Thursday, December 5, 2013

Noise, Focus, and the Conscious Mind

THE ABSURD TIMES

 

 

 

 

THE ABSURD TIMES

 

 

 

 

 

 

 











    Schopenhauer wrote the following in the 19th Century.  When I showed it to several people more recently, the remark was “My God, what would he do today?”
    At that time, I was in Chicago, on the Northwest side, and directly below the flight path for landings at O’Hare field.  It was there that many Chicagoans learned to stop in mid-sentence, wait for several minutes, and then continue, without any repetition, the rest of the sentence.   Contemporary “music” is only acceptable to most when it is louder and has much lower and thumping bass than is possible with any live instrument.
    It is well known, today, in Cognitive Science, that the conscious brain can only focus on one thing at a time.  Those who think they can multi-task are merely shifting consciousness from task to task rapidly, not performing many tasks at once.  Even our politicians are beginning to recognize this to some extent when banning texting while driving.  As a matter of fact, such drivers are less reliable than those who are drunk, as some real professional drunks know enough to cover one eye when double vision occurs.  Some hormone stricken adolescents have no clue as to how impaired they are at such times.
    The final footnote seems to me misleading as Nietzsche, in 1888, or so, threw his arms around a horse that was being whipped harshly.  Idiots point to this as a sign of his impending insanity, but it could also be seen as a bold humanitarian gesture.


ON NOISE.







Kant has written a treatise on The Vital Powers; but I should like to write a dirge on them, since their lavish use in the form of knocking, hammering, and tumbling things about has made the whole of my life a daily torment. Certainly there are people, nay, very many, who will smile at this, because they are not sensitive to noise; it is precisely these people, however, who are not sensitive to argument, thought, poetry or art, in short, to any kind of intellectual impression: a fact to be assigned to the coarse quality and strong texture of their brain tissues. On the other hand, in the biographies or in other records of the personal utterances of almost all great writers, I find complaints of the pain that noise has occasioned to intellectual men. For example, in the case of Kant, Goethe, Lichtenberg, Jean Paul; and indeed when no mention is made of the matter it is merely because the context did not lead up to it. I should explain the subject we are treating in this way:
If a big diamond is cut up into pieces, it immediately loses its value as a whole; or if an army is scattered or divided into small bodies, it loses all its power; and in the same way a great intellect has no more power than an ordinary one as soon as it is interrupted, disturbed, distracted, or diverted; for its superiority entails that it concentrates all its strength on one point and object, just as a concave mirror concentrates all the rays of light thrown upon it. Noisy interruption prevents this concentration. This is why the most eminent intellects have always been strongly averse to any kind of disturbance, interruption and distraction, and above everything to that violent interruption which is caused by noise; other people do not take any particular notice of this sort of thing. The most intelligent of all the European nations has called “Never interrupt” the eleventh commandment.  But noise is the most impertinent of all interruptions, for it not only interrupts our own thoughts but disperses them. Where, however, there is nothing to interrupt, noise naturally will not be felt particularly.  Sometimes a trifling but incessant noise torments and disturbs me for a time, and before I become distinctly conscious of it I feel it merely as the effort of thinking becomes more difficult, just as I should feel a weight on my foot; then I realise what it is.
But to pass from genus to species, the truly infernal cracking of whips in the narrow resounding streets of a town must be denounced as the most unwarrantable and disgraceful of all noises. It deprives life of all peace and sensibility. Nothing gives me so clear a grasp of the stupidity and thoughtlessness of mankind as the tolerance of the cracking of whips. This sudden, sharp crack which paralyses the brain, destroys all meditation, and murders thought, must cause pain to any one who has anything like an idea in his head. Hence every crack must disturb a hundred people applying their minds to some activity, however trivial it may be; while it disjoints and renders painful the meditations of the thinker; just like the executioner’s axe when it severs the head from the body. No sound cuts so sharply into the brain as this cursed cracking of whips; one feels the prick of the whip-cord in one’s brain, which is affected in the same way as the mimosa pudica is by touch, and which lasts the same length of time. With all respect for the most holy doctrine of utility, I do not see why a fellow who is removing a load of sand or manure should obtain the privilege of killing in the bud the thoughts that are springing up in the heads of about ten thousand people successively. (He is only half-an-hour on the road.)
Hammering, the barking of dogs, and the screaming of children are abominable; but it is only the cracking of a whip that is the true murderer of thought. Its object is to destroy every favourable moment that one now and then may have for reflection. If there were no other means of urging on an animal than by making this most disgraceful of all noises, one would forgive its existence. But it is quite the contrary: this cursed cracking of whips is not only unnecessary but even useless.  The effect that it is intended to have on the horse mentally becomes quite blunted and ineffective; since the constant abuse of it has accustomed the horse to the crack, he does not quicken his pace for it.  This is especially noticeable in the unceasing crack of the whip which comes from an empty vehicle as it is being driven at its slowest rate to pick up a fare. The slightest touch with the whip would be more effective. Allowing, however, that it were absolutely necessary to remind the horse of the presence of the whip by continually cracking it, a crack that made one hundredth part of the noise would be sufficient.  It is well known that animals in regard to hearing and seeing notice the slightest indications, even indications that are scarcely perceptible to ourselves. Trained dogs and canary birds furnish astonishing examples of this. Accordingly, this cracking of whips must be regarded as something purely wanton; nay, as an impudent defiance, on the part of those who work with their hands, offered to those who work with their heads. That such infamy is endured in a town is a piece of barbarity and injustice, the more so as it could be easily removed by a police notice requiring every whip cord to have a knot at the end of it. It would do no harm to draw the proletariat’s attention to the classes above him who work with their heads; for he has unbounded fear of any kind of head work. A fellow who rides through the narrow streets of a populous town with unemployed post-horses or cart-horses, unceasingly cracking with all his strength a whip several yards long, instantly deserves to dismount and receive five really good blows with a stick. If all the philanthropists in the world, together with all the legislators, met in order to bring forward their reasons for the total abolition of corporal punishment, I would not be persuaded to the contrary.
But we can see often enough something that is even still worse. I mean a carter walking alone, and without any horses, through the streets incessantly cracking his whip. He has become so accustomed to the crack in consequence of its unwarrantable toleration. Since one looks after one’s body and all its needs in a most tender fashion, is the thinking mind to be the only thing that never experiences the slightest consideration or protection, to say nothing of respect? Carters, sack-bearers (porters), messengers, and such-like, are the beasts of burden of humanity; they should be treated absolutely with justice, fairness, forbearance and care, but they ought not to be allowed to thwart the higher exertions of the human race by wantonly making a noise. I should like to know how many great and splendid thoughts these whips have cracked out of the world. If I had any authority, I should soon produce in the heads of these carters an inseparable _nexus idearum_ between cracking a whip and receiving a whipping.
Let us hope that those nations with more intelligence and refined feelings will make a beginning, and then by force of example induce the Germans to do the same.[8] Meanwhile, hear what Thomas Hood says of them (_Up the Rhine)_: “_For a musical people they are the most noisy I ever met with_” That they are so is not due to their being more prone to making a noise than other people, but to their insensibility, which springs from obtuseness; they are not disturbed by it in reading or thinking, because they do not think; they only smoke, which is their substitute for thought. The general toleration of unnecessary noise, for instance, of the clashing of doors, which is so extremely ill-mannered and vulgar, is a direct proof of the dulness and poverty of thought that one meets with everywhere. In Germany it seems as though it were planned that no one should think for noise; take the inane drumming that goes on as an instance. Finally, as far as the literature treated of in this chapter is concerned, I have only one work to recommend, but it is an excellent one: I mean a poetical epistle in terzo rimo by the famous painter Bronzino, entitled “_De’ Romori: a Messer Luca Martini_” It describes fully and amusingly the torture to which one is put by the many kinds of noises of a small Italian town. It is written in tragicomic style. This epistle is to be found in _Opere burlesche del Berni, Aretino ed altri,_ vol. ii. p. 258, apparently published in Utrecht in 1771.
The nature of our intellect is such that ideas are said to spring by abstraction from observations, so that the latter are in existence before the former. If this is really what takes place, as is the case with a man who has merely his own experience as his teacher and book, he knows quite well which of his observations belong to and are represented by each of his ideas; he is perfectly acquainted with both, and accordingly he treats everything correctly that comes before his notice.  We might call this the natural mode of education.
On the other hand, an artificial education is having one’s head crammed full of ideas, derived from hearing others talk, from learning and reading, before one has anything like an extensive knowledge of the world as it is and as one sees it. The observations which produce all these ideas are said to come later on with experience; but until then these ideas are applied wrongly, and accordingly both things and men are judged wrongly, seen wrongly, and treated wrongly. And so it is that education perverts the mind; and this is why, after a long spell of learning and reading, we enter the world, in our youth, with views that are partly simple, partly perverted; consequently we comport ourselves with an air of anxiety at one time, at another of presumption. This is because our head is full of ideas which we are now trying to make use of, but almost always apply wrongly. This is the result of [Greek: hysteron proteron] (putting the cart before the horse), since we are directly opposing the natural development of our mind by obtaining ideas first and observations last; for teachers, instead of developing in a boy his faculties of discernment and judgment, and of thinking for himself, merely strive to stuff his head full of other people’s thoughts. Subsequently, all the opinions that have sprung from misapplied ideas have to be rectified by a lengthy experience; and it is seldom that they are completely rectified. This is why so few men of learning have such sound common sense as is quite common among the illiterate.

