23 December 2012

Maurice Herzog, Mountain Climber, R.I.P. (1919-2012)

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One of my great heroes, French mountain climber Maurice Herzog, died on 13 December 2012 at age 93, both famous and controversial.  Through his pivotal book, Annapurna (1952), the best-selling mountaineering book of all time, he inspired me (and uncountable others in my own and later generations) to climb to the very top – to hell with any and all personal costs.  He and Louis Lachenal summited the Himalayan peak Annapurna (8,091 meters/ 26,245 feet) in 1950 – without oxygen – and were the first known climbers to summit one of the 14 mountains over 8,000 meters in height. 
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In their bold all-out dash to the summit, Herzog and Lachenal wore lightweight boots and risked severe frostbite, and indeed both of them soon lost all their toes and Herzog lost his fingers.  Their retreat from the mountain, aided by some of France’s greatest climbers on the team, was an epic in itself.  It would be 20 years before Annapurna was summited a second time.  It’s a bear of a mountain, and many of mountaineering’s best have died there since. 
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One of Herzog’s immortal lessons to me from his experience this was:  “Don’t lose your gloves!”  That sounds sensible enough, but in the extreme experience of hypothermia, inhumanly agonizing climbing fatigue and lack of rest, one does not always focus to the optimum. And on Annapurna’s high altitude they were massively oxygen-deprived.  On the descent of Annapurna, Herzog took off his gloves to get into his rucksack, and the gloves blew away down the slope.  No spare gloves/mittens = disaster; there is such a thing as taking lightweight packing to absurd extremes.  He lost his fingers (as well as his toes). 
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I remembered his plight in horror when in April 1975 I was alone on the summit of Mt. Marcy in unseasonably brutal freezing winter conditions while shivering with hypothermia and at the end of my wits and strength, and when taking off my mittens to take a photo, one mitt in my only pair of mittens blew away; it started sliding down toward the void of Panther Gorge and I quickly stepped out and got a boot on it before it was lost.  I vowed that very day to splurge and buy an extra pair of mitts for all future cold expeditions.  Don’t forget that lesson! 
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Another great lesson from this Annapurna epic was the survival value of snow caves.  On their desperate descent the frostbitten Herzog and Lachenal were rescued by their fellow teammates, Gaston Rebuffat and Lionel Terray.  Someone accidentally fell into a crevasse that luckily had them slide somewhat laterally (rather than vertically) into a snow cave-like cavity.  There they weathered out the wild wind and cold, but with only one sleeping bag for four men.  (That had to have been one long night.) 
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When they broke out for a desperate retreat to lower camps the next morning, the physically able were snow-blinded, and they were guided by the cripples who still had vision.  It was but a marginal team arrangement, but it got them down. 
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Climbers earlier had been well above 8,000 meters on both Everest and K2, but without reaching the summits.  The French feat was great, and Herzog’s well-written account of it electrified the mountaineering world.  Everest was finally summited in 1953 by the strong British expedition, and K2 was summited in 1954 by two in the Italian team backed up by the immortal Walter Bonatti (another of my greatest heroes). 
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One great achievement by Herzog and the French team in 1950 was that they had to do a quick and completely original exploration and reconnaissance of the mostly unknown Annapurna region to even find the mountain in the far back wilderness, and they were pressured hard by time as the coming summer monsoon would smother them in storm.  Heroes come through in desperate situations.  With a bit of luck. 
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The Herzog legacy has hit some bumps in recent years as newer discoveries in climbing history have made some of the previously unknown details clearer.   Controversy is not unusual to the sport of climbing, since we are all egotistical lunatics and closet glory-hounds.  (Example:  most of my own greatest climbs were solo with no witnesses and of moderate difficulty; yet I will brag about them until my dying day!  Climbing defines us at a very fierce level.)  Some of the members of this 1950 French team did not get the glory they deserved in Herzog’s book. 
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For example: 
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Lionel Terray – author of perhaps the greatest title describing the lunacy of mountain climbers, Conquistadors of the Useless -- was on the team and an important element in the expedition’s success and the rescue of the summiteers.  Terray was a great one, specializing in fast and light ascents way before it became esteemed for its aesthetic purity.  He did the first ascent in 1955 of Makalu (8,481 meters and 5th highest peak in the world) with Jean Couzy, and this French expedition later put seven more members on the summit before going home, a tremendous achievement.  He also did the first ascent of Cerro Fitzroy in Patagonia, 1952, with Guido Magnone, and the first ascent of Mt. Huntington in Alaska in 1964. 
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Later discovered writings by Louis Lachenal, who summited Annapurna with Herzog, have apparently added new details to the story of the climb.  Lachenal and Terray did the second ascent of the North Face of the Eiger in 1947, an epic event. 
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Also on Herzog’s Annapurna team was Gaston Rebuffat – the skillful master of climbing technique and author of exquisite books on the grace of the upward moving mountaineer.  Gaston helped save the day in the retreat on Annapurna.  On his resume he was the first to climb all six of the Great North Faces in the Alps.  Another of my great heroes.  A stylist, a romantic and a visionary. 
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The controversy, in sum, is that Herzog as organizer/ leader of the expedition monopolized the rights to information for the press and the world at large, and thus his teammates – who saved his life – were pushed a bit into the background in his book and in immediate mountaineering fame. 
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Ok, I accept this.  Mountain climbers are not (quite) gods.  We are often pricks.  Human weaknesses are expected, and humans as climbers are not completely rational.  (How would you categorize someone who lusts for these dangerous desolate peaks?)  I am extremely glad to see the day when the other members of the 1950 Annapurna expedition are given their long-delayed due, and I’m sorry that Herzog did not share the glory as he might have.  I hope to someday read the full accounts of others on the expedition.  Mountains seem (from human perspective) to be not always fair to those who assault them, and neither are mountaineering historians. 
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Yet, all in all, Maurice Herzog, by publishing Annapurna in 1952, ignited a holy spark in so many of us misfits and inspired us to climb far beyond our limitations and to reach for the very top.  I thank him for that heroic vision. 
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-Zenwind.
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30 August 2012

Book Review: Rocket Men: the epic story of the first men on the Moon (2009) by Craig Nelson

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I bought this very excellent book some time ago when I saw it in a 60% off sale, and, ironically, I had started reading it just before the recent death of Neil Armstrong. Even though we know that Armstrong successfully landed his Apollo 11 Lunar Lander, when Nelson describes that prolonged, tense search for a safe landing spot while running low on landing fuel, it holds one in suspense.
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Nelson rivets your attention on the first page and doesn’t let up. He documents the unprecedented scale of the Space Race effort and provides great background on the Missile Race, the German scientists and Cold War. He gives detailed descriptions of the long hard work by the 400,000-strong team of scientists, engineers, astronauts, and aerospace industry workers – who overcame continuous obstacles to do the seemingly impossible.
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This book is a great companion to Andrew Chaikin’s earlier book on the entire Apollo program, A Man on the Moon (1994), which I reviewed two years ago here. Nelson’s Rocket Men focuses on the Apollo 11 flight and the effort leading up to it, while Chaikin had also documented the later flights of Apollo 12-17 with each of their individual dangers and discoveries. There is not as much overlap as one would expect between the two books, they complement each other well, and both are exciting reads.
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I highly recommend Rocket Men, especially now that the first man to step on the Moon has just died and passed into history. Although I had been a huge fan and close follower of the Mercury program in the early 1960s, I had been out of the loop for a while. I had never heard of Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin or Mike Collins when, in late July 1969, I was on Bunker 6, Hill 34, Quang Nam Province during the middle of a quiet moonlit night; our sergeant called up and told me, “The astronauts just landed on the Moon, man!” I looked up at the Moon and thought to myself, “Those guys are in more danger then I am at this particular moment.”
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After a poor start with early humiliating failures and later tragic deaths, the space program gained accelerating momentum and really did get off the ground – all the way to the Moon and back again. Heroic and inspiring work.
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-Zenwind.
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06 August 2012

Mars Landing of NASA Curiosity Spacecraft

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Damn! They actually did it. They pulled it off. They used a completely untried and incredibly bold landing technique – involving a rocket-powered hovercraft “backpack”, with the rover on rope slings below it, to lower the rover to the surface and then cut off from it and fly elsewhere to crash safely out of the way. Curiosity sits on the surface of Mars, ready to do its thing.
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The JPL/Cal Tech rocket boys and girls should be proud. Their immediate press conference – after the initial elation passed – showed them both humble and proud. They emphasized the total team effort involved, as well as the scientific rigor and hard, dedicated work. They said that “curiosity” was one of humanity’s hallmarks.
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The entire achievement is inspiring. Humanity at its best.
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-Zenwind.
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27 June 2012

Movie Review: Moonrise Kingdom (2012)

