Monday, July 28, 2008
Decline and fall of mainline Protestantism
Including useful references to Ianneconne's thesis on why strict churches are stronger. By Joseph Bottum, from First Things, here.
Friday, May 2, 2008
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
A parenting book I might read
David Bjorkland, "Why Youth Is Not Wasted on the Young: Immaturity in Human Development." ($74.95---YIKES!!!) Bjorkland is an evolutionary developmental biologist, my missed calling in life.
Also from Bjorkland: "Origins of the Social Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and Child Development" ($60---what is with this series?) and "Origins of Human Nature: Evolutionary Developmental Psychology" ($28.80, this one I can afford.)
Also from Bjorkland: "Origins of the Social Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and Child Development" ($60---what is with this series?) and "Origins of Human Nature: Evolutionary Developmental Psychology" ($28.80, this one I can afford.)
Monday, April 14, 2008
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Monday, April 7, 2008
Work-life whatever
Feminists can turn any kind of tragedy into banal nattering on work-life balance. See here, Silda Spitzer; and I know there's another one about Britney Spears on the LAT somewhere, but couldn't track it down.
The latest study with the stats.
The latest study with the stats.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Books
"The Ten Year Nap", Meg Wolitzer. About rich Manhattan opt-out moms. I know I'm gonna hate it; I can't wait to read it.
"The Runner," by David Samuels. Con-kid fakes it into Princeton. Yum!
"The Big Test: the secret history of American meritocracy," Nicholas Lemann. Self-explanatory.
"The Runner," by David Samuels. Con-kid fakes it into Princeton. Yum!
"The Big Test: the secret history of American meritocracy," Nicholas Lemann. Self-explanatory.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
If I had a fence
Book looks useful: Neil Gilbert, "A Mother's Life." Review was only so-so; I could've done it better.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Prostitution round-up
Prostitution and the Pollution of Moral Ecology.
Do as He Said (Spitzer, not a victimless crime)
George Carlin: "Why should it be illegal to sell something that's perfectly legal to give away?" (re: egg donation, organ and kidney donation)
Spitzer's True Folly, pro-prostitution.
"Prada Prostitutes," and the poor misunderstood johns who buy them.
Do as He Said (Spitzer, not a victimless crime)
George Carlin: "Why should it be illegal to sell something that's perfectly legal to give away?" (re: egg donation, organ and kidney donation)
Spitzer's True Folly, pro-prostitution.
"Prada Prostitutes," and the poor misunderstood johns who buy them.
Michael Pollan, from "in defense of food":
Or another one:
And
And here's the link to the NYT editorial: http://www.michaelpollan.com/article.php?id=87
So this is what putting science, and scientism, in charge of the American diet has gotten us: anxiety and confusion about even the most basic questions of food and health, and a steadily diminishing ability to enjoy one of the great pleasures of life without guilt or neurosis.
But while nutritionism has its roots in a scientific approach to food, it's important to remember that it is not a science but an ideology, and that the food industry, journalism, and government bear just as much responsibility for its conquest of our minds and diets. All three helped to amplify the signal of nutritionism: jouranlism by uncritically reporting the latest dietary studies on its front pages; the food industry by marketing dubious foodlike products on the basis of tenuous health claims; and the government by taking it upon itself to issue official dietary advice based on sketchy science in the first place and corrupted by political pressure in the second. The novel food products the industry designed according to the latest nutritionist specs certainly helped push real food off our plates. But the industry's influence would not be nearly so great had the ideology of nutritionism not already undermined the influence of tradition and habit and common sense -- and the transmitter of all those values, mom -- on our eating.
Now, all this might be tolerable if eating by the light of nutritionism made us, if not happier, then at least healthier. That it has failed to do. Thirty years of nutritional advice have left us fatter, sicker, and more poorly nourished. Which is why we find ourselves in the predicament we do: in need of a whole new way to think about eating.
