Delight Springs

Monday, February 16, 2026

Happy Prez's Day

David McCullough quotes Abigail Adams on George Washington:

"He is polite with dignity, affable without familiarity, distant without haughtiness, grave without austerity, modest, wise, and good. He was a good man. There are traits in his character which perfectly fit him for the exalted station he holds." Thr 


That's the sort of character we need in the White House.


And it's their great-grandson Henry's birthday...
It’s the birthday of the writer Henry Adams, whose memoir, The Education of Henry Adams (1918), came out the year he died. He was the great-grandson of John Adams, and the grandson of John Quincy Adams, which left the sensitive, introverted boy burdened by an almost stultifying sense of responsibility to play a prominent part in the world. But Adams preferred to be an observer only, later writing of himself that he “never got to the point of playing the game at all; he lost himself in the study of it, watching the errors of the players.” After attending Harvard, he traveled extensively through Europe, became a political journalist for a time, and eventually returned to his alma mater in 1870 to teach medieval history.

He wrote two novels, Democracy (1880), which he published anonymously, and Ester (1884), a comic romantic tale about the battle of the sexes that he published under a pseudonym. He also wrote numerous biographies and The History of the United States of America: 1801–1817 (nine volumes; 1889–1891), which is considered a neglected masterpiece.

Unlike many autobiographies, The Education of Henry Adams is really a record of Adams’s introspection rather than his accomplishments. Adams had long since come to the conclusion that his traditional education had failed to help him come to terms with the changing world — changes that included the discovery of X-rays and radio waves and radioactivity, a world war, and the invention of the automobile — and that was the thrust of his memoir. But, while the memoir was an intimate portrait of his own life, Adams avoided any mention of his wife, Clover, whom he was in love with and who committed suicide 13 years after they married. WA
==

Henry once wrote a pessimistic letter to William James, suggesting that entropy in the universe (according to the 2d law of thermodynamics, etc.) doomed humanity to misery and meaninglessness. 

WJ's reply was classic:
...The "second law" is wholly irrelevant to "history"—save that it sets a terminus—for history is the course of things before that terminus, and all that the second law says is that, whatever the history, it must invest itself between that initial maximum and that terminal minimum of difference in energy-level. As the great irrigation-reservoir empties itself, the whole question for us is that of the distribution of its effects, of which rills to guide it into; and the size of the rills has nothing to do with their significance. Human cerebration is the most important rill we know of, and both the "capacity" and the "intensity" factor thereof may be treated as infinitesimal. Yet the filling of such rills would be cheaply bought by the waste of whole sums spent in getting a little of the down-flowing torrent to enter them. Just so of human institutions—their value has in strict theory nothing whatever to do with their energy-budget—being wholly a question of the form the energy flows through. Though the ultimate state of the universe may be its vital and psychical extinction, there is nothing in physics to interfere with the hypothesis that the penultimate state might be the millennium—in other words a state in which a minimum of difference of energy-level might have its exchanges so skillfully canalisés that a maximum of happy and virtuous consciousness would be the only result. In short, the last expiring pulsation of the universe's life might be, "I am so happy and perfect that I can stand it no longer." You don't believe this and I don't say I do. But I can find nothing in "Energetik" to conflict with its possibility. You seem to me not to discriminate, but to treat quantity and distribution of energy as if they formed one question... Letters of William James, June 17, 1910.
WJ died later that summer. 

When my time comes, let his words be my epitaph:

"I am so happy...that I can stand it no longer."

69!

  

What a terrific birthday: catfish by the river, chocolate cake, Nashville Sounds tickets in April, and the charmed company of the best family I've got. 
#Lucky #Grateful #Day-to-day

Saturday, February 14, 2026

69

That's a big number, in the human calculus. I've now outlived my muse WJ, creeping up on Hamlet's undiscovered country. Thinking of it as bonus time. But of course, it's all been bonus time— from 2.14.57 on, in my case. We who are here are all bonus babies. We are the lucky ones, as Richard* rightly said. I'm just happy to be here. Think I'll ink that. 
 
