Pages

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Mind cure

"...mind cure and the crop of pseudoscientific interventions that materialized contemporaneously (“hydropathies, diet fads, homeopathies, mesmerisms, hypnotisms”) were “acceptable neither to science nor to church,” as Meyer writes. Their unacceptability was precisely the point. Neurotics were tired of contending with a liberal Protestantism that called suffering congregants to feats of manly self-discipline, and they were no less tired of an impotent medical establishment bent on dismissing their problems as fictions.

Many doctors in the 1860s and ’70s were staunch materialists, unwilling to countenance the existence of diseases that left no detectable traces. Others understood “nervous disorders” as regrettable but inevitable by-products of modernity and its ceaseless exhaustions. In his 1881 treatise, American Nervousness, pioneering neurologist George Beard anticipated much of the self-help dialectic to come, identifying society as the problem and proposing personal improvement as the solution. “Confronted by an imbalance between two terms”—the self and civilization—“one could modify one or the other, or both,” writes Meyer. But not for a moment did [Beard] mean to be attacking civilization. He drew no romantic inferences. He had no political or social therapies to propose. In effect, Beard assumed that “modern civilization” was what it was; nothing was to be done about it.

In this tacit isolation of therapy from society, of health from politics, he was offering nineteenth-century individualism one of the major lines upon which it could fall back in its twentieth-century retreat. If neither physicians nor pastors could heal nervous people, patients would have to seek alternative sources of aid or learn to heal themselves. Paradoxically, they did both, often simultaneously. They discovered alternative sources of aid in mind cure—which promptly counseled them to fix themselves. The crankish cure-alls that flourished at the end of the century were an ingenious way to split the difference between their two nemeses, science and organized religion: mind cure and its brethren were precursors of the now-common claim to being “not religious but spiritual,” for they, too, straddled the growing schism between enchantment and Enlightenment, cloaking the consolations of religion in the sober mantle of scientific respectability. Here at last was that precious thing, license to believe in miracles without stanching the tides of Progress."

Everything is Too Small: https://a.co/fHaOfaQ

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

How to Repair the Planet? One Answer Might Be Hiding in Plain Sight.

We tend to look at environmental problems in isolation. A holistic approach would be more effective, a new report says.

Sometimes, human needs can make problems like climate change and biodiversity collapse seem insurmountable. The world still relies on fossil fuels that are dangerously heating the planet. People need to eat, but agriculture is a top driver of biodiversity loss.

But what if we're looking at those problems the wrong way? What if we tackled them as a whole, instead of individually?

A landmark assessment, commissioned by 147 countries and made public on Tuesday, offers the most comprehensive answer to date, examining the sometimes dizzying interconnections among biodiversity, climate change, food, water and health.

"Our current approaches to dealing with these crises have tended to be fragmented or siloed," said Paula Harrison, a co-chair of the assessment and an environmental scientist who focuses on land and water modeling at the UK Center for Ecology & Hydrology, a research organization. "That's led to inefficiencies and has often been counterproductive."
...

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/17/climate/biodiversity-climate-change-interconnections.html?unlocked_article_code=1.iE4.d22K.DrhnJ6y0rYq2&smid=em-share

Thursday, December 12, 2024

The Gilded Age of Medicine Is Here

"...2024 was arguably the year that the mortal dangers of corporate medicine finally became undeniable and inescapable. A study published in JAMA found that, after hospitals were acquired by private-equity firms, Medicare patients were more likely to suffer falls and contract bloodstream infections; another study found that if private equity acquired a nursing home its residents became eleven per cent more likely to die. Although private-equity firms often argue that they infuse hospitals with capital, a recent analysis found that hospital assets tend to decrease after acquisition. Yet P.E. now oversees nearly a third of staffing in U.S. emergency departments and owns more than four hundred and fifty hospitals. In some of them, patients were "forced to sleep in hallways, and doctors who spoke out were threatened with termination," according to Jonathan Jones, a former president of the American Academy of Emergency Medicine.

Erin Fuse Brown, a professor at the Brown University School of Public Health, told me that private-equity firms have learned that they "don't have to make things better or make them more efficient. You can just change one small thing and make a ton more money." They are hardly the only corporations to learn this lesson. Increasingly, health insurers, private hospitals, and even nonprofits are behaving as though they aim first to extract revenue, and only second to care for people. Patients often are viewed less as humans in need of care than consumers who generate profit.