       *       *       *       *       *

From what has been said, the principal point in education is that _one’s knowledge of the world begins at the right end;_ and the attainment of which might be designated as the aim of all education. But, as has been pointed out, this depends principally on the observation of each thing preceding the idea one forms of it; further, that narrow ideas precede broader; so that the whole of one’s instruction is given in the order that the ideas themselves during formation must have followed. But directly this order is not strictly adhered to, imperfect and subsequently wrong ideas spring up; and finally there arises a perverted view of the world in keeping with the nature of the individual—a view such as almost every one holds for a long time, and most people to the end of their lives. If a man analyses his own character, he will find that it was not until he reached a very ripe age, and in some cases quite unexpectedly, that he was able to rightly and clearly understand many matters of a quite simple nature.
Previously, there had been an obscure point in his knowledge of the world which had arisen through his omitting something in his early education, whether he had been either artificially educated by men or just naturally by his own experience. Therefore one should try to find out the strictly natural course of knowledge, so that by keeping methodically to it children may become acquainted with the affairs of the world, without getting false ideas into their heads, which frequently cannot be driven out again. In carrying this out, one must next take care that children do not use words with which they connect no clear meaning. Even children have, as a rule, that unhappy tendency of being satisfied with words instead of wishing to understand things, and of learning words by heart, so that they may make use of them when they are in a difficulty. This tendency clings to them afterwards, so that the knowledge of many learned men becomes mere verbosity.
However, the principal thing must always be to let one’s observations precede one’s ideas, and not the reverse as is usually and unfortunately the case; which may be likened to a child coming into the world with its feet foremost, or a rhyme begun before thinking of its reason. While the child’s mind has made a very few observations one inculcates it with ideas and opinions, which are, strictly speaking, prejudices. His observations and experience are developed through this ready-made apparatus instead of his ideas being developed out of his own observations. In viewing the world one sees many things from many sides, consequently this is not such a short or quick way of learning as that which makes use of abstract ideas, and quickly comes to a decision about everything; therefore preconceived ideas will not be rectified until late, or it may be they are never rectified. For, when a man’s view contradicts his ideas, he will reject at the outset what it renders evident as one-sided, nay, he will deny it and shut his eyes to it, so that his preconceived ideas may remain unaffected. And so it happens that many men go through life full of oddities, caprices, fancies, and prejudices, until they finally become fixed ideas. He has never attempted to abstract fundamental ideas from his own observations and experience, because he has got everything ready-made from other people; and it is for this very reason that he and countless others are so insipid and shallow. Instead of such a system, the natural system of education should be employed in educating children. No idea should be impregnated but what has come through the medium of observations, or at any rate been verified by them. A child would have fewer ideas, but they would be well-grounded and correct. It would learn to measure things according to its own standard and not according to another’s. It would then never acquire a thousand whims and prejudices which must be eradicated by the greater part of subsequent experience and education.  Its mind would henceforth be accustomed to thoroughness and clearness; the child would rely on its own judgment, and be free from prejudices.  And, in general, children should not get to know life, in any aspect whatever, from the copy before they have learnt it from the original.  Instead, therefore, of hastening to place mere books in their hands, one should make them gradually acquainted with things and the circumstances of human life, and above everything one should take care to guide them to a clear grasp of reality, and to teach them to obtain their ideas directly from the real world, and to form them in keeping with it—but not to get them from elsewhere, as from books, fables, or what others have said—and then later to make use of such ready-made ideas in real life. The result will be that their heads are full of chimeras and that some will have a wrong comprehension of things, and others will fruitlessly endeavour to remodel the world according to those chimeras, and so get on to wrong paths both in theory and practice. For it is incredible how much harm is done by false notions which have been implanted early in life, only to develop later on into prejudices; the later education which we get from the world and real life must be employed in eradicating these early ideas. And this is why, as is related by Diogenes Laertius, Antisthenes gave the following answer:
[Greek: erotaetheis ti ton mathaematon anankaiotaton, ephae, “to kaka apomathein.”] (_Interrogatus quaenam esset disciplina maxime necessaria, Mala, inquit, dediscere_.)

       *       *       *       *       *

Children should be kept from all kinds of instruction that may make errors possible until their sixteenth year, that is to say, from philosophy, religion, and general views of every description; because it is the errors that are acquired in early days that remain, as a rule, ineradicable, and because the faculty of judgment is the last to arrive at maturity. They should only be interested in such things that make errors impossible, such as mathematics, in things which are not very dangerous, such as languages, natural science, history, and so forth; in general, the branches of knowledge which are to be taken up at any age must be within reach of the intellect at that age and perfectly comprehensible to it. Childhood and youth are the time for collecting data and getting to know specially and thoroughly individual and particular things. On the other hand, all judgment of a general nature must at that time be suspended, and final explanations left alone. One should leave the faculty of judgment alone, as it only comes with maturity and experience, and also take care that one does not anticipate it by inculcating prejudice, when it will be crippled for ever.
On the contrary, the memory is to be specially exercised, as it has its greatest strength and tenacity in youth; however, what has to be retained must be chosen with the most careful and scrupulous consideration. For as it is what we have learnt well in our youth that lasts, we should take the greatest possible advantage of this precious gift. If we picture to ourselves how deeply engraven on our memory the people are whom we knew during the first twelve years of our life, and how indelibly imprinted are also the events of that time, and most of the things that we then experienced, heard, or learnt, the idea of basing education on this susceptibility and tenacity of the youthful mind will seem natural; in that the mind receives its impressions according to a strict method and a regular system. But because the years of youth that are assigned to man are only few, and the capacity for remembering, in general, is always limited (and still more so the capacity for remembering of the individual), everything depends on the memory being filled with what is most essential and important in any department of knowledge, to the exclusion of everything else. This selection should be made by the most capable minds and masters in every branch of knowledge after the most mature consideration, and the result of it established. Such a selection must be based on a sifting of matters which are necessary and important for a man to know in general, and also for him to know in a particular profession or calling.  Knowledge of the first kind would have to be divided into graduated courses, like an encyclopædia, corresponding to the degree of general culture which each man has attained in his external circumstances; from a course restricted to what is necessary for primary instruction up to the matter contained in every branch of the philosophical faculty.  Knowledge of the second kind would, however, be reserved for him who had really mastered the selection in all its branches. The whole would give a canon specially devised for intellectual education, which naturally would require revision every ten years. By such an arrangement the youthful power of the memory would be put to the best advantage, and it would furnish the faculty of judgment with excellent material when it appeared later on.