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Moonrise Kingdom, directed by Wes Anderson, is a strange little movie that I highly recommend, a “comedy, drama, romance”, that is low budget but featuring first rate acting talent. E.g.: Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Frances McDormand, Bill Murray, Tilda Swinton, and Harvey Keitel, but our new young actors, Kara Hayward as Suzy and Jared Gilman as Sam, steal the show. If you have ever been connected in any way with the Boy Scout movement, this movie is a must-see. If you ever remember young love, track the DVD down when it comes out.
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It is 1965. The plot revolves around two early-teens, Suzy (12-year-old daughter of Murray’s and McDormand’s characters) and Sam (a 12-year-old orphan and outsider but a Khaki Scout extraordinaire). They are both outcast loners yet they find each other and fall in love. Their individual lives at home have become so unbearable that they agree to run away together, relying on Sam's Scouting skills to survive in the wild.
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The corny low-budget homage to a bygone era reminds me in a way of A Christmas Story (1983) starring Darren McGavin. I will definitely get the DVD when available. I’m an irretrievable cult fan of this flick.
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Music has a powerful part in this film. Much of it is from the 1946 masterpiece by Benjamin Britten, “The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra”, as well as many more pieces by Britten. Another strong musical element is Hank Williams’ music: “Kaw-Liga”, “Long Gone Lonesome Blues”, and “Ramblin’ Man”. Williams’ songs are enough to make your heart break. We also hear from Camille Saint-Saens, Franz Schubert, Francoise Hardy, Mozart, and others. Be sure to stay with it into the end credits, where some more music education awaits you.
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As to Release Dates: apparently it was only Limited Release in the USA in May 2012. So look for DVD releases later this year. It is still in (limited) theaters here.
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Update: I just saw this film again in the only theater playing it in Thailand. It still plays – possibly because it strongly appeals to that very quirky sub-species, the American expatriate. I enjoyed the music more than ever this time, so see it in a theater if you can.
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-Zenwind.
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06 June 2012

Book Reviews: The Millennium Trilogy by Stieg Larsson – (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, etc.)

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This trilogy is a real page-turner for its entire three volumes of some 2,100 pages. I loved it and couldn’t put the books down. Written by the late Swedish journalist Stieg Larsson, the stories are murder mysteries, spy stories and pure thrillers, with courtroom drama and some unforgettable characters. It has a strong moral sense and is refreshingly feminist in that it features many extraordinarily intelligent and strong female characters. (I will try not to spoil the plotlines in this review, giving just enough detail to hopefully hook you on the books.)
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Larsson originally wanted the entire trilogy to be named Men Who Hate Women, because that is one of the major threads. The Swedish publishers did keep that name for the first Swedish novel (and the first Swedish film, based on the first volume, was also named that). The English language publishers named them: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (which I will refer to as Vol. 1), The Girl Who Played with Fire (Vol. 2), and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest (Vol. 3). It is called The Millennium Trilogy because the fictitious Swedish monthly journal Millennium is always close to the center of the action with its investigative journalist/publisher Mikael Blomkvist and its editor-in-chief Ericka Berger.
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The “girl” in the English titles is Lisbeth Salander – and what a character she is. She is small, looking like an anorexic teen when she is in her mid-twenties, and she is socially incompetent, deeply introverted, sticking to her own private world and mistrusting almost everyone else (except for her peers in “Hacker Republic”). Damaged goods. What most people around her do not realize about Lisbeth is that she has areas of pure genius. She has a photographic memory and has incredible abilities with computer technology. She is a world class hacker – “probably the best in Sweden”. She works as a researcher for a top-of-the-line private security company in Stockholm, whose boss says she is by far the best researcher he has ever seen.
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Lisbeth Salander is her own worst enemy when it comes to her personal PR. Her social incompetence makes her appear extremely rude. She comes off as offensively punk, tattooed, pierced, dressing very goth, and wearing lots of black make-up. She scowls, but if she ever gives her “crooked smile,” then look out, because some major shit may come down and someone will pay dearly. Even one of her greatest friends and defenders was surprised at her appearance at her own trial; he thought: “She reminded him of a vampire in some pop-art movie from the ‘60s.” (Vol. 3).
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You do not ever want to piss Lisbeth Salander off. Her revenge can be very exacting. Salander has a history of violence from her earliest school days through her teens, and, although she uses violence only in self defense, she is stereotyped as crazy and locked up in a children’s psych hospital when twelve years old. (However, there is an interesting back-story to that that is developed later in Vol. 2.) She just wants to be left alone, but various miscreants – representatives and hirelings of the state in particular – continue to oppress her. Even at her transition to adulthood at 18 she is still shackled by being declared legally “incompetent” and therefore under the complete control of a legal “guardian” appointed by the state.
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Yet we will see that Salander’s childhood institutionalization and her later guardianship status is actually orchestrated behind the scenes by shadowy police intrigues dating back from the Cold War era, and her rights as an individual have been trampled further by dumb bureaucracy and by the psychiatric industry. She has been horrendously mistreated.
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Author Stieg Larsson was a great feminist, an advocate for women’s rights, dignity and security. (It is said that at age 15 he witnessed a gang rape of a young teenage girl, and he never forgave himself for not doing something – anything – about it at the time; a haunted author.) His female characters are intelligent, passionate and strong-willed. Especially “the girl,” Lisbeth Salander, whose story is central.
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But we also meet other great heroines, such as Ericka Berger, an intelligent, super-competent and confident woman who is editor-in-chief of Millennium magazine. (The Swedish films of the trilogy, while being great adaptations, do not do complete justice to Ericka’s courage and integrity in the books; but in the first English language film so far, actress Robin Wright seems to be portraying Ericka as Larsson envisioned her.)
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There are other heroines in the novels. Monica Figuerola, who is not only an intelligent, beautiful, super physically fit law enforcement officer but also is a key investigator within a small secret police department that is responsible for protecting the integrity of Sweden’s constitutional rule of law. Sonja Modig is a Stockholm cop who independently thinks outside the box. Suzanne Linder is an ex-cop who specializes in private security and takes no nonsense from bad guys, showing them no mercy. If the English language film sequels follow as I hope, Embeth Davitz will be playing Annika Blomkvist Giannini in the third film. (I recently read a review of the trilogy by Mario Vargas Llosa, and he also delights in these strong female characterizations.)
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Mikael Blomkvist is the heroic investigative journalist with immense integrity, idealism, devotion and drive. Lisbeth Salander laughs at him as a boring “do-gooder,” while she is slowly admitting her growing respect for him as a professional and as a friend. Blomkvist has an interesting – and quite exhausting – sex life. Women, quite simply, like him, and he has an impressive array of lovers. He is a decent man, a moral man, and women tend to feel safe with him as well as appreciated by him. He makes no promises to anyone and is always honest, but women pull him into the sack remarkably often. To get his work done, he often must hide in unknown places – a very rough life! (Daniel Craig is very well suited to the English language movie role, although none of the movies have nearly as much bedroom action as the books.)
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Blomkvist’s love life fits in with Sweden’s famous sexual libertarianism. If it is between consenting adults, well then it’s none of your business – neither yours nor the state’s. Blomkvist and Ericka Berger have been “best friends” and “occasional lovers” for 25 years, and, although it destroyed Blomkvist’s earlier attempt at marriage to another woman who eventually could not accept his infidelities with Ericka, Berger’s husband (who is bisexual) accepts his wife’s affair with no problems. Ericka is deeply in love with two men.
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This attitude is libertarian because it is entirely consensual and laissez faire. Lisbeth Salander’s love life is totally off all maps. Larsson defends all sexual preferences between consenting adults: hetero, LGBT, etc.
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Looking at the three novels here, Vol. 1 is a murder mystery and an intro to some of the main characters. Vol. 2 continues with our characters pursuing an entirely new murder mystery involving journalistic investigations into coercive sex trafficking of young foreign women into Sweden as unwilling prostitutes. Lisbeth’s history is unearthed, e.g., how she “played with fire.” Vol. 3 is a seamless sequel from Vol. 1 and 2, in which we meet Cold War rogues in Lisbeth’s background and the Swedish secret police. The Hacker Republic is introduced, a loose, worldwide, internet-connected community of hackers who defend their own. There is a classic courtroom trial in which all of Lisbeth’s loyal friends are involved. It is a fantastic series.
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Political and philosophical stuff: (my opinions):
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The nanny state is the government insisting that it knows best how to take good care of you, whether you want that care or not. There are moments when the horror show of bureaucratic tyranny overwhelms me. Larsson strongly criticizes the real-life infringements made on individuals’ autonomy and rights by the legal institution of Guardianship that victimizes his fictional Lisbeth.
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He also criticizes coercive psychiatric institutionalization – shades of Thomas Szasz, as a good libertarian friend has reminded me. Szasz is a Hungarian-American psychiatrist who has argued against such state incarceration. (One of my greatest uneasy guilty actions is the fact that I worked many years on locked psychiatric wards, a turnkey lording over legally coerced patients officially labeled with “mental illness.” Someday I will address such guilty memories in more detail.)
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Self-defense. Mace pepper spray is an “illegal weapon” throughout Sweden, yet professional journalist and editor Ericka Berger carries it. She says, “I’ll be damned if I’m going to run around alone at night without some sort of weapon.” She is an independent woman and intends to remain so.
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Later, Ericka has her house broken into by a scary, threatening weirdo who may return at any time. The police are not even interested or helpful. She is completely alone at this time, so she positions golf clubs in the house as possible defensive weapons if he returns. She is later informed by police that in Sweden if you kill an intruder breaking into your own home you will be charged with manslaughter; if you admit that you had fore-armed yourself (with golf clubs) it could be charged as murder. That is insane!
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Free Will. Lisbeth Salander had been bullied by the state for her entire life, with her rights violated systematically. Her family upbringing was violently dysfunctional. Yet she declares several times that environmental influences are no excuse. A couple of times she says that: “There are no innocents. There are, however, different degrees of responsibilities.” According to a non-political, specialized philosophical usage of the word “libertarian” – relating instead to ethical-epistemological issues of Free Will – Lisbeth is a libertarian: we choose and are responsible. (I would also call her a political libertarian, if indeed she could be said to be political at all; she is probably in the individualist-anarchist camp of libertarian theory.)
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A note on the film adaptations of the trilogy. The three Swedish language films are excellent. Although they had played at a small venue in Bangkok, I never saw them then because I knew nothing about the story. I only paid attention when it was announced that Daniel Craig would star in an English version, and then I read the trilogy and eventually got the Swedish DVDs. The English version was also excellent, and I look forward to the sequels. The Swedish actress Noomi Rapace was very good in her original screen role as Lisbeth, and I am glad to see that she has more film roles coming her way now. But I think that Rooney Mara portrayed a Lisbeth that was closer to the books. This is because Mara is younger, smaller and more vulnerable looking. Rapace looks like a true ass-kicker, and for that reason I cannot picture her as easily being the victim in the first film. But all the films thus far are all great, adding up to one great body of work in literature and film.
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(Immediately following below is a very long review of the book The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and Philosophy, 2012, ed. by Eric Bronson.)
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-Zenwind.
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Book Review: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and Philosophy: Everything Is Fire (2012) ed. by Eric Bronson