In 1873, Mark Twain co-wrote the novel "The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today," which satirized an era that was marked by inequality, greed, and moral decay but was painted in a veneer of abundance and progress. Industrialists made fortunes in oil, steel, and shipping even as millions suffered poverty and exploitation. Today, health care is where the money is. New technologies and treatments sustain the impression that patients have never been healthier, but corporations and conglomerates wield immense power at the expense of the people they're meant to serve. Welcome to the Gilded Age of medicine..."

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/2024-in-review/the-gilded-age-of-medicine-is-here

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

English heritage

That ubiquitous internet attribution to Ben Franklin of the line that beer is proof that God loves us is surely apocryphal.

"His (London) colleagues nicknamed him the Water-American because he refused to partake in the ubiquitous beer drinking: a pint before breakfast, with breakfast, after breakfast, with the midday meal, at six, and a last one before bed. (Franklin preferred Madeira.) Franklin also prided himself on healthy habits…"

— The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore by Evan Friss

Nobelists vs. rfk jr.

More than 75 Nobel Prize winners signed a letter urging senators not to confirm Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. The letter marks the first time in recent memory that Nobel laureates have banded together against a cabinet choice. https://nyti.ms/3ZVGD0t

https://www.threads.net/@nytimes/post/DDYfLHMJfBP?xmt=AQGz_JVaAzyTLs1rr8ONwjp0eyswfDQbK_U4lh0Gh7_Ruw

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Atul Gawande on living longer/better

  
Atul Gawande, the assistant administrator for global health at the U.S. Agency for International Development, talks about how to live longer and better, with the New Yorker staff writer Dhruv Khullar.

Gawande's Being Mortal is excellent. He talked about it at Google:


 

Monday, December 2, 2024

Back in '25

 Returning Spring 2025


PHIL 3345, BIOETHICS 

T/Th 4:20 PM, James Union Building (JUB) 202


3 credit hours. Explores ethical issues arising from the practice of medical therapeutics, from the development of new biomedical technologies, and more largely from reflections on life’s meaning and prospects in the face of changing modalities of intervention fostered particularly by the various life sciences. Dr. Oliver


Supporting the philosophical study of bioethics, bio-medical ethics, biotechnology, and the future of life, at Middle Tennessee State University and beyond... "Keep your health, your splendid health. It is better than all the truths under the firmament." William James --Course blogsite, http://bioethjpo.blogspot.com/


TEXTS include-

  • BIOETHICS: THE BASICS (Campbell) ”the word ‘bioethics’ just means the ethics of life”... 

  • BEYOND BIOETHICS (Obasogie) “Bioethics’ traditional emphasis on individual interests such as doctor-patient relationships, informed consent, and personal autonomy is minimally helpful in confronting the social and political challenges posed by new human biotechnologies”... 

  • THE PREMONITION (Lewis) "The characters you will meet in these pages are as fascinating as they are unexpected. A thirteen-year-old girl’s science project on transmission of an airborne pathogen develops into a very grown-up model of disease control. A local public-health officer uses her worm’s-eye view to see what the CDC misses, and reveals great truths about American society"...

  • THE CODE BREAKER: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race (Isaacson) "we are entering a life-science revolution... Should we use our new evolution-hacking powers to make us less susceptible to viruses? ...Should we allow parents, if they can afford it, to enhance the height or muscles or IQ of their kids? After helping to discover CRISPR, Doudna became a leader in wrestling with these moral issues..." 

  • WHAT WE OWE THE FUTURE (MacAskill) "argues for longtermism: that positively influencing the distant future is our time’s key moral priority. It’s not enough to reverse climate change or avert a pandemic. We must ensure that civilization would rebound if it collapsed; counter the end of moral progress; and prepare for a planet where the smartest beings are digital. If we make wise choices now, our grandchildren will thrive, knowing we did everything we could to give them a world full of justice, hope and beauty"...






For more info: phil.oliver@mtsu.edu


Sunday, December 1, 2024

If My Dying Daughter Could Face Her Mortality, Why Couldn’t the Rest of Us?