       *       *       *       *       *

What is meant by maturity of knowledge is that state of perfection to which any one individual is able to bring it, when an exact correspondence has been effected between the whole of his abstract ideas and his own personal observations: whereby each of his ideas rests directly or indirectly on a basis of observation, which alone gives it any real value; and likewise he is able to place every observation that he makes under the right idea corresponding to it.
Maturity of knowledge is the work of experience alone, and consequently of time. For the knowledge we acquire from our own observation is, as a rule, distinct from that we get through abstract ideas; the former is acquired in the natural way, while the latter comes through good and bad instruction and what other people have told to us.  Consequently, in youth there is generally little harmony and connection between our ideas, which mere expressions have fixed, and our real knowledge, which has been acquired by observation. Later they both gradually approach and correct each other; but maturity of knowledge does not exist until they have become quite incorporated. This maturity is quite independent of that other kind of perfection, the standard of which may be high or low, I mean the perfection to which the capacities of an individual may be brought; it is not based on a correspondence between the abstract and intuitive knowledge, but on the degree of intensity of each.

The most necessary thing for the practical man is the attainment of an exact and thorough knowledge of what is really going on in the world; but it is also the most irksome, for a man may continue studying until old age without having learnt all that is to be learnt; while one can master the most important things in the sciences in one’s youth. In getting such a knowledge of the world, it is as a novice that the boy and youth have the first and most difficult lessons to learn; but frequently even the matured man has still much to learn. The study is of considerable difficulty in itself, but it is made doubly difficult by novels, which depict the ways of the world and of men who do not exist in real life. But these are accepted with the credulity of youth, and become incorporated with the mind; so that now, in the place of purely negative ignorance, a whole framework of wrong ideas, which are positively wrong, crops up, subsequently confusing the schooling of experience and representing the lesson it teaches in a false light. If the youth was previously in the dark, he will now be led astray by a will-o’-the-wisp: and with a girl this is still more frequently the case. They have been deluded into an absolutely false view of life by reading novels, and expectations have been raised that can never be fulfilled. This generally has the most harmful effect on their whole lives. Those men who had neither time nor opportunity to read novels in their youth, such as those who work with their hands, have decided advantage over them. Few of these novels are exempt from reproach—nay, whose effect is contrary to bad. Before all others, for instance, _Gil Blas_ and the other works of Le Sage (or rather their Spanish originals); further, The Vicar of Wakefield, and to some extent the novels of Walter Scott. Don Quixote may be regarded as a satirical presentation of the error in question.
FOOTNOTES:
[8] According to a notice from the Munich Society for the Protection of Animals, the superfluous whipping and cracking were strictly forbidden in Nuremberg in December 1858.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Parables Still True Internationally

> A FEW PARABLES.
>
>
> In a field of ripening corn I came to a place which had been trampled
> down by some ruthless foot; and as I glanced amongst the countless
> stalks, every one of them alike, standing there so erect and bearing
> the full weight of the ear, I saw a multitude of different flowers,
> red and blue and violet. How pretty they looked as they grew there so
> naturally with their little foliage! But, thought I, they are quite
> useless; they bear no fruit; they are mere weeds, suffered to remain
> only because there is no getting rid of them. And yet, but for these
> flowers, there would be nothing to charm the eye in that wilderness
> of stalks. They are emblematic of poetry and art, which, in civic
> life--so severe, but still useful and not without its fruit--play the
> same part as flowers in the corn.
>
> * * * * *
>
> There are some really beautifully landscapes in the world, but the
> human figures in them are poor, and you had not better look at them.
>
> * * * * *
>
> The fly should be used as the symbol of impertinence and audacity; for
> whilst all other animals shun man more than anything else, and run
> away even before he comes near them, the fly lights upon his very
> nose.
>
> * * * * *
>
> Two Chinamen traveling in Europe went to the theatre for the first
> time. One of them did nothing but study the machinery, and he
> succeeded in finding out how it was worked. The other tried to get at
> the meaning of the piece in spite of his ignorance of the language.
> Here you have the Astronomer and the Philosopher.
>
> * * * * *
>
> Wisdom which is only theoretical and never put into practice, is like
> a double rose; its color and perfume are delightful, but it withers
> away and leaves no seed.
>
> No rose without a thorn. Yes, but many a thorn without a rose.
>
> * * * * *
>
> A wide-spreading apple-tree stood in full bloom, and behind it a
> straight fir raised its dark and tapering head. _Look at the thousands
> of gay blossoms which cover me everywhere_, said the apple-tree; _what
> have you to show in comparison? Dark-green needles! That is true_,
> replied the fir, _but when winter comes, you will be bared of your
> glory; and I shall be as I am now_.
>
> * * * * *
>
> Once, as I was botanizing under an oak, I found amongst a number
> of other plants of similar height one that was dark in color, with
> tightly closed leaves and a stalk that was very straight and stiff.
> When I touched it, it said to me in firm tones: _Let me alone; I am
> not for your collection, like these plants to which Nature has given
> only a single year of life. I am a little oak_.
>
> So it is with a man whose influence is to last for hundreds of years.
> As a child, as a youth, often even as a full-grown man, nay, his whole
> life long, he goes about among his fellows, looking like them and
> seemingly as unimportant. But let him alone; he will not die. Time
> will come and bring those who know how to value him.
>
> * * * * *
>
> The man who goes up in a balloon does not feel as though he were
> ascending; he only sees the earth sinking deeper under him.
>
> There is a mystery which only those will understand who feel the truth
> of it.
>
> * * * * *
>
> Your estimation of a man's size will be affected by the distance at
> which you stand from him, but in two entirely opposite ways according
> as it is his physical or his mental stature that you are considering.
> The one will seem smaller, the farther off you move; the other,
> greater.
>
> * * * * *
>
> Nature covers all her works with a varnish of beauty, like the tender
> bloom that is breathed, as it were, on the surface of a peach or a
> plum. Painters and poets lay themselves out to take off this varnish,
> to store it up, and give it us to be enjoyed at our leisure. We drink
> deep of this beauty long before we enter upon life itself; and when
> afterwards we come to see the works of Nature for ourselves, the
> varnish is gone: the artists have used it up and we have enjoyed it in
> advance. Thus it is that the world so often appears harsh and devoid
> of charm, nay, actually repulsive. It were better to leave us to
> discover the varnish for ourselves. This would mean that we should
> not enjoy it all at once and in large quantities; we should have no
> finished pictures, no perfect poems; but we should look at all things
> in that genial and pleasing light in which even now a child of Nature
> sometimes sees them--some one who has not anticipated his aesthetic
> pleasures by the help of art, or taken the charms of life too early.
>
> * * * * *
>
> The Cathedral in Mayence is so shut in by the houses that are built
> round about it, that there is no one spot from which you can see it
> as a whole. This is symbolic of everything great or beautiful in the
> world. It ought to exist for its own sake alone, but before very long
> it is misused to serve alien ends. People come from all directions
> wanting to find in it support and maintenance for themselves; they
> stand in the way and spoil its effect. To be sure, there is nothing
> surprising in this, for in a world of need and imperfection everything
> is seized upon which can be used to satisfy want. Nothing is exempt
> from this service, no, not even those very things which arise only
> when need and want are for a moment lost sight of--the beautiful and
> the true, sought for their own sakes.
>
> This is especially illustrated and corroborated in the case of
> institutions--whether great or small, wealthy or poor, founded, no
> matter in what century or in what land, to maintain and advance human
> knowledge, and generally to afford help to those intellectual efforts
> which ennoble the race. Wherever these institutions may be, it is not
> long before people sneak up to them under the pretence of wishing to
> further those special ends, while they are really led on by the desire
> to secure the emoluments which have been left for their furtherance,
> and thus to satisfy certain coarse and brutal instincts of their own.
> Thus it is that we come to have so many charlatans in every branch
> of knowledge. The charlatan takes very different shapes according
> to circumstances; but at bottom he is a man who cares nothing about
> knowledge for its own sake, and only strives to gain the semblance
> of it that he may use it for his own personal ends, which are always
> selfish and material.
>
> * * * * *
>
> Every hero is a Samson. The strong man succumbs to the intrigues of
> the weak and the many; and if in the end he loses all patience he
> crushes both them and himself. Or he is like Gulliver at Lilliput,
> overwhelmed by an enormous number of little men.
>
> * * * * *
>
> A mother gave her children Aesop's fables to read, in the hope of
> educating and improving their minds; but they very soon brought the
> book back, and the eldest, wise beyond his years, delivered himself as
> follows: _This is no book for us; it's much too childish and stupid.
> You can't make us believe that foxes and wolves and ravens are able to
> talk; we've got beyond stories of that kind_!
>
> In these young hopefuls you have the enlightened Rationalists of the
> future.
>
> * * * * *
>
> A number of porcupines huddled together for warmth on a cold day in
> winter; but, as they began to prick one another with their quills,
> they were obliged to disperse. However the cold drove them together
> again, when just the same thing happened. At last, after many turns of
> huddling and dispersing, they discovered that they would be best off
> by remaining at a little distance from one another. In the same way
> the need of society drives the human porcupines together, only to be
> mutually repelled by the many prickly and disagreeable qualities of
> their nature. The moderate distance which they at last discover to be
> the only tolerable condition of intercourse, is the code of politeness
> and fine manners; and those who transgress it are roughly told--in
> the English phrase--_to keep their distance_. By this arrangement the
> mutual need of warmth is only very moderately satisfied; but then
> people do not get pricked. A man who has some heat in himself prefers
> to remain outside, where he will neither prick other people nor get
> pricked himself.
>