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This book philosophically analyzes Stieg Larsson’s The Millennium Trilogy [reviewed separately above], i.e., the novels, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (vol. 1), The Girl Who Played with Fire (vol. 2), and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest (vol. 3). It is part of the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture series. As in other volumes in this and related publishers’ series, this book offers a variety of philosophical perspectives from many contributors, as well as bits of humor and a great love of the subject matter. (The subtitle, “Everything Is Fire”, is a great example of this: It brings to mind both Volume 2 of the trilogy and the philosophical contribution of the great ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus.) Editor Eric Bronson was also co-editor of The Lord of the Rings and Philosophy, a book I also enjoyed very much and reviewed here several years ago.
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SPOILER ALERT: Reading this review assumes that you have read all three novels of Stieg Larsson’s The Millennium Trilogy and/or have seen the three Swedish films. If your only intro to the trilogy is the first English language film, you may want to wait to see the forthcoming Hollywood sequels before reading this. Important plot details are given away here for the entire trilogy.
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PHILOSOPHY ALERT: This review is very long and under a heavy philosophical burden, so if philosophy isn’t your thing you might want to skip the whole post. But I’m an addict and simply couldn’t put the book(s) down. As always, I do not agree with some of the philosophers and thinkers who write here or are quoted, but I always learn something from them. I call challenges like this “mind-stretching”, good for one’s brain even if it sometimes feels like being physically stretched on the Torture Rack.
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The book’s Dedication is: “To Pippi Longstocking and the misfit in all of us.” If you get that, this book may be for you.
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Editor Eric Bronson’s Introduction is subtitled “The Girl Who Kicked the Sophists’ Nest” and his first sentence is: “If Lisbeth Salander is the new voice of reason, then truth ‘can be a moody bitch’.” That five-word quote at the end is from character Mikael Blomkvist’s affectionate-but-truthful description of Salander. Making a comparison of Salander and Socrates, Bronson writes:
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“Like Lisbeth in Stockholm, Socrates saw himself as a gadfly in Athens, an annoying pest who forced the city sophists to look deeper into their own hypocrisies. Before Lisbeth, it was Socrates who was brought to trial and pre-convicted in the court of public opinion. ‘I have incurred a great deal of bitter hostility,’ he complained, ‘and this is what will bring about my destruction’. Salander puts it differently. ‘Every time I turn around’, she says in The Girl Who Played with Fire, ‘there’s some fucking pile of shit with a beer belly in my way acting tough’.” (p.3)
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The book’s five parts are: “Lisbeth ‘The Idiot’ Salander”; “Mikael ‘Do-Gooder’ Blomkvist”; “Stieg Larsson, Mystery Man”; “Everyone Has Secrets”; and, “75,000 Volts of Vengeance Can’t Be Wrong, Can It?”
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Part One: Lisbeth “The Idiot” Salander.
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Chapter 1: “Labeling Lisbeth: Sti(e)gma and Spoiled Identity”, by Aryn Marti and Mary Simms.
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The authors take Larsson’s portrayal of Lisbeth’s social/ psychological stigma as being a dangerously crazy and violent child and young adult, and they discuss it in terms of the works of Erving Goffman (Asylums: Essays on the Social Situations of Mental Patients and Other Inmates, 1961; Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity, 1986).
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Throughout her life Lisbeth is given horrible (and out of context) labels, e.g., as insane, violent, etc. Such labels make it easier for such people to be further labeled and identified as having such and such a pathology and thus guilty of such and such behavior – even if evidence for this is thin or lacking completely.
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As we know, in Lisbeth Salander’s case a sinister conspiracy is using her stigma and labels to bury her in a mental institution for life. She has zero credibility, and the conspirators count on this to silence her. The authors point out that many people in real life face these problems of such easy labeling.
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In one section, titled “The Right to Remain Sullen”, the authors point out that such institutional incarceration can change a patient’s view of themselves (p.9). There are “attacks on the self” (Goffman) involved, including a paper trail of records and personal history written by others. Goffman is quoted (p.10): “[T]he official sheet of paper attests that the patient is of unsound mind, a danger to himself and others – an attestation, incidentally, which seems to cut deeply into the patient’s pride, and into the possibility of having any.” Goffman’s term, “spoiled identity”, is an interesting and useful concept.
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Lisbeth tried to tell the police, the social workers and the psychiatrists why she has acted as she did, but they do not listen. She is invisible to them (a concept I first learned from reading Nathaniel Branden’s theories of “psychological visibility”).
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(When discussing these novels with a libertarian friend of mine, a physician, he reminded me of the parallels between Lisbeth’s criminal mistreatment by the psychiatric establishment and the anti-establishment work of the longtime renegade psychiatrist Thomas Szasz.)
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Chapter 2: “The Mis-education of Lisbeth Salander and the Alchemy of the At-Risk Child”, by Chad William Timm.
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(A personal note: I absolutely hated public school, always thinking of my time there as a 12-year prison sentence; this undoubtedly helped formulate my early anti-authoritarian self.)
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Timm asks us, how did Lisbeth, with a phenomenal photographic memory, genius computer abilities and unparalleled research skills, fail so miserably at school? He sets out to explain “the ways school officials use their positions of power to separate and categorize students such as Lisbeth, essentially constructing their identities” (p.20). He uses ideas of Michel Foucault in his analysis.
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Timm focuses on “the recent standards and accountability movement” in the USA. There have been “unprecedented steps to regulate schooling” by the US federal government (p.21). (As a former teacher there, I can only agree with him.)
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In a beautiful line that I cannot agree with more, Timm writes: “The bastard child of the standards and accountability movement was President George W. Bush’s 2002 No Child Left Behind Act” (NCLB), recently renamed by President Barack Obama as the Race to the Top Program (p.22).
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Policy makers construct the standardized tests, thus “fabricating”, through a kind of “alchemy”, the successful student and the “at risk” ones – here borrowing terms from educational philosopher Thomas Popkewitz, who also uses Foucault’s ideas (p.22-3). (I first heard of this whole phenomenon reading a 1960s review of Banesh Hoffmann’s book The Tyranny of Testing, 1962, in The Objectivist.)
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Accountability requires that teachers teach to the tests, which are fabricated from on high. “Multiple choice fill-in-the-bubble exams require students to think in certain limited ways, and teachers are forced to teach to those understandings so that students are proficient and their schools don’t lose funding” (p.23).
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Lisbeth did not follow the program and was labeled “at risk.” Yet she was profoundly “gifted and talented”, and no one saw that. Schools are much like prisons, thus “at risk” students, as defined by the school powers, are regulated and watched. Labeling one as “at risk” can be a self-fulfilling prophecy (p.28). (Yes, it can.)
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NCLB accountability disciplines and normalizes schools into conformity. If a school falls below expectations, it is “subject to surveillance, discipline, and punishment” (p.30). Schools pass these actions down to students. (As we used to say in the Marines, “Shit flows downhill.”)
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A quote from Foucault is given (p.31) about “domination” and “authority”. Lisbeth refuses to be disciplined or bow to authority and thus fails at school.
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(I would add that from my vantage point as a teacher in the era of NCLB, I see the system also stifling and destroying teachers as well as students.)
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Chapter 3: “The Girl Who Turned the Tables: a queer reading of Lisbeth Salander”, by Kim Surkan
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A very interesting chapter. Enough said.
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Part Two: Mikael “Do-Gooder” Blomkvist
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Chapter 4: “Why Are So Many Women F***king Kalle Blomkvist?: Larsson’s philosophy of female attraction”, by Andrew Terjesen and Jenny Terjesen
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Simply summarized, why is Mikael Blomkvist actively bedded so often by so many hot women? They cannot resist him. (And it’s not in any way connected with Daniel Craig – aka, James Bond – playing Blomkvist in the Hollywood re-adaption of volume 1; the original novels show us a Blomkvist that has an even more active sex life.)
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Well, Blomkvist is a strong and decent man with great integrity. He has confidence in himself as well as genuine respect and consideration for his many lovers. They just cannot resist him even if he never makes promises. Also, this is Sweden, which has a reputation as a sexually libertarian culture.
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Chapter 5: “Why Journalists and Geniuses Love Coffee and Hate Themselves”, by Eric Bronson
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Bronson asks, “What’s the deal with all the coffee?” Indeed, our characters are drinking copious amounts of coffee at home, at work, in cafes and while visiting or hosting. Java is everywhere in these stories. Just reading about it all makes me want to run to the john. Lisbeth Salander, Mikael Blomkvist, and most of the heroes and villains all hang out in cafes.
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Bronson reminds us of the history of coffee and European intellectuals. The coffee houses of the 18th century were the in places to talk about ideas. They were known as “penny universities”, because a poor but thoughtful man could learn a lot by just hanging around and listening. Joseph Addison praised them, as did Diderot. Later, Marx and Engels hung out in Paris cafes, and later Trotsky did in Vienna. Other frequenters of Paris cafes were Stein, Hemingway and their Lost Generation; Sartre, de Beauvoir and the Existentialists. (Pp.66-71)
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(I must add that, if memory serves me correctly, coffee houses figured importantly in the story of two great early 18th century libertarians getting together, John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, authors of Cato’s Letters, 1720-1723, one of the most important sources of libertarian ideas for America’s revolutionaries generations later.)
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Bronson sums his essay up with wit: “Lonely, self-absorbed, and socially awkward, today’s coffee drinker is again a sign of the times. That’s not to say everyone is like that. In most societies, you can still find well-adjusted, contented, and calm people completely at peace with themselves and their universe. Those are the tea drinkers” (p.72). Bronson points out that Zen masters drink tea and they see it closely associated with tranquility. But Larsson’s characters “prefer a quick cup of joe in between kickboxing lessons and hacking government websites” (p.73).
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Chapter 6: “The Making of Kalle Blomkvist: crime journalism in post-war Sweden”, by Ester Pollack
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Pollack writes of Blomkvist that he is “the embodiment of the investigative journalist who exposes power and corruption” (p.76). She says that his high ideals do exist, for example, with Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of Watergate fame, with “journalism as a counterweight to political power” (p.77). She then goes on to trace the history of investigative journalism in Sweden – of which Stieg Larsson was a bold modern example.
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Part Three: Stieg Larsson, Mystery Man
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Chapter 7: “The Philosopher Who Knew Stieg Larsson: a brief memoir”, by Sven Ove Hansson
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Hansson first got together with Larsson because both were into investigating right-wing extremist groups, fascists, racists, neo-nazis, etc. Hansson writes that Larsson “was Sweden’s leading figure in the investigations and exposure of racist organizations and their activities” (p.92).
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Larsson traced the change toward more open and blatant anti-Semitism in Sweden since the late 1980s, along with “an increasing number of right-wing extremist journals, pamphlets, and web pages” (p.96). Larsson also traced “a new strategy” by a leading Swedish fascist, Per Engdahl (1909-1994), to get their movement into electoral politics: i.e., recognizing that biological racism would no longer sell but attacking cultural differences and immigration would work. Thus a new party was born, Sweden Democrats. This copied the same strategy used by Britain’s National Front, led by fascist A.K. Chesterton in the late 1960s (p.97).
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Stieg Larsson also was also famously outspoken against violence against homosexuals and women.
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Larsson also spoke out against pseudoscience of every kind, and he publicized a link between publishing houses that printed pseudoscience stuff and printing of pro-Nazi (and Holocaust-denier) David Irving’s biography of Goring. “Stieg was a skeptic of the paranormal. He refused to believe the unsubstantiated claims of pseudoscience and mysticism, defended science as a road to knowledge, and rejected the ‘postmodern’ idea that all of our knowledge is a social construction. He knew where relativism and irrationalism could lead. The Holocaust was not a social construction but an indisputable historical fact.” (p.102).
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Deterministic beliefs such as astrology leave no room for acting to better oneself and one’s world, and it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, in Larsson’s words, “a stifling form of spirituality” (p103).
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Hansson ends his essay with this: “Stieg Larsson’s ideas and convictions are clearly visible in his novels: his feminism and his contempt for discrimination, his conviction that hidden power structures should be brought to light, his anti-elitism, and not least, his belief in the power of human rationality” (p.105).
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Chapter 8: “This Isn’t Some Damned Locked-Room Mystery Novel”: Is The Millennium Trilogy Popular Fiction or Literature?” by Tyler Shores.
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Discussing how readers have certain expectations of literature, Shores (on pp.110-111) quotes Nietzsche on who is the ideal reader: “When I try to picture the character of a perfect reader, I always imagine a monster of courage and curiosity, as well as of suppleness, cunning, and prudence – in short, a born adventurer and explorer” (Nietzsche, Ecce Homo).  Ooh Rah! Very well said, Fred! That quote encapsulates my own lifelong relationship with Nietzsche.