 Recently, a friend of Orli's gave me a tremendous gift: the knowledge that Orli had tried to prepare herself. Four months before her death, Orli texted this friend to say she knew she would not survive. She believed she had two years left. "I'm going to die," she wrote. "But doesn't everyone? I just will die a little sooner than most. This is a great opportunity for me actually. Everyone's focused on the time they have left. They forgot to live."

That she could face what we could not is not entirely unusual. Some psychologists have pushed for allowing teens and young adults a role in determining not only the course of their care but also in how they live their days, and how they die. This population, I learned, has a strong sense of their own trajectory; they are known for trying to protect the emotional well-being of their caregivers.

Indeed, after she died, I found out that Orli had worried most about what would happen to us — Hana, Ian and me — if she were to leave. I offered her no reassurance. I didn't know these were her fears. I learned of them too late.

She and Ian spoke about death more than I did — what happens, where do we go, is there something more, will we ever see each other again? I wish I had been in those conversations. Still, I am comforted that they took place.

Everyone, even children, deserves the opportunity to sit with these questions at the end of life. It's not impossible. But to do so requires us to recognize: It's not sadness we should fear. It's regret.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/25/opinion/children-cancer-grief.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Saturday, November 30, 2024

Ethical theory

"This fall, I've been teaching Intro Ethics for the first time in years. It's a strange assignment, as though the students were previously feral and my task was to begin their moral education, age 18 to 22. Presumably, most were introduced to ethics already by their primary caregivers. At least, I hope they were.
There are difficult questions about what to teach in such a class and how. I once wrote about the risks of Intro Ethics, echoing Annette Baier's "Theory and Reflective Practices." "The obvious trouble with our contemporary attempts to use moral theory to guide action," she wrote, "is the lack of agreement on which theory to apply."

Kieran Setiya
https://open.substack.com/pub/ksetiya/p/intro-ethics?r=35ogp&utm_medium=ios

Friday, November 29, 2024

the ultimate thanks-giving

"I have been a sentient being, a thinking animal, on this beautiful planet, and that in itself has been an enormous privilege and adventure."

When the poetic neurologist Oliver Sacks learned that he was dying, he wrote something almost unbearably beautiful about the measure of living — the ultimate thanks-giving:

https://mailchi.mp/themarginalian/oliver-sacks-gratitude

Sunday, November 24, 2024

A crisis of crises

"..,Crisis can be a powerful catalyst for shaping policy and improving society. But just like any such tool, it can be misused as easily as used.

If that lesson isn't new, it's very much worth reviewing now. The United States is in what can only be described as an epoch of crisis. There is no quarter of American life that has not been claimed by the term, from the planet (climate) to the Republic (democracy, migration, housing) to the deepest chambers of the human heart (loneliness, despair). In the future, if we survive that long, historians will marvel at either our capacity to endure so much hardship at once or our ability to label so many disparate problems with the same graying word. In the meantime, officials and policymakers — and, yes, journalists — ought to consider how they employ this term and why, and whether it's having the desired effect..."

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/21/opinion/public-health-crisis-america.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Saturday, November 23, 2024

The Road to Wisdom: On Truth, Science, Faith, and Trust By Francis S. Collins

“A recent cross-sectional study in two states, Ohio and Florida,37 showed that the rate of death in those states was strongly associated with political party affiliation—after May 2021, when vaccines were freely available to all adults, the death rate for Republican voters was 43 percent higher than for Democratic voters. The long echo of the negative public response to COVID-19 has led to greater resistance to all forms of vaccination, putting children at risk for diseases like measles and polio that had almost been eradicated in the developed world. This may be the most consequential example of distrust of science in modern history. This circumstance is utterly contrary to the way a person or a nation should respond to a threatening pandemic: political party should be set aside in favor of clearheaded and objective assessment of the facts. But with our current separation into divisive tribal communities, the opportunity for thoughtful considerations of options—for achieving wisdom—has mostly been lost. The consequences have been truly tragic.” ― Francis S. Collins, The Road to Wisdom: On Truth, Science, Faith, and Trust


Wednesday, November 20, 2024

A.I. Chatbots Defeated Doctors at Diagnosing Illness

A small study found ChatGPT outdid human physicians when assessing medical case histories, even when those doctors were using a chatbot.