Or another one:
In the so-called Western diet, food has been replaced by nutrients, and common sense by confusion. The result is what Michael Pollan calls the American paradox: The more we worry about nutrition, the less healthy we seem to become.
But if real food -- the sort of food our great grandmothers would recognize as food -- stands in need of defense, from whom does it need defending? From the food industry on one side and nutritional science on the other. Both stand to gain much from widespread confusion about what to eat, a question that for most of human history people have been able to answer without expert help. Yet the professionalization of eating has failed to make Americans healthier. Thirty years of official nutritional advice has only made us sicker and fatter while ruining countless numbers of meals.
And
But the industrialization of our food that we call the Western diet is systematically destroying traditional food cultures. Before the modern food era -- and before nutritionism -- people relied for guidance about what to eat on their national or ethnic or regional cultures. We think of culture as a set of beliefs and practices to help mediate our relationship to other people, but of course culture (at least before the rise of science) has also played a critical role in helping mediate people's relationship to nature. Eating being a big part of that relationship, cultures have had a great deal to say about what and how and why and when and how much we should eat. Of course when it comes to food, culture is really just a fancy word for Mom, the figure who typically passes on the food ways of the group -- food ways that, although they were never ''designed'' to optimize health (we have many reasons to eat the way we do), would not have endured if they did not keep eaters alive and well.
The sheer novelty and glamour of the Western diet, with its 17,000 new food products introduced every year, and the marketing muscle used to sell these products, has overwhelmed the force of tradition and left us where we now find ourselves: relying on science and journalism and marketing to help us decide questions about what to eat. Nutritionism, which arose to help us better deal with the problems of the Western diet, has largely been co-opted by it, used by the industry to sell more food and to undermine the authority of traditional ways of eating. You would not have read this far into this article if your food culture were intact and healthy; you would simply eat the way your parents and grandparents and great-grandparents taught you to eat. The question is, Are we better off with these new authorities than we were with the traditional authorities they supplanted? The answer by now should be clear.
And here's the link to the NYT editorial: http://www.michaelpollan.com/article.php?id=87
Uneven penetration
Christina Hoff Sommers does her thing, re: women in the sciences, here.
Cf. the panel at Mormons in the Life Sciences.
Cf. the panel at Mormons in the Life Sciences.
Marriage on the margin, mistress on the side
Little piece on total and marginal value of intimate relationships, here.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Critical shopping
I might like this book, "The Meaning of Sunglasses." Think she cites to Barthes or Foucault?
Friday, February 22, 2008
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Demographic Winter
Here.
A skeptical take, from Reason magazine, here. (People aren't having kids because they don't like them.)
Question: does the global downturn in birthrates call the premises of evolutionary psychology into question? It's said that in some countries 1 in 3 women is childless---how to explain this? Is it that the instincts are to mate and to nurture, rather than to reproduce per se? Dunno.
A skeptical take, from Reason magazine, here. (People aren't having kids because they don't like them.)
Question: does the global downturn in birthrates call the premises of evolutionary psychology into question? It's said that in some countries 1 in 3 women is childless---how to explain this? Is it that the instincts are to mate and to nurture, rather than to reproduce per se? Dunno.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Bens Brother Stuttering Video Take 1
Here's a youtube video for the song---weird video, sorry, I couldn't find anything better. You can get an idea of the song, though.
Friday, February 15, 2008
Crazy in love
with Kay Hymowitz.
Interview with Front Page magazine.
Latest of the many great City Journal pieces, this one a companion to "New Girl Order" on the "child-man".
Her book, on marriage and class. And another one on post-modern parenting.
Love her, want her, want to be her.
Interview with Front Page magazine.
Latest of the many great City Journal pieces, this one a companion to "New Girl Order" on the "child-man".
Her book, on marriage and class. And another one on post-modern parenting.
Love her, want her, want to be her.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Biotech and Abortion
From Bill Saletan, this time in the NYT, here.
A bit disappointing, because I thought Saletan got it. He's right that biotech poses grave problems for anti-abortion, but it also poses grave--even disastrous--problems for pro-abortion.