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Shores writes that Larsson’s trilogy, highlighting violence against women and corruption in high places, might be, in Sartre’s words, a “committed literature”, meant to inspire change (p.111).
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Chapter 9: “Why We Enjoy Reading about Men Who Hate Women: Aristotle’s Cathartic Appeal”, by Denis Knepp.
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Why do we enjoy reading about such violently sick tragic events?
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Plato wanted to banish the poets – epic (Homer) and tragic (Aeschylus, Sophocles, etc.) – from his ideal (despotic) State. [To me, one of the Western world’s most egregious mistakes was to name Plato’s most famous work as The Republic; such a wickedly tyrannical regime is best named, as the Germans do, Der Staat, “The State”.] Plato would censor all violence and bad behavior on the stage or in other literature because of possible bad influences on the audience.
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In Aeschylus’ Agamemnon, the king returns home from Troy only to be killed by his wife with an axe. (Lisbeth Salander also wields an axe against her own father.) In this play’s sequel, The Libation Bearers, Aeschylus has their son, Orestes, kill his mother to avenge his father. After summing up their story, Knepp writes, “And you thought the Vangers were a dysfunctional family!” (p.122).
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Knepp then focuses on Aristotle’s theory of catharsis in his Poetics, a book that deals mainly with tragic “poetry”, i.e., drama, and is one of the earliest theoretical treatments of art. (Sadly, Aristotle’s promised writings on comedy are lost to the ages.) Aristotle says that tragic heroes (such as Lisbeth Salander) must be flawed rather than godlike, so that we can sympathize with them and feel “pity” and “terror” over their undeserved suffering. Lisbeth is brutally raped by Bjurman, and it is a horrible scene, but Aristotle wrote of such horrible scenes that we experience “by means of pity and terror a catharsis of such emotions.” (Poetics)
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“Catharsis” has traditionally been translated as “purging”, as in vomiting, bad emotions. Knepp brings in a different reading of “catharsis” by Aristotelian scholar Martha Nussbaum. She writes that catharsis originally meant “clarification or cleaning up” (The Fragility of Goodness: luck and ethics in Greek tragedy and philosophy, 2001). Her application to Aristotle’s theory: “the function of a tragedy is to accomplish, through pity and fear, a clarification (or illumination) concerning experiences of the pitiable and fearful kind.” (Quoted here on p.125.)
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Knepp sums up the above quote from Nussbaum: “When Aristotle wrote that Athenians watching a Greek tragedy had a catharsis of the emotions of pity and fear, it meant that the audience came to a better understanding of these emotions. Art is educational” (p.125). The world can be a fearful and confusing place, “and art can serve to clarify and dispel our confusion” (p.125).
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Knepp now returns to Salander being raped by Bjurman with the added meaning of catharsis as clarification. “It is a function of power”, he writes, Bjurman being her legal guardian who is supposed to protect her (p.125). Stieg Larsson wrote, in the first novel, that: “Taking away a person’s control of her own life – meaning her bank account – is one of the greatest infringements a democracy can impose, especially when it applies to young people” (p.125).
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Martin Vanger’s serial rapes and murders give him (in Larsson’s words), “the godlike feeling of having absolute control over someone’s life and death.” Again, it is a man of power who preys on powerless women.
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The ancient Greek tragedies have no happy endings, but Lisbeth does get her revenge. Knepp quotes Aristotle, who wrote that it is not tragic to see “a thoroughly villainous person falling from good fortune into misfortune” but it “can contain moral satisfaction” (p.126). Knepp ends his essay by pointing out: “And Salander’s revenge is certainly satisfying” (p.126). Oh, Yeah!
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Chapter 10: “The Dragon Tattoo and the voyeuristic Reader”, by Jaime Weida
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Weida quotes several feminist writers who see Larsson’s presentation of Lisbeth Salander as an object for “voyeuristic pleasure” (p.130). She also quotes a 24-year-old survivor of a violent rape who said: “It was very cathartic reading the books, and when I watched the first movie I was blown away…. It was the first active and aggressive depiction of a survivor I have ever seen” (p.136).
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Weida writes that she is a fan of the books and of Lisbeth Salander, but that we also must admit that the stories may appeal to “prurient curiosity and voyeuristic urge by turning Salander into a sexual spectacle” (p.136).
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Part Four: Everyone Has Secrets
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Chapter 11: “Hacker’s Republic: Information junkies in a free society”, by Andrew Zimmerman Jones
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Jones sums up his essay by writing: “By making his two primary characters a journalist and a hacker, Stieg Larsson has created a new kind of hero for our modern information age” (p153).
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He discusses WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, quoting a WikiLeaks self-description: “We help you safely get the truth out. We are of assistance to people of all countries who wish to reveal unethical behavior in their governments and institutions. We aim for maximum political impact” (p.141). WikiLeaks protects its sources, just as journalist Blomkvist does. Their information leaks range from US war atrocities to secrets of government corruption to diplomatic cables to exposes of Scientology to a part in the spread of the “Climategate” email publication.
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Assange became famous early as an “ethical computer hacker” when still a teen (p.142). Jones goes into the evolutions of meaning for the term “hacker”, while pointing out that the term “cracker” best describes those who are primarily destructive, e.g., creating viruses and damaging computer systems (p.143).
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“It is becoming more mainstream to think of science as a hacker enterprise”, writes Jones. “Genetic manipulation is called ‘hacking the genome’.” (p.144). In quoting writers on “hacker ethics”, Jones shows how hacker culture appeals so much to Lisbeth Salander – including the lack of trust in authorities and the hacker call for decentralization of information. “It is self-reliant and rooted in an antiauthoritarian embrace of individuality” (p.145). Jones points out that Lisbeth shares many ethical principles with Assange (p.146).
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One very interesting point made by Jones really explained a lot to me about differences today in libertarian theory. He writes: “Many young people today do not think about ownership the same way that their parents did. The digital revolution and the mainstreaming of hacker culture have resulted in a world where boundaries of ownership are rapidly changing” (p.147). (And the topic of intellectual property is a really hot one in modern libertarian circles.)
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Jones writes: “This belief in free information also has positive manifestations. The most potent single source of information ever created is Wikipedia, the volunteer-written encyclopedia that is accessible, for free, to anyone in the world, with articles that cover virtually any topic imaginable. Wikipedia is the ultimate manifestation of the idea that ‘Information wants to be free but is everywhere in chains’” (p.148). (The ending quote here is taken from McKenzie Wark, A Hacker Manifesto, 2004, and it is of course a paraphrase from Marx and Engels, The Communist Manifesto, 1848. The creator of Wikipedia, Jimmy Wales, is a libertarian Objectivist but my personal knowledge of him can still imagine him greatly appreciating this tribute.)
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This Jones’ essay has more rich ideas about transparency, hackers, Lisbeth Salander, and Assange. It is worth the price of the book in itself.
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Chapter 12: “Kicking the Hornet’s Nest: the hidden ‘Section’ in every institution”, by Adriel M. Trott.
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Trott asks if problems with institutions – such as Lisbeth Salander had with the institutions of the secret service and the psychiatric profession (and, one could add, with the police, courts, and news media) – are because of a few bad individuals in them, or is it a case of the entire institution being rotten?
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Trott brings in Aristotle’s thoughts on the Rule of Law (Aristotle, Politics). Aristotle differentiates the rule of law (“reason without desire”) from the rule of men [which he also said was like the rule of a “wild beast”].
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Trott continues: “Yet he [Aristotle] goes to explain that the law is made and applied by human beings so that even the law includes some elements of human desire” (p.157). [cf. similar thoughts of James Madison, a fan of Aristotle, in The Federalist Papers]
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Trott writes about Sapo, the secret security police in Sweden: This “institution preserves itself by acting illegally and then justifies this action by claiming self-defense….” (p.158). She continues: “Yet when institutions become biased in favor of themselves and their own existence, they invariably begin to subordinate the powerless, the very ones they are supposed to protect” (p.158).
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Trott touches on a very interesting topic about governmental institutions when she mentions Sweden’s guardianship agency – which legally maintains control over those adults deemed mentally “incompetent”. She writes that the agency’s “desire to maintain guardianship of Salander shows us how the institution’s self-preservation trumps the concern for the individual” (p.158).
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And as one example of the agency’s “doublespeak”, she quotes from the third novel where a guardianship agency official gives court testimony. The official states: “No-one is happier than we who work at the agency when a guardianship is rescinded.” Trott immediately points out that, “If that were so, however, then the agency would be happiest to put itself out of business” (p.159). [cf. Public Choice theory, where governmental officials of all kinds are analyzed as “economic actors” who try to maximize their positions of power via votes, political appointments, etc. Classical liberal James M. Buchanan (b.1919) won the Nobel Prize in Economics for his contributions to this theory. His book, co-authored with Gordon Tollock, The Calculus of Consent: Logical Foundations of Constitutional Democracy (1962) is a classic work on the theory; again, I first heard of this book through a review in Objectivist literature over four decades ago.]
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A couple of times Trott mentions Rousseau and his famous “will of the people” theme. [I always get uneasy when I hear it because of the depressing uses the concept had later from collectivists such as Marxists and Hitler.]
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Trott mentions Hannah Arendt’s criticism of the concept of “human rights” when it is ineffective whenever an institution does not apply protection to certain people (p.160). People who most need protection, such as Lisbeth, are not recognized by the very institutions that should be protecting them.
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In the discussion of the third volume of the trilogy, Trott frustrates me a bit when she asks a couple of questions: “Lisbeth has believed that speaking to the authorities was useless because they could not hear her. So why suddenly in the courtroom does she think that she can or will be heard? Has the institution been properly cleaned up? Why should Salander think so?” (p.161)
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This amazes me and makes me wonder how closely Trott has read The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest or grasped its spirit. I answer: In the courtroom, a public arena, Salander has proof -- powerful proof – that her adversaries are lying and are far in the wrong. She planned a brilliant defense – aided by Blomkvist, his sister Annika, the Hacker Republic, and a few authorities with integrity – which turned the institutional powers upside down. Yes, it is fiction, but please don’t disparage Salander’s intelligence. She is a heroine, and inspiration.
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Giving both Marx and contemporary feminists their due, Trott writes: “The idea that the structure of institutions and political life in general serves those in power comes from Karl Marx (1818-1883). Marx thought institutions serve the rich, propertied class, but feminist thinkers have taken up Marx’s analysis of political institutions to argue that institutions do indeed serve those in power, and men are those in power” (pp.161-2).
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These points are well taken. Marx’s critiques of institutional power structures have merit, although his determinism is too simplistic and ignores the possibilities of individuals’ intellectual independence – indeed, it makes his own experience, of his bourgeois upbringing which is turned into the role of revolutionary vanguard, seem theoretically impossible.
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Likewise, Trott’s marxian-feminist theories are very well presented with some valid points. Still, I think Salander would contemptuously tell her to “fuck off”, to stop whining and to stop acting like a victim. (Lisbeth says a couple of times, “There are no innocents. There are, however, different degrees of responsibilities.”)
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Really, Trott gives us a good feminist interpretation, although my own feminism is more of an individualist kind. (I could suggest – only half-jokingly – that a male equivalent of radical feminism might articulate itself someday – protesting some of the “female” aspects of governmental tyranny, e.g., the “nanny state” that wants to aggressively mother us all whether we want it or not.)
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Chapter 13: “Secret Meetings: the truth is in the gossip” by Karen C. Adkins
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Adkins writes (p.166) that “The word gossip has a negative connotation and is conventionally defined as spreading malicious (often false) information about someone who is absent.” She notes that it can be used by those in power to maintain power by destroying the reputation of those threatening the powerful.
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“Knowledge (especially through gossip) is power for Larsson – both for good and for ill” (p.166). “Larsson clearly defends gossip as a legitimate (even necessary) path to knowledge. Adkins points out that “some contemporary philosophers have sought to restore credibility to gossip, defending the possibility of loose talk producing real knowledge” (pp.166-7). She goes on to mention two philosophers who “defend gossip as knowledge producing in part because of its looseness” (p.167). She writes: “Gossip rests on a bedrock of trust….” The journalists and police in Larsson’s trilogy trade in information and need trustworthy sources. She sees an emphasis on trust in his novels far exceeding what would be found in other crime novels.
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Blomkvist, in Vol. 1, has his reputation shattered. Adkins writes that, “In the American legal context, reputation is valuable in part because it is seen as property” (p.167). Reputations are affected by legal judgments but also through gossip. Lisbeth Salander, the expert hacker, says that, “Everyone has secrets”, but she is very careful about revealing them (p.169). So is her security agency boss, Armansky, who draws a moral line between legitimate business secrets and private lives.