Dr. Adam Rodman, an expert in internal medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, confidently expected that chatbots built to use artificial intelligence would help doctors diagnose illnesses.

He was wrong.

Instead, in a study Dr. Rodman helped design, doctors who were given ChatGPT-4 along with conventional resources did only slightly better than doctors who did not have access to the bot. And, to the researchers' surprise, ChatGPT alone outperformed the doctors.

"I was shocked," Dr. Rodman said.

The chatbot, from the company OpenAI, scored an average of 90 percent when diagnosing a medical condition from a case report and explaining its reasoning. Doctors randomly assigned to use the chatbot got an average score of 76 percent. Those randomly assigned not to use it had an average score of 74 percent.

The study showed more than just the chatbot's superior performance.

It unveiled doctors' sometimes unwavering belief in a diagnosis they made, even when a chatbot potentially suggests a better one... nyt
==

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

health misinformation and political polarization

"I taught a course at Vanderbilt University on health misinformation and political polarization in 2022. My syllabus & readings are available on my website and unfortunately still highly relevant today. "

www.matthewfacciani.com/teaching MisinfoResearch

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

“If it kills me”

Clever dramatically-convergent portrayal of environmental activism & bioethics (long Covid, depression, mental illness), with a side of British humor…

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0024w9s?partner=uk.co.bbc&origin=share-mobile

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

AI as philosophers' stone?

As American civic life has become increasingly shaped by algorithms, trust in government has plummeted. Is there any turning back?

"...In “The Techno-Optimist Manifesto,” posted last October, Marc Andreessen, the venture capitalist and notable Trump-Vance supporter, delivered a delusional account of human history as the triumph of the “techno-capital machine” over the constraints of nature. “We had a problem of isolation, so we invented the Internet,” Andreessen proclaimed, preposterously. The solution is at hand: “We believe Artificial Intelligence is our alchemy, our Philosopher’s Stone—we are literally making sand think.” This September, OpenAI’s Sam Altman posted an essay in which he argued that generative A.I. is “the most consequential fact about all of history so far,” and that humanity is on the cusp of solving every problem. “There are a lot of details we still have to figure out,” Altman wrote, unironically, “but it’s a mistake to get distracted by any particular challenge.” The following month, not to be outdone, Dario Amodei, the C.E.O. of Anthropic, a rival of OpenAI, published a blog post called “Machines of Loving Grace: How AI Could Transform the World for the Better,” in which he predicted that A.I. could lead, in five to ten years, to “the defeat of most diseases, the growth in biological and cognitive freedom, the lifting of billions of people out of poverty to share in the new technologies, a renaissance of liberal democracy and human rights”—developments that will happen so fast and be so overwhelming that many of us will be “literally moved to tears.” Someone will be crying. That much is true.

Having built an information infrastructure that classifies and divides humans and drives them to ideological extremes, these same people and corporations are now building machines that purport to undo the very damage they have caused, much in the same way that geoengineering schemes seek to address catastrophic climate by using the very logic and tools that created the problem. In a study funded in part by M.I.T.’s Generative AI Initiative and published in Science this fall, conspiracy-minded Americans were subjected to long exchanges with a deprogramming chatbot. “The treatment reduced participants’ belief in their chosen conspiracy theory by 20% on average,” the researchers concluded. They don’t seem to have bothered to establish control groups who might, for instance, have been asked to read articles and books, or—seemingly beyond the realm of imagination—converse with another human..." Jill Lepore

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Jennifer Doudna on gene-editing

The biochemist Jennifer Doudna—who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, in 2020—reveals a few books that she thinks best equip one to understand the promise and potential peril of the gene-editing revolution.

https://www.threads.net/@newyorkermag/post/DBM4Oo3hAiz?xmt=AQGzR8uWJUxEKH34B6UaClaVdllgDJY1CdCOjOFZ8mbw9Q

Monday, October 7, 2024

I’m a Doctor. ChatGPT’s Bedside Manner Is Better Than Mine.

As a young, idealistic medical student in the 2000s, I thought my future job as a doctor would always be safe from artificial intelligence.

At the time it was already clear that machines would eventually outperform humans at the technical side of medicine. Whenever I searched Google with a list of symptoms from a rare disease, for example, the same abstruse answer that I was struggling to memorize for exams reliably appeared within the first few results.

