Delight Springs

Monday, January 18, 2021

Introductions

LISTEN. We're still a week away from Opening Day, for the still-remote Spring 2021 semester, but student Introductions have begun to pop up on our course blogsite.


(I like the new selfie light-ring clipped to my camera... 
but how do you get rid of those reflected floating circles?!)

The first, prompted by my query about favorite philosophers, references one Olaf Stapledon. I think that's the first time anyone in my classes has mentioned him, in all these years. I didn't know a thing about him. Now I know he wrote Star Maker, and thinks "an emerging consciousness is the ultimate goal of the universe." 

Also that he "directly influenced Arthur C. Clarke" (open the pod-bay door, HAL) and other sci-fi luminaries. And said “Philosophy is an amazing tissue of really fine thinking and incredible, puerile mistakes. It's like one of those rubber 'bones' they give dogs to chew, damned good for the mind's teeth, but as food - no bloody good at all.” Ha! But my dogs do enjoy their Kong chewies, and I enjoy my philosophy.

Olaf Stapledon, I told my student, 
is very interesting! Sounds like he may have had an impact on your thinking comparable to Carl Sagan's on me, back in the day when I first picked up and read his book "Cosmic Connection"...

Personally I don't believe the universe per se has an "ultimate goal," but I do think forming goals and pursuing them is crucially important for us all. And I do think we're vitally connected to the universe, we're "starstuff studying the stars"-that's our cosmic connection.


Another new student, a chem major,  says he likes "to look into why we do things/things happen, rather than just to know why A causes B." And he likes "a strong cut of Stoicism. Roll with the punches, keep your head high, and don't complain."
You've hit on a couple of fundamental distinctions in western philosophy: appearance/reality, and causes/reasons. What's real and true vs. illusory and false (or "fake")... What explains events & actions vs. what justifies them...

Stoicism is indeed a philosophy for our time, and maybe all times. I prefer the variant known as Stoic Pragmatism, which says don't complain UNLESS complaining leads to constructive action that fixes what's broken.

Looking forward to more of these philosophical Introductions. Teacher's still got lots to learn! 

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