And this. 
 






Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Sacred matter

During our peripatetic walk in #3 yesterday, The subject of materialism versus immaterialism came up. Some (like Descartes) think of a matter as mere, crudely deficient in potentiality and incapable of giving rise to all the rich and animated phenomena of life. William James thought otherwise:

"To anyone who has ever looked on the face of a dead child or parent the mere fact that matter COULD have taken for a time that precious form, ought to make matter sacred ever after. It makes no difference what the PRINCIPLE of life may be, material or immaterial, matter at any rate co-operates, lends itself to all life's purposes. That beloved incarnation was among matter's possibilities."

—William James, Pragmatism lecture 3 https://www.gutenberg.org/files/5116/5116-h/5116-h.htm#link2H_4_0005

Thursday, February 5, 2026

Positive change

Our power is on again in Nashville, we've been told. We'll head home tomorrow.

Last week in the hotel was pretty stressful, but this week at the Airbnb just 15 minutes from school is something I could get used to. It would mean more delightful walks on the Stones River Greenway, like the one the dogs and I enjoyed Monday; and more chance encounters with old students on non-teaching days, like I had yesterday.

That Greenway walk reacquainted me with Bertha Chrietzberg, whose efforts enhanced the quality of life of countless walkers over the years. She was a true meliorist, someone who achieved her potential and left the world better than she found it. And gave me a new talking point when we encountered Aristotle in class.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Day 7

 Wind chill below zero. Robert Frost comes to mind...


Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I’ve tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To know that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Day 6

Still without power, holed up in a downtown hotel a stone's throw from the Seigenthaler pedestrian bridge so artfully depicted in the lobby. Want to dogwalk it, but it's forbiddingly icy. Hurry please, NES.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Day 4 without power

Our temporary lodging on the 12th floor afforded a view of the new Titans' stadium, until problems with climate control in the room uprooted us. Taking the dogs out is still a challenge, but at least we've thawed out and stayed warm. Could be worse. Sadly it is, for many.

Monday, January 26, 2026

Big chill

Day 2 without power. Thank goodness for firewood, extra blankets, dogs, good neighbors, and the right attitude. It's ALL temporary, after all.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Peculiar Magic of a Winter Snowstorm

Our Lyceum guest at MTSU last Fall, Megan Craig, sees the beauty and descending spirit in a day like this.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/24/opinion/winter-snow-storm.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

Snowy sleety icky afternoon

Good time to pick up the little book about the Parnassus pooches I was gifted for Christmas. Hauled the elliptical in from the barn too, no dogwalk for us today.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

petulant, violent and deranged

The "straight line" is actually more than 500 years long, in Kurt Andersen's Fantasyland account.
"How did a great, sophisticated nation, one of the world's longest-standing republics, end up so fragile that it can be undone by one man's dementia? That's an important question, the answer to which I believe lies in the straight line from Bush vs Gore and the Roberts Supreme Court, to January 6th, to the execution of Renee Good. However, what's more important is that we realize where we are right now, that we don't try to sugarcoat and sanewash what's happening: A petulant, violent and deranged individual is running America."

Paul Krugman

https://open.substack.com/pub/paulkrugman/p/its-sundowning-in-america?r=35ogp&utm_medium=ios&shareImageVariant=overlay

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Opening Day '26-first contact

 It's 12 degrees in middle Tennessee on the first day of the Spring semester. No matter. Spring means renewal and a fresh start, just like Opening Day in my favorite sporting pastime. Pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training in just a few weeks now.

I think these "first contact" days in academia, meeting bright-eyed eager young learners for the first time (they get younger every year, somehow), hearing who they think they are and why they're here and what they think philosophy is (et al) are what I'll miss most when I stop teaching.  Is this really going to be the penultimate year? We'll see. Meanwhile, I fully intend to enjoy today. 