But I was certain that the other side of practicing medicine, the human side, would keep my job safe. This side requires compassion, empathy and clear communication between doctor and patient. As long as patients were still composed of flesh and blood, I figured, their doctors would need to be, too. The one thing I would always have over A.I. was my bedside manner.

When ChatGPT and other large language models appeared, however, I saw my job security go out the window...


https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/05/opinion/ai-chatgpt-medicine-doctor.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Sunday, September 29, 2024

Anti-Aging Enthusiasts Are Taking a Pill to Extend Their Lives. Will It Work?

"Let's see, taking something that's risky, that's going to have no benefits?" Dr. Dillin said. "I'll pass."

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/24/well/live/rapamycin-aging-longevity-benefits-risks.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Climate & health

The climate crisis is a health crisis.

The most effective action to slow and reverse ClimateChange is transitioning to renewable energy and moving away from fossil fuels.

Learn more 🔗bit.ly/3TFVSXs #UNGA79

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Something’s Poisoning America’s Land. Farmers Fear ‘Forever’ Chemicals.

For decades, farmers across America have been encouraged by the federal government to spread municipal sewage on millions of acres of farmland as fertilizer. It was rich in nutrients, and it helped keep the sludge out of landfills.

But a growing body of research shows that this black sludge, made from the sewage that flows from homes and factories, can contain heavy concentrations of chemicals thought to increase the risk of certain types of cancer and to cause birth defects and developmental delays in children.

Known as "forever chemicals" because of their longevity, these toxic contaminants are now being detected, sometimes at high levels, on farmland across the country, including in Texas, Maine, Michigan, New York and Tennessee. In some cases the chemicals are suspected of sickening or killing livestock and are turning up in produce. Farmers are beginning to fear for their own health.

The national scale of farmland contamination by these chemicals — which are used in everything from microwave popcorn bags and firefighting gear to nonstick pans and stain-resistant carpets — is only now starting to become apparent. There are now lawsuits against providers of the fertilizer, as well as against the Environmental Protection Agency, alleging that the agency failed to regulate the chemicals, known as PFAS…

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/31/climate/pfas-fertilizer-sludge-farm.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Reasonable expectations (for a centenarian)

Maria Branyas Morera, World's Oldest Person, Dies at 117

Ms. Morera, who cultivated a following on social media as "Super Catalan Grandma," died peacefully in her sleep, her family said.

...Like many supercentenarians, Ms. Morera became the subject of scientific fascination. Her habits and lifestyle — and genetic makeup — have been studied in the hopes of understanding her longevity.

"What do you expect from life?" a doctor once asked her while retrieving blood samples for study, according to El País.

Ms. Morera, unmoved, answered simply: "Death."

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/20/world/europe/worlds-oldest-person-maria-branyas-dead.html?smid=em-share

Sunday, August 11, 2024

We’re Applying Lessons From Covid to Bird Flu. That’s Not Good.

…Undeniably, the country is in a different place regarding the risks from Covid than it was two or three or four years ago, and it is perfectly justifiable that many Americans are less interested in hearing about Covid than they were then. Perhaps it is also natural to not want to hear about public health matters at all — the previous years were difficult and painful, after all. But to believe that means we should pass laws discouraging individuals from taking precautions, or to choose not to pursue surveillance measures to actually track the progress of a new disease threat, is a deeply pathological response to an experience of pandemic trauma, and one that implies it is more problematic to remind those around us of ongoing health risks than to take action to limit them. We seem to have memory-holed not just the suffering of Covid-19 but also the initial burst of inspiring if imperfect solidarity it produced, preferring instead to embrace the "bipartisan" indifference our pandemic tribalism ultimately yielded to. Thankfully, bird flu isn't making us pay for it — yet.

David Wallace-Wells

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/07/opinion/bird-flu-covid.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Saturday, August 3, 2024

A Prescription for Physicians: Listen to the Patient’s Story

In "Telltale Hearts," a new memoir, Dr. Dean-David Schillinger traces the links between narrative and well-being.

...One of the chief complaints about physicians these days is that they don't have enough time and they don't really listen. So Dr. Schillinger, a primary care physician at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center, has written a book about the importance of patients' stories. He writes of the power of narrative to build trust that cuts through the barriers that often separate doctors and patients to ultimately improve care.

