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Tag: ethics

Book Review: Ed Finn and Kathryn Cramer’s “Hieroglyph”

Hieroglyph: Stories & Visions for a Better Future is an outgrowth of Arizona State University’s Center for Science and the Imagination. Since the project was inspired by a Neal Stephenson essay (one of my favorite authors), I figured it would be an enlightening and worthwhile collection of speculative fiction. And while that turned out to […]

Book Review: Edward O. Wilson’s “The Meaning of Human Existence”

Throughout his distinguished career, Edward O. Wilson has brought a vast wealth of interdisciplinary knowledge to bear on some of humanity’s most complex and pressing questions.  The Meaning of Human Existence is his most philosophical work, and contains many worthwhile insights about humanity’s origins and possible futures.  Wilson’s method, best characterized as a kind of […]

Book Review: Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway’s “The Collapse of Western Civilization”

This is definitely the best resource I’ve encountered for a crash course in the root causes of climate change and the potential negative outcomes if the global community continues to ignore the problem.  Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway have condensed years of research into a tiny book––all the better to penetrate the noosphere of a […]

Book Review: Naomi Klein’s “This Changes Everything”

Every human struggle needs an image of a better future for supporters to rally around, but it’s never enough to simply know where we want to end up.  The accomplishment of profound societal change, if sought peacefully, also demands a set of linguistic and psychological frames revolutionaries can use to inform, impassion, and ultimately persuade […]

Book Review: David Mitchell’s “Cloud Atlas”

After several years of observing the barrage of praise that’s been heaped upon Cloud Atlas by friends and critics, I finally sat down to read it, convinced it couldn’t possibly live up to the hype.  One hundred pages in, I’d already dismissed David Mitchell’s well-loved book as nothing more than a garish, sprawling, unfocused coterie […]

Book Review: Bernard Williams’s “Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline”

I almost quit reading this book after the first few chapters.  Bernard Williams’ opaque arguments about metaphysics and epistemology––hardly my favorite philosophy subjects––are enervating to the point of somnolence.  I’ve never enjoyed or been particularly enlightened by analytical philosophy, which typically deploys the tropes of formal logic to imbue philosophical arguments with an air of […]

Book Review: Iain M. Banks’ “Look to Windward”

The Culture universe is an undeniably brilliant creation, containing more than one writer’s fair share of imaginative inventions and astonishing moments.  I have been impressed with every Culture novel I’ve read, but often complete them wondering what Banks could have done to warm my heart the same way he enchants my brain.  After this refreshing […]

Book Review: John Dewey’s “Reconstruction in Philosophy”

John Dewey is my intellectual hero, so taking up one of his works is always a distinct pleasure for me.  There is no other thinker at this point in my life who can challenge and delight me the way Dewey does; his philosophy is deeply contemplative but also distinctly practical, and his insights reflect the […]

Book Review: Jeremy Rifkin’s “The Zero Marginal Cost Society”

A hefty portion of humanity’s uniqueness can be traced back to future projection.  We constantly weave narratives that stretch moments and months and millennia ahead, even as we fumble to figure out what to do with today, each day.  Everyone needs some kind of intellectual framework to navigate this tricky tension, which is where futurists […]

Book Review: Robert Wright’s “Nonzero”

This book came to my attention by way of David Brin, who claims it as mandatory reading for anyone interested in saving the world.  I’m not sure if I’d go that far, but the assertion that positive sum games play a critical role in biological and cultural evolution is definitely significant, especially insofar as it […]