A philosopher's reflections on our global and rapidly changing social world
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
A new form of exploitation
Much thinking about economic justice for working people has been framed by the nineteenth-century concept of “capitalism”: owners of enterprises constitute a minority of the population; they hire workers who represent the majority of the population; wages and profits define the distribution of income throughout the whole population. This picture still works well enough for a range of economic…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Republicanism and multicultural democracy
Philip Pettit’s writings about republicanism offer a valuable and distinctive perspective on individual freedom and the nature of a good society. He develops those ideas most fully in Republicanism : a theory of freedom and government. Pettit’s core idea is that we should conceive of freedom as “non-domination” — that is, that an individual is free when he or she is not subject to the arbitrary…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
The micro and the social
In his influential article “A definition of physicalism” (1993) Philip Pettit attempts to formulate a consistent and coherent account of physicalism as an ontology of the world. I believe that we can define a possibly true, substantive doctrine which holds, roughly, that the empirical world ‘contains just what a true complete physics would say it contains’. (213) The resulting view is offered…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Why "DEI"?
The current war on DEI has proven to be unrelenting and highly destructive to the independence, academic freedom, and inclusiveness of American universities. And yet the values that gave rise to DEI initiatives throughout the country in the past two decades are deeply grounded in fundamental American values of equality, freedom, and community. How did we get to the place where DEI is regarded as…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
A conversation with Gemini about Orwell's Road to Wigan Pier
In previous posts I’ve been fairly skeptical about the value of ChatGPT as a research tool (link). In recent weeks I’ve been exploring Google’s Gemini 2.0 Flash and Gemini Deep Research, and I’m cautiously more impressed. There are two core shortcomings of an AI tool based solely on large language models and massive training: lack of specific sources of factual knowledge and inability to provide…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
The continuing reality of racism
source: https://www.kff.org/key-data-on-health-and-health-care-by-race-and-ethnicity/?entry=health-status-and-outcomes-birth-risks-and-outcomes The rightwing extremist war on DEI intensifies by the week, it appears. And the scope of its prohibitions expands as well. Universities throughout the United States are being bullied through the threat of the loss of Federal funds — sometimes in the…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Rethinking Analytical Sociology
My current book Rethinking Analytical Sociology has now appeared in print. The book is intended to provide a sympathetic but critical review of analytical sociology as a relatively new sub-discipline within sociology. Here is a video preview of the book. The book argues that the “generativist” approach offered by analytical sociologists is suitable to a fairly specific range of problems within…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Why are English majors disappearing?
Many universities have witnessed a decline in students pursuing majors in the humanities, including English literature. Why has this happened? This sounds like a fairly simple and parochial subject — why are students and families losing interest in liberal arts majors like philosophy, literature, or history? But this impression is misleading. The subject is not simple: there are multiple causal…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
"Rigorous" sociology
There is sometimes an inclination within the social sciences to unify and “improve” the methodologies of the social sciences to allow them to be “fully scientific” in the way that chemistry or physics were thought to be in the neo-positivist phase of the philosophy of science. With something like these ambitions Klarita Gërxhani, Nan D. de Graaf, and Werner Raub’s recent Handbook of Sociological…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Assessing causes in the past (Kreuzer)
Quantitative social scientists have something of a catechism when it comes to providing evidence for causal assertions. If we want to assert that A is a contributing cause to B (for example, living in a neighborhood with many sub-standard housing units is a cause of higher rates of delinquency), we need to conduct a study involving a reasonably large number of cases and then assess whether cases…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Popper and Parfit: the minds of philosophers
Derek Parfit hit the philosophy firmament in the early 1960s, while Karl Popper arrived on the Vienna scene three decades earlier. David Edmonds’ biography of Parfit provides a careful and detailed account of Parfit’s main philosophical preoccupations and some details about his life in Parfit: A Philosopher and His Mission to Save Morality. Popper’s autobiographical essay in Paul Arthur Schilpp,…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Limitations of Hobsbawm's historical writing
A defining component of Eric Hobsbawm’s historical writings is the quartet of “Age” books: Age of Revolution, Age of Capital, Age of Empire, and Age of Extremes. These are synthetic works, offering a narrative of the long nineteenth century and the short twentieth century. They give primary attention to developments pertaining to economic, political, and social change in Britain, Europe, and…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
E.P. Thompson's break with Stalinism
E. P. Thompson was one of the great social historians of the twentieth century (link, link). He was also a committed socialist from youth to the end of his life. His 1963 book, The Making of the English Working Class, transformed the way that historians on the left conceptualized “social class”, and it was one of the formative works of “history from below”. Thompson was a member of the British…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Defining disciplinary research in the social sciences
The “historical turn” in the philosophy of science in the 1960s and 1970s gave most of its attention to the development of the physical sciences — especially physics itself. (See Tom Nickles’ essay “Historicist Theories of Scientific Rationality” in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy for a detailed account of this development in the philosophy of science; link.) Historian-philosophers like…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Mistakes by organizations
In 1964 Jim Marshall, a defensive player for the Minnesota Vikings, committed a mistake by recovering a fumble by the San Francisco 49ers and running it into the end zone – at the wrong end of the field. In the early 1990s the US Congress made a mistake by ordering continued development of the Osprey VTOL aircraft. Did these two “actors” do the same sort of thing? Is an organization’s mistake…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Brecht on Galileo on science
Bertolt Brecht composed his play Life of Galileo (1939) (link) while on the run in Denmark from Nazi Germany in 1938. Brecht was a determined anti-Nazi, and he was an advocate of revolutionary Marxism. It is fascinating to read one of the longest speeches he composed for Galileo at the end of the play, in which Galileo reflects on his recantation of the heliocentric theory of planetary motion.…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Thinking about social class
Marx’s theory of social class is founded on the idea of conflict of interest defined by the property system. Marx puts the point this way in the Communist Manifesto: “History is a history of class conflict.” And his inference from this fact: “Workers of the world, unite; you have nothing to lose but your chains” (Marx and Engels 1848). Individuals belong to classes depending on their position…

View On WordPress
0 notes