I see that several more student introductions have surfaced on our course site since last night, before we've entered the classroom for the first time (starting at 9:40 this morning). Pleased to see that so many of the kids have responded to my challenge, when I said in my own intro that I worry about their generation not reading books. They're mentioning titles that are unfamiliar to me, mostly, and that's good. I do learn from them at least as much as they learn from me, when I remember to pay attention and make connection. George Saunders is right: "[W]riting and reading [and teaching and learning] is a way of simply underscoring that human connection is important, that you can know my mind and I can know yours, which is a vastly consoling idea, and we need it."

So here we go. Another fresh start. Tabula rasa time. My mentor John Lachs didnt quit 'til he was 87. I begin to understand why.

Monday, January 19, 2026

On MLK day, 2026

"We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the hateful words and actions of the bad people, but for the appalling silence of the good people."

“If you can't fly then run, if you can't run then walk, if you can't walk then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward.”

“Those who are not looking for happiness are the most likely to find it, because those who are searching forget that the surest way to be happy is to seek happiness for others.”

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual doom.”

“Human progress never rolls in on wheels of inevitability; it comes through the tireless efforts of men willing to be co workers with God, and without this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the forces of social stagnation. We must use time creatively, in the knowledge that the time is always ripe to do right.”— Martin Luther King Jr.

Gifted an inscribed copy to 
Younger Daughter for xmas (two days ago)

"We can succeed only by concert. It is not "can any of us imagine better?" but, "can we all do better?" The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise -- with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country."
Abraham Lincoln in the 1862 annual address to Congress

"Let not any one pacify his conscience by the delusion that he can do no harm if he takes no part, and forms no opinion. Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing. He is not a good man who, without a protest, allows wrong to be committed in his name, and with the means which he helps to supply, because he will not trouble himself to use his mind on the subject."
John Stuart Mill
1867

Heroes. HCR

I have a dream, in living color

Connect

A good point to note, on the Spring semester's Opening Day tomorrow:

"But to me, it's becoming clear that writing and reading [and teaching and learning] is a way of simply underscoring that human connection is important, that you can know my mind and I can know yours, which is a vastly consoling idea, and we need it."

George Saunders Is No Saint (Despite What You May Have Heard),
NYT Magazine 1/18/2026

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Complain!

"...Unless climate change, nuclear war, or both burn us to cinders entirely, humanity will stagger forth from this dreadful era, and once the dizziness has stopped will look back, and will condemn: and condemn us all, unless we did something – even just complain, but the complaint needs to be public and constantly iterated – to refuse to accept this vicious assault on the prospects of a better world." Anthony Grayling

https://open.substack.com/pub/acgrayling/p/pictures-from-an-exhibition?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=post%20viewer

Or cones

Stitches come out Monday.

"You may not agree, you may not care, but
if you are holding this book you should know
that of all the sights I love in this world —
and there are plenty — very near the top of
the list is this one: dogs without leashes."
— Mary Oliver, Dogsongs

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Biblio-patriotism

"So the America I loved still exists, if not in the White House or the Supreme Court or the Senate or the House of Representatives or the media. The America I love still exists at the front desks of our public libraries."
— A Man Without a Country, Kurt Vonnegut

Sunday, January 11, 2026

WJS Newsletter – William James Society

Spring 2026 Newsletter

President's Message from Dr. Phil Oliver

LISTEN (audio file on Google Docs)

'Tis the season of William James's birth, in 1842.

By an odd twist of coincidence, January 11 happens also to be my wife's birthday. So it's a date I cannot and dare not ever forget.

The late great biographer Robert Richardson, noting the legendary James "family tradition" according to which Emerson blessed infant William, cautioned against attaching either too much or too little import to that mythic connection. It does seem too right to be true, but also too good not to be...

https://wjsociety.org/news/

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Texas A&M, Under New Curriculum Limits, Warns Professor Not to Teach Plato

Definitely planning, now, to discuss Plato's Symposium in my classes around Valentine's Day. What a moment we're living through! And what a platonic irony, as they're literally killing poets too.

