Reading

Created
Tue, 13/12/2022 - 02:00

This is a big moment! The Collection box set releases venture into the 1960’s for the first time. Season 2 is an obvious choice given it’s near complete status. But how good can black and white Doctor Who look in high definition? As it turns out, black and white Doctor Who is really good in […]

The post REVIEW: Doctor Who: The Collection – Season 2 appeared first on Blogtor Who.

Created
Tue, 13/12/2022 - 01:34
2022 Fundraiser

It’s been a tough year for the world and a tough year at Chez Ian (cancer, housing issues, blah.) Personally, I’m just beginning to recover from cancer treatment, though some of it will be ongoing, and sucking, for another six to twelve months. China, deciding to the right thing (Zero Covid) stupid, is now releasing some restrictions and that’s going to go badly. Russia invaded Ukraine, ground forward and will likely wind up with less than it’d like and more than the West wanted.

Created
Tue, 13/12/2022 - 00:15
Resource network

There have been a few half-hearted attempts to do mutual credit, or business barter on a blockchain, but the only one that has cut any ice at all with me so far is Resource. Founder David Casey was a social entrepreneur experimenting with mutual credit long before venturing into blockchain and he has assembled a team which seems to be committed to honest finance rather than shilling shitcoins. The project is built on the Celo blockchain, which seems to have similar values, counting Charles Eisenstein's book Sacred Economics as an inspiration.

Created
Tue, 13/12/2022 - 00:00

As always, if you find value in this work I do, please consider helping me keep it sustainable by joining my weekly newsletter, Sparky’s List! You can get it in your inbox or read it on Patreon, the content is the same. (And just in time for the holidays, gift subscriptions are now available.) Also, don’t forget to visit the TMW store for all of your holiday shopping needs (as long as they are extremely specific and limited)!

Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 23:28

Each quarter, Patreon Plus supporters can ask Michael questions. Here is a transcript of the most recent one, just in time for our next Q&A this Thursday. Please support Michael’s work via his Patreon page. Karl Fitzgerald: Alright, let’s get into it. We’ve got lots of good questions. Welcome, everyone. My name is Karl Fitzgerald. Continue Reading

The post China the Change Agent – Patreon Q&A #3 first appeared on Michael Hudson.
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 21:04
Update on the Parliamentary amendments The Online Safety Bill is back in Parliament. It had been stalled for five months whilst the government made a few changes. A Parliamentary debate on Monday (5th December) revealed the shift in policy direction for the first time. It’s relatively small change, with big implications. According to the government, […]
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 21:00
“Even if you prefer the sexiness of radicalism or the glory of revolution: you need boring, work-a-day normal conservative philosophy.” Yesterday, J. Dmitri Gallow (Senior Research Fellow at Dianoia Institute of Philosophy) tweeted out a thread on the value of what he labels “conservative, normal philosophy.” Finding it interesting, I asked him to turn it into a brief blog post for Daily Nous, which he very kindly did. In Defense of Boring and Derivative Philosophy by J. Dmitri Gallow I often hear papers, talks, or projects dismissed as “boring” or “derivative”—contrasted with philosophy that’s “novel” or “insightful.” This dismissive attitude is usually directed at (a) work that’s conservative, rather than radical (in a sense I’ll explain below), and (b) work that’s normal, rather than revolutionary (in the sense of Thomas Kuhn). I think the dismissive attitude underestimates the value of normal conservative philosophy. Below, I’ll introduce these distinctions and defend normal conservative—and therefore, boring and derivative—philosophy.
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 20:00
The weekly report on new and revised entries at online philosophy resources and new reviews of philosophy books… SEP New:       Saint Thomas Aquinas by Robert Pasnau. Revised:         Divine Providence by Hugh J. McCann and Daniel M. Johnson. Margaret Lucas Cavendish by David Cunning. Risk by Sven Ove Hansson. Nonexistent Objects by Maria Reicher. Relative Identity by Harry Deutsch and Pawel Garbacz. Epistemology in Latin America by Diego Machuca. IEP           ∅ NDPR         ∅ 1000-Word Philosophy         ∅    Project Vox     ∅ Recent Philosophy Book Reviews in Non-Academic Media   John Venn: A Life in Logic by Lukas M. Verburgt is reviewed by Cheryl Misak at Times Literary Supplement. Dream, Death, and the Self by J.J. Valberg is reviewed by Scot English at Patheos. The Right to Sex: Feminism in the Twenty-First Century by Amia Srinivasan is reviewed by Jane Haile at The New York Journal of Books. On the Emergence of an Ecological Class: A Memo by Bruno Latour and After Lockdown: A Metamorphosis by Bruno Latour are reviewed by Jeremy Harding at London Review of Books. Not Thinking Like a Liberal by Raymond Geuss is reviewed by Richard Eldridge at Los Angeles Review of Books.
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 19:37
December 12, 2022 The U.S. government should end its prosecution of Julian Assange for publishing secrets. Twelve years ago, on November 28th 2010, our five international media outlets – The New York Times, the Guardian, Le Monde, El Pais and DER SPIEGEL – published a series of revelations in cooperation with Wikileaks that made the headlines around the globe.
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 19:00
After a bit of a delay, we’re resuming the Article Spotlight series, in which the authors of recent journal articles are invited to write brief posts here about them. As noted at the time of the first installment, the articles featured will tend to be ones judged to be of interest to a wide range of philosophers. An article’s inclusion in this series should not be construed as an endorsement of its argument or agreement with its conclusions, but rather as a way of saying, “this might be interesting to discuss.” In this month’s post, Joshua Glasgow, professor of philosophy at Sonoma State University, discusses his recent article, “The Ordinary Meaningful Life,” which appeared earlier this year in The Journal of the American Philosophical Association—the official version should be publicly available; if you can’t access it, there is a link to a preprint here. [Originally posted on December 8, 2022] The Ordinary Meaningful Life by Joshua Glasgow We celebrate being important. Why? In particular, why should you care about whether you are especially important, or great, or significant?
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 19:00
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December 12th, 2022next

December 12th, 2022: TIME IS RAPIDLY RUNNING OUT TO ORDER THE FOLLOWING AMAZING THING AND GET IT IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS:

It's called

Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 14:49
That’s the headline for my latest piece in Inside Story, a review of Brad DeLong’s Slouching Towards Utopia and Sebastian Edwards The Chile Project . Some extracts The Chile Project, of which Edwards was a generally sympathetic observer, ranks with Thatcher’s Britain as the paradigmatic case of what I’ve called “hard neoliberalism,” which combines authoritarianism […]
Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 14:29

This food timeline started as a way to explore the revolution in Australian food that has occurred during the baby-boomers’ lifetime, but has since expanded to include more about the previous decades (and century) as well. Also included are overseas events and trends that had an impact here. The entries are brief, but there are lots of links if you want more information.

Top food companies 2022

Created
Mon, 12/12/2022 - 11:36
Another Message Board Post comments on any topic. Civil discussion and no coarse language please. Side discussions and idees fixes to the sandpits, please. I’ve moved my irregular email news from Mailchimp to Substack. You can read it here. You can also follow me on Mastodon here I’m also trying out Substack as a blogging […]