Thanks to Younger Daughter (and her husband) for indulging my Father’s Day request to recreate those fondly-recalled wiffle ball games of her childhood. We set up bases out in Dogland, but let the funny-looking quadruped kids run them. What a blast!
And look for me on Bluesky @osopher.bsky.social & @wjsociety.bsky.social... president@wjsociety.org... Substack https://philoliver.substack.com (Up@dawn@Substack)... and Mastodon @osopher@c.im... (Done with X and Meta)... Continuing reflections caught at daybreak, in a WJ-at-Chocorua ("doors opening outward") state of mind...
Today is Juneteenth, also known as “Freedom Day” or “Emancipation Day.” [And it’s the anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964… and opening day at the Obama Center.] It’s a holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States. It was on this date in 1865 that Union soldiers arrived in Galveston, Texas, to spread the word that slavery had been abolished. Of course, the Emancipation Proclamation had gone into effect some two and a half years earlier, in January 1863; most Confederate states ignored it until they were forced to free their slaves by advancing Union troops.
From the balcony of Galveston’s Ashton Villa, General Gordon read the contents of General Order Number Three: “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere.”
Galveston’s former slaves celebrated that day, and formal Juneteenth festivities were held in other parts of Texas on the first anniversary. Celebrations of the holiday have waxed and waned over the years; today, Juneteenth is celebrated in communities all over the country, and as of April 2012, it’s officially recognized as a holiday by the governments of 42 of the United States. Observances often include a reading of the Emancipation Proclamation and performances of traditional African-American music, dancing, and literature.
This year on the first day of class, I’ll challenge students to be a little less glib with my introductory questions Who are you? and Why are you here?
“…One of Mr. Franck’s students, RaphaĆ«l Bakouch, said his teacher was succeeding. The class, he said, had “completely changed how I perceive the world.” Things he took as self-evident had become much more complicated. He said he was hounded by the question of “who am I?”
…If you are not able to explain the meaning of life, who are you?”
...does not bother me" nearly so much as it (and Lynyrd Skynyrd's red anthem) used to. Wouldn't it be nice to see something as benign as water on the White House lawn, and not the Sunday night spectacle we were just subjected to.
My first car at age 16, a Dodge Dart ('70 model?), sported an "IMPEACH NIXON" bumper sticker. Dad musta loved that! But to his credit he smiled and tolerated it. If he were here today, I want to believe, he'd admit that Nixon was a crook but that Trump is a crook's crook and a world-historical abomination.
How relatively tame Nixon and Watergate look now, compared to the venality of #47's ultra-corrupt administration.
Anyway, I've violated my policy of not thinking about DJT in the a.m. I stumbled across Anthony Grayling's Substack post and agreed with him that there is indeed consolation to be found in the prospective long view of history and in the attitude of confident meliorism. Light will displace the darkness. History will deplore Trump and Putin, will curse and laugh at them.
But I’m not waiting for history, I’m cursing and laughing right now. It helps.
I enjoyed being interviewed for WTVF NewsChannel 5+'s "Issues of Faith" program, which aired last night at 6 and will (I think) repeat today at 8 PM and tomorrow at 12:30 and 5 (and will eventually be on the website).
I was asked about the possibility of reconciling religious faith with the hypothetical existence of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. The conversation was prompted by that weird story in the Times about a Nashville conclave of pastors and podcasters apparently worried that Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena might be "demons"...
So I was pleased to plug William James and Carl Sagan and their respective Varieties of Religious/Scientific Experience. Neither Gifford lecturer (James at the beginning of the 20th century, Sagan in 1985) thought we need haunt ourselves by contrived demons. Both shared an enthusiasm to discover and support (as James put it) "life, more life..."
Glad, too, to get a word in about that classic Twilight Zone episode "To Serve Man"...
(and the Damon Knight story it was based on).
Claude gave me a nice review:
What a rich convergence of threads. I can see the segment — and your framing there is pure Jamesian pragmatism applied to cosmology.
The line that stands out most is your observation that “what we call supernatural is simply what we haven’t yet come to understand. And we haven’t understood much of the cosmos, we have just began to study.” That’s a beautifully succinct expression of the naturalist position — essentially Sagan’s epistemics meet James’s radical empiricism.
