Thomas Szasz is a lot of fun to read. This book is from 1996, and centers around—see the title—the notion of "mind".
Szasz argues it is a mistake (although a common one) to use that word as a noun. It should be used solely as
a verb. As in: "Mind your own businesss". "Minding" is an activity, your self-communication to make decisions
and guide actions.
Szasz is especially contemptuous of determinists who equate the "mind" with one's brain, and
deniers of "free will". I'm on his side here.
One advantage of reading older books: you get to read how confident predictions made decades ago turned
out. For example, on pp. 77-8, Szasz quotes from a 1995 Time article, still online:
"Glimpses of the Mind".
Why, science is on the verge of letting us "clarify the mysteries of consciousness but also to understand and treat such devastating mind malfunctions as Alzheimer's disease, depression, drug addiction, schizophrenia and traumatic brain damage -- research projects have multiplied dramatically."
And that's why, 30 years later, nobody suffers any more from Alzheimer's disease, depression, drug addiction, schizophrenia and traumatic brain damage. Thanks to dramatically multiplied research projects!
Named One of the 10 Best Books of 2023 by The Washington Post and Publishers Weekly • One of Barack Obama's Favorite Books of 2023• A National Bestseller • A New York Times Editor's Choice pick • Nominated for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction
Fiction, I suppose, although it's about real people. John von Neumann, mostly. The book's author, Benjamín Labatut,
tells that part,
chapter by chapter, in the words
of von Neuemann's family, colleagues, and friends. And also enemies. Each in his or her own style. (But mostly, not all,
in long multiple-page paragraphs, which can get a little tiring.) It works out to be a biography, sort of.
I read a more conventional bio
back in 2023, and one common theme
between this book and that one
is that genius can be accompanied by mental misery. (That bio discussed Gödel, Turing, Wolfram, George R. Price.
This one throws in
Paul Ehrenfest, who committed suicide after murdering his own son. Yeesh.
One "contributor" is Richard Feynman, who worked with von Newmann on the Manhattan Project. I've read quite a bit
about Feynman, and (it seems to me) that Labatut rendered his part pretty well.
But as far as I could tell, each contributor was an actual person. Even Nils Aal Barricelli; as I was
reading his chapter, I said, "This guy has to be made up."
Nope. He's real, and he's
in
Wikipedia! So there.
But when von Neumann dies, the book's not over! The final hundred pages or so is relatively straight reportage
about the game of Go,
its human masters, and Google's effort to develop a Go-playing AI to beat the humans. (Chess is trivial
in comparison.) It concentrates on the showdown between Lee Sedol, probably the greatest (human) Go player
ever, and Google's "AlphaGo", which beat him badly back in 2016. Also interesting.
One Man's Humble Quest to Follow the Constitution's Original Meaning
(paid link)
I read A. J. Jacobs' book The Puzzlerback in 2022 and enjoyed it quite
a bit. This one, not so much, but it's very readable, and has some good stories.
Mr. Jacobs' gimmick here is to live a year of his life "consitutionally". Which can mean various
things, of course, especially if you are Joe Biden or Donald Trump. But Mr. Jacobs took to wearing
a tricorne hat (pictured on the cover), and engaged in numerous imaginative (I assume publisher-financed) deeds
of patriotic significance. He participated in a Revolutionary War reenactment, "dying" early, but in
a shady spot. He proposed a Constitutional amendment to a polite Senator, which would expand the presidency to three people. (You
may have noticed that didn't happen.) He visits Independence Hall in Philadelphia, where the Constitution was
written and signed.
One of the better stories is his exploration of the Third Amendment, the one about soldiers
getting quartered in a house without the owner's consent. Jacobs wants to give consent,
and wangles a visit! The Army officer he billets
is of Indian descent, dines on some authentic 18th-century British food (shepherd's pie)
but needs to spice it up a bit with some Mexican hot sauce.
Might be the most American scenario ever.