"What has increasingly been lost as we advance in our technologies, using electronic health records that make us look at the computer and not at the patient, and becoming more constrained from a time perspective, is the most important and common medical procedure — the medical interview," Dr. Schillinger said told The New York Times.

"A lot of people think that's the doctor peppering the patient with questions, but that's not really how it should go," he added. "It really should be about eliciting the patient's perspective on the experience and their social context."

Science is paramount, he said, but the patient's story is an essential complement. "It's when we separate the two that we get in trouble," Dr. Schillinger said. The book is about what he thinks of as "the alchemy of science and story."
...
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/03/health/schillinger-telltale-heart.html?smid=em-share

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Into the Heart of Life: Richard Powers on Living with Bewilderment at the Otherworldly Wonder of Our World – The Marginalian

Maria Popova again has me thinking this (like its predecessor "Overstory") would be a good text for Environmental Ethics. Bioethics too.

"…Set sometime in the near future, when our search for life beyond the Solar System has come to its inevitable fruition, [Bewilderment] tells the story of a thirty-nine-year-old astrobiologist and his neurodivergent, frightened, boundlessly courageous nine-year-old son, searching together for other worlds and instead discovering how to reworld ours with meaning. 

Radiating from their quest is a luminous invitation to live up to our nature not as creatures consumed by "the black hole of the self," as Powers so perfectly puts it in his talk, but as living empathy machines and portable cosmoses of possibility, whose planetary story is yet unwritten…

As the father searches for other worlds, he is savaged by despair at humanity's catastrophic mismanagement of this one, haunted by the growing sense that we couldn't possibly be good interplanetary emissaries until we have become good stewards of our own home planet. But each time he hits rock bottom, he bounces back up — as we all do, as we all must in order to go on living — with rekindled faith in what we are capable of…"

https://www.themarginalian.org/2022/06/26/richard-powers-bewilderment/

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Saturday, June 29, 2024

Atul Gawande on finding meaning in mortality

On Mortality and Meaning by The On Being Project

The eighth episode in our Wisdom Season

Read on Substack

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Not enough rocks?

Google Is Using A.I. to Answer Your Health Questions. Should You Trust It?

…The system has already been shown to produce bad answers seemingly based on flawed sources. When asked "how many rocks should I eat," for example, A.I. Overviews told some users to eat at least one rock a day for vitamins and minerals. (The advice was scraped from The Onion, a satirical site.)

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/31/well/live/google-ai-health-information.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

On Call

Dr. Fauci's book describes trying to build a government response to Covid "with a president who literally did not understand what was going on in some very fundamental ways." Some examples.

https://www.threads.net/@maddowshow/post/C8Vze4FxImX/?xmt=AQGzVW1N-Bsp_vcCfymOvAqz2JlOJTYcYaRg4A_A1uxxPw

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

Pandemic lit

The growing body of literature about the pandemic "radiates a desire to be useful, somehow, and a sense that perhaps fiction can give people a new way of thinking about the crisis," Katy Waldman writes.

https://www.threads.net/@newyorkermag/post/C8C7MYhR8on/?xmt=AQGzamCu9Yn97gHusiSyOs4fF_OnIRCe-j37P9X2mAlv6A

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

How Do We Know What Animals Are Really Feeling?

Animal-welfare science tries to get inside the minds of a huge range of species — in order to help improve their lives.

"...a true ethical question, one that troubled the entire premise of a multibillion-dollar global industry: "whether or not it is ethical to keep these hens for the sole purpose of egg-laying, only to have them slaughtered at the end." Among the scores of students we watched over the course of a weekend, LeBlond and her teammates from the Atlantic Veterinary College were the only ones who, in the final seconds of their talks, raised deep questions about the scenario's entire premise — about whether, in the end, these fictional animals should have been put in these fictional situations in the first place.

It was a question that the judges of the Animal Welfare Assessment Contest had no doubt considered, but it also was one that seemed to lie outside the contest's purview: In its either-or structure, the contest is helping train future professionals how to improve, rather than remove, the ties that bind animals into human society. Unless the day arrives when there is no need for laboratory rats, or poultry barns, or facilities to house desert tortoises and other captive wildlife, the animals of North America will be in the hands of veterinarians and animal scientists like LeBlond and her classmates, to help shape their situations the very best way they can." nyt

Monday, April 29, 2024

Steve Gleason’s good life

What's the last great book you read?


