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Catspeak

Posted on Monday, Dec 10, 2018 1:20AMMonday, December 10, 2018 by Brooks Riley (Catspeak)

by Brooks Riley

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Recent Comments on 3QD

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  • David Oates Thanks Leanne. I'm still waiting for some open space in this crazy-busy week so I can read your short story. Thx too for the shout-out for Mountains...

    Small Press Publishing: Necessary Imprint on a Big-Press World ·  Wednesday, April 21, 2021

  • David Oates Thanks for the update, Aram... and for the appreciative enthusiasm. Is Black Sparrow still in existence? I'll probably focus the first of the...

    Small Press Publishing: Necessary Imprint on a Big-Press World ·  Wednesday, April 21, 2021

  • Charlie Huenemann Great essay on the importance of so-called "lesser" books on the shaping of one's mind. I have run into so many scholars who got started in just the...

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  • Charlie Huenemann Interesting essay, and subsequent discussion. I think it is important to note that the peer-review system can be just as political and capricious as...

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  • Lorax It seems like the concerns above are ones that can, and sometimes do, apply to plain old research and scholarly activity: even if it's peer reviewed,...

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  • Roger Frye As Reuben Hersh argued, a proof is convincing and explaining. Lean is a great step in the right direction....

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  • Bill Benzon Yes, all too often peer review devolves into mutual back-slapping. Not sure what can be done about that.

    Institutionalizing Public Philosophy ·  Tuesday, April 20, 2021

  • Bill Benzon Harvard's faced this problem in the case of Cornel West. You may remember that early in the millennium he got in trouble with then president Lawrence...

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  • Martinlucas It is interesting to reflect on the culture which makes you feel the need to write this piece. There is a pervasive puritanism which tends to see...

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  • Eric Weiner Michael, I really don't know. I think there is a range in terms of quality, rigor, value, impact, and general significance and importance of public...

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  • Rajendra Kshirsagar I think if the critic is sympathetic and sensitive, the analysis can only add to the listener's experience. A great example is the book Absolutely on...

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  • Animal Symbolicum I suspect — and I'm in good company here — that if the mathematical community is going to count a computer as having solved a Millenium Prize...

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  • Michael Liss Eric, if you were King (or Dean) how would you balance the value of popularizing scholarship (and perhaps even creating young future scholars who...

    Institutionalizing Public Philosophy ·  Tuesday, April 20, 2021

  • Eric Weiner Do you think there are other kinds of intellectual production (i.e., creative, instructional, community-based) that should be "institutionalized?"...

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  • Brooks Riley Thank you, Mary. The unique advantage of our species is the ability to imagine ourselves in other habitats or other lives. It's more than...

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  • Brooks Riley You’re right, the jilted lover tone is not far from the truth. In Switzerland, Nietzsche had Wagner more or less to himself. In Bayreuth he had to...

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  • Brooks Riley Speaking of Texas, when I was 14, my parents put me on a train from Washington to Austin to visit my half-sisters. The trip took two days. On the...

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  • Chris Horner Many thanks, Brooks. I suppose the motives for FN's rejection of Wagner could be seen in a number of ways. In some respects he writes about Wagner in...

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  • Aram Jahn Of the Big Five, the sale of Simon and Schuster to Penguin/Random House is expected to go through before the end of the year. And then there were...

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  • Mary Hrovat Thank you so much for this thoughtful essay! I especially enjoyed your description of (vicarious) serial nesting. Even when I (used to) take the bus...

    On the Move ·  Tuesday, April 20, 2021

  • Jochen Szangolies
    In a few paragraphs, I hope to sketch a few sturdy ideas that can be kicked away as soon as they’re no longer useful.
    ...

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  • Joan Harvey Yes, Westerns, though the last I watched was Stagecoach, a different kind of motion. Have not seen The Grey Fox, and am probably due to see High Noon...

    On the Move ·  Tuesday, April 20, 2021

  • Michael Liss Trains are essential to Westerns. They bring in the bad guys, take out the good ones. Or the reverse. The Grey Fox uses them (and the Canadian...

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