Tuesday, December 2, 2008

The snow cometh

Well, blogging has been low on the necessity scale as of late. I've been rather busy if I don't say so myself. Between working 4 times a week, soccer on sundays, school, and of course all-the-while moving, I think I can confidently say I am actually busy.
Things aren't looking to settle down anytime soon either; 'one more paper' bears no meaning when final exams distinctly follow. For now, I've got a decent amount of time to finish this paper, and this blog, this allowance of time, is like a sigh before I have to take it all back in again.
It's funny when I look at the amount of days until this paper is due, and I say, "6 days, that's plenty of time," but I of course fail to mention in those days I have two concerts, 3 work shifts, school, moving out, and it's snowing.
The snow is surely a sign of things to come. A light sprinkling of disorder that is enticing before the shit storm that is car accidents, slippery slopes, and a total exacerbation of all life's problems. Sure, the snow looks pretty now, but wait until you're knee-high in an morally-neutral disruptive substance. That's what life will be like very shortly for me: morally-neutral, yet always disruptive. Such is the life of seasons I suppose; those of the earth, and those of me. It's no wonder that school comes to a 'yearly' end with the spring an summer. Can you imagine your last taste of school being in the dead of a Canadian winter? It's enough to keep you locked in your house for ages. Outside is stress and total chaos. The house, your bed, your kitchen, your living rooms are homages to order and comfort and they welcome you back with open arms comforting you from the harshness that is winter, and they only let you back out with understanding and promises of a bright spring to come. Ending in the winter is a bitter taste left in your mouth, that repels you from reaching to the outside world for some time. Colloquially, this must be why 'snowboarders' tend to be, or were at some point chaos-loving douche-bags.

In any event, like the snow, life is coming and it's going to get hectic; hectic of course, but more cautiosly for me, important! I should not be looking at the storm of things to come as troublesome, specially when it's for my own good. Life is what I love, and I should be thankful for a blizzard of it - overwhelmed or not, I'm going to brave the storm and with a hopeful heart withstand it and overcome that which obstructs me. Wish me luck, and if you have any thoughts on Balibar's article "Althusser's Object," let me know, 'cause I'll be needing the help where I can get it - especially since I've been told by my professor, "No more C work Tim!"
Ah, my proffesor, Old Man Winter.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Re: "Ok. I'm going."

Oh A, I don't know what's worse, the fact you're having procrastinating issues, or the fact it makes me feel a better about myself.
I must say, this post is much like the superhero who dashes in at the last second to save the lady from the collapse of a burning building. I've been running around a lot in my head about my life, and its direction. School, in particular. Not going to lie, dropping out has been on my mind for the last few days. It's been on my mind a lot that what I'm putting out is not good enough; in short, I haven't felt committed enough. A quick gander at my grades will reflect this sentiment. When I told you today I wasn't motivated to come to class, I was really trying to say I wasn't motivated to come to school again.
In my days of self loathing, I have found solace in you, in particular this post. I can't imagine you intended it, but realistically, the expression of your thoughts have come at the right time to give me a new perspective on myself. For some strange reason (well maybe not that strange, but still, random) I am quoting in my head, 300 the movie, in that 'even a god-king can bleed.' Because of you, because you struggle in ways I do, I have hope. I can look to you in complete admiration, and know that its not by some divine gift you've received that I feel this way. This type of reflection is exactly what I need to enforce the notion that your status (to me anyways) takes work. Hard, painful work. Thanks to you, I no longer want to give up. I feel elevated again; I feel human.
Once again, thank you.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

