I just found out (via some pages about Daniel Dennet's new book on the same matter) about a book from Derk Pereboom: Living Without Free Will. There is a review in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
Montag, 17. Februar 2003, 15:26 - Rubrik: Buch
Richard Holloway tells us about Richard Dawkins new book in the Guardian. A Devil's Chaplain & Other Selected Essays. “The goal of life is life itself. There is no final purpose, no end other than entropy and the end of all endings.” Yes, O. K. “But there is deep refreshment to be had ‘from standing up full-face into the keen wind of understanding’.” Mh, maybe, sometimes. Dawkin's earlier book River out of Eden was of the boring kind though. (via Arts & Letters Daily)
p. s.: There's a read-worthy portrait of “the devil's chaplain” in the Guardian by Simon Hattenstone. Two quotes: “In one of the letters that he [Dawkins] regularly fires off to newspapers, he suggested that child sex abuse in the Church ‘unpleasant as it is, may do less permanent damage to the children than bringing them up Catholic in the first place’.” This is not so far away from the truth, I think. — “I see religion, however, as a kind of organised misconception.” Here he is wrong because religion is not about conception, or is it? (via SciTech Daily)
p. s. Gould and God, a review of A Devil's Chaplain in Nature.
p. s. Through a Glass, Darkly. A thoughtfully written review by Michael Ruse in the American Scientist.
p. s. The concept of cultural items such as tunes or games, beliefs or fashions, as themselves “memes” with a kind of life of their own, making use of human beings as vehicles in their pitiless Darwinian struggle with competitors, has similar problems. First it sounds perverse, but then it seems dazzling and exciting. Yes! A gunman is a bullet's way of making another bullet, and a librarian is a library's way of making another library! Like Samuel Butler, who instructed that “even a potato in a dark cellar has a low cunning that stands it in excellent stead,” we suddenly think of tunes and games and accents and treatments as pursuing their own projects, plotting to invade us, making use of us to pursue their own competitive existences. Again, though, there is the sobering up. Get rid of any image of a tune or a treatment cunningly squirreling away, invading people and bringing about changes. A tune does not literally make use of people, since it is not the kind of thing that has purposes and designs. What is true is that when one lodges in people's heads, they are prone to spread it. And then we feel let down, since this is all that is apparently left when the rhetorical flourishes are cleaned off.
From a review by Simon Blackburn in The New Republic online. I feel alike.
p. s.: There's a read-worthy portrait of “the devil's chaplain” in the Guardian by Simon Hattenstone. Two quotes: “In one of the letters that he [Dawkins] regularly fires off to newspapers, he suggested that child sex abuse in the Church ‘unpleasant as it is, may do less permanent damage to the children than bringing them up Catholic in the first place’.” This is not so far away from the truth, I think. — “I see religion, however, as a kind of organised misconception.” Here he is wrong because religion is not about conception, or is it? (via SciTech Daily)
p. s. Gould and God, a review of A Devil's Chaplain in Nature.
p. s. Through a Glass, Darkly. A thoughtfully written review by Michael Ruse in the American Scientist.
p. s. The concept of cultural items such as tunes or games, beliefs or fashions, as themselves “memes” with a kind of life of their own, making use of human beings as vehicles in their pitiless Darwinian struggle with competitors, has similar problems. First it sounds perverse, but then it seems dazzling and exciting. Yes! A gunman is a bullet's way of making another bullet, and a librarian is a library's way of making another library! Like Samuel Butler, who instructed that “even a potato in a dark cellar has a low cunning that stands it in excellent stead,” we suddenly think of tunes and games and accents and treatments as pursuing their own projects, plotting to invade us, making use of us to pursue their own competitive existences. Again, though, there is the sobering up. Get rid of any image of a tune or a treatment cunningly squirreling away, invading people and bringing about changes. A tune does not literally make use of people, since it is not the kind of thing that has purposes and designs. What is true is that when one lodges in people's heads, they are prone to spread it. And then we feel let down, since this is all that is apparently left when the rhetorical flourishes are cleaned off.
From a review by Simon Blackburn in The New Republic online. I feel alike.
Montag, 17. Februar 2003, 15:07 - Rubrik: Buch
Buch gelesen: Epsilon von David Ambrose. Mehr in meiner Liste B
Samstag, 15. Februar 2003, 22:35 - Rubrik: Buch
Ich habe soeben zum ersten mal im Leben einen DSL-Anschluss in Betrieb genommen. 1und1 brauchte mehr als eine Woche um die Unterlagen zu schicken. Aber dann ging es flott und schmerzlos: mit dem PPP-übers-Ethernetz-Treiber pppoe (unter Debian GNU/Linux) keine Probleme. Mit pppoeconf geht es sogar noch bequemer.
Donnerstag, 13. Februar 2003, 19:58
“Der kreative Kosmos” heißt ein Buch von Brigitte (Tierärztin) und Thomas (Physiker) Görnitz über “Geist und Materie aus Information”. Klappentext: “Eine kosmologisch begründete abstrakte Quanteninformation liefert die Basis für Materie und Geist.” So ein Quack. Fragt sich nur, warum sich Spektrum Akademischer Verlag dafür hergibt? (via Perlentaucher, nämlich hier)
Donnerstag, 13. Februar 2003, 15:03 - Rubrik: Buch
Gestern abend im Kino gewesen. Es ist schon ein paar Jahre her, das ich Harry Mulischs Roman gelesen habe. Deshalb hat mir der Film vielleicht doch noch ganz gut gefallen. Onno und Ada sind wiederzuerkennen. Onno hat auch im Film Klasse. Der Film-Max dagegen ist ein Hampelmann. Die Leindwandversion hat die gleiche Schwäche wie das Buch: Der metaphysische und mystische Anteil wird zum Schluss viel zu konkret und damit reizlos.
Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2003, 12:09 - Rubrik: Und sonst so
There is an interview with physicist João Magueijo in the New Scientist, who suggests that light speed may vary.
“I don't think there's any future for journals. They're just a waste of time. I haven't read a journal in years. The future is the Web: the Web archive doesn't filter out the good stuff, and the bad stuff is there just as much as it is in the journals. I think in the future people will just publish in the Web archives.”
And more like this e. g. on peer review. Refreshing. (via SciTech Daily)
“I don't think there's any future for journals. They're just a waste of time. I haven't read a journal in years. The future is the Web: the Web archive doesn't filter out the good stuff, and the bad stuff is there just as much as it is in the journals. I think in the future people will just publish in the Web archives.”
And more like this e. g. on peer review. Refreshing. (via SciTech Daily)
Dienstag, 11. Februar 2003, 18:34 - Rubrik: Forschung
Humberto Maturana und der Kommunikationswissenschaftler Bernhard Pörksen führen ein Gespräch über “die Ursprünge der Biologie des Erkennens”. Das Gespräch erscheint als Buch im Carl Auer Verlag. Es scheint sich um eine deutsche Originalausgabe zu handeln. Ich glaub, das werde ich mal lesen. (via Perlentaucher, nämlich hier)
Montag, 10. Februar 2003, 13:45 - Rubrik: Buch
Oliver Hahn kündigt in der Newsgroup de.rec.buecher eine Site zu Simenons Komissar Maigret an: www.maigret.de.
Sonntag, 9. Februar 2003, 17:59 - Rubrik: Buch