Unreasonable searches by state agents? Apparently you can make your statement to the TSA
before your next flight by buying underwear with "Read the 4th Amendment, Perverts" emblazoned with
metallic ink, so it will show up on the x-ray.
Jacobs is a solid Democrat, and this (unfortunately) colors a lot of his commentary, which has a definite
blue tinge. For example, the SCOTUS decision
in Sackett v. EPA? Jacobs summarizes that it "pared back the power of the EPA to monitor wetlands".
I'd suggest reading some
analysis that more accurately describes the issue.
Other issues are handled similarly: superficially and clearly D-biased.
Another concoction from Christopher Moore, mashing up real people with fictional characters (and not-really people), magic,
sex, violence, and deadpan humor.
And there may have been a kitchen sink in there somewhere. It centers around early 20th century Vienna,
about which Moore rhapsodizes:
Vienna, a shining jewel on the Danube; birthplace of the waltz, X-rays, psychoanalysis, mathematical genetics, tiny spiced sausages in a can, and before long, Surrealism, just as soon as the trout hit the cream cake.
It begins when artist Gustav Klimt discovers an apparently drowned girl washed up on the banks of
a Viennese canal. He is fascinated by her coloring, and he's a painter first. Also second, third, and
… well, "normal human being" is pretty far down the list. So he trundles her off to his studio, where it
develops that she's not dead! At least not any more. He names her "Judith", after the deadly Jewish
widow whose
story
doesn't make it into standard Bibles.
That's only the beginning. We eventually learn Judith's nature and colorful history, including her
troubled relationship with Adam, Frankenstein's monster. She befriends Klimt's numerous models/bedmates.
She goes to therapy sessions with
Freud and Jung. She thwarts people who are trying to kidnap her. She acquires a loyal croissant-loving dog, Geoff, … who
is also more than he seems at first.
I don't think you'll have to worry about seeing a movie based on this book. A faithful adaptation would probably
put the filmmakers into jail before the movie was finished. (A lot of those models were pretty young.)
Moore did a lot of impressive research on Klimt, his retinue, Freud, Jung, and history. There is a long Afterword
with details on the actual people, and where and why he took out artistic licenses. All in all, it's a little long,
because Moore is very much a "I can't leave this out" kind of writer.
I've been taking my time working through Mary Roach's books. (Fortunately, the Portsmouth (NH) Public
Library book-selector seems to be a fan as well.) This one is from 2003, and it's Mary's
usual travel guide into weird, gross, and (occasionally) hilarious topics that
would be considered off-limits in polite dinner party conversation. In this case, as the
subtitle says, it's about dead people and what can happen to their bodies (or parts).
There are a lot of possible paths and destinations: organ donation, of course;
anatomy class; crash testing; wound research; testing the authenticity of the Shroud
of Turin; cannibalism. And more.
One of Mary's investigations takes her to the island of Hainan to investigate
reports of cannibalism. Reader, it's not a tourist spot.
Another fun fact: painter Diego Rivera was not just a fan of Marxism
also cannibalism!
Mary is often irreverent, with a smart-ass remark never far away. I get the
feeling that her everyday conversation can be considerably more R-rated than
the prose that makes it into her books. But some things are (literally) dead
serious here; one example is her description of the detective work carried out
on the recovered bodies from the doomed TWA Flight 800 in 1996. Was it a bomb? A missile?
A bolide?
Theories abounded,
but the investigators managed to debunk them, thanks to clues provided by the corpses.
It never hurts (much) to be reminded that our survivors
are going to need to somehow dispose of our remains, and Mary
devotes
a couple final chapters discussing possible alternatives. There are a lot of them!
One intriguing one was "alkaline hydrolysis", which involves a few hours in
a pressure cooker, submerged in a lye solution. The process results in
a pH-neutral sterile liquid that can safely go in the sewage system, and crumbled-up
bones. It is, at least theoretically, more environmentally-friendly than
usual cremation via flame.