moving in

So, I've been to the house a few times now, had a chance to run through where things go (not to mention where I'll have to repair the wall - oops).
The house is very nice and my excitement is building to move in. It's a whole new living space for me to get used to; to make it my own; a part of me.
I don't get attached to a lot of things, especially that easily, but making this house a part of me and vice versa is going to be different. What can I do to this house, where I feel like I've produced the feeling of a 'home,' beyond the walls and roof? In the Lockian sense I've just got to mix my labour with the house to make it mine. Sounds simple enough. Repair the wall, move some furniture, and the house becomes my property (well, some of it).
In the Althusserian sense, it gets tricky. I don't know if its possible for me to label this 'housey feeling' as a crystallized object yet. 'In the last instance,' I say to myself, 'is not possible to put a finger on.' Thankfully, Balibar is a smart person. These epistemological breaks, that is points in between the crystallization of objects are in themselves objects. This epistemological (house) break, this one heading towards 'the last instance' is in itself an object. My house, my 'home,' is going to be my object of personal ownership.
How strange that the crystallization, the last instance, is only possible in the eradication of the objectifying - as in me. That will probably not be the desired 'house' feeling I am looking for, lest I die young!

Sunday, November 9, 2008

moving out

So, my girlfriend and friend get possession of their (our) house tomorrow. Call me crazy, but I'm not really affected by this at all quite yet.
Perhaps its the fact that I have never stepped foot into the house as of yet - tomorrow may be a different story. I could be jumping for joy at the possession of a new house. I do have a passion for setting up things. Maybe once I start moving things into the house where I can place them logically my excitement will raise. Until then, the movement phases me not.
One part of the change that has me excited is to justify abusing my staff discount - electronics shall be aplenty if I have it my way. Speakers are the first on the list.
I'll have to show them off as soon as I get them - for now the large t.v. will have to make due with the puny bookshelf speakers I'm running - my receiver yearns to be used to it's intended capacity.
In the meantime, I shall spend some more time packing and organizing, cleaning and dusting, packing and garbaging.
It's been very interesting to sort through the years that I have lugged around - kept my hands on lives long forgotten. Found memories of people I used to confide in and watched as I took my stance on keeping those memories or not years later and an entirely different mind set. It's hard to argue that things are not in flux, and I'm made curious as to what this will look like years down the road. What will be worth keeping in another 5 years? What memories will obtain through the new ones about to be made? Time looks to unveil a number of truths and surprises ahead, and it will always be interesting to see what happens.
Moving out is certainly interesting - I hope what moves-in creates worthwhile memories.
Cheers to those memories past and those not yet realized!

Friday, November 7, 2008

Work . . .

is like this!

I'm a bad mid-wife to Locke and Strauss

So, here's my last essay - it was like giving birth - and being a man, I can just throw that kind of statement on the table.
Not much you can do about how painful I think child birth is - it's exactly like writing an essay on Strauss' treatment of Locke's doctrine of Natural right; right ladies?
Well, I'll just accuse those who say 'no it's not' as never having read Strauss on Locke . . .
So, enjoy, or hate, or just skip it - it's all good.


From Leo Strauss’ article, On Locke’s Doctrine of Natural Right, I will argue that Strauss shows Locke’s notion of natural law is a revolutionary idea that grounds its rules in reason rather than revelation by showing that natural law is not inherent in humanity, so it must come from a natural right that is dictated by reason – furthermore, that Locke’s account of the natural law fully informs his political philosophy.