 On Wednesday, as word of disputes like Dr. Peterson's spread, critics of the Texas A&M policies said free-speech clashes became inevitable after the board's moves. The College Station campus's chapter of the American Association of University Professors said the move against Dr. Peterson "raises serious legal concerns."

The group said its misgivings went beyond the Constitution.

"Silencing 2,500-year-old ideas from one of the world's most influential thinkers betrays the mission of higher education and denies students the opportunity to engage critically with the foundations of Western thought," the group said. "A research university that censors Plato abandons its obligation to truth, inquiry, and the public trust — and should not be regarded as a serious institution of higher learning."

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/07/us/tamu-plato-race-gender.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

'Who am I?' (etc.)-time yet again for introductions

It's a real treat, relatively late in an academic career, to teach a new course for the first time. I'll be doing that next semester with Existentialism, and this semester (beginning in less than two weeks now) with Philosophy in Recent American Fiction. I always ask my new students some basic Opening Day questions. Here are my own responses, this time:

*Who are you? - I'm the Prof, probably the oldest guy in the room (though that isn't always the case, in MALA classes). I've been teaching at MTSU for a quarter century, but this is the first time I've offered THIS course. My special interest is in American philosophy, particularly that of pragmatist William James. [And btw: I am current president of the William James Society.]
*Why are you here? - I'm at MTSU because they hired me, not long after the Belmont provost un-hired me when I expressed sympathy for the Unitarian Universalist credo ("guided by reason and inspired by love, we celebrate diversity, confront oppression, and promote environmental and social justice"). And in retrospect, I'm glad he did! I've been happy at MTSU (and teach a course called Philosophy of Happiness). I'm in Middle Tennessee because I came to Vanderbilt (from Mizzou) for grad school and liked it enough to stay.
*What's your definition of philosophy? - "An unusually stubborn attempt to think [and write and speak] clearly" in the pursuit of wisdom. (The quoted/un-bracketed bit is, naturally, from William James.)
*What are the best and the most recent novels you've read? What did you like/dislike about them? Did you find in them anything "philosophical," by your definition? - Most recent, and among the best, are those by the two Richards (Ford and Powers) we'll be reading. We'll get into my thoughts (and yours) concerning their relation to wisdom. Suffice for now to say that Ford's Frank Bascombe is a character I find amusing and occasionally wise, living his life in Periods (The Existence Period, The Permanent Period, etc.); and Powers's Playground touches on themes I find vitally relevant and potentially either an advance or a big setback for humanity: the environment, and Artificial Intelligence. It's too soon to tell about that, but it's pretty clear that we've got to address those issues effectively as individuals AND as a species, if we're to survive and flourish for long.

== 

 Postscript. Frank says things like:

  • "For your life to be worth anything you must sooner or later face the possibility of terrible, searing regret. Though you must also manage to avoid it or your life will be ruined".
  • "Maturity, as I conceived it, was recognizing what was bad or peculiar in life, admitting it has to stay that way, and going ahead with the best of things".
  • "If you lose all hope, you can always find it again".
  • "Love isn't a thing, after all, but an endless series of single acts."


Wednesday, January 7, 2026

A day of infamy

 

Jan 6 now signifies surgery, for Nell (and Mom too), as well as insurrection. But this Jan 6 had a better outcome than in '21, even if Nell doesn't quite believe it yet. Substack

Monday, January 5, 2026

A Case for Beauty in a Fleeting World

We turn to art to make sense of a life that is heartbreakingly fragile.

"...Because the rest, as Shakespeare knew, is silence."

