frenchman Michel Foucault had a lot to do with it.  Though often cited as a post-structuralist  and postmodernist, Foucault rejected these labels, preferring to present his thought as a critical history of modernity.   His thought has been highly influential for both academic and activist groups.

In 1976 Gallimard published Foucault's Histoire de la sexualité: la volonté de savoir (The History of Sexuality: The Will to Knowledge), a short book exploring what Foucault called the "repressive hypothesis". It revolved largely around the concept of power, rejecting Marxist theories of power and rejecting psychoanalysis. Foucault intended it as the first in a seven-volume exploration of the subject.   Histoire de la sexualité was a best seller and gained a positive press reception, but lukewarm intellectual interest, something that upset Foucault, who felt that many misunderstood his hypothesis.   He soon became dissatisfied with his publisher.  Along with Paul Veyne and François Wahl, Foucault launched a new series of academic books, known as Dex Travaux (Some Works), through the company Seuil, which he hoped would improve the state of academic research in France.   He also produced introductions for the memoirs of Herculine Barbin and My Secret Life.

“There exists an international citizenry that has its rights, and has its duties, and that is committed to rise up against every abuse of power, no matter who the author, no matter who the victims. After all, we are all ruled, and as such, we are in solidarity."  - Michel Foucault, 1981

Foucault remained a political activist until his death in 1984.  He focused on protesting government abuses of human rights across the world. He was a key player in the 1975 protests against the Spanish government to execute 11 militants sentenced to death without fair trial. It was his idea to travel to Madrid with 6 others to give their press conference there; they were subsequently arrested and deported back to Paris. In 1977, he protested the extradition of Klaus Croissant to West Germany, and his rib was fractured during clashes with riot police. In July that year, he organised an assembly of Eastern Bloc dissidents to mark the visit of Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnevto Paris. In 1979, he campaigned for Vietnamese political dissidents to be granted asylum in France.
In 1977, Italian newspaper Corriere della sera asked Foucault to write a column for them. In doing so, in 1978 he travelled to Tehranin Iran, days after the Black Friday massacre. Documenting the developing Iranian Revolution, he met with opposition leaders such as Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari and Mehdi Bazargan, and discovered the popular support for Islamism. Returning to France, he was one of the journalists who visited the Ayatollah Khomeini, before he visited Tehran again. His articles expressed awe of Khomeini's Islamist movement, for which he was widely criticised in the French press, including by Iranian liberal dissidents. Foucault's response was that Islamism was to become a major political force in the region, and that the West must treat it with respect rather than hostility. In April 1978, Foucault traveled to Japan, where he studied Zen Buddhism under Omori Sogen at the Seionji temple in Uenohara.
Although remaining critical of power relations, Foucault expressed cautious support for the Socialist Party government of François Mitterrand following its electoral victory in 1981. But his support soon deteriorated when that party refused to condemn the Polish government's crackdown on the 1982 demonstrations in Poland orchestrated by theSolidarity trade union. He and sociologist Pierre Bourdieu authored a document condemning Mitterrand's inaction that was published in Libération, and they also took part in large public protests on the issue. Foucault continued to support Solidarity, and with his friend Simone Signoret traveled Poland as part of a Médecins du Monde expedition, taking time out to visit the Auschwitz concentration camp. He continued his academic research, and in June 1984 Gallimard published the second and third volumes of Histoire de la sexualité. Volume two, L'Usage des plaisirs, dealt with the "techniques of self" prescribed by ancient Greek pagan morality in relation to sexual ethics, while volume three, Le Souci de soi explored the same theme in the Greek and Latin texts of the first two centuries CE. A fourth volume, Les Aveux de la chair, examined it in early Christianity, but it remained unfinished at Foucault's death.
In October 1980, Foucault became a visiting professor at the University of California, Berkeley, giving the Howison Lectures on "Truth and Subjectivity", while in November he lectured at the Humanities Institute at the New York University. His growing popularity in American intellectual circles was noted by Time magazine, while Foucault went on to lecture at UCLA in 1981, the University of Vermont in 1982, and Berkeley again in 1983, where his lectures drew huge crowds. When in California, Foucault spent many evenings in the gay scene of the San Francisco Bay Area. He would praise sado-masochistic activity in interviews with the gay press, describing it as "the real creation of new possibilities of pleasure, which people had no idea about previously." Through sexual activity, Foucault contracted HIV which developed into AIDS. Little was known of the virus at the time; the first cases had only been identified in 1980. In summer 1983, Foucault developed a persistent dry cough, which concerned friends in Paris, but Foucault insisted it was just a pulmonary infection. Only when hospitalized was Foucault correctly diagnosed and treated with antibiotics.  He delivered a final set of lectures at the Collège de France. Foucault entered Paris' Hôpital de la Salpêtrière on 9 June 1984.  He died in the hospital on 25 June 1984.
Foucault's discussions on power and discourse have inspired many critical theorists, who believe that Foucault's analysis of power structures could aid the struggle against inequality. They claim that through discourse analysis, hierarchies may be uncovered and questioned by way of analyzing the corresponding fields of knowledge through which they are legitimated. This is one of the ways that Foucault's work is linked to critical theory.
In 2007, Foucault was listed as the most cited scholar in the humanities by the ISI Web of Science among a large quantity of French philosophers, the compilation's author commenting that "What this says of modern scholarship is for the reader to decide – and it is imagined that judgments will vary from admiration to despair, depending on one’s view".
A prominent critique of Foucault's thought concerns his refusal to propose positive solutions to the social and political issues that he critiques. Since no human relation is devoid of power, freedom becomes elusive - even as an ideal. This stance which critiques normativity as socially constructed and contingent, but which relies on an implicit norm in order to mount the critique led philosopher Jürgen Habermas to describe Foucault's thinking as "crypto-normativist", covertly reliant on the very Enlightenment principles he attempts to deconstruct.[163] A similar critique has been advanced by Diana Taylor, and by Nancy Fraser who argues that "Foucault's critique encompasses traditional moral systems, he denies himself recourse to concepts such as "freedom" and "justice", and therefore lacks the ability to generate positive alternatives " 
The experts say, “That postmodernism is indefinable is a truism. However, it can be described as a set of critical, strategic and rhetorical practices employing concepts such as difference, repetition, the trace, the simulacrum, and hyperreality to destabilize other concepts such as presence, identity, historical progress, epistemic certainty, and the univocity of meaning.”  http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/postmodernism/