A bit disappointing, because I thought Saletan got it. He's right that biotech poses grave problems for anti-abortion, but it also poses grave--even disastrous--problems for pro-abortion.
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Law and Literature
Reading list:
The Bible, Book of Exodus and later selected excerpts.
Herman Melville, selected stories, including "Bartleby"
Franz Kafka, "In the Penal Colony."
Snow – Orhan Pamuk
Neuromancer – William Gibson
Leo Tolstoy – Great Short Works, including Hadji Murad and Ivan Ilyich
Eugene Zamiatyin – We
Jose Saramago – Blindness
Jack Henry Abbott – In the Belly of the Beast
Fernando Verissimo – Borges and the Eternal Orangutans
J.M. Coetzee – The Life and Times of Michael K
Law Lit, by Thane Rosenbaum, selections
Mario Vargas Llosa – Who Killed Palomino Molero?
Francisco Goldman – The Art of Political Murder: Who Killed the Bishop?
Films: Battle Royale, others, including I hope some new releases.
The Bible, Book of Exodus and later selected excerpts.
Herman Melville, selected stories, including "Bartleby"
Franz Kafka, "In the Penal Colony."
Snow – Orhan Pamuk
Neuromancer – William Gibson
Leo Tolstoy – Great Short Works, including Hadji Murad and Ivan Ilyich
Eugene Zamiatyin – We
Jose Saramago – Blindness
Jack Henry Abbott – In the Belly of the Beast
Fernando Verissimo – Borges and the Eternal Orangutans
J.M. Coetzee – The Life and Times of Michael K
Law Lit, by Thane Rosenbaum, selections
Mario Vargas Llosa – Who Killed Palomino Molero?
Francisco Goldman – The Art of Political Murder: Who Killed the Bishop?
Films: Battle Royale, others, including I hope some new releases.
His-fault divorce
This piece, from Tim Harford on Slate, got me all riled up in an inarticulate, upset way----usually a sign that there's something wrong in my thinking, but I'm not clear where or how. I'm pretty sure that higher rates of divorce are, on balance an over the entire population, bad for women. How to rebut Harford other than bearing anecdote or testimony?
Unintended Consequences
This, from Dubner-Levitt in the NYT, on the unintended consequences of the ADA, Jewish law, and the Endangered Species Act. Via, and with excellent commentary, the always-interesting Marginal Revolution.
She so WRONG ON THE ISSUES
Argh, she makes me crazy. Stephanie Coontz on the future of marriage, here.
Amy Ophelia Winehouse
Reading "Reviving Ophelia" for book club; many observations I agree with, much of the analysis I reject. One of Pipher's methods is a sort of therapy-by-critical-thinking, teaching girls to critically deconstruct their culture with the idea that they will then recognize and reject the destructive elements. For all my disagreements with Pipher, this was one aspect of the book I accepted, more or less.
But consider Amy Winehouse, as an NYT article did this morning. She's often paired with Britney as a pair of lissome pop Ophelias, with their self-destructive attention-seeking. But Amy Winehouse is the anti-Britney, in many ways: her songs have always been, precisely, critical deconstructions of a female-destructive culture. And it doesn't seem to have protected her from its depredations in any way.
But consider Amy Winehouse, as an NYT article did this morning. She's often paired with Britney as a pair of lissome pop Ophelias, with their self-destructive attention-seeking. But Amy Winehouse is the anti-Britney, in many ways: her songs have always been, precisely, critical deconstructions of a female-destructive culture. And it doesn't seem to have protected her from its depredations in any way.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Jargon is good
because it conveys useful ideas for reducing complicated observations. Two good ones I learned today: specialization marriage (old version, gender roles) and hedonic marriage (present-day, custom-made for maximum self-realization). From this.
And here's the link to the original piece, "The New Economics of Marriage."
And here's the link to the original piece, "The New Economics of Marriage."
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