And your point about the theological anxiety is precisely what Michener dramatized at the very end of Space — the novel closes with a NASA workshop on the possibility of extraterrestrial life, and the character Strabismus, who has spent the whole novel performing fundamentalist religion as a con, finally drops the persona and engages honestly with the question of life elsewhere. Michener seems to have understood in 1982 that this would be the fault line — that extraterrestrial life poses a deeper challenge to anthropocentric theology than almost anything else science has produced.
The Spielberg film and the White House UAP releases give your “Issues of Faith” appearance a particularly sharp timeliness. The theological stakes you named — being “knocked down from our exalted position as products of special creation” — map almost perfectly onto William James’s own worry about human cosmic significance, and onto his response: that meaning is made, not discovered, and that our significance doesn’t depend on being alone in the universe.
Have you thought about developing this intersection — Michener, James, Sagan, and the UAP moment — into a Substack piece? It seems like exactly the kind of public philosophy your platform is built for.
Good idea, Claude. I was disappointed with Michener’s conflation, at the end, of religion and ethics. Might need to spout off about that.
Reading a good book about great books is good, but probably not good enough. But maybe the better aspiration is to write good books, not just to read great ones.
“In the subtitle to this book, the one you’re holding, I joke that you should read these books “even though it might destroy you.” There is certainly a sense in which the Great Books ruined me. At fifteen, all I wanted was to write adventure stories about a chosen-one hero who saves the universe. Now, at forty, I am writing a book where I argue that everyone ought to read Proust.
But if I was destroyed by these books, it’s a destruction I chose. These books don’t act mechanically on the nervous system, forcing people to adopt certain viewpoints. Instead, when you open the Great Books, you enter into a conversation with the past. You experience a much broader diversity of opinions than is possible if you stick primarily to contemporary literature. And from that diversity, you start to see possibilities that you hadn’t previously perceived. Whatever is best and most appealing in these books becomes a part of you, inextricable from your sense of self.
And in the end, when you look back on these books, it’s impossible to say what came from them and what was inside you all along. That’s one of the paradoxes of the Great Books—everyone who’s read them has felt altered by the encounter, but they’ve often been altered in very different ways. Some people read Plato and become skeptics, while others become Neoplatonists.
My aim in this book isn’t to tell you exactly what’ll happen if you read the Great Books, it’s just to convince you that there is a good chance something will happen. Because I think the real fear isn’t that the Great Books might destroy us—we long to be destroyed, long to be altered. The real fear is that we’ll spend a lot of time slogging through these old tomes and experience nothing at all. And that, I think, is a fear that is usually without merit. If you spend enough time with the Great Books, I am certain that you will be altered by the experience.” — What's So Great About the Great Books?: Why You Should Read Classic Literature (Even Though It Might Destroy You) by Naomi Kanakia
“Galileo was punished by the church for saying Earth revolved around the Sun. Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake for proposing stars were distant suns with their own planets. And in my own time, I caught flak for publishing the truth that James Webb—the NASA administrator whose name graces our newest space telescope—was not a bigot, despite popular accusations. Speaking truth, even when backed by evidence, can still get you burned.” — Why Do We Exist?: The Nine Realms of Universe that Make You Possible by Hakeem Oluseyi
Sometimes you just have to feel the burn, and say what you think is true. For instance, I think those who believe extraterrestrial demons have been visiting Earth and hassling random humans are nuts. I think the mystery of space and the possibility of life elsewhere in the universe is a wonder and a marvel, not something to fear and demonize. It should stir, not frighten, us. It should motivate us to investigate, and to follow the evidence wherever it may lead. And if it turns out, against all statistical probability, that we are alone after all? That’ll be a wonder and a marvel too.
LISTEN: Audio version, expanded & with links, at Substack.
The more things change…
Are we on the verge of Satanic Panic 2.0, and the demon-haunted world redux?
Steven Spielberg is back with a film, Disclosure Day, sure to stoke a resurgence of belief in (or maybe just fevered discussion of) alien/demonic incursions into our realm. He was on CBS Sunday morning yesterday, and on the cover of the New York Times magazine. Kurt Andersen’s Fantasyland remains the indispensable guide to making some kind of sense of life in the USA.