Our World Today -- As it has Always Been, Only Worse

THE ABSURD TIMES








  A FEW PARABLES.      In a field of ripening corn I came to a place which had been trampled  down by some ruthless foot; and as I glanced amongst the countless  stalks, every one of them alike, standing there so erect and bearing  the full weight of the ear, I saw a multitude of different flowers,  red and blue and violet. How pretty they looked as they grew there so  naturally with their little foliage! But, thought I, they are quite  useless; they bear no fruit; they are mere weeds, suffered to remain  only because there is no getting rid of them. And yet, but for these  flowers, there would be nothing to charm the eye in that wilderness  of stalks. They are emblematic of poetry and art, which, in civic  life--so severe, but still useful and not without its fruit--play the  same part as flowers in the corn.           *       *       *       *       *    There are some really beautifully landscapes in the world, but the  human figures in them are poor, and you had not better look at them.           *       *       *       *       *    The fly should be used as the symbol of impertinence and audacity; for  whilst all other animals shun man more than anything else, and run  away even before he comes near them, the fly lights upon his very  nose.           *       *       *       *       *    Two Chinamen traveling in Europe went to the theatre for the first  time. One of them did nothing but study the machinery, and he  succeeded in finding out how it was worked. The other tried to get at  the meaning of the piece in spite of his ignorance of the language.  Here you have the Astronomer and the Philosopher.           *       *       *       *       *    Wisdom which is only theoretical and never put into practice, is like  a double rose; its color and perfume are delightful, but it withers  away and leaves no seed.    No rose without a thorn. Yes, but many a thorn without a rose.           *       *       *       *       *    A wide-spreading apple-tree stood in full bloom, and behind it a  straight fir raised its dark and tapering head. _Look at the thousands  of gay blossoms which cover me everywhere_, said the apple-tree; _what  have you to show in comparison? Dark-green needles! That is true_,  replied the fir, _but when winter comes, you will be bared of your  glory; and I shall be as I am now_.           *       *       *       *       *    Once, as I was botanizing under an oak, I found amongst a number  of other plants of similar height one that was dark in color, with  tightly closed leaves and a stalk that was very straight and stiff.  When I touched it, it said to me in firm tones: _Let me alone; I am  not for your collection, like these plants to which Nature has given  only a single year of life. I am a little oak_.    So it is with a man whose influence is to last for hundreds of years.  As a child, as a youth, often even as a full-grown man, nay, his whole  life long, he goes about among his fellows, looking like them and  seemingly as unimportant. But let him alone; he will not die. Time  will come and bring those who know how to value him.           *       *       *       *       *    The man who goes up in a balloon does not feel as though he were  ascending; he only sees the earth sinking deeper under him.    There is a mystery which only those will understand who feel the truth  of it.           *       *       *       *       *    Your estimation of a man's size will be affected by the distance at  which you stand from him, but in two entirely opposite ways according  as it is his physical or his mental stature that you are considering.  The one will seem smaller, the farther off you move; the other,  greater.           *       *       *       *       *    Nature covers all her works with a varnish of beauty, like the tender  bloom that is breathed, as it were, on the surface of a peach or a  plum. Painters and poets lay themselves out to take off this varnish,  to store it up, and give it us to be enjoyed at our leisure. We drink  deep of this beauty long before we enter upon life itself; and when  afterwards we come to see the works of Nature for ourselves, the  varnish is gone: the artists have used it up and we have enjoyed it in  advance. Thus it is that the world so often appears harsh and devoid  of charm, nay, actually repulsive. It were better to leave us to  discover the varnish for ourselves. This would mean that we should  not enjoy it all at once and in large quantities; we should have no  finished pictures, no perfect poems; but we should look at all things  in that genial and pleasing light in which even now a child of Nature  sometimes sees them--some one who has not anticipated his aesthetic  pleasures by the help of art, or taken the charms of life too early.           *       *       *       *       *    The Cathedral in Mayence is so shut in by the houses that are built  round about it, that there is no one spot from which you can see it  as a whole. This is symbolic of everything great or beautiful in the  world. It ought to exist for its own sake alone, but before very long  it is misused to serve alien ends. People come from all directions  wanting to find in it support and maintenance for themselves; they  stand in the way and spoil its effect. To be sure, there is nothing  surprising in this, for in a world of need and imperfection everything  is seized upon which can be used to satisfy want. Nothing is exempt  from this service, no, not even those very things which arise only  when need and want are for a moment lost sight of--the beautiful and  the true, sought for their own sakes.    This is especially illustrated and corroborated in the case of  institutions--whether great or small, wealthy or poor, founded, no  matter in what century or in what land, to maintain and advance human  knowledge, and generally to afford help to those intellectual efforts  which ennoble the race. Wherever these institutions may be, it is not  long before people sneak up to them under the pretence of wishing to  further those special ends, while they are really led on by the desire  to secure the emoluments which have been left for their furtherance,  and thus to satisfy certain coarse and brutal instincts of their own.  Thus it is that we come to have so many charlatans in every branch  of knowledge. The charlatan takes very different shapes according  to circumstances; but at bottom he is a man who cares nothing about  knowledge for its own sake, and only strives to gain the semblance  of it that he may use it for his own personal ends, which are always  selfish and material.           *       *       *       *       *    Every hero is a Samson. The strong man succumbs to the intrigues of  the weak and the many; and if in the end he loses all patience he  crushes both them and himself. Or he is like Gulliver at Lilliput,  overwhelmed by an enormous number of little men.           *       *       *       *       *    A mother gave her children Aesop's fables to read, in the hope of  educating and improving their minds; but they very soon brought the  book back, and the eldest, wise beyond his years, delivered himself as  follows: _This is no book for us; it's much too childish and stupid.  You can't make us believe that foxes and wolves and ravens are able to  talk; we've got beyond stories of that kind_!    In these young hopefuls you have the enlightened Rationalists of the  future.           *       *       *       *       *    A number of porcupines huddled together for warmth on a cold day in  winter; but, as they began to prick one another with their quills,  they were obliged to disperse. However the cold drove them together  again, when just the same thing happened. At last, after many turns of  huddling and dispersing, they discovered that they would be best off  by remaining at a little distance from one another. In the same way  the need of society drives the human porcupines together, only to be  mutually repelled by the many prickly and disagreeable qualities of  their nature. The moderate distance which they at last discover to be  the only tolerable condition of intercourse, is the code of politeness  and fine manners; and those who transgress it are roughly told--in  the English phrase--_to keep their distance_. By this arrangement the  mutual need of warmth is only very moderately satisfied; but then  people do not get pricked. A man who has some heat in himself prefers  to remain outside, where he will neither prick other people nor get  pricked himself.    