Michel Foucalt was not one of the bad guys.  Had he not died in 1984, he might have led the rediscovery of Hegel.
The Nietzschean method of genealogy, in its application to modern subjectivity, is another facet of philosophical postmodernism. Michel Foucault's application of genealogy to formative moments in modernity's history and his exhortations to experiment with subjectivity place him within the scope of postmodern discourse. In the 1971 essay “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” Foucault spells out his adaptation of the genealogical method in his historical studies. First and foremost, he says, genealogy “opposes itself to the search for ‘origins’” (Foucault 1977, 141). That is, genealogy studies the accidents and contingencies that converge at crucial moments, giving rise to new epochs, concepts, and institutions. As Foucault remarks: “What is found at the historical beginning of things is not the inviolable identity of their origin; it is the dissension of other things. It is disparity” (Foucault 1977, 142). In Nietzschean fashion, Foucault exposes history conceived as the origin and development of an identical subject, e.g., “modernity,” as a fiction modern discourses invent after the fact. Underlying the fiction of modernity is a sense of temporality that excludes the elements of chance and contingency in play at every moment. 

In short, linear, progressive history covers up the discontinuities and interruptions that mark points of succession in historical time.


This new translation of The Science of Logic (also known as ‘Greater Logic’) includes the revise Book I (1832), Book II (1813), and Book III (1816). Recent research has given us a detailed picture of the process that led Hegel to his final conception of the System and of the place of the Logic within it. We now understand how and why Hegel distanced himself from Schelling, how radical this break with his early mentor was, and to what extent it entailed a return (but with a difference) to Fichte and Kant. In the introduction to the volume, George di Giovanni presents in synoptic form the results of recent scholarship on the subject, and, while recognizing the fault lines in Hegel's System that allow opposite interpretations, argues that the Logic marks the end of classical metaphysics. The translation is accompanied by a full apparatus of historical and explanatory notes.




Saturday, May 9, 2015

The Return of the One Grand Narrative

Ferguson, MO, police departments every where, the Baltimore Prosecutors Office, and the Department of Justice now all have "narratives".  Not surprisingly, they are all different.  Jean-François Lyotard described the Collapse of the Grand Narrative in 1979.  Anglophiles have been trying to recover ever since.

Particle physicists recently came up with Theory of Everything (TOE) for an explanation of how we got here and how everything works.  The Higgs Boson, announced on July 4, 2012, was in large part the Cap Stone for what has been called the Standard Model of particle physics.  Focusing on particle physics encourages one to miss the Big Picture.

It is harder to miss the significance  of a description containing "one grand narrative" in the text.  The following paragraph is from a Great Courses catalogue with offers expiring May 14, 2015:

"Explore the monumental 'story of everything' with this brilliant and exciting course that weaves cosmology, geology, anthropology, biology, history, and more into one grand narrative beginning with the big bang and ending with a look into our future." 

The online description for the course says,

"About 100,000 to 60,000 years ago, a species of hominines—bipedal ape-like creatures—began to move out of its home territory in Africa and into the Asian continent. Today, homo sapiens, the descendants of those first hominines—live in nearly every ecological niche. We fly through the air in planes, communicate instantaneously over immense distances, and develop theories about the creation of the Universe. In Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth, and the Rise of Humanity, you’ll hear this ever-evolving story—the history of everything—in its monumental entirety from the moment the Universe grew from the size of an atom to the size of a galaxy in a fraction of a second."

You can enjoy learning about this by purchasing this course
  http://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/big-history-the-big-bang-life-on-earth-and-the-rise-of-humanity.html

Jean-François Lyotard noted the Collapse of the Grand Narrative in 1979.  You can experience its return only 36 years later!

DR2H