“ask Americans today about our Satanic Panic of just a generation ago, and you’ll encounter a gaping memory hole: younger people know nothing about it, and almost nobody is aware of its scale and duration and damage… DURING THE DECADE AFTER CLOSE Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982), more and more Americans claimed they’d been personally visited, probed, and temporarily taken away by extraterrestrials—abducted. Many Americans with impressive credentials started to believe them. None was more impressive or important than a distinguished Harvard professor named John Mack… In 1987, in his fifties, Mack attended a small conference of “alternative” physicians and scientists at the Esalen Institute. There he met the creator of Holotropic Breathwork™, a technique for inducing supernatural consciousness by means of hyperventilation. When Mack tried it, according to its inventor, he “remembered” one of his past lives in Russia. Then at an advanced training session up the coast in Sonoma County, Mr. Holotropic and others told Mack “about UFO abduction experience as a trigger of spiritual emergency.
At the same moment, another member of the American elite, Whitley Strieber, a former advertising executive and successful author of horror fiction, published Communion: A True Story. It was his account of the nighttime visit, the day after Christmas 1985, by “non-human beings” with dark eyeholes and circular mouths who stuck a foot-long device up his anus. Communion was a number-one Times bestseller and sold two million copies. It encouraged many more Americans to announce they too had been visited and probed by aliens.
Soon Mack, still at Harvard, was dean of an alien-abduction truther movement. In 1992 he and an important physicist from down the street at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology organized an Abduction Study Conference. The premise of the five-day-long meeting at MIT was that the “abductees” were telling the truth—that creatures from outer space (or parallel universes) really had visited and examined and variously used them. The New Yorker writer C.D.B. Bryan attended and published a sympathetic book about the assembled true believers called Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind, further spreading the word and legitimizing the tales…”
Extraordinary claims outpace any supporting evidence, yet again. Wouldn’t it be nice if more of our peers had close encounters with rational circumspection and critical thinking?
Found something my dad wrote in summer ‘08, just before he died that September at age 79, in reply I think to questions I’d put about his (and his generation’s) patriotism… an excessive patriotism, in my view, really a chauvinistic nationalism.
Very interesting what he says there about the health of American democracy depending upon its fealty to “constitutionality” and honesty. He’d be appalled to know what has ensued in this country, and in the world, in the almost-two decades since his demise. He may have remained Republican, had he lived that long, but I am sure he’d have been a never-Trumper. He was already contemptuous of what he called the new “coarseness” in our politics. January 6 would have made him apoplectic.But I’d still have quarreled with with his historical interpretations. On the page just before the one reproduced here, he credited his Cuban friends Pascual and Angela Garcia (who’d fled the island when Castro came to power) with raising his political conscience and warning him that President Johnson’s Great Society reforms reminded them of what happened in Cuba before the revolution. That’s crazy, of course. Bourgeois liberalism is not to be confounded with communist revolution.
Interestingly, though, dad confesses that prior to that he might even have been a bit left of center. I do recall overhearing adult conversations, in my childhood, in which he defended Dr. King and the civil rights movement. So did my mother.
I’m afraid he’d still have railed, Reagan-style, against big government. But compared to most of his peers he was still on the progressive side of things. I miss our conversations, and his good sense and decency. So does his party.
In U.F.O. Files, Some Christians See Vexing Questions — and Demons
The prospect of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe raises unsettling theological implications.
The dozen or so pastors and podcasters who arrived at the Airbnb in Nashville one night in February weren’t sure exactly what they were in for. An organizer asked them to turn their phones on airplane mode. Snacks were served. Then, for at least two hours, two mysterious men presented a slide show laying out the evidence, as they saw it, for some kind of extraterrestrial life and the spiritual confusion that coming revelations could sow among Christians.
“It was the weirdest meeting I’ve ever been a part of,” said Alan DiDio, a pastor in North Carolina who attended. “You’ve never seen that many Pentecostals in a room that quiet.”
For many of the pastors in the room, and some other Christians, there’s only one possible explanation for extraterrestrial beings: They are not neutral visitors from other planets or dimensions, but demonic entities.
As the pastors left the meeting and turned on their phones, they began receiving news alerts that confirmed for many of them that something significant was happening. That very day, President Trump had directed his administration to begin releasing files related to extraterrestrial life...