To begin, Locke’s view of the natural law from the Essay Concerning Human Understanding is covered by a seemingly too obvious paradox. On the one hand, he states in order for the natural law to be a law, it must come and be known to come from God with sanctions of infinite weight and duration in the afterlife; however, on the other hand, Locke also says that reason cannot demonstrate the existence of another life. Not to be confused with an outright denial of God, from this, Locke is saying that natural reason does not demonstrate an afterlife that grounds our natural law – only through revelation do we get the precepts of a divinely inspired natural law. Of course, the paradox here is that we cannot have knowledge of a natural law through natural reason, that natural law is effectively unknowable. Strauss presses the matter of Locke’s attempt to discover natural law amidst the unreasonable notion of revelation. For whatever reason Locke had to submerse his notion of the natural law in revelation (The Crusades and Inquisition come to mind), his implicit notion of natural law remains clouded further still. In attempting to show that natural law could be rooted in natural reason and be concerned with public happiness, Strauss tells us of a partial law of nature that deals with such things. The partial law of nature is concerned with political happiness or a good of mankind that is relevant to this world – that is to say, it is based on natural reason and doesn’t presuppose the belief in an afterlife. It would seem that fulfilling political happiness would answer what is the perfection of our nature. As quickly as the premise lifts off, it is shot down – political happiness does not entail that the partial law of nature is anything but just that: partial. The law of nature must come from and be known to come from God, and in Locke’s example, the Chinese and Siamites are politically happy, yet they are unaware of God – naturally speaking, the partial law of nature restricts the conditions which a nation uses as a guide to be civil. It cannot be then, that the partial law of nature fulfills the perfection of our nature, otherwise it would be accessible and applicable to everyone. Thus far, we have not reached any law of nature aright, and it appears that Locke’s arguments are weak attempts of exposing the law of nature. But, as Strauss digs deeper, his exposition of Locke makes the argument very clear. Because Locke’s attempts to show natural law is so obviously paradoxical we can implicitly know that Locke believes, “If there is to be such a law this law must therefore consist of a set of rules whose validity does not presuppose life after death or belief in a life after death.”

Since there is no established law(s) of nature, there are no inherent rules, and from this we know that the rules are not “imprinted on the mind as a duty,” from God. In this instance, the rules of the law of nature become “practical principals . . . [that] continue constantly to operate and influence all our actions without ceasing and which may be observed in all persons and all ages, steady and universal.” It happens to be the case that, “Nature . . . has put into man a desire of happiness, and an aversion to misery;” the desire appears to obtain continually and universally. This desire has the character of a natural right, and antedates all duties of man. If God is the creator, then the constant practical principals observed in everyone would be an effect of its creation. God has planted in man the pursuit of happiness and aversion to pain – in a word, the desire of self-preservation. All desires, all life, when in conflict necessarily leads to the influence of self-preservation. This right of nature, this desire, is foundational for the law of nature, because happiness presumes life and the right of self-preservation becomes the most fundamental right. Self-preservation, however, is not sufficient for the law of nature, because the act of self preservation requires man’s reason that teaches him what is necessary for that preservation. Happiness is the foundation for reason, which henceforth becomes the law of nature. Simply put, as a deviation from traditional views, as opposed to revelation, reason is said to be the natural law.
Much akin to the classical philosophers, who spoke from reason rather than the word of their deities, Locke takes up the charge of trying to find what is the perfection and excellency of our nature. To the classic philosophers, virtue was the fulfillment of our nature, yet they were unable to show a necessary connection between virtue and happiness without showing that the connection existed only in an afterlife. Even though there was never a discovered necessary connection between virtue and happiness, the classical philosophers and practically all men see there is a connection of happiness to virtue, and therefore the admission that happiness is connected to natural law. Because there is a visible connection between public happiness and a general compliance with several moral rules, philosophers and men are eager to point out the connection, but have not shown it to be a necessary connection – hence the dilemma Locke faces, and with the help of Strauss, we are shown that he eventually overcomes. The necessary (foundational) connection of happiness to the law of nature (reason), in Locke’s arguments goes to show that there is a necessary connection to the perfection of our nature and happiness.
According to this argumentation of Strauss’ exposition of Locke, we are informed of the reason that influences Locke’s formulation(s) of the law of nature. Most explicitly, Locke says that because of the law of nature, “no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty, or possessions.” Reason, the activity founded on self-preservation continually dictates man to not harm one another in his life, liberty, and property. The precepts of Locke’s naming of the law of nature are as should be obvious, rooted in self-preservation. With much of Locke’s political philosophy, it begins with the state of nature. The state in which men are naturally in is also the state which Locke begins his reasoning for his notion of the law of nature. Men, naturally have perfect freedom – the freedom to “order their actions and dispose of their possessions . . . without . . . depending on the will of any other man.” Additionally, the state of nature is a state of equality, where no one naturally has a subordination or subjection over one another. All men are born with equal rank, with the same natural advantages and the same faculties, but most importantly have equality in reciprocal power and jurisdiction, “no one having more than another.” Since men are equal and free, but more importantly their power and jurisdiction is reciprocal, it becomes a necessity of reason that all men need be executors of the law of nature because of their (foundational) right to self preservation. It is by reason, therefore, that “every man hath a right to punish the offender, and be executioner of the law of nature.” That is to say, every man has the right to protect the law of nature that says to not harm another in life, liberty, or property. This equality of being executioner of the law of nature establishes mutual security, so that if one person transgresses against another, he has the rest of humanity to fear, as jurisdiction is reciprocal. It is now the case that men are foundationally protected in their life and liberty, but Locke’s all important notion of property remains to be dealt with.

