Trends

I’ve noted in a previous post that I delivered a lecture this afternoon at the National Association for Quality’s annual educational conference.  My topic was on the applications of ethical thinking to the cultivation of a culture of quality in healthcare.

During the presentation — which, I fear, bored most of my audience — I found myself stressing again and again a problem that spreads far beyond ethics and quality: that most of contemporary moral philosophy is dangerously out of sync with an average person’s thinking.

I made the point mostly to emhasize that unlike most other disciplines, today’s theoretical ethics, as a discipline, doesn’t translate well into practical ethics. 

But the point runs deeper than that.  Before the “linguistic turn” in philosophy, most philosophical problems could be understood by a reasonably well-educated person.  But to get through cutting-edge philosophy, one needs advanced training in either mathematics (to handle symbolic logic) or linguistics and mathematics (to handle language). 

I saw this during my graduate seminars.  The world of philosophy that I thought I knew from private reading and from undergraduate coursework was almost wholly unlike the complex beast that lurked in the seminar room.  There, just about everything — ethics, aesthetics, metaphysics, epistemology — seemed to reduce to formal logic and linguistics, which in turn presupposed an expert-level grasp of calculus.  Math = logic = basis of philosophy.

There are some reassuring blips on the radar screen that suggest the tide is turning, but the damage done not just to the discipline, but also to a world that (whether it knows it or not) depends on philosophy, is incalculable.  Even with symbolic notation.

In parallel fashion, there is a growing understanding that string theory as the end-all, be-all of theoretical physics may be a fool’s errand.  In the current edition of The Economist, there appears a review of two recent books that attack string theory as being non-scientific and a detriment to the advancement of bleeding-edge physics.

Let us hope the trend continues.

I have become … Elton Weintz

I write this from a nicely appointed room in the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego, California.  I’m in town for the 31st annual educational conference of the National Association for Healthcare Quality, for which I delivered a 75-minute lecture on ethical principles relevant to … you guessed it! … healthcare quality.  The really nice thing […]

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Happy anniversary!

Today marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of my parish church, St. Anthony of Padua.  For the first two years, the parish was under diocesan control, and again for the last two, but in the intervening 96 years, we were shepharded by the Conventual Order of Friars Minor (the black Franciscans). This evening, we […]

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Oh, crap …

… has it really been a month since my last post?  Oy, vay.  In my defense, there’s been a lot going on.  Herewith an update. Work has been a bit strange.  It’s amazing what a few weeks’ time will do, politics-wise.  Now I just need to convince my boss that she grossly underpays me for […]

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Realignments, &c.

* It appears that Rick is coming into my workgroup just as Duane makes his escape back to California. It’s unfortunate that there won’t be much of an overlap, and I regret seeing Duane go, but I think this will make him happier — and his happiness genuinely important to me. He deserves some inner […]

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Realignments, &c.

It appears that Rick is coming into my workgroup just as Duane makes his escape back to California. It’s unfortunate that there won’t be much of an overlap, and I regret seeing Duane go, but I think this will make him happier — and his happiness genuinely important to me. He deserves some inner peace. […]

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Zero-sum politics

Radio commentary earlier this week from Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, struck a nerve. Gingrich posited the thesis that the soul of global democracy is locked in a long-running struggle between those who value process — even if it should result in a suboptimal result — versus those who favor […]

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Restoring the chi

There is great benefit to thinking things through, to making informed decisions after careful reflection and logical analysis. But sometimes, on matters of great importance to the self, we hide a premise or two from our conscious thought — and exploring one’s own behavior can be the key to completing the syllogism and thus overcoming […]

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Getting older

I met my friend Corey for lunch today. I hadn’t seen him in more than a year; since we last met, he and his wife welcomed a daughter into the world and are expecting another child around Christmas. The conversation was quite pleasant. I can tell that Corey’s perspectives on a lot of things are […]

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King Tut

Without question, I need more time to reflect on whatever has been bothering me so much at work that I’ve been reduced to swearing at the IT people in meetings.  I had planned to take Friday-Monday-Tuesday off for the Independence Day holiday, but decided on Wednesday to leave early and take Thursday off, too.  Which […]

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