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In her section, “The Grapevine Goes Digital”, Adkins reminds us that in the internet information age, personal diary-type information can be dug up and published widely. She writes that that Larsson’s world of hacker electronic rumor sharing as a resistance tool “is a new historical phenomenon only in its scale and technology” (p.171). She gives examples of oppressed communities that have used gossip against those in power: e.g., in colonial India rumor spreading helped organize resistance, etc.
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One big difference between traditional oral and printed political gossip is that trust is not needed at all on the internet. “Oral gossip and rumor rely on some basic trust in the reliability of one’s source; newspaper gossip carries with it the reputation of the journalist. By contrast, it’s very easy to set up an anonymous website, and forwarding a gossipy link carries with it less ethical freight than does spreading a rumor” (p.171).
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Re: Hacker Republic. It is a closed community with identities vague, but it has “core values”, e.g., not spreading viruses but rather being info junkies.
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Adkins writes about the controlling of one’s reputation as culture moved from the more intimate spoken/oral culture, which is most based on trust, to print culture. She mentions the work of Walter Ong, who wrote that this transition to written/literate culture led to the development of a “private self”, often distinct from the traditional public self. Private diaries were then created. (Walter Ong, 1982, Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word)
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Adkins writes that now internet gossiping and rumor, with its infinite shareability, has no bounds. Therefore: The Grapevine Goes Digital.
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In Larsson’s trilogy, the evil powers use gossip and rumor to convict Lisbeth Salander before she is even captured. Adkins compares this to the medieval witch hunts, where gossip marked a woman as a witch and sealed her fate. The infamous Malleus Maleficarum (“The Witch’s Hammer”) is mentioned, the Christian church’s manual on demonology, c.1486 (p.173). The police label Lisbeth as a Satanic lesbian cultist, and this gossip goes viral. Adkins likens it to “a modern, Internet-enhanced witch hunt” (p.174). She writes about the dynamics of power politics when it comes down to the usage of gossip.
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She also points out that Larsson mentions “Trust capital” as a fundamental requirement for professional life, especially for a journalist like Blomkvist. If your trust capital is perceived to be high, people will bank on you; if it is low, they won’t.
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Adkins writes of Larsson’s focus on “friendship as a (potentially) ideal space that can transcend power conflicts” where gossip is concerned. She says that this in line with feminist interpretations of gossip that “ground its legitimacy in intimacy – we gossip only with those whom we know well and trust” (p.174).
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Adkins ends her essay with this: “To trust someone fully, to confide in someone fully, requires a reciprocal exchange of sharing secrets. Psssst. Pass it on” (p.175). The trilogy itself ends with a kind of treaty of trust – “he knew her secrets just as she knew all of his” (Vol.3, quoted in Adkins p.175).
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Part Five: 75,000 Volts of Vengeance Can’t Be Wrong, Can It?
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Chapter 14: “The Principled Pleasure: Lisbeth’s Aristotelian Revenge”, by Emma L.E. Rees
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Rees points out Lisbeth Salander’s “brutal revenge on Advocat Nils Bjurman”, and asks if there is something wrong with us for being emotionally attached to someone (Lisbeth) who could do this. Then she analyzes Salander’s revenge in light of Aristotle’s thoughts on the subject (p.181), quoting from his writings on ethics and rhetoric.
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One of Salander’s goals when she deals decisively with Bjurman is to achieve independence from him and from the unjust control he has over her by the guardianship order. Another goal is revenge.
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Aristotle wrote that: “passion and anger are the causes of acts of revenge. But there is a difference between revenge and punishment; the latter is inflicted in the interest of the sufferer, the former in the interest of him who inflicts it, that he may obtain satisfaction” (p.183, from Aristotle, The “Art” of Rhetoric).
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Rees asks what it says about us as readers when we also take pleasure in seeing Lisbeth get her revenge. She points out that Salander “is avenging herself and protecting other women (just as Larsson hoped he was doing by writing his books)” (p.183). Rees notes that Aristotle says that for an act to be revenge, rather than punishment, the person receiving the revenge must know who is attacking him and why (p.185).
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Rees says that an Aristotelian viewpoint would see that Salander’s “brutal act of revenge is the only rational, logical choice she can make for the sake of her future happiness. Such happiness is impossible in an Aristotelian sense while she’s subject to the guardianship order, because independence is key to emotional security and well-being” (p.185).
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On page 186 Rees writes (including a quote from Aristotle): “The ultimate goal for Lisbeth is to move from humiliation to a state of Aristotelian eudaimonia (happiness; a life worth living). ‘The very existence of the state [eudaimonia] depends on proportionate reciprocity’, Aristotle told us, ‘for men demand that they shall be able to requite evil with evil – if they cannot, they feel they are in the position of slaves.’ Revenge seen in these terms is a social and moral obligation: we will be condemned to servility if we do not take revenge.”
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In light of our delight after Lisbeth gets her revenge, Aristotle’s words (from The “Art” of Rhetoric) ring true: “We praise a man who feels anger on the right grounds and against the right persons, and also in the right manner and at the right moment and for the right length of time.” Delicious!
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Chapter 15: “Acting Out of Duty or Just Acting Out?: Salander and Kant”, by Tanja Barazon
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Barazon examines Lisbeth Salander’s moral standards by comparing them with those of Immanuel Kant (1724-1804).
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In Barazon’s paraphrase of one of Kant’s important moral principles, “…I should never follow a rule of behavior that I couldn’t rationally will everyone else to follow” (p.189). I.e., you should only act as if that principle behind your action should be a universal moral law for everyone to follow.
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The criminal wants to be protected from any coercive actions against his own self, but his hypocrisy is that he thinks of himself as an exception and that he may victimize others. Laws against coercion protect him, but he thinks he is above the law. Lisbeth shares with Kant a contempt for this hypocrisy of criminals. The villains in these novels are capable of rationality, yet they see themselves as exceptions to rules and laws for ordinary people. E.g., Martin Vanger reasons that he has entitlement to “the godlike feeling of having absolute control over someone’s life and death” (Vol.1).
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Kant elevated “duty” to a high position in his moral system; to him it is far superior to doing anything for self-interest or pleasure. But as Barazon puts it: “Lisbeth repeatedly commits immoral acts for her own pleasure. She didn’t start hacking into people’s computers out of moral duty; she hacks because she likes it”
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Yet Salander occasionally acts toward moral purposes beyond her own immediate self-interest, and Blomkvist understands this. E.g., she throws herself into tracking down a serial killer of women.
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Kant also said that people should each be an end unto themselves rather than being treated as a mere means to achieve the ends of others. Barazon points out that Salander and others in the stories are often treated as mere means to the ends of the villains. E.g., Zalachenko misuses everyone this way, Salander’s mother, his son, etc. In turn, Sapo (the secret police) use him, Gullberg even killing him for the “good” of the Section and Sweden.
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Further, Barazon writes that, “Free will and free choice are two essential elements of Kant’s moral theory” (p.195). Kant valued individual autonomy as a necessity for a person to be considered as a moral agent. Then she startled me by writing, “Kant opposed welfare systems because they limit personal autonomy and treat people as if they were children, unable to care for themselves” (p.195). (I had never before known of this libertarian aspect of Kant, probably because of my early contact with Ayn Rand’s total contempt for Kant, perhaps some of it but not all of it justified.) Barazon writes: “As Kant was, Lisbeth is a champion of autonomy” (p.195).
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Barazon tells us that Kant had stated that we must never lie to anyone and that we cannot morally lie even to a murderer (p.196). She then writes that the great classical liberal Benjamin Constant (1767-1830) responded to Kant’s thesis here by holding that only someone worthy of the truth should put us under obligation to tell the truth (p.196). As Salander had said, “a bastard is always a bastard, and if I can hurt a bastard by digging up shit about him, then he deserves it.”
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Barazon finishes her essay with this: “Lisbeth may not inspire us in the pursuit of moral perfection, but there is something deeply human and endearing about her. She does not offer herself as a paragon of morality. Like the rest of us, Salander is a work in progress” (p.196).
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Chapter 16: “To Catch a Thief: The Ethics of Deceiving Bad People”, by James Edwin Mahon [This is the last chapter in the book.]
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Mahon brings in the ideas of English philosopher J.L. Austin (1911-1960) and some of his thoughts in the late-1950s in the British Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society.
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Mahon points out that Lisbeth Salander lies while under oath at her trial. She leaves out details that – however “justified” – would leave her vulnerable to prosecution for perjury. Mahon always challenges us to judge these breaches of legality by our heroes/heroines in the trilogy.
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[Rant]: My own position on this is close to Benjamin Constant’s (in Chapter 15 above) – that unjust laws are lies themselves, and they do not deserve the respect of “telling the truth” if that would play into the hands of tyrannical government agents. E.g., in the 1970s I self-medicated myself with several substances that were arbitrarily labeled “illegal” by those in power; if I harm others by my ingestion of these substances then I have trespassed against them; if I have not harmed anyone, let me be! “I’ll tolerate your hobbies if you tolerate mine” (Robert Anton Wilson). [/rant]
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Mahon writes that, “Indeed, it is possible to read the novels as saying that people may be lied to and deceived, for the right reasons.” (p.198)
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Continuing, he writes that “Both Mikael Blomkvist and Lisbeth Salander battle against those with power and money who lie to and deceive others. Yet both Blomkvist and Salander repeatedly lie and deceive. Blomkvist lies in order to obtain information, withholds information from the authorities, and deceives those who spy on him and (illegally) monitor him. Salander routinely violates the privacy of others, hacking into their financial records and private communications. She engages in fraud, theft, and assault, and lies about it to the authorities, even when the criminals are being brought to justice. Her rationale is that ‘there are no innocents’.” (Pp.198-9)
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Mahon asks: “Did Larsson believe it was justified for Salander and Blomkvist to lie to and deceive bad people who are perpetrating crimes, in order to catch them? In any case, are such actions justified? Or, if they are not justified, are they at least excusable?” (p.199) He continues:
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“British philosopher J.L. Austin (1911-1960) argued that when someone is accused of doing something wrong, bad, or inept, there are two ways in which he or she can defend this conduct. The first is to accept full responsibility for the action but to deny that it was wrong, bad, or inept. To do this is to justify the action, to hold that it was, in fact, the right thing to do. On this account, the action was permissible or even obligatory. The second way to defend the conduct is to agree that the action was wrong, bad, or inept, but to accept only partial responsibility for the action, or even none at all. To do this is to excuse the action, to hold that one is not (fully, or partly) to blame for how one acted. Consider an example. If I shout at a child, then my action may be justified (the child was about to touch a hot stove) or excusable (I have been unable to sleep for days, and the child is making a racket).” (p.199)
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Mahon continues: “The question, therefore, is whether the lies and deceptions of Blomkvist and Salander are justified or excusable – or neither” (p.199).
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Blomkvist lies or allows falsehoods to be understood to get info from Bjorck, a secret service official who has committed crimes and has conspired to violate Salander’s rights. No guilt is felt by Blomkvist. Is his lying and double-cross of Bjorck excusable, or is it, further, justified? In volume three of the trilogy, Blomkvist knows his home phone and cell phone are bugged by the (now villainous) secret police. He feels guiltless, and he feeds them disinformation just as they would do. In a review of Larsson’s trilogy, the great South American writer Mario Vargas Llosa – an enthusiastic admirer of Salander and Blomkvist – calls them “two vigilantes” (quoted on p.206).
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Salander and Blomkvist have great dialogues at times (especially in volume one), debating the ethics of investigative journalists vs. those of hackers. Blomkvist stresses that “we journalists have an ethics committee that keeps track of the moral issues.” (p.205)
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Salander replies that she has comparable principles: “I call them Salander’s Principles” (quoted on pp.205-6).
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Mahon does a fine analysis of the complexities of her principles and actions, as well as those of other characters. I will not discuss the rest of the good points he makes, but I will recommend his essay highly.
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My Summary of the book: As always, books like this on philosophy and pop culture are very rich, instructive, and enjoyable. My intensive studies of philosophy were decades ago, so these books bring new material to my attention and help keep me in touch with the discipline as an amateur. Finding philosophical minds that enjoy some of the same books and movies as I do is a great pleasure.
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Lisbeth Salander would just leaf casually through this book once and memorize the whole thing, and Mikael Blomkvist would come down hard on the weaknesses of my writing technique in the above review. It is not nearly as easy for me, but for me it was a pure labor of love to read and review this volume.
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Caveat: I have typed this directly from handwritten notes, and due to limited computer time I have not been able to triple check my review draft against the book. The book deserves better. Sorry.
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-Zenwind.
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Book Review: Life, by Keith Richards (2010)