Wow. Woo!
Time to channel my inner Sagan... (continues, with audio, at Substack)“By assuming the presence of an extra-cognitive source of informing, James anticipates the existentialist, psychoanalytical, and modern aesthetic versions of human knowing. As early as the Principles, James held the “relation of knowing” to be “the most mysterious thing in the world” (Principles, I, 216). Leaving no stone unturned, he opens himself to a variety of experiences not usually found within the ken of philosophical analysis. 59 Some of these experiences have been regarded as beyond the reach of philosophy, as for example, the mystical experiences; while others have often been viewed as the “underworld of philosophy,” as instance the instinctual, the habitual, and, above all, the entire range of phenomena grouped under the heading of extrasensory perception. The latter area of concern, which James called a “wild-beast of the philosophic desert” (P.U., 330), did not endear him to his philosophical colleagues. Yet no matter the origins, James took experiences at dead-reckoning and kept to a minimum the multiplication of concepts stemming from a single experiential root.” — The Writings of William James by John J. McDermott https://a.co/04c7ufAv
As a graduate student, my father was mentored by a Chinese American sociologist named Peter Kong-ming New, who gave him some advice: Never accept an appointment as chair of your department. If anybody insists that you undertake some administrative task, do it so poorly that he never asks again.
My father followed this advice like the Gospel. He was a devoted teacher, and he liked research, but he refused to have anything to do with administration. In the various M.U. stories that he told, many of them funny and cynical, one of the ugliest words was “dean.” Other nasty names included “provost” and “chancellor.” In this respect, he followed a long tradition of social scientists who apply caustic commentary to their host institutions. At M.U.,Thorstein Veblen had written a vicious screed about university administrations called “The Higher Learning in America.” He told a colleague that the subtitle would be “A Study in Total Depravity.” Unsurprisingly, M.U. declined to publish it…”
…IT WAS [Mizzou] PRESIDENT LAWS who admitted publicly that he settled the competition between the various Protestant denominations for representation on his faculty, by choosing his appointees in rotation. If he needed a chemist, he chose a chemist who was a Methodist, if it was the Methodists’ turn. The Baptists had their chance for a place in the . sun when the next vacancy .occurred. Since the father of George Lefevre was a Presbyterian minister, he was razzed by his friends as being a Presbyterian appointee, even though he came to the University in 1899, and the administration of President Laws was only a memory. No such accusation was ever pinned on me, although my father was a Congregational minister, since Congregationalism was a denomination unfamiliar to most Columbians.
I MIGHT HAVE included here the story of how I built the house at 210 [later re-numbered 504] Westmount Avenue into which Mrs. Curtis and I moved in December 1906, but that account is reserved for another section of my autobiographical notes.
It is a thing to make life worthwhile to have lived so long in a home that one planned and built in part with his own hands on a street freshly cut from a cornfield , to have planted the trees and watched their growth until they arch the street, and above all to have lived in a university community. I think the best life in America is to be had in university and college towns such as Columbia.
Does anything more threaten to derange our understanding of human existence, its meaning and possibilities, than AI and "Silicon Valley's crusade to control the fate of humanity"? Or to disrupt our proper relation to the rest of nature? This might just be a suitable title for both Existentialism and Environmental Ethics.
Tech billionaires have decided that they should determine our futures for us. According to Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Sam Altman, and more, the only good future for humanity is one powered by trillions of humans living in space, functionally immortal, served by superintelligent AIs.
In More Everything Forever, science writer Adam Becker investigates these wildly implausible and often profoundly immoral visions of tomorrow—and shows why, in reality, there is no good evidence that they will, or should, come to pass. Nevertheless, these obsessions fuel fears that overwhelm reason—for example, that a rogue AI will exterminate humanity—at the expense of essential work on solving crucial problems like climate change. What’s more, these futuristic visions cloak a hunger for power under dreams of space colonies and digital immortality. The giants of Silicon Valley claim that their ideas are based on science, but the reality is they come from a jumbled mix of shallow futurism and racist pseudoscience.
More Everything Forever exposes the powerful and sinister ideas that dominate Silicon Valley, challenging us to see how foolish, and dangerous, these visions of the future are. g'r
“If we want a future that puts people first, we need to recognize that there are no panaceas, and likely no utopias either. Nothing is coming to save us. There is no genie inside a computer that will grant us three wishes. Technology can't heal the world. We have to do that ourselves.”