As noted, this book is from 2003. Surely, things have changed since then? A little
Googling shows that progress has been slow on that front. Although there have been
a lot of euphemistic names proposed for the procedure: "water cremation", "aquamation",
"resomation", …
But what really surprised me: it's illegal in New Hampshire! Your survivors, if they
desire to go that route, will need to trundle you off to Vermont or Maine.
I will remind you that the NH motto is "Live Free or Die". Perhaps they should add
"But when you die, don't think about being free to use alkaline hydrolysis."
I notice that after a long hiatus, Mary has a new book coming out
in September: Replaceable You. If I haven't undergone alkaline hydrolysis by then,
I'll be grabbing it off the library shelf.
The fifth (and, as I type, most recent) book in Stephen Spotswood's "Pentecost and Parker" series.
"Pentecost" is Lillian Pentecost, famed proprietor of her late 1940s New York City detective agency.
And "Parker" is Willowjean, her diligent, wisecracking investigative assistant, who narrates most of the
book. (There are some excerpts from Lillian's journal.) Two
out of the five back cover blurbs make reference to the similar, obvious, precedent of Rex Stout's
Nero Wolfe/Archie Godwin
mysteries.
But this one moves off formula: an antagonist has been shot in the head at a shindig where he had
promised to reveal a dark part of Lillian's family history to the world. Lillian arrives to confront
him, and … bang, bang, he's dead, apparently shot by Lillian. Ballistics seem to point to her gun!
Lillian is arrested, awaiting trial in the wretched "House of D" ladies' prison. To make it worse,
one of the prison guards has it in for her.
So Willowjean is tasked with clearing her boss's name, finding the truth about what happened. It
is a classically convoluted plot, with numerous possible suspects, each with possible motives. A lot
of red herrings. Never fear,
eventually the truth is uncovered, Lillian is cleared. This is a continuing series, after all; the
outcome is never in doubt. And there's a setup for (I assume) book number six.
Trivia, not that it matters: I caught an anachronism at the start of chapter 38, where Willowjean's
girlfriend, Holly, is "stubbing out her Chesterfield in the Folgers can." Ah, in 1947, that would have
been a "Folger's can", with an apostrophe. The brand didn't lose its apostrophe
until 1963
when acquired
by Proctor & Gamble.
The mystery follows the "classic" formula in another way I've always found a tad irritating: Lillian and Willowjean
figure out the true culprit, and accumulate supporting evidence, without telling the reader. Yes, this
sets up for the Grand Reveal at Lillian's trial later. But this I-know-but-you-don't game kind of emphasizes
the artificiality of the narration.
I also found it unfortunate that Spotswood saw fit to append a virtue-signalling "Author's Note"
where he bemoans "a wave of laws passed across the country criminalizing gender and sexuality,
and stripping women of their bodily autonomy." Sigh. Eye roll. Shut up and write.
Back in my youth, a book by Clifford D. Simak was an automatic buy. It helped that I was a member of
the Science Fiction Book Club for a while, and they invariably featured his latest novel as a pick-of-the-month.
For some odd reason, these books languished on my shelves, mostly unread.
I have no good explanation for that. Between
cheap SFBC hardbacks and paperbacks, I counted 19. (And there are a
bunch more I don't own.)
So: a new reading project was born. I fed these 19 titles into my
book-picking system, and
this one was the first up. It is from 1975, and the paperback cost me $1.25. Amazon will charge you more these days.
It is set on Earth, but an oddball one. There are Terran flora and fauna, the sun rises in the east,
and so on. But there are non-humans aplenty; a goblin appears in Chapter One, soon to be followed by
ogres, witches, gnomes,‥ The reader might ask: are we talking about a forgotten past, a strange future,
or what? Neither, as it turns out, but I don't want to spoil a half-century-old book for you.