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This is the autobiography of The Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards (with help from James Fox). The Stones were one of my favorite bands when I was an adolescent, and they turned me on to American blues and early Rock n Roll with their own English interpretations sent back to us.
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My friend Ron D. and I would sit down with pencil and paper by the phonograph, playing and replaying their early records to try and decipher their lyrics. “Because I used to love her, but it’s all over now.” I had all the earliest Stones records but stopped buying them sometime well before the end of the ‘60s when I was more into Dylan.
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I was in Vietnam in 1969 when my father sent me a newspaper clipping about Brian Jones dying. I still refer to Ron Woods as “that new guy”. By the ‘70s I was no longer buying albums of any kind (except for maybe Classical) and so I was only hearing Stones’ songs on radio, although I may have borrowed Let It Bleed from someone for a while. I have enjoyed catching up on the Stones’ long epic story via this book.
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Some surprises: Keith Richards was in Boy Scouts and speaks favorably of them and of what he learned there, e.g., knotting broken guitar strings, lighting a fire, being prepared, etc. (He mistakenly reports that his father was an “Eagle Scout”; that is the American highest rank; he means the equivalent British “King’s” or “Queen’s” Scout.) His experiences with and manner of interacting with women were remarkably like my own have always been. His frank discussions about his substance abuse – including a stretch of heroin dependency from about 1969 to 1978 – were insightful and valuable, and, although I never went with heroin as he did, I appreciated his insights into general substance use and abuse. His frank descriptions of the in-fighting between the Rolling Stones band members throughout the band’s entire history were revealing and solved some mysteries for me.
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I thoroughly enjoyed this trip back into the farthest reaches of my own life’s soundtrack, one in which the Rolling Stones played a big part.
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“But it’s all right now, in fact it’s a gas
But it’s all right
I’m Jumpin’ Jack Flash, it’s a gas, gas, gas.”
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-Zenwind.
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20 May 2012