When I was diagnosed [with ALS], one of the first questions I asked in a journal entry was, "Can I discover peace of mind, even if this disease destroys my body?" That inquiry has been a guiding light for me the past 13 years. "The Good Life: Lessons From the World's Longest Scientific Study of Happiness," by Robert Waldinger and Marc Schulz, has real-life stories I could relate to, providing insights which have helped illuminate the path for me to live longer, and be grateful and content."


https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/25/books/review/steve-gleason-a-life-impossible-als.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare


Thursday, April 25, 2024

Healthy minds, flourishing lives

  

 

POSTSCRIPT. It was pleasing to receive a group email from Dr. Evins of the Honors College, at semester's end, thanking all the faculty participants for their contributions to the Mental Health semester series. These remarks in particular gratified: 
"...It was a really really really good series, thanks to all the wonderful presenters. Truly excellent... Phil touched on so much. He brought the classics and the wisdom of the ages directly to the students in one meta Philosophy lecture. It was powerful. The students will have much to say about the many points he touched on in his lecture. And also about going outside to walk the dog :) ...Also, Tom stood up for cat culture as personal therapy, balancing out Phil very nicely. (My husband is an Epictetus guy. I myself brought Epictetus home from both Phil and Tom.)"

Cat culture? Well, whatever works. 

 

MTSU Honors Lecture Series Spring 2024, here are the links to videos from each lecture; some videos are better than others depending on who was there to be the videographer!, but much was, happily, captured:

1/22 M. Evins, Honors Intro

1/29 Michelle Stevens, MTSU Center for Fairness, Justice, and Equity

2/5 Mary Kaye Anderson, MTSU Counseling Services

2/12 Rudy Dunlap, MTSU Health and Human Performance

2/26 Seth Marshall, MTSU Psychology

3/4 Spring Break – No Classes

3/11 Sarah Harris, MTSU Nutrition and Food Science

3/18 Kent Syler, MTSU Political Science

3/25 Rev. Susan Pendleton Jones, Belmont University

4/1 Bill Dobbins, NAMI-TN

4/8 Phil Oliver, MTSU Philosophy

4/15 Honors Student Presentations: Emilie ConnersEli WardMadalyn Dye

4/22 Tom Brinthaupt, MTSU Psychology

Monday, April 22, 2024

Peter Attia’s Quest to Live Long and Prosper

The point isn't longevity, it's to feel good today and plan to feel good again tomorrow. And to know you'll be ready, whenever the time comes, to rejoin Russell's great ocean of "universal life" (which really you're already doing). The point is to "live long and prosper" right now.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/04/22/how-to-die-in-good-health?_gl=1*gdig7f*_up*MQ..&gclid=05dc19316ca81fce994f7f12f1af4029&gclsrc=3p.ds

Tuesday, March 12, 2024

“deliberately exposed to radiation”

'Oppenheimer,' My Uncle and the Secrets America Still Doesn't Like to Tell

…"Oppenheimer" is a movie about a singular genius, an extraordinary collaboration and a turning point in history. But it's also a lesson in applied physics: the way a lone catalyst may trigger a chain reaction whose impact cannot be predicted or controlled. J. Robert Oppenheimer's greatest triumph set into motion forces that brought about his downfall. An innovation designed to make the world safer in the long term made it manifestly more dangerous. And in subsequent atomic tests through the postwar years, many Americans were deliberately exposed to radiation, to see what the blast and its aftermath would do to them...

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/11/opinion/oppenheimer-secret-lives.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Pandemic lessons not learned

It has been four years since the WHO declared COVID-19 a pandemic.

In 2022 Ed Yong wrote that the U.S. "made none of the broad changes that would protect its population against future pathogens, such as better ventilation or universal paid sick leave." He predicted that America will "continue to struggle against infectious diseases in part because some of its most deeply held values are antithetical to the task of besting a virus."

https://www.threads.net/@theatlantic/post/C4YzdRnRMYY/?xmt=AQGzVL8uXjPeUw92cc_xOhRNVYs1mCOg0E7vTYMC4LycRg