Posts

Can ghosts shape our selves?

Can ghosts shape our selves?

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Ghosts serve perhaps a useful role in human lives: they could help define the nature of our selves and what it is to be human. I discuss this in this essay which was published on 29 August 2023 by Blue Labyrinths magazine. See  https://bluelabyrinths.com/2023/08/28/can-ghosts-shape-our-selves/   Hamlet and his father (William Blake, 1806) (Public Domain)

Book Review: Metazoa

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My review of Peter Godfrey-Smith's book, Metazoa: Animal Minds and the Birth of Consciousnes s has just been published in the Newtown Review of Books . (Image: Pleine Mer, Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947) (Wikimedia Commons))

Not all art is beautiful (and that’s good)

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Is aesthetics only about art that is beautiful as conventionally understood? If not, what purpose does art that may not be so serve? My new essay published in May 2022 in Blue Labyrinths        Image: John Constable, Hadleigh Castle (1837) (Public Domain)

Views of Reality from Stagecraft, Science, and ‘Nowhere’

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Robert Delauney, Eiffel Tower (1911) (Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons) There are numerous ways in which the fourth wall can be transgressed. Then what is the role of the fourth wall as an inviolable boundary between fiction and reality? Secondly, is evidence of such infringements today a sign that society is becoming more self-reflexive in a quest to redefine the borders between fiction and the “real” world?                                                                                                             My new essay published in the July 2021 issue of Epoche Magazine

Can Pascal’s rationality rescue the pandemic vaccine?: My second essay in Blue Labyrinths

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How do you convince someone to take the coronavirus vaccine? This essay argues that we can do so by presenting to them a reasoned argument from theology, namely, Pascal's wager. See essay at  https://bluelabyrinths.com/2021/04/25/can-pascals-rationality-rescue-the-pandemic-vaccine/ The Triumph of Death (1532) by Pieter Brueghel the Elder, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Art, temporality and the "motions of the mind": My essay published in Blue Labyrinths

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 It is a commonplace to claim that art imitates life. If so, art, in performing this mimesis, should respond also to our obsession and concern with temporality (time as experienced, not as measured, or human time as opposed to what the metaphysicians claim). How does art participate in this alchemy of smelting clock time into felt time? Read essay at Blue Labyrinths .

Another research paper published on Jorge Luis Borges

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  My research paper on “Time and the Observer in Jorge Luis Borges” has been published in the 2020 edition of the Literature & Aesthetics journal released a few days back. Abstract: Jorge Luis Borges is ambivalent in his views of time and is unwilling to completely accept a denial of the reality of time. I argue that this is because a view that refutes time denies the observer too along with it.  Borges tries therefore to identify a reconciliation between a refutation of time and its reality.  (Image: Edwaert Collier - Vanitas Still Life with a Statuette of an Antique Athlete and a Print of Michelangelo (1675) - Public Domain)