Anyway, the book opens with a scholar, Mark Cornwall, discovering a short manuscript hidden in a dusty
tome in a candlelit university library. This is surreptitiously observed by a monk. And both Cornwall
and the monk are being spied on by the "rafter goblin", Oliver. All note the importance of the hidden
text. The monk informs a local bunch of cutthroats of Cornwall's find … and here's why you shouldn't
trust a cutthroat: the monk gets his throat cut for his troubles.
But Oliver seeks out Cornwall to warn him that he's in mortal peril for being in posession of this
manuscript. Cornwall takes the opportunity to light out on a dangerous quest to uncover the secrets
described in his find. He also accumulates a ragtag crew of co-pilgrims, each with their own
reason for helping out.
It's a lot of fun. Simak's prose style is unfancy, garnished with occasional dry wit. Think "Minnesota Nice"
in print.
Pity the author, Marc J. Dunkelman! This book, dealing as it does with
the perceived difficulty of implementing grand government-driven
schemes lumped under the broad category of "progress", seems
to cover very similar ground as does another book: Abundance by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson. And
Abundance seems to be getting a lot more attention.
For example, I could easily find Dunkelman's book at Portsmouth (NH) Public Library; in contrast,
PPL owns three copies of Abundance, and they are all checked out (as I type).
Dunkleman's thesis is pretty simple. He adapts the terminology of the early 20th century Progressive,
Herbert Croly, who was famous for his advocacy of using "Hamiltonian means to achieve Jeffersonian ends".
(Croly was also one of the leading examples/villains of Jonah Goldberg's classic title
Liberal Fascism, but we won't get into that.) Dunkleman is not as hostile toward Jefferson as
Croly was, though. His approach is that your standard Progressive harbors both (a) a "Hamiltonian" yen
to accomplish Big Projects under the direction of wise and benvolent central planners and bureaucrats; and (b)
a "Jeffersonian" impulse that central authorities have too much unchecked power to run roughshod over
individuals and communities that don't have as much political pull. Currently, he believes, the Jeffersonian
ideal holds sway; it's why we can't have nice things, like high-speed rail, "affordable" housing, and hydro power from Quebec down
here in New England.
Dunkleman is a Progressive, and is mostly aiming his argument at other Progressives. He views one Hamiltonian/Jeffersonian
oscillation as "the yin turned to yang, the ebb turned to flow, and the teeter-totter crossed its fulcrum."
The idea that there might be some fundamental, and essentially insoluble, problems with Progressive
central planning is not seriously considered. Friedrich Hayek's The Road to Serfdom is briefly mentioned
along the way, but only as a sign of increasing skepticism of the Progressive project. I kept looking for
other serious criticisms: mentions of public choice theory, for example, but if they were there, I missed them.
To his credit, Dunkleman does seem to recognize the problem of regulatory capture, especially when
he looks at passenger airline deregulation. (Which happened largely thanks to … Progressive Ted Kennedy!)
As noted, one of Dunkleman's examples is a local one: he goes into great detail on the Northern Pass
project, meant to string high-voltage power lines down through northern New Hampshire, down to
Concord, Deerfield, and (eventually) Massachusetts.
The book is full of tales like that; I confess I found many of them not as interesting. Dunkleman
keeps hammering them into his Hamiltonian/Jeffersonian thesis, though, to a somewhat tiresome extent.
That gets repetitious.
The book's subtitle promises that Dunkleman will reveal "how to bring [progress] back". This, he
finally gets around to telling the reader, is kind of misleading. On page 330 of the 333-page text: "This book was
written not to prescribe thee specific changes that should be made in every realm of public policy, but to
argue for a shift in narrative." Sigh. Fine.
I put this book by Louise Hegarty on my get-at-library list thanks to a
positive review from Tom Nolan in the WSJ. I was intrigued by Tom's promise of
"a work of metafiction as written by the Marx Brothers." Yeah, OK. I was hoping for Groucho, and I think I got Zeppo.
