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Regions and Powers III

  I will assume a reader's familiarity with the first two panels of this ongoing discussion of a book by Barry Buzan and Ole Waever. With our authors, we turn now to the east of Asia, the Pacific rim. Looking with the eyes of these scholars affiliated respectively with the London School of Economics and the University of Copenhagen, let us start with this quote.  [p. 145.] "After the east Asian economic crisis in 1997, the succession crisis facing Indonesia became critical, and at the time of writing it was far from clear whether the muddled shift to electoral politics would be able to handle the turbulent mix of economic disaster, secession, (East Timor, Aceh, Irian Jaya) and recurrent bouts of communal violence in various places. Indonesia had all the appearance of a crumbling empire, and its internal disarray and weak leadership contributed to the paralysis of ASEAN, which was already burdened by both over-ambitious expansion and the impact of the regional economic crisis....
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A question and answer from quora

That is a photo of a graveyard.  Included here for no reason.  Consider it an arbitrary visual.  At Quora, I was asked recently whether Democrats are "mentally incapable of understanding that the purpose of tariffs is precisely to make foreign products more expensive in order to make domestic products more competitive?" I answered for you, Democratic friends. ------------------------------------------------------------- friends.  There is room for some confusion, in part because our Dear Leader himself seems to have multiple ideas about what “THE purpose” of tariffs is. Tariffs are such wonderful things, in his view, that they can serve many purposes. In part, yes, he does seem to want to encourage what some economists call “import substitution,” where buyers in an importing nation learn to bring their own supply chain within the borders. But: no one has ever postulated that import substitution is a smooth or costless process, and Trump is not leveling with us about ...

Thoughts on my golden age list

In a recent post, in order to make the case that the period 1880-1920 was a golden age for western philosophy, I offered you a list of works of that period, which I arbitrarily organized as two works per year.  It makes, I think, an impressive list.  But it will naturally raise questions.... 1. What number of these 82 works constitute "philosophy" in a fairly narrow sense of the term? All such borders are permeable, but my best answer is 36.  Or, less than half. I am counting only non-fiction works among those 36. If I add to that number the heavily philosophical novels and plays on the list (Dostoyevsky, Ibsen, Bellamy, Shaw and Joyce) I get that number up to 41, or just one-half of the whole.  2. What are the chief subjects of those that I think are philosophy but only in an acceptable broadened sense?  This was a very active time for philosophically inclined thought within the adjacent fields of biology, psychology, economics, and history (where any of those ...

Bursting of the hydrogen bubble

The phrase "bursting of the hydrogen bubble" itself sounds amusing --- as if one is making a pun on bubble in the literal and in the financial/metaphorical senses of the term.  But, then, I might just be too easy to amuse.  My thoughts here are about the financial sense and the hydrogen industry as a candidate for major post-fossil-fuels world, energy space.  The underlying idea is that hydrogen is the key to storing and transporting energy from the more intermittent renewables. Solar power isn't incoming on cloudy days; wind power isn't helpful when the air is still. But either the sun or the wind can be used to split water into its constituent parts and store the hydrogen side of that split.  The stored and transportable gas can then be used for a lot of projects that otherwise would involve the emission of carbon. It can be used for shipping, aviation, the creation of ammonia and methanol, and fuel cells.  That's the theory anyway. In practical terms, the ...

Regions and Powers II

More on the book on RSC Theory I discussed here a bit as my New Years' Day entry. [By way of review, RSC Theory means a theory of international relations that looks at the globe from the bottom up -- from the circumstance of particular regions regarded as each a "security complex" in its own right, to their relationship with each other and so to the Big Global Picture. This, as expounded in the 2003 book REGIONS AND POWERS, is in accord with the old Machiavellian realist approach to the subject and averse to top-down views such as the "end of history" or "clash of civilizations" theorists.]  I'd like to quote a striking passage about matters of cause and effect in this book. "For much of history, only one scenario appears as relevant ... because development has turned onto one of the tracks that becomes self-reinforcing. At crucial moments of historical change, the situation is open and several scenarios become possible, though, as we have see...

Trials I was watching (or watching FOR) last year

Early last year I promised to keep on eye out for five then-upcoming high-profile trials.  They were:  Apple v. Dept of Justice; Nevada v. Telles, Illinois v. Crimo; Trump's hush-money case; RealPage (the property management software concern). Today I will catch up on each of them.   1. There has been no APPLE trial yet.  US District Court Judge Julien Xavier Neals has a motion to dismiss under advisement and some news is expected soon on whether the trial will proceed and on what schedule.  2. The TELLES case has been resolved. A jury found him guilty of first-degree murder in August, and he was sentenced in October to 28 years in prison.  3. Robert CRIMO, suspect in the Highland Park 4th-of-July-parade shootings, backed out of a plea deal this summer.  Near year's end, the Judge denied a motion to exclude much of him interrogation video. A trial is expected shortly. 4. Donald TRUMP's hush money case? That one went to trial (you may have heard). ...

An unappreciated golden age

Perhaps the real golden age of philosophy is quite recent.Perhaps it is a mere "bag of shells" into our living past.  My thesis is that the real golden age in (western) philosophy occurred between the years 1880 and 1920. Between two Dayton brothers' receipt of a patent on the cash register in the former year and consolidation of power by the Bolsheviks in Russia with their Civil War victories of the latter year. ["Western" above very much includes Russian. It does not include Japanese, though, so the works of Kitaro Nishida, though written within this period, and discussed on this blog not long ago, will not be highlighted on the list below.]  Here are some of the outstanding works of philosophy and of philosophy-adjacent intellectual and creative fields, published in this forty-one year period 1880 - 1920 within the West. Most are books, some are poems, articles or lectures. I have not made any typographical distinction among them. Each seminal work is named i...