Margaret Renkl

Friday, January 2, 2026

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Reinstated

Good! I shared the same headline in class, the morning after. Once in a while, school administrators get things right:

Clarksville, TN — the APSU professor who was fired over a post he shared online about the death of Charlie Kirk, has been reinstated. He was fired for resharing a 2023 headline that said, "Charlie Kirk Says Gun Deaths 'Unfortunately' Worth it to Keep 2nd Amendment." Then Sen. Marsha Blackburn shared his post calling for the university to take action.

https://www.threads.com/@allie4tn/post/DS5n_efkU9J?xmt=AQF014Eu4a3E7IgbJRH9K1grF5eYm6lV-mQ2WUT-ibMys6o0yS3y7EznwdMpMbnV6n2NwryL&slof=1

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Desiderata

Someone else on the Internet asked about a popular monologue/poem/prayer from the '20s, Desiderata.

It was popular on posters in the '60s and '70s, back when I was into bedroom-wall posters like "If a man does not keep pace with his companions…" (Thoreau) and "Great minds, like parachutes, function only went open" (Einstein-or was it merely coupled with a picture of Einstein on his bicycle?)… 


Desiderata was widely and falsely attributed to some anonymous sage from the 17th century, but no: it was written by a lawyer from Terre Haute in 1927, one Max Ehrmann. It's actually pretty good, and closes with advice. I endorse: "With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be cheerful. Strive to be happy." one line, though, offends my meliorism. "No doubt the universe is unfolding as it should."


Three words too many.



Useful fiction, stubborn facts

Someone on the Internet asked the William James Society if a useful fiction can be true.
WJ's reply:

Literary fiction can be true in the pragmatic sense, definitely. But unlike my shallower younger* brother the novelist, I have to forge every sentence in the teeth of irreducible and stubborn facts. We pragmatists do not deny reality. We do sometimes attempt to defy it.

https://bsky.app/profile/wjsociety.bsky.social/post/3mb7gbzit2c22

*Re: WJ's shallower younger (and "vainer") brother, a recent Paris Review essay characterizes the sibling rivalry that I take to have been mostly affectionate as more sinister than I hope it was: https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2025/04/01/william-and-henry-james/

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Men at Work: The Japanese Way of "Wa" Meets the American Way of Play

My proposal for the 29th Baseball in Literature and Culture conference in 2026, in Ottawa KS:
When former Cub/Met/Card George Altman died recently, the New York Times reported of his post-MLB career in Japan: "During seven seasons... he hit 193 home runs, becoming a popular player for his slugging and willingness to learn Japanese phrases." [emphasis added] *


Altman worked at fitting in culturally, as teammate and guest.

Professionals in every endeavor, not just athletes, must of course work at their craft as well as their collegiality; but in the western world we're often implored to do what we love, so that we'll "never really have to work a day in our lives."

Freddie Freeman, asked why he banters and jokes with opposing players at first base (and takes abuse from young Blue Jays fans in video ads), says he tries to remember that he's playing a kid's game and should be having fun.

Robert Whiting, in You Gotta Have Wa, observes that "Americans played ball. Japanese worked at it." The Japanese game is more like a martial art, a game of "control" (kanri yakyu) mostly devoid of fun (or at least not primarily aiming at fun).

With so many Japanese stars now shining in MLB, and more on the way, we have an opportunity and an incentive to study and try to understand this contrast in cultural styles. They seem to have meshed effectively for the Dodgers these past couple of years, with Ohtani, Yamamoto, et al.


 (And, having now read Altman's memoir, I can report that he seems to have had at least as much fun playing in Japan as in the U.S.)

Will east meet west between the lines, and ultimately sync up? Will the Freeman style of fun endure, for fans and players alike? Here's an invitation to philosophy, which I'll take up in my presentation in March as players resume working and playing ball.

* And there are some great Japanese phrases... my favorite is Ikigai. There needs to be a word for what gets you out of bed (besides "dogs").

William James Society Prez's message, winter '25-6

 AUDIO version: LISTEN


‘Tis the season of William James’s birth, in 1842.


By an odd twist of coincidence, January 11 happens also to be my wife’s birthday. So it’s a date I cannot and dare not ever forget.