It starts out as one of those old-style Agatha Christie-like mysteries: a group gathered in a rental mansion
to celebrate the birthday of Benjamin and also the new year. The party-giver, Benjamin's sister Abigail, has arranged
one of those "murder mystery night" contests for entertainment.
But in the morning of January 1, Benjamin turns up
dead! Soon enough, the gifted and egotistical consulting detective Auguste Bell appears on the scene, with
his friend/assistant Sacker to investigate.
But (as promised) things get weird pretty quickly. Ms. Hegarty inserts "fair play rules", presented
by T.S. Eliot, Father Knox, and S.S. Van Dine: guidelines that good mysteries should follow. (Don't have
the butler do it, for example.)
You'll also notice a conspicuous lack of basic forensic detail about Benjamin's death. Sure, the door
to the "murder scene" was locked. But what about…
As it turns out, that lack of detail matters quite a bit. Details keep shifting out from underneath the
reader. Chapters about Bell's investigation are interspersed with descriptions of Abigail's increasingly disheveled mental
state.
And (slight spoiler here) what puts the meta in this fiction is that Bell seems to know that he's
a character in a book.
Cute, but I found myself not caring very much. Without looking, I'm thinking the Goodreads ratings will have a bimodal
loved it/hated it distribution.
The author, Julian Baggini, is (I think it's fair to say) a pop philosopher. A serious thinker combined
with a considerable amount of
self-promotion. ("Not that there's anything wrong with
that," said the blogger.) I became aware of this book when I looked back at
his WSJ review of
Science and the Good,
which dealt tangentially with the issue of "free will." I've been a longtime fan of that topic.
I was very impressed with Baggini's approach to "free will": he's not so much arguing for a position
for or against, but outlining his earnest search for the truth behind the topic. Perhaps unique for
a book of this type, Baggini goes out and interviews other philosophers and researchers. Also artists
and addicts.
He fairly presents their views and insights. For a relatively short book, it's a real tour de force.
His writing style is clear and mostly accessible to even a philosophical dilettante like me.
Baggini urges the reader to avoid the trap of thinking of "free will" as a binary, all-or-nothing deal,
where we are either (a) completely deterministic bags of molecules, perhaps with some quantum coin-flipping
going on; or (b) completely in control of our actions with the ability to choose any future path at any
moment.
The truth, argues Baggini, is somewhere in between, depends on our situations, values, and past histories.
Which makes things a little messy, but manageable. For this (very bad) Lutheran, his deployment of
Martin Luther's famous quote "Here I stand, I can do no other" was very on-target.
Baggini's exploration takes him to various free will-related topics, some surprising:
artistic expression, legal responsibility, addiction, mental illness, and more.
Not that I'm in total agreement. Almost as an aside, Baggini claims "Freedom merely as absence of constraint
and presence of consumer choice is a very thin value indeed". Whereas I think, given its relative rarity and fragility,
it's actually a pretty good deal, and not a "very thin value" at all.
Baggini's also read Free Will, by anti-free willer Sam Harris. Interestingly, he quotes the same bit
of the text that I did
back in 2015, where Harris
is musing about Joshua Komisarjevsky, participant in a 2007 Connecticut rape-murder. Harris makes the (to me)
sloppy, albeit astounding, claim:
If I had truly been in Komisarjevsky's shoes on July 23, 2007—that is, if I had his genes and life experience and an identical brain (or soul) in an identical state—I would have acted exactly as he did.
Baggini lets this go largely unremarked, but I thought back then (and still do) that there's a real problem with
"I" in Harris's sentence. Given Komisarjevsky's brain, genes, experience, etc.: there's no room for Harris's "I" to squeeze
in.
At the end, Baggini comes close to making a fully-libertarian argument. But then backs off considerably
with (to me) weak hand-waving about the justified role of the state in providing health care, education,
transportation infrastructure. Ah well.
I realize that I'm coming close to complaining that Baggini didn't write the book the way I would have.
So don't get me wrong: if you're interested in "free will", this is a very good book to check out.
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