John Dewey, b. 1859-Oct-20

One of the most influential men of his time, and an architect of the “American Century,” John Dewey was the man behind the curtain as the Progressive Era undid the predations of the Gilded Age and constructed the now-declining middle class.

Dewey was a pragmatist, a school of philosophy which places primacy upon experience and rejects Platonism unconditionally. It is not a set of metaphysical claims so much as a habit of thought, and all engineers and scientists are trained by default to the pragmatic approach to problem-solving: Think first, believe later.

  • It is no accident that all democracies have put a high estimate upon education; that schooling has been their first care and enduring charge. Only through education can equality of opportunity be anything more than a phrase. Accidental inequalities of birth, wealth, and learning are always tending to restrict the opportunities of some as compared with those of others. Only free and continued education can counteract those forces which are always at work to restore, in however changed a form, feudal oligarchy. Democracy has to be born anew every generation, and education is its midwife.

  • Every thinker puts some portion of an apparently stable world in peril and no one can wholly predict what will emerge in its place.

  • Legislation is a matter of more or less intelligent improvisation aiming at palliating conditions by means of patchwork policies.

  • It is a familiar and significant saying that a problem well put is half-solved.

  • In the late eighteenth and the greater part of the nineteenth centuries appeared the first marked cultural shift in the attitude taken toward change. Under the names of indefinite perfectibility, progress, and evolution, the movement of things in the universe itself and of the universe as a whole began to take on a beneficent instead of hateful aspect.

  • The revolution in scientific ideas just mentioned is primarily logical. It is due to recognition that the very method of physical science, with its primary standard units of mass, space, and time, is concerned with measurements of relations of change, not with individuals as such.

  • This idea is that laws which purport to be statements of what actually occurs are statistical in character as distinct from so-called dynamic laws that are abstract and mathematical, and disguised definitions. Recognition of the statistical nature of physical laws was first effected in the case of gases when it became evident that generalizations regarding the behavior of swarms of molecules were not descriptions or predictions of the behavior of any individual particle. A single molecule is not and cannot be a gas. It is consequently absurd to suppose that a scientific law is about the elementary constituents of a gas. It is a statement of what happens when a large number of such constituents interact with one another under certain conditions.

  • The mystery is that the world is at it is — a mystery that is the source of all joy and all sorrow, of all hope and fear, and the source of development both creative and degenerative. The contingency of all into which time enters is the source of pathos, comedy, and tragedy.

  • Surrender of individuality by the many to someone who is taken to be a superindividual explains the retrograde movement of society. Dictatorships and totalitarian states, and belief in the inevitability of this or that result coming to pass are, strange as it may sound, ways of denying the reality of time and the creativeness of the individual.

  • The ground of democratic ideas and practices is faith in the potentialities of individuals, faith in the capacity for positive developments if proper conditions are provided. The weakness of the philosophy originally advanced to justify the democratic movement was that it took individuality to be something given ready-made, that is, in abstraction from time, instead of as a power to develop.

  • To regiment artists, to make them servants of some particular cause does violence to the very springs of artistic creation. But it does more than that. It betrays the very cause of a better future it would serve, for in its subjugation of the individuality of the artist it annihilates the source of that which is genuinely new. Where the regimentation is successful, it would cause the future to be but a rearrangement of the past.

  • Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself.

  • Education, therefore, is a process of living and not a preparation for future living.

  • We only think when we are confronted with problems.

Posted in General | 1 Comment

“God had had enough”

Elijah Cummings’ corpse had scarcely been delivered to the funeral home before Evangelical Right loonies got busy.

Right-wing commentator and radical conspiracy theorist Chris McDonald streamed a special edition of his “The MC Files” program this morning in response to the news that Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings had died. McDonald and his guest, Maryland pastor Stacey Shiflett, spent the entire program attacking Cummings as corrupt, unbiblical, and ungodly, and asserting that God had taken his life because of his opposition to President Donald Trump.

“We know the Bible,” McDonald said. “You’ve got a leader that has been in office for over 30 years, that opened the door on unfettered abortion in this country. His civil rights icon status was a joke because he did nothing to bring rights to his people; all he did was divide, all he did was play the race card.

McDonald said that Cummings was a corrupt and lawless leader who waged “a cooked, deceptive, demonic attempt” to take down Trump.

“Everything that he’s done has been nothing but trying to take this president out,” he said. “I believe that God had had enough, and God moved.””

It takes a lot of stored-up malice to be a good Christian.

Posted in General | Leave a comment

2020 G7 to be held at Trump property

As if the Trump administration doesn’t have enough ethics problems, White House Chief-of-Staff Rick Mulvaney announced yesterday that the very best place in America to host a half-dozen world leaders, their retinues, and thousands of media folk, is one of his golf course resorts.

President Trump has awarded the 2020 Group of Seven summit of world leaders to his private company, scheduling the summit for June at his Trump National Doral Miami golf resort in Florida, the White House announced Thursday.

[ … ]

Trump’s Doral resort — set among office parks near Miami International Airport — has been in sharp decline in recent years, according to the Trump Organization’s own records. Its net operating income fell 69 percent from 2015 to 2017; a Trump Organization representative testified last year that the reason was Trump’s damaged brand.

This is so egregiously self-dealing that, with patient explanations, even some members of his dullard cult may be able to smell the stench.

Posted in General | Leave a comment

Oblivious tweet of the day

Honestly, I marvel some days at Albert the Pious’ total obliviousness. He’s correct, so far as he goes, but he clearly doesn’t understand that the same is true of the moral code set out in the Ten Commandments and the New Testament.

All moral codes are no more than this: the common-sense consensus about the behaviors needful for the survival of the group or tribe. Thus, the first five of the Ten Commandments concern piety and worship, the indispensable elements of the Jewish tribe’s survival. Similarly, the 1st-Century Christian cult, like contemporary cults all around the world, were adamant that the group came first and your spouse and children got the leftovers.

Some of the sharpest contemporary moral debates center upon the question, Who is my tribe? Thus, an abortion may be a very good thing for a family group that can’t afford a child or doesn’t wish to interrupt an education. But it’s a very bad thing for churches, because that’s somebody who won’t be around to help assure the persistence of the religion and its Holy Men.

The benchmark for all moral codes is the well-being and survival of the group, and the most painful moral disputes center upon the identity of the group whose well-being should be given priority.

Posted in General | Leave a comment

Quote for the day

How a theologian today can have a good conscience with his Christianity is incomprehensible and inaccessible to me …

This is from Volume 16 of Friedrich Nietzsche’s notebooks, an unpublished remark from June-July of 1885.

I’ve been acquiring the set as it is published, and this passage provoked two reactions in me when I encountered it.

  • Recognition, because I’ve had the identical thought through the years. Do the professors at the local seminary really not know that they’re frauds, or do they not care?

  • This was written almost 150-years ago — before the invention of, even, the automobile. How does theological nonsense even persist when it ought to be as disreputable as alchemy?

Posted in General | Leave a comment