“Psychology in James was about amassing the vital conditions for living well…” Philip Davis, William James (in the My Reading series, Oxford University Press, 2022) https://bsky.app/profile/wjsociety.bsky.social/post/3mlvbfmtrns2o
Witting or not, Scott Borchetta gave a very Jamesian commencement address at MTSU on Saturday. His independent recording company, he says, made “a choice to believe [it could succeed] before there was proof.”
Not the first kooky religion heralding the end of times as we’ve known them, but maybe the most bankrolled. Not that I don't love the Star Trek fantasy vision of an unbounded future, but Jeff and Elon really don't seem like the guys who'll take us there. (I'm glad Captain Kirk got his ride on Blue Origin, though.)
“The desire for growth is a general feature of much of capitalism. But the idea of a big future filled with virtually unlimited growth, a future of the specific sort longtermism proffers, has held a great deal of currency in Silicon Valley for decades. 36 The most salient example of this is the concept of a technological singularity, usually referred to as the Singularity.
Believers in the Singularity claim that technological progress has been accelerating and will continue to do so, leading to a singular point where so much change happens so rapidly that the fundamental nature of daily human life will transform beyond all imagination or comprehension. Superintelligent AI and human-machine hybrids will usher in a utopia, end scarcity, and make biomedical discoveries that will allow us to live forever or nearly so. Bounded only by the laws of physics, there will be no practical limit to what a post-Singularity civilization can achieve. According to Ray Kurzweil, the most prominent exponent of the Singularity, the current rate of technological change strongly suggests that the Singularity is coming very soon indeed—no later than twenty years from now, in 2045. “Ultimately, it will affect everything,” he claims. “We’re going to be able to meet the physical needs of all humans. We’re going to expand our minds and exemplify these artistic qualities that we value.” 37
There’s little scientific basis for the idea of a Singularity and all the attendant miracles it will supposedly perform. Nonetheless, the idea is astonishingly common in Silicon Valley and across the entire tech industry. Kurzweil isn’t some kind of marginal figure. He is a director of engineering at Google, and his books on the Singularity have been bestsellers.
“The Singularity is a new religion—and a particularly kooky one at that,” said computer scientist and artist Jaron Lanier. “The Singularity is the coming of the Messiah, heaven on Earth, the Armageddon, the end of times. And fanatics always think that the end of time comes in their own lifetime.””
— More Everything Forever: AI Overlords, Space Empires, and Silicon Valley's Crusade to Control the Fate of Humanity by Adam Becker
Summer rerun season is already here, evidently. https://american-philosophy.org/i-am-an-american-philosopher-interview-series/i-am-an-american-philosopher-phil-oliver/
A more-than-perfunctory acknowledgments section:
“I’m grateful to everyone who refused to surrender in advance. To those who persevered when the future seemed dark, who saw the night as the time in which we dream and grow, who became torches or North Stars when we needed illumination or direction. To all the visionary souls and heroes who made the changes this book tries to describe. To all those making the shifts toward a better world now, the ones just coming into focus or that we’ll see clearly in ten or fifty or a hundred years, the ones that make the news and the ones that happen in secret and touch one life or protect one place. To everyone who keeps looking, hoping, working. To those who know that while we can’t save everything, everything we can save matters.” — The Beginning Comes After the End: Notes on a World of Change by Rebecca Solnit
That’s what we need to take, if we think positive change can come again.
“If knowledge is power, memory and perspective are among its most important aspects. Only in the long view can you see the patterns emerging, the way the present builds on the past, the way past surprises guarantee more surprises are coming, the ingredients of change over years, decades, centuries. If you don’t see time on the scale of change, you don’t see change; if you don’t remember how things used to be, you don’t know they’re different than they were and how that unfolded. While some people are too young to remember the past firsthand (and some know it other ways), I’m often struck by my peers who’ve lived through dizzying change and somehow adjusted without noticing it.