Monday, September 23, 2013

COGNITIVE PARSIMONY AND “CONSPIRACY THEORIES”


COGNITIVE PARSIMONY AND "CONSPIRACY THEORIES"

For further information and documentation on the matter discussed below follow this link: http://statecrimesagainstdemocracy.blogspot.com/

Illustration: 911dude.com Pentagon right after the strike. Where is the airplane?

There is actually nothing new about the secrets revealed in the article published in 2010, but it seems to be the first opportunity to reevaluate all that has been said about the so-called "Conspiracies". The central idea is that people use their minds to find the answer that best comports with their own pre-conceived biases or beliefs rather than to evaluate the evidence anew and attempt to arrive at a more scientific or objective solution. Another word for this could be "lazy brain syndrome".

This has been known for ages, actually, but simply has just recently become explicitly stated in a peer-reviewed scientific journal published by an extremely reliable and respected publication. In the last cognitive revolution back in the 17th Century many of the suppositions of the previous millennium and more were simply abandoned and replaced. Descartes is best know for his statement Cogito Ergo Sum, which was the first thing he decided he could say after abandoning all his past beliefs and assumptions. We can dispense with the usual criticisms inherent, such as he assumes that thinking is a process, that an "I" is capable of it, and that such was going on, and realize that some things we need to take on faith. A similar fate befell Bertrand Russell in his attempt to "PROVE" that 2+2=4. He failed.

Still, it is common in people to dispense with this assumption altogether and simply believe what is easiest, a sort of Occam's Razor of everyday life. Thus, we find the extreme manifestation of this today in the religious fundamentalists' belief that dinosaurs are only 6,000 years old despite all evidence to the contrary. Certain interests in our government, especially during the past 90 years or so, have refined this tendency and taken advantage of it. Much of this activity is found in the term "Conspiracy Theory," a convenient way of dismissing and concealing activities of the government to further the interests of the intelligence industry.

It is compounded by the fact that often these agents welcome such accusations against it in order to elude detection in other areas. A classic example of this is Area 51, the place where Harry Truman allegedly concealed alien visitation from outer space, the UFOs, the "flying saucers," issue. In reality, a top-secret form of spy craft was apparently seen, denied by the government, and the media immediately seized on it as the UFO cover-up. The intelligence community could not believe its luck and did its best to exploit the "conspiracy". Since military technology is often a decade or so ahead of public awareness, this media frenzy was secretly welcomed. Denials of the UFOs of course fueled more speculation and, meanwhile, the military development was allowed to continue unscrutinized. They could not have planned it better.

We have a similar phenomenon today with the right-wing assertions that shiny black helicopters are roaming the skies as part of a United Nations takeover and world government run by the Trilateral Commission. These are actually drones collecting information for NSA, but it will take some time for this to be made public. Edward Snowden has already made enough of NSA's practices known that there is no need for further analysis here. Our government does not call them "conspiracy theorists" because they are simply wrong. If they were right, then they would be so labeled. For this reason, the term "State Crimes Against Democracy" (SCAD) has been coined to replace it.

It was only after the JFK assassination that the term "Conspiracy Theorist" was coined and flying saucers used as an example. It was a defensive move to label anyone who thought that the assassination of JFK was part of a governmental/intelligence agency and thus make the entire idea seem foolish and preposterous. The Warren Commission Report was published as an attempt to explain the entire thing but, to the government's chagrin, intelligent people began to actually read it, some of who became angry and others laughed, and the entire operation came into disrepute. It was far easier to call anyone who questioned it a "Conspiracy Theorist" than to actually defend the report, far easier.

So let us start over and see what we actually do know. It is clear that the U.S. Government (other governments as well, but we will remain focused here) uses and sees no fault with assassination as an instrument in foreign policy, albeit as a last resort. One clear example is Mossadegh, the socialist leader of Iran, in 1953. We replaced him with the Shah, a brutal dictator with obvious long-term results. He was eventually overthrown and replaced with an extremist Islamic government. The government actually worked in the interests of the people for awhile until some of its more secular and logical leaders fled the country or were executed and the focus turned to making sure that men and women did not swim at the same time and so on. The one aspect of the country and its government that remains even today is that it will not obey us and is determined not to be undermined by us. This is the legacy of Dulles.

Other examples include Salvador Alliende in 1973, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia after the Oil Embargo, Omar Torrios in Panama, Patrice Lumumba in Africa, activists in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Yemen (and their children), and well-known are the many failed attempts on Fidel Castro. The deaths by cancer in Central and South America also seem suspicious, including Venezuela and Brazil.

Now, where and when have we seen likely SCADs? As mentioned, the assassination of JFK is the one that comes to mind most easily. Now, how could this be foreign policy related? At the time he was assassinated, 20,000 American Soldiers, all volunteers, were stationed in Viet Nam. In addition, the U.S. sprayed deathly chemical over the entire country in 1962. In Cuba, we had the Bay of Pigs incident, among others. Kennedy also had a need to prove his manhood against Castro. Kennedy grew up during Korea in a wealthy family with an urge to become a politician. Castro grew up poor in Cuba with pitching baseball for the New York Yankees as his goal. Pitching can take a great deal more cognitive analysis and inventiveness than American politics.