Note on Recent Posts Here

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Because my home computer is in danger of serious overheating these days, I have only had it on for short periods of time. So I have been publishing a backlog of draft documents that were already saved in various degrees of completeness. Glancing back at many of these that I have posted thus far, I see a lot of typos and poorly written passages. I hope to go back and correct them someday, but I will have to wait for cooler conditions. Please bear with me.
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-Zenwind.
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18 May 2012

Movie Review: The Flowers of War

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The Flowers of War (2011) is a Chinese-made film starring Christian Bale and a great cast of Chinese actresses. It is in English and Chinese with subtitles. It is a great story, showing unexpected humanity.
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It is a story based upon a historical novel as well as on historical accounts, and it happens during the 1937 Japanese conquest of Nanking, China. The brutality of many of the occupying Japanese troops has forever earned the infamous label of “The Rape of Nanking.”
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I was actually surprised by the restraint shown by the filmmakers. I have read of, and have seen documentary film footage of, the hideously savage treatment of Chinese citizens under the Japanese occupation, and it is horror beyond words. While the film did not shy completely from depicting this aspect, it instead focused on the deep and humane personal changes our protagonists go through while experiencing this crucible of barbarity. I found it to be incredibly inspiring.
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Our characters meet in a Nanking Catholic church as the Japanese tighten their grip on the city. Bale’s character is a burned-out American mortician with mercenary motives. There are a dozen young teenage Chinese girls living in the church’s convent, and their priest protector is dead. Then a dozen flashy prostitutes from a nearby brothel also seek refuge at the church. Bale has more than he bargained for.
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The decisions and actions of the girls and the prostitutes drive most of the moral action. Bale is a reluctant hero carried along, yet there are heroines and heroes aplenty. I highly recommend this movie.
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-Zenwind.
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28 April 2012

Book Reviews: Stephen Batchelor, Buddhism without Beliefs and Confession of a Buddhist Atheist