The late great biographer Robert Richardson, noting the legendary James “family tradition” according to which Emerson blessed infant William, cautioned against attaching either too much or too little import to that mythic connection. It does seem too right to be true, but also too good not to be.


   


But isn’t it also a nice (and documented) twist, whether coincidental or fated, that WJ ended up delivering the keynote commemorative address at Emerson’s centenary in 1903? “Emerson's revelation,” suitably naturalized, was also his: “the point of any pen can be an epitome of reality; the commonest person's act, if genuinely actuated, can lay hold on eternity.” That is to say: Emerson and James both defended the actual experience of everyday people (as against the esoteric metaphysical daydreams of system-building philosophers, themselves not excluded) as reality’s surest sign.


It’s no coincidence that a devout philosopher of experience would take particular delight in sharing his own and others’ experience via the now-sadly-disappearing art of literary correspondence. WJ definitely did. His letters, like so much of his colloquially rendered and public-facing philosophy, shine and sparkle with wit, wordplay, and (above all) a profound humanity. So much of the message he meant to give the world in published form was even better conveyed in intimate missives to friends and family. 


And so it was a particular delight for me personally when a perceptive student in my Philosophy of Happiness course gifted me, at semester’s end this past December, with the two-volume 1925 edition of James’s letters (edited in 1911 by his son Henry). 


What a delicious trove! (And just a tip of the iceberg, compared to the unabridged edition that runs to over a dozen thick volumes and three feet on the shelf.) I often find myself consulting, for quick convenience, Project Gutenberg’s online version (II). But the books–the book books–are very special. (Rhys had already nailed down his A, by the way, but this gift sealed his happy Happiness legacy.)


Richardson notes that “by his mid-twenties William James already had a remarkable capacity to convert misery and unhappiness into intellectual and emotional openness and growth. It is almost as though trouble was for him a precondition for insight, and accepting trouble was the first step in overcoming it.” What a useful skill for us to emulate, in these times of trouble! 


“In January 1868, as his twenty-sixth birthday rolled past and he did his annual stocktaking, he wrote [his friend Oliver Wendell] Holmes [Jr.] that he was in the dismalest of dumps, unable to understand ‘how it is I am able to take so little interest in reading this winter.’ He could not have known that it would be a little over two years before he really hit bottom” (as he would confide in the famous diary entry of February 1, 1870: “I about touched bottom, and perceive plainly that I must face the choice with open eyes: shall I frankly throw the moral business overboard . . . or shall I follow it, and it alone, making everything else merely stuff for it?”


The  “moral business” for WJ was the active and proactive will he’d not quite believed in before. But now, as RIchardson aptly summarizes, he began to reject any fate as a fait accompli. “It is not what fate does to us that matters; what matters is what we do with what fate does to us.”


In a charming letter decades later in 1896, to his salvific hero Renouvier, he complained (as we academics are perennially wont to do) about his extra-academic workload: “Our University inflicts a monstrous amount of routine business on one, faculty meetings and committees of every sort, so that during term-time one can do no continuous reading at all—reading of books, I mean. When vacation comes, my brain is so tired that I can read nothing serious for a month.”


Yes indeed, we can relate. What was on your holiday reading list?


But then he said: “During the past month I have only read Tolstoy's two great novels…”


‘Nothing serious’!! Was he joking? He went on to say of Tolstoy:“I don’t like his fatalism and semi-pessimism, but…”


In any event, here we are on the cusp of a new year and a fresh semester, as light expands and “light reading” gives way to something supposedly more continuously serious. I think WJ would enjoy the course I get to teach for the first time, Philosophy in Recent American Fiction. We’re reading Richard Ford, Richard Powers, Rebecca Goldstein, and more. He’d like their anti-fatalism and semi-optimistic meliorism, as I know you Jamesians do too.


One more thing: many thanks to Professor Kevin Decker for his stellar service as secretary to WJS; and a hearty welcome to his incoming successor, Professor Alexis Dianda! Their transition has been smooth, and the state of our society is strong.  