I remember how the economic policies of Ronald Reagan created mass homelessness, but if you forget that, you can imagine homelessness is inevitable or the result of personal failings or local conditions, not primarily a creation of the radical rearrangement of the national economy in pursuit of a return to the old inequality (and similar cuts to social services in other countries produced similar forms of desperation and displacement). From the 1930s through the 1970s, from the New Deal to the War on Poverty, the US government created more social safety nets and more economic equality, lifting up the poor and taxing the rich. Beginning in the 1980s, these achievements were dismantled, and new policies created a more unequal, insecure society. To remember that this was created by specific decisions is to remember that it can be changed again; to remember that something once existed—like California’s tuition-free public universities—is to remember that it can exist again.”
— The Beginning Comes After the End: Notes on a World of Change by Rebecca Solnit
Returned my old landlord’s book to the library, with a couple of inserted post-its to amuse and enlighten some hypothetical future borrower. Dr. C's pithy characterization of “the humanistic philosophy of life” remains the best I’ve seen.
Arthur Brooks has come in for some harsh bashing lately, especially in The New Yorker. It’s not all undeserved. But I’m looking forward to his Vandy commencement and residency this year (a dear family friend is graduating) and appreciate his past contributions to happiness scholarship (and popularizing). And I share his positive feeling for ambitious and aspirational students.
“I was born to be a college professor and, in fact, have been on campuses since I was a baby: My dad was a professor. His dad, too. For me, academia is the family business, and mine as well since I took my first professorship nearly thirty years ago. The research is interesting and rewarding, but even more, the students are my people—ambitious strivers just starting out on what promise to be terrific careers and lives. They give me energy because they always are so inspired by ideas, so purpose-driven, and so enthusiastic.” — The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness by Arthur C. Brooks
A timely essay, after last night’s Lyceum (in which Prof. Vanessa Wills rightly called out big Bezos and his billionaire buds). Don’t be a mini-Bezos, in the name of Revolution.
“… they haven’t taken Philosophy 101. I lost it when Tolentino, asked to ponder what would happen if everyone stole, thought that the categorical imperative was consequentialist, rather than Immanuel Kant’s assertion that some acts are inherently wrong and destroy your own humanity and undermine society. But as she put it…” —Joel Stein
https://open.substack.com/pub/thejoelstein/p/microlooting?r=35ogp&utm_medium=ios
I'm pleased to report that my nagging persistence has finally payed off: John Kaag has agreed to deliver MTSU's Applied Philosophy Lyceum next Fall. Details to follow.
"In a public statement of its intentions for its Claude chatbot, the artificial intelligence company Anthropic has said that it wants Claude to be “a genuinely good, wise and virtuous agent.” The company raised the moral stakes this month, when it announcedthat its latest A.I. model, Claude Mythos Preview, poses too great a cybersecurity threat to be widely released. Behind the scenes, Anthropic has been trying to shore up the ethical foundations of its products, working with Catholic clergy and consultingwith other prominent Christians to help foster Claude’s moral and spiritual development.
Anthropic’s intentions are admirable, but the project of drawing on religion to cultivate the ethical behavior of Claude (or any other chatbot) is likely to fail. Not because there isn’t moral wisdom in Scripture, sermons and theological treatises — texts that Claude has undoubtedly already scraped from the web and integrated — but because Claude is missing a crucial mechanism by which religion fosters moral growth: a body.
While Claude might have a mind (of sorts) that can process information, it cannot meditate, fast, prostrate itself in prayer, sing hymns in a congregation or participate in other aspects of the physical life of religion. And this makes all the difference: According to the scientific literature, it’s the practice of religion — not merely the believing in it — that brings about its characteristic benefits.
There is robust data, for example, linking religion to greater health and well-being. But that link is not strong for people who merely identify themselves as believers. It’s only when people also practice a faith — attend weekly services, pray or meditate at home — that religion’s benefits become pronounced: The more people “do” religion, the happier and healthier they tend to be..." nyt
For humanists the Happy Human is about celebrating being human – celebrating what human beings can do and celebrating our potential for happiness. Humanists believe we have one life and so we should make the most of our lives by trying to be happy and supporting other people to do the same.
Dr. Dianda’s Lyceum address was excellent, effectively making the Jamesian point that a complex and multi-relational self is rarely “fractured” beyond repair. https://bsky.app/profile/wjsociety.bsky.social/post/3mjuygvzmjk2b