A bit more historical fact is needed here. Castro took over Cuba from out puppet, Batista, well-portrayed in the Godfather movie movies. When he took over, he nationalized all the companies (today it would be "corporations"). He did offer to reimburse the companies for their value, but they refused, saying they were worth much more than he offered. He then agreed to pay whatever their valuation was, provided they pay back taxes based on that valuation. They refused saying that taxation is wrong, or a betrayal, or some other evil thing. He then simply kept them without reimbursement. He seemed to have no choice. This was during the Eisenhower/Nixon administration and, again, Dulles was involved. Viet-Nam began at least under the Eisenhower/Nixon administration, but Truman may have had a role in taking over the colonial role from France. Certainly Truman's behavior towards Stalin at Yalta contributed to the years of the so-called "cold-war." At any rate, all of this was inherited by Kennedy.

Now, the Bay of Pigs fiasco was a CIA operation planned during Eisenhower/Nixon and when Kennedy finally realized how the CIA was running things counter to his own objectives, he, in his brother's terms, "cleaned house" and the entire Dulles era was over. His brother's leashing of J. Edgar Hoover did not endear him to the FBI, whose role is supposed to be entirely internal, but by that time it is possible that organized crime found out about Hoover's sexual fetishes. At any rate, Hoover concentrated increasingly on "Communists" with the country rather than crime figures. Of course, this meant a concentration on those who sympathized with Castro as well as, eventually, those who opposed Vietnam policies.

It is somewhat obscure, even today, whether Kennedy intended to withdraw from Vietnam in his second term. It is also obscure whether the Cuban missile crisis taught him anything, as it was only the decision of one Soviet captain not to launch nuclear missiles, against orders, that kept hostilities from breaking out. What is clear is what happened after his assassination and the election of LBJ. In short, who had the most to gain from his assassination?

After his assassination, LBJ had himself sworn in immediately, drafter Earl Warren from the Supreme Court to make things seem quite non-conspiratorial. The fact that the only accused only had a chance to say "I'm only a patsy" before he was killed, his killer died after his request to be transferred out of state was refused, 22 key witnesses died within two years, and so on has been well-documented. Mark Lane and others have done extensive work on this and all agree that there WAS a conspiracy. Beyond that, there is disagreement as to who was behind it.

Well, right after the next election, LBJ had over 500,000 troops in Vietnam. Nothing changed in respect to Castro. For each soldier in Vietnam, 20 support staff were required. The military budget skyrocketed. Any party who supplied munitions and other wares to the military profited immensely as did the intelligence community. This war continued until Gerald Ford was in office. LBJ was great at arm twisting as he managed to force Israel's support for Vietnam in return for arms during the 67 war, as atonement for attacking the U.S.S. Enterprise, and also induced Arthur Goldberg, an excellent Supreme Court Justice, to quit the lifetime appointment in order to support Israel at the United Nations. The only thing of value Goldberg did after that idiotic move was to liberate baseball for the reserve clause with Curt Flood as his client.

MLK was shadowed for years by Hoover as a "Communist Agent," but anything King did was sanctioned until he made one mistake. He made a speech against the war – he was assassinated within hours or days.

RFK was careful not to publicly oppose the War, but it was well known that such was his intention. When it became clear that he would be able to have a credible chance of being nominated for the Presidency and would have defeated Nixon (it was well known that he was also his brother's campaign manager), he had to go.

All of Malcolm X's activities were allowed until he went to Mecca and returned, attracted a large following, and started talking about international matters. He had to go. In fact, any African American leader with a large following who dares speak ill of U.S. foreign policy had to go. Is it now clear why Obama seems so pro-military?

Under Nixon and Regan, military spending increased exponentially.

So, what other conspiracies are in contention? The latest one is the 9/11 bombing of the World Trade Center. Clearly, Bush wanted to invade Iraq and kill Sadam, and much was done in the name of protecting us from a repeat of 9/11. Clearly, Bib Laden was first recruited and trained by the U.S. and had offices in New York City as he prepared to lead opposition to the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. In addition, quite a bit of chemicals, the type only used in intentional implosions of building were found at the site. Clearly, there is no reason to doubt that it was welcome by the Bush administration, Haliburton, and Blackwater. There is much room for skepticism and certainly there is no reason to rule it out as a conspiracy on the grounds that George W. Bush was too moral to sanction such an undertaking.

Additional questions arise as well: why is there no publicity or controversy over the crash into the Pentagon? Surely, that should be a matter of interest. We hear little about the destruction of building number seven which was not hit. We do know that there had been considerable communication between government officials (nameless) and Al-Qaeda officials (nameless). What did they talk about? We do know very well that no individual had more personal animosity for Saddam Hussein that did Bin Laden.

The biggest and most plausible objection to all of these assassinations is that it would be impossible for a large governmental agency to keep all participants quiet. However, it is also quite clear that they were well orchestrated. Everyone involved only knew so much, and most did not even know that their actions were involved in these assassinations. Those who knew too much and could not be trusted to remain silent are dead.

The problem today in uncovering any of these State Crimes Against Democracy is that it is much easier for everyone simply to dismiss the accusations as "nutty conspiracy theories like area 51," and go on their ways. American people are mentally lazy anyhow, and the term "conspiracy theory" makes it easy for them not to be bothered with making the effort. Additionally, our school system indoctrinates remorselessly towards patriotism and thus predisposes them to reinforce their notions rather than challenge them.

--
Posted By Blogger to The Absurd Times at 9/16/2013 04:35:00 PM

Monday, September 2, 2013

Resistance to Cognitive Re-evaluation

This was originally published in 2010 so far as I can determine.

It is fully in accordance with what we have known for centuries:  people are not open to re-evaluation of their beliefs, especially if they were inculcated (such as in religion) or obtained at an early age (such as patriotic jingoism in Elementary Schools).

However, it also helps to explain how some Orwellian techniques are at work as well.

It is not at all clear that there is an alternative reality to the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center as Bin Laden was knowledgeable about Engineering and building and knew the implosive effects of an oxygen-draining explosion within a closed area such as the Buildings were and so indicated at the time, but building seven remains unexplained.

Of more importance are some of the other conspiracies and the obvious decline of government since the JFK assassination.  At any rate, here is the information:





Friday, July 23, 2010

State Crimes Against Democracy

State Crimes Against Democracy 

by Prof. Peter Phillips and Prof. Mickey Huff

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=17922


Global Research, March 4, 2010 

Project Censored - 2010-03-03 


New research in the journal American Behavioral Scientist (Sage publications, February 2010) addresses the concept of “State Crimes Against Democracy” (SCAD). Professor Lance deHaven-Smith from Florida State University writes that SCADs involve highlevel government officials, often in combination with private interests, that engage in covert activities for political advantages and power. Proven SCADs since World War II include McCarthyism (fabrication of evidence of a communist infiltration), Gulf of Tonkin Resolution (President Johnson and Robert McNamara falsely claimed North Vietnam attacked a US ship), burglary of the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist in effort to discredit Ellsberg, the Watergate break-in, Iran-Contra, Florida’s 2000 Election (felon disenfranchisement program), and fixed intelligence on WMDs to justify the Iraq War.(1)


Other suspected SCADs include the assassination of Lee Harvey Oswald, the shooting of George Wallace, the October Surprise near the end of the Carter presidency, military grade anthrax mailed to Senators Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy, Martin Luther King’s assassination, and the collapse of World Trade Center Building 7 on September 11, 2001. The proven SCADs have a long trail of congressional hearings, public records, and academic research establishing the truth of the activities. The suspected SCADs listed above have substantial evidence of covert actions with countervailing deniability that tend to leave the facts in dispute.(2)



