Category Archives: Human Nature

Fear vs. Hope

An essay about “contrasting views of reality” by the American right and the left; Short items about MAGA and pets; Republicans and raunch; Laura Loomer; Buttigieg explains Trump; Lance Wallnau blames witchcraft; and Trump’s new big lie about crime; And … Continue reading

Posted in Human Nature, Politics, Psychology | Comments Off on Fear vs. Hope

Cheating and Lying

To me, all of these undermine the Conservative project as a legitimate intellectual discourse. How new local news sources are not what they appear to be; Epoch Times; my rule of thumb about reliable news sources; How the Heritage Foundation … Continue reading

Posted in conservatives, Human Nature, Politics | Comments Off on Cheating and Lying

Lukianoff & Haidt, THE CODDLING OF THE AMERICAN MIND

Here’s a book that was published six years ago this month, and which I read one year ago last month. Subtitle: “How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas are Setting Up a Generation for Failure” (Penguin Press, Sept. 2018, 338pp, including … Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Culture, Human Nature, Psychology | Comments Off on Lukianoff & Haidt, THE CODDLING OF THE AMERICAN MIND

Human Nature, Morality, Politics

I think the title here is the name for the broad category of my interests. They all blend together. They connect. For today: Would conservatives ever allow a revision of the US Constitution? No matter how dysfunctional it’s become, no … Continue reading

Posted in Human Nature, Morality, Politics | Comments Off on Human Nature, Morality, Politics

Examining The Techno-Humanist Manifesto

Here’s a piece that challenges my challenge to the assumption, especially in America, than more is better, that the economy must always expand, that the population should continue to increase indefinitely. My point has been that this literally cannot continue … Continue reading

Posted in Human Nature, Philosophy, progress | Comments Off on Examining The Techno-Humanist Manifesto

Brian Greene: UNTIL THE END OF TIME, post 5

Final post summarizing this Brian Greene book. Earlier: post 1, post 2, post 3, post 4. The final three chapters return to the cosmic scope of the book’s overall theme, exploring what we’ve concluded about the far future and the … Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Evolution, Human Nature, Meaning | Comments Off on Brian Greene: UNTIL THE END OF TIME, post 5

Steven Pinker: THE BLANK SLATE, post 10

Finally: the last topic chapter, about The Arts, and then the final chapter. Earlier posts about this book: post 1, post 2, post 3, post 4, post 5, post 6, post 7, post 8, post 9. – – – –Ch20, … Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Human Nature, Psychology, Steven Pinker | Comments Off on Steven Pinker: THE BLANK SLATE, post 10

Steven Pinker: THE BLANK SLATE, post 9

This time: Children. The old nature vs. nurture debate is too simplistic and binary. Given implications of our innate human nature, the (by now unsurprising) takeaway here is that parents have far less influence on their children than people have … Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Children, Culture, Human Nature, Psychology, Steven Pinker | Comments Off on Steven Pinker: THE BLANK SLATE, post 9

Today’s Post About How Politics Illustrates Human Nature, For Better or Worse, Mostly Worse

How Republicans cheer mass deportation; How JD Vance’s comments reflect conservative values that prioritize children over adults; Two pieces about how Republican values have been abandoned their traditional core values, in the service of a tyrant; Items about the deliberate … Continue reading

Posted in Human Nature, MInd, Politics | Comments Off on Today’s Post About How Politics Illustrates Human Nature, For Better or Worse, Mostly Worse

The Need for a Fantasy Past

There are two problems with MAGA. First, it’s regressive in that it’s trying to reimpose primitive tribal values onto a complex, global world. Second, more practically, it’s simply not possible to return to conditions of the past. Today’s items: Why … Continue reading

Posted in conservatives, Economics, Human Nature | Comments Off on The Need for a Fantasy Past