Property, a notion synonymous with Locke is of no small consequence in his political theory, and as such gets its own treatment in his treatise. For starters, God gave the world in common to all men, and they have an equal chance at the world through the spontaneous hand of nature. However, the general gift of the land must be procured privately for man to have particular use of it. Like the wild Indian who has no stead, yet has nourishment in fruits and meat not only has a claim to his spoils, they become a part of him. The annexation of the necessary subsistence becomes part of himself and also his property by mixing the provided resource with the property of himself – by mixing his ownership of his labour with the resource, it becomes a part of him and his property. That is to say that whatever man pulls out of the giving state of nature with his labour now becomes the proper owner of that, in the same way a man owns himself. By the property being an extension of the person, that person now privately owns that property. In the conjunction of self-preservation (and property-preservation) and reason, we are fully informed as to why Locke designates political power “to be a right of making laws with penalty of death, and consequently all less penalties, for the regulating and preserving of property, and of employing the force of the community in the execution of such laws, and in the defense of the commonwealth from foreign injury; and all this only for the public good.”

It has now been shown how Locke’s notion of the natural right and laws are revolutionary and distinct from the traditional precepts of revelation. Also, the grounding of reason and self-preservation go on to inform and enforce Locke’s conception of political philosophy in the Second Treatise of Government.

skipping pleasantries

It's a good possibility that most people who will read this know me, or slightly know me - so I'm not giving you an introduction, in spite of this being my first post.
I'd rather not give you any answers to who I am anyway - you and I can figure that out as we go along.
So, with that being said, I'll begin with needlessly giving you an ear full.
First things first - I was able to put my finger on why I don't like starbucks hot chocolate; it feels like drinking a mineral. It's like having a nice cup of finely ground earth. The taste is okay, I'm not a fan of the burnt almond flavour, but it suffices as tasty.
The next piece of randomness I would like to add now is that, I am a huge fan of the game LittleBigPlanet, it's a very well rounded game with an emphasis on fun and creativity, but the thing I love most about the game is the intro.
Best piece of video I've ever seen in a video game. 'cerebellumillical cord' 'stephen fry' - there really isn't much more you can ask from it.
And the last thing on my mind revolves around my last essay I just wrote - on Strauss' view of Locke's doctrine of the natural right.
This essay was a pain, and I think I know why - like a lot people should, I blame Leo Strauss.
Have you ever seen, in a movie or in life when a car tire is going forward, but its rolling 'backwards'? You know what I am talking about? Well, if you can picture that, that is exactly how Strauss' exposition looked like - moving forward and backwards all at the same time. It's not easy to ground something like that, while simultaneously applying it to Locke's second treatise on government. It was difficult to say the least, and I am sure the marking up of the paper will reflect that unintuitive vision that something is going forward and backwards.
ah well - it's done, and I can move on to a philosopher I enjoy a lot more; Althusser, unlike Locke, I feel I could trust you with my stuff. (just not my wife! (if I had one, but really, let's not get technical to ruin the sick joke(I guess I may not ever get a wife, seeing as I would call her 'my stuff')))
likewise, I am done; hopefully you've enjoyed my deflowering of this blog as much as I did! (yeah, it was okay)