The term “conspiracy theory” is often used to denigrate and discredit inquiry into the veracity of suspected SCADs. Labeling SCAD research as “conspiracy theory” is an effective method of preventing ongoing investigations from being reported in the corporate media and keep them outside of broader public scrutiny. Psychologist Laurie Manwell, University of Guelph, addresses the psychological advantage that SCAD actors hold in the public sphere. Manwell, writing in American Behavioral Scientist (Sage 2010) states, “research shows that people are far less willing to examine information that disputes, rather than confirms, their beliefs . . . pre-existing beliefs can interfere with SCADs inquiry, especially in regards to September 11, 2001.”(3)


Professor Steven Hoffman, visiting scholar at the University of Buffalo, recently acknowledged this phenomenon in a study “There Must Be a Reason: Osama, Saddam and Inferred Justification.” Hoffman concluded, “Our data shows substantial support for a cognitive theory known as ‘motivated reasoning,’ which suggests that rather than search rationally for information that either confirms or disconfirms a particular belief, people actually seek out information that confirms what they already believe. In fact, for the most part people completely ignore contrary information.” (4)


Sometimes even new academic research goes largely unreported when the work contradicts prevailing understandings of recent historical events. A specific case of unreported academic research is the peer reviewed journal article from Open Chemical Physics Journal (Volume 2, 2009), entitled “Active Thermitic Material Discovered in Dust for the 9/11 World Trade Center Catastrophe.” In the abstract the authors write, “We have discovered distinctive red/gray chips in all the samples. These red/gray chips show marked similarities in all four samples. The properties of these chips were analyzed using optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray energy dispersive spectroscopy (XEDS), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The red portion of these chips is found to be an unreacted thermitic material and highly energetic.” Thermite is a pyrotechnic composition of a metal powder and a metal oxide which produces an aluminothermic reaction known as a thermite reaction and is used in controlled demolitions of buildings.(5)


National Medal of Science recipient (1999) Professor Lynn Margulis from the Department of Geosciences at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst is one of many academics who supports further open investigative research in the collapse of the World Trade Center towers. Margulis recently wrote in Rock Creek Free Press, “all three buildings were destroyed by carefully planned, orchestrated and executed controlled demolition.”6 Richard Gage, AIA, architect and founder of the non-profit Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth, Inc. (AE911Truth), announced a decisive milestone February 19, 2010 at a press conference in San Francisco, CA. More than 1,000 architects and engineers worldwide now support the call for a new investigation into the destruction of the Twin Towers and Building 7 at the World Trade Center complex on September 11, 2001.(7)



Credible scientific evidence brings into question the possibility that some aspects of the events of 9/11 involved State Crimes Against Democracy. Psychologically this is a very hard concept for Americans to even consider. However, ignoring the issue in the context of multiple proven SCADs since World War II seems far more dangerous for democracy than the consequences of future scientific inquiry and transparent, fact-based investigative reporting. Anything short of complete, open discourse based on all the evidence about these critical issues in our society relating to the possible continuation of SCADs is simply a matter of censorship.(8)




Peter Phillips is professor of sociology at Sonoma State University, President of Media Freedom Foundation/Project Censored, former director of Project Censored, and coeditor of Censored 2010.



Mickey Huff is associate professor of history at Diablo Valley College, Director of Project Censored/Media Freedom Foundation, and co-editor of Censored 2010.



Notes



1 Lance deHaven-Smith, “Beyond Conspiracy Theory: Patterns of High Crime in American Government,” American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 53, No. 6, (February, 2010): pp. 795-825. For more studies on SCADs and related issues see all articles for American Behavioral Scientist, Sage publications, Vol. 53, No. 6, (February, 2010), online at http://abs.sagepub.com/content/vol53/issue6/.



For more background reading on this subject with specifics on the controversial cases mentioned in this paragraph, see the following scholarly works: Robert Abele, The Anatomy of a Deception: A Reconstruction and Analysis of the Decision to Invade Iraq (New York: University Press of America, 2010); Bob Coen and Eric Nadler, Dead Silence: Fear and Terror on the Anthrax Trail (Berkeley, CA: Counterpoint, 2009); Daniel Ellsberg, Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers (New York: Viking Adult, 2002); Steve Freeman and Joel Bleifuss, Was the 2004 Election Stolen? Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2006); Robert Griffith, The Politics of Fear: Joseph R. McCarthy and the Senate. (Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987); David Ray Griffin, The Mysterious Collapse of World Trade Center 7: Why the Final Official Report About 9/11 Is Unscientific and False (New York: Olive Branch press, 2008); Mark Crispin Miller, Loser Take All: Election Fraud and the Subversion of Democracy, 2000-2008 (New York: Ig Publishing, 2008); Kenneth O'Reilly, Hoover and the Un-Americans: The FBI, HUAC, and the Red Menace (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1983); Robert Parry, Trick or Treason: The October Surprise Mystery (New York: Sheridan Square Press, 1993); William Pepper, An Act of State: The Execution of Marin Luther King (Updated) (New York: Verso, 2008); Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber, Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq (New York: Tarcher and Penguin, 2003); selected works of Peter Dale Scott, including Deep Politics and the Death of JFK (1993, 1996), Drugs Oil and War (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, March 2003), The Road to 9/11 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007), and The War Conspiracy: JFK, 9/11, and the Deep Politics of War (Ipswich, MA: Mary Ferrell Foundation Press, 2008); Norman Solomon, War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning us to Death (New Jersey: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2005); Lawrence Walsh, Firewall: The Iran-Contra Conspiracy and Cover-up (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1997); Gary Webb, Dark Alliance: The CIA, The Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2nd Edition, 2003);



2 Ibid.



3 American Behavioral Scientist, Sage publications, February, 2010, Vol. 53, No. 6, online at http://abs.sagepub.com/content/vol53/issue6/. Specifically, see Laurie A. Manwell, “In Denial of Democracy: Social Psychological Implications for Public Discourse on State Crimes Against Democracy Post-9/11,” American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 53, No. 6, (February, 2010): pp. 848-884.



4 “How We Support Our False Beliefs,” Science Daily (Aug. 23, 2009) online at http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/08/090821135020.htm. For the full study see Steven Hoffman, Ph.D., et al, "There Must Be a Reason: Osama, Saddam and Inferred Justification," Sociological Inquiry, Volume 79 Issue 2, (2009): pp. 142-162.



5 Niels H. Harrit, Jeffrey Farrer, Steven E. Jones, Kevin R. Ryan, Frank M. Legge, Daniel Farnsworth, Gregg Roberts, James R. Gourley, Bradley R. Larsen, "Active Thermitic Material Discovered in Dust from the 9/11 World Trade Center Catastrophe," Open Chemical Physics Journal, Vol. 2 (April 3, 2009): 7-31, online at http://www.bentham.org/open/tocpj/openaccess2.htm.



6 Lynn Margulis, “Two Hit, Three Down, the Biggest Lie,” Rock Creek Press, February 2010, Vol. 4, No. 2, p. 6, and online at http://rockcreekfreepress.tumblr.com/post/353434420/two-hit-three-down-the-biggest-lie



7 Richard Gage, AIA, Architects and Engineers for 911 Truth, Press Conference, February 19th, 2010, SF, CA, online at http://www.ae911truth.org/info/160. See the Conference announcement video online at http://www.youtube.com/ae911truth#p/c/891B0945A34D98F7/0/R35O_QQP8Vw




8 For more on issues of media censorship see Peter Phillips and Mickey Huff, eds., Censored 2010 (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2009).