Happy 2026, everyone. Let’s see if we can make it better. 


Phil Oliver

President@wjsociety.org

Nashville, TN

December 2025


Sunday, December 21, 2025

Nothing serious

I can relate.

"Our University moreover inflicts a monstrous amount of routine business on one, faculty meetings and committees of every sort, so that during term-time one can do no continuous reading at all—reading of books, I mean. When vacation comes, my brain is so tired that I can read nothing serious for a month. During the past month I have only read Tolstoy's two great novels, which, strange to say, I had never attacked before. I don't like his fatalism and semi-pessimism, but for infallible veracity concerning human nature, and absolute simplicity of method, he makes all the other writers of novels and plays seem like children."

"The Letters of William James, Vol. II": https://a.co/7orKwS6

Artificial learning

Cautionary warning for my upcoming Philosophy in Recent American Fiction course:

"All I want for Christmas is to have my brain scrubbed of the memory of teaching a university-level literature course where most students used AI to tell them what the books were about and then also used AI to tell me what they thought about the books."

https://www.threads.com/@annasandyelrod/post/DSfpbY_iSuF?xmt=AQF0tMZ1NskaVYuYlU8maJd3ef_ngVHjxLuJ9bGQUAaJ2UyhV1ab79qOALAYfukA4ftq8Xa5&slof=1

Friday, December 19, 2025

Resentment vs. Happiness

"...In an inevitably plural society, one of the things a person growing up needs to acquire is skin thickness. So I don't think encouraging people to resent everything they think is a moral mistake made by everybody else is a good way to prepare yourself for a happy life. I have not myself very often experienced people complaining about this sort of thing, but I don't like it when they do. If I'm teaching a course on race and racism, it's a bit weird that I'm not allowed to mention the N-word.

At the beginning of most of my classes, I tell students that if someone says something that upsets you, assume they didn't mean to. Let's start with that. Evidence can mount up that that's not what's going on. But that should be our presumption in a college classroom..."


Kwame Anthony Appiah on Identity in an Age of Essentialism
https://www.chronicle.com/article/the-professor-of-pluralism?bc_nonce=hpau1vwvsvdpy3tcevyy7a&cid=reg_wall_signup

Schopenhauer

"Nietzsche considered him one of his most important teachers, and Freud, astonishingly, thought him one of the half-dozen greatest individuals who had ever lived. One of the few professional philosophers to treat him as more than a crank was Wittgenstein, who perhaps saw in his work an anti-philosophy akin to his own."

https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v47/n22/terry-eagleton/pregnant-with-monsters

Sunday, December 14, 2025

"Staying Informed and Not Overwhelmed in 2026"

NYTimes: We are asking readers to share their tips for coping with the news.

I avoid it on waking (I wake early, before dawn). I do pick up my phone or tablet, but I go straight to the Bluesky app's "beach sunrises" tab and take in a few beautiful images... then maybe read an inspiring Maria Popova "Marginalian" post, or the like... then pick up a book and read for 30 minutes... then write in my journal... then walk the dogs. THEN I'm almost ready to confront the NYT, BBC, New Yorker, Harper's, et al. When I get to school (I teach Philosophy at Middle Tennessee State University) I open class with a glance at onthisday.com (because students don't know much about history) and only then at the NYT website. I do not face the news alone and by myself. We discuss it.

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Commencement address

I've heard some unimpressive ones over the years at my school, and anticipate another this afternoon. To compensate:

Tim Minchin - 9 Life Lessons



Read the whole thing here. Sure beats the "eat more fiber" debacle of '21.

Friday, December 12, 2025

Exit line

What a lovely end-of-semester gift from a student in Philosophy of Happiness. Volume II includes the transcendent 1910 letter to Henry Adams I sent them off with: " I am so happy...I can stand it no longer!"


If I retire in May '27 and this was the last time I will have taught PHIL of Happiness, it'll leave a warm and lasting impression. Good times, happy memories.