Project Censored: http://www.projectcensored.org/



Daily News at:  http://mediafreedom.pnn.com/5174-independent-news-sources






Validated News & Research at: http://www.mediafreedominternational.org/



Daily Censored Blog at: http://dailycensored.com/


Blog: http://mythinfo.blogspot.com/ 



Peter Phillips is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Peter Phillips 



Global Research Articles by Mickey Huff

 State Crimes Against Democracy   No comments: 

Pretending Not to See or Hear, Refusing to Signify: The Farce and Tragedy of Geocentric Public Affairs Scholarship

Pretending Not to See or Hear, Refusing to Signify: The Farce and Tragedy of Geocentric Public Affairs Scholarship

Matthew T. Witt
University of La Verne, CA, USA, wittm@ulv.edu

Abstract
This article opens with an inventory of how popular culture passion plays are homologous to the stampeding disenfranchisement everywhere of working classes and the emasculation of professional codes of ethics under siege by neoliberal initiatives and gambits.The article then examines a recent example of contemporary,“deconstructive” scholarly analysis and inventory of presidential “Orwellian doublespeak.” The preoccupation among contemporary critical scholarship with “discourse analysis” and language gambits is criticized for displacing interrogation of real-event anomalies, as with the porous account given by the 9/11 Commission for what happened that fateful day. The article concludes by explaining how critical scholarship consistently falls short of unmasking Master Signifiers.

American Behavioral Scientist
February 2010; 53(6)

http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/6/921.abstract

 State Crimes Against Democracy   No comments: 

The USA PATRIOT Acts (et al.): Convergent Legislation and Oligarchic Isomorphism in the "Politics of Fear" and State Crime(s) Against Democracy (SCADs

The USA PATRIOT Acts (et al.): Convergent Legislation and Oligarchic Isomorphism in the “Politics of Fear” and State Crime(s) Against Democracy (SCADs)

Kym Thorne
University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia, kjthorne@senet.com.au

Alexander Kouzmin
University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia, Southern Cross University, Lismore, Australia, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK

Abstract

The irrelevance of habeas corpus and the abolition of “double jeopardy,” secret and protracted outsourcing of detention and torture, and increasing geographic prevalence of surveillance technologies across Anglo-American “democracies” have many citizens concerned about the rapidly convergent, authoritarian behavior of political oligarchs and the actual destruction of sovereignty and democratic values under the onslaught of antiterrorism hubris, propaganda, and fear. This article examines synchronic legislative isomorphism in responses to 9/11 in the United States, the United Kingdom and European Union, and Australia in terms of enacted terrorism legislation and, also, diachronic, oligarchic isomorphism in the manufacture of fear within a convergent world by comparing the “Politics of Fear” being practiced today to Stalinist—Russian and McCarthyist—U.S. abuse of “fear.” The immediate future of Anglo-American democratic hubris, threats to civil society, and oligarchic threats to democratic praxis are canvassed. This article also raises the question as to whether The USA PATRIOT Acts of 2001/2006, sanctioned by the U.S. Congress, are examples, themselves, of state crimes against democracy. In the very least, any democratically inclined White House occupant in 2009 would need to commit to repealing these repressive, and counterproductive, acts.

American Behavioral Scientist
February 2010; 53(6)

http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/6/885.abstract

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In Denial of Democracy: Social Psychological Implications for Public Discourse on State Crimes Against Democracy Post-9/11

In Denial of Democracy: Social Psychological Implications for Public Discourse on State Crimes Against Democracy Post-9/11

Laurie A. Manwell

University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada, lmanwell@uoguelph.ca
Abstract
Protecting democracy requires that the general public be educated on how people can be manipulated by government and media into forfeiting their civil liberties and duties. This article reviews research on cognitive constructs that can prevent people from processing information that challenges preexisting assumptions about government, dissent, and public discourse in democratic societies. Terror management theory and system justification theory are used to explain how preexisting beliefs can interfere with people’s examination of evidence for state crimes against democracy (SCADs), specifically in relation to the events of September 11, 2001, and the war on terror in Afghanistan and Iraq. Reform strategies are proposed to motivate citizens toward increased social responsibility in a post-9/11 culture of propagandized fear, imperialism, and war.

American Behavioral Scientist
February 2010; 53(6)

http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/6/848.abstract

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Negative Information Action: Danger for Democracy

Negative Information Action: Danger for Democracy

Christopher L. Hinson

Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA,chris.l.hinson@gmail.com
Abstract
This article explores evidence of, and provides insight into, secrecy-related information actions that are sometimes used to circumvent established government policy and law. These information actions may also be used to cover up such circumventions after the fact. To better understand secrecy as a negative information action and its impact on democracy, secrecy-related information actions are described according to methods, information technologies, and knowledge support. Negative information actions are willful and deliberate acts designed to keep government information from those in government and the public entitled to it. Negative information actions subvert the rule of law and the constitutional checks and balances. Negative information actions used by government officials to violate policies and laws during the IranContra Affair are identified, analyzed, and categorized by type. The relative impact of negative information actions on enlightened citizen understanding is demonstrated using a Negative Information Action Model by assigning a location according to type on a continuum of enlightened citizen understanding. Findings are compared with democratic theory and conspiracy doctrine.

American Behavioral Scientist
February 2010; 53(6)

http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/6/826.abstract

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Beyond Conspiracy Theory: Patterns of High Crime in American Government

Beyond Conspiracy Theory: Patterns of High Crime in American Government

Lance deHaven-Smith

Florida State University, Tallahassee, ldehavensmith@fsu.edu

Abstract
This article explores the conceptual, methodological, and practical implications of research on state crimes against democracy (SCADs). In contrast to conspiracy theories, which speculate about each suspicious event in isolation, the SCAD construct delineates a general category of criminality and calls for crimes that fit this category to be examined comparatively. Using this approach, an analysis of post—World War II SCADs and suspected SCADs highlights a number of commonalities in SCAD targets, timing, and policy consequences. SCADs often appear where presidential politics and foreign policy intersect. SCADs differ from earlier forms of political corruption in that they frequently involve political, military, and/or economic elites at the very highest levels of the social and political order.The article concludes by suggesting statutory and constitutional reforms to improve SCAD prevention and detection.

American Behavioral Scientist
February 2010: 53(6)

http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/6/795.abstract

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Sense Making Under "Holographic" Conditions: Framing SCAD Research

Sense Making Under “Holographic” Conditions: Framing SCAD Research

Matthew T. Witt
University of La Verne, CA, USA, wittm{at}ulv.edu

Alexander Kouzmin
Southern Cross University, Lismore, New South Wales (NSW), Australia; University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia (SA), Australia, akouzmin{at}scu.edu.au

Abstract

The ellipses of due diligence riddling the official account of the 9/11 incidents continue being ignored by scholars of policy and public administration. This article introduces intellectual context for examining the policy heuristic “State Crimes Against Democracy” (SCAD) (deHaven-Smith, 2006) and its usefulness for better understanding patterns of state criminality of which no extant policy analytic model gives adequate account.This article then introduces papers included in this symposium examining the chimerical presence and perfidious legacy of state criminality against democracy.

American Behavioral Scientist
February 2010; 53(6)

http://abs.sagepub.com/content/53/6/783.abstract

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