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I love Stephen Batchelor’s writings on Buddhism, and his tastes in it are very much like my own, although we each came to them via very different roads. Batchelor immersed himself completely into Buddhism, becoming an ordained monk in the Tibetan tradition and later training at a Korean Zen monastery, spending a total of about ten years in robes (i.e., as a monk).
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I will talk about these two major works of his out of their chronological order, because I read his later book, Confession of a Buddhist Atheist (2010), first, and then I read his famous earlier one, Buddhism without Beliefs (1997), last.
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Confession of a Buddhist Atheist really grabbed me and I could not put it down. I love intellectual biographies, and this book takes us on a guided tour through Batchelor’s intellectual journeys within Buddhism and his personal evolution. He is a few years younger than me, but we have a lot in common as far as our early reading experiences: The Doors of Perception, Alan Watts’ The Way of Zen, Hermann Hesse’s Steppenwolf and Siddhartha, and Kerouac’s books.
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Batchelor, as a young man, left his native Britain and went to Dharamsala, India in the early 1970s. This is the Dalai Lama’s residence-in-exile and the center of free Tibetan (Vajrayana) practice. Batchelor is good with languages and did some important translations of Tibetan scriptures. He also got the chance to try something quite different while there by attending a vipassana meditation retreat taught by an Indian meditation teacher, and this experience gave him a lifelong curiosity about other schools of Buddhism such as Theravada and early Buddhism, and their meditation practices. He had a restless, inquisitive spirit even then.
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Later he went with a Tibetan teacher to Switzerland, to help establish a Vajrayana center there. In Europe he also studied some Existentialism and took Jungian analysis on the side, continually curious. He tells of some of the deep sectarian religious disputes in the Tibetan Buddhist community (which is no surprise, since all religious sects and secular ideologies tend to split asunder and then splinter off again and again into warring sects).
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Ever searching, he traveled to Korea to train at a Zen monastery there for a few years. Zen, as a sect in the Mahayana tradition, is a bit different from Tibetan Vajrayana and Theravada/ Hinayana. He loves Zen’s aesthetic dimensions – as I do. At this monastery he met a French woman who had been a nun and translator there for a while, and eventually they both disrobed (i.e., formally left the monkhood) and later got married. They have ever since been active lay Buddhist teachers and writers in England and France.
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Batchelor’s evolution toward Buddhist atheism was rooted in his ability to think critically and independently. He saw the many contradictions in Buddhist doctrines, but the primary driver was his inability to believe in outrageous supernatural claims, especially in rebirth (sometimes also called “reincarnation”). Try as he might, he could not believe in human or animal rebirths after death. Yet he admits that “the entire edifice of traditional Buddhist thought stands or falls on the belief in rebirth.” (p.37) And, I must agree it does. This left him as a heretic outside the Buddhist fold, and I’ve always felt that way, too.
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I never really believed in survival after death, be it resurrection to Heaven/Hell or rebirth here in the real world – except for one independently imagined moment as a small child, before ever hearing of reincarnation, resurrection or rebirth. My knowledge of human death at that time was represented by an old photo, in my grandmother’s room, of my maternal grandfather, and this grandfather had died a year before I was born. I never met him, but I saw him in the photo as representing a unique individual personhood who was now gone.
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At this same time, I was a young farm boy who saw the death of animals all the time, and I thought of my grandfather’s death within this knowledge of frequent animal death. I remember one evening as my father was milking the cows; a kitten that I loved and played with every day was coming down with the symptoms of distemper, a disease that killed over half of our cats at that time. My father saw me squatting down to look face to face with my beloved kitten as it sneezed weakly and hung its head. He told me that I must understand that the kitten would most probably die soon (as it did and as I knew it would) and that I should be ready for this.
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I looked at my kitten friend, so soon to die, and I thought a kind of wordless childhood equivalent of: “What is death? What will happen to this kitten that has a unique personality of its own? I know that its body will rot into nothing, but does its personhood just disappear into nothing? Or does this person/soul jump from one life to another? Can this kitten, living now but so soon to go, be my dead grandfather’s person that has somehow jumped into this kitten’s body/life to die once again, and will it soon jump into another body/life of some kind after this kitten dies? Is this my grandfather facing me now?”
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I – a child – had independently invented for myself the notion of the reincarnation of a person/self/soul after death. I know of no outside influence on this and can explain it no other way. It is hard to let go of a self, such as my beloved kitten, into a death with no future. This early memory is a very strong one. I understand how fundamentally rooted such ideas of the survival of death are to human religions through the ages. Even Plato fell for it.
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Later, I learned a vague notion of resurrection to Heaven or Hell after death, as pushed by my family’s Christian religion, but I never really bought it completely. The stories of New Testament characters coming back to life after being dead for a while never seemed sensible at all, given my knowledge of death and decay here in the real world.
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But I was temporarily scared by hell-fire and brimstone tent-show evangelists, artists at scaring folks. One time, as a kid, my father and I attended a tent-meeting in the old gravel parking lot of the Methodist Church, and the evangelist roared on about once personally meeting the Devil face to face. He was a great stage-man, a born actor. As we left the tent-meeting to walk home, the wind was gusty and the night shadows from blowing branches were terrifying. I said to my father, “I’m scared,” and in his unvarying honesty he said, “Me too.” Monsters I could imagine, but Heaven or rebirth, no.
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I discovered Buddhism when I was 17, the same year I realized that I had been an atheist (or a “non-theist”) for some time and no longer had any interest in Christianity, theism, or supernaturalism of any kind. I was drawn to two aspects of Buddhism: 1. the story of the Buddha’s incomparable integrity and his arduous lone independent quest for truth; and 2. the rambling esthetic quality of the Beat Zen of Jack Kerouac and Gary Snyder, with mountains, forests, and lonely wilderness haunts.
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This was the same time that I discovered Western rationalist philosophy via Ayn Rand, and she gave me the solid beginnings of a classical Western education. I somehow digested them all together without too much indigestion.
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The Buddhist rebirth myths and grand supernatural Mahayana mysticism were never interesting to me, and I still don’t have the slightest clue what the Vajrayana Tibetans are talking about. Zen (aka Chinese mountain “Ch’an”), mixed with a bit of Taoism and absent any supernatural elements, has been my constant spiritual center for 45 years.
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The “selfish” Hinayana (aka Theravada) schools also appealed to me, as they still preserve the ancient Pali Canon, the oldest Buddhist texts and those closest to the time of Siddhartha Gautama, the Sakyamuni Buddha, and I still like this tradition mostly for its possible insights into the actual historical Buddha – the man, the teacher and the therapist. Batchelor has gravitated back to the spirit of early Buddhism, as I have to some extent. The Pali Canon reveals what looks very much like an authentic personality portrait of this great Gautama sage.
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Batchelor can articulate, in just a phrase or two, decades of my own experiences as a bumbling practitioner. It is such a comfort to read someone of like mind.
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Batchelor’s earlier masterpiece, Buddhism without Beliefs, is distilled and sharp. Without insisting on belief in any dogma or mysticism, he introduces us to Buddhist basics: meditation and Buddha’s own primary aim, teaching us how to deal with Dukkha (aka the anguish, disappointments and sufferings that are integral parts of life as we are born, are so often disappointed, age, get sick, and eventually die). The Buddha – in his early Pali Canon discourses – frequently insisted that the heart of his whole message was recognizing Dukkha and the means of its cessation through his Four Noble Truths and Eightfold Noble Path, and that the surrounding religious edifices were mere chaff compared to this central healing advice. The immediate point is release from the grip of Dukkha, and this can be learned and practiced.
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The First Noble Truth is in understanding Dukkha/anguish and embracing it as an integral part of life, and the Second Truth is seeing Dukkha’s origins and causes (i.e., clinging to irrational, unrealistic desires, cravings and obsessions) and then letting go of them. Batchelor writes that the challenge of Truths One and Two “is to act before habitual reactions incapacitate us.” This reminds me of modern cognitive psychology.
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Buddhist metaphysics, cosmologies and theologies are just irrelevant distractions, of no importance. As the Buddha advised in the Pali Canon: imagine a man wounded on a battlefield with a poisonous arrow embedded in him; a surgeon wants to immediately remove the arrow and clean out the poison to save his life; but the wounded man says: “Stop! Before you remove the arrow, I want to know who the man was who shot it. What clan does he belong to? What kind of bow did he use to shoot it? Who fletched the arrow?” Etc.
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The Buddha said that before such useless questions could ever be answered, the man would die of the poison. The all-important immediate task is to remove the arrow and have the surgeon treat the poisoned wound. All the other questions are completely unimportant and absurd. The treatment for Dukkha is all-important right now, and the rest is useless. This gets down to the basics. Buddha said that metaphysical questions “Do not tend toward edification”, and he ignored them when asked.
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Batchelor also emphasizes the Pali Canon’s Kalama Sutta, where the Buddha tells the Kalama people not to believe something simply because it is legend, tradition, scriptural, or coming from an authority. Rather you should determine to “see and know for yourselves” that some actions or qualities are skillful, blameless, and lead to welfare and happiness, while other actions or qualities lead to the opposites. (Many traditionalists – often themselves wannabe authorities – claim that this sutta is misused to give people a doctrinal carte blanche and thus they criticize anyone emphasizing it. Yet it appeals to heretics such as Batchelor and me, who are not impressed by dogma.)
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Batchelor has several simple meditation exercises sprinkled throughout the book, and they are very well selected. One of these is, after earlier learning to concentrate on one’s breathing (the Buddha’s favored focus of meditation) and on releasing physical and mental tensions, to contemplate this thought: “Since death is certain and the time of death uncertain, what should I do?” (p.29) We are all impermanent and we will all certainly die, so what do we do with our time here and now? I think of this when I observe many traditional Buddhists focusing almost mechanically on a better rebirth somewhere down the road rather than on the spiritual enrichment of this precious life we have right now.
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I wish that I had read these books when I was 17. Yet Batchelor was only 14 or 15 at that time and he had not yet discovered all this. He cuts through so much of the massive superfluous stuff in traditional Buddhist culture and belief, yet in his compassion he doesn’t put the traditions down. His writing is quite often very poetic, and his refinement of all of his life’s experiences and scholarship into readable texts makes it all so rich and beautiful.
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-Zenwind.
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16 April 2012

Geocentrism: Were Copernicus and Galileo Wrong? Creationism: Was Darwin Wrong? The 1985 National Bible-Science Conference

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This is a wild but true story. I was there. I’m fascinated by weird pseudoscience and cultic belief systems. As a seriously interested skeptic I took a weekend in the summer of 1985 to attend this “Scientific Creationist” 1985 National Bible-Science Conference in Cleveland, Ohio. A very small group of skeptics, monitoring Creationism’s claims, had organized to attend this conference as a minority of observers, and I hooked up with them.
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One of the attractions of this conference was that along with the regular Creationist presentations would be some by Geocentrists, i.e., those who believe that Copernicus and Galileo et al were wrong and that the Earth is the immovable center of the universe with the Sun and everything else revolving around it – because the Bible says it’s so. In the West, almost all Creationism is Bible-based, but so is most Geocentrism and Flat Earth belief. (See the work by the late science writer and skeptic Robert Schadewald, whom I mention here later.)
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I had been following the early-1980s resurgence of anti-evolutionary proselytizing in my rural area and had started to investigate it. I bought many core books by the major Creationists of the day as well as books by scientists and scholars who defended Darwin and evolutionary science. I studied most of the Creationists’ main arguments – especially the ones dealing with geology and paleontology. I also subscribed to newsletters from scientists monitoring the Creationist movement, and that is how I learned of the skeptics’ plan to attend the Cleveland conference. I contacted these skeptics and, based on some things I had written earlier, was invited to attend with them.
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I tried as much as possible to be open-minded and objective about both sides in the controversy, hence I immersed myself deeply in Creationist lore, but it became obvious who the real scientists were and who the true-believers and/or charlatans were. The “Scientific” Creationists’ books and arguments were transparently weak and often dishonest. When they quoted famous scientists, they quite often did a lot of misquoting, quoting out-of-context, and even “creative quotation” (i.e., ripping out words and phrases, and then pasting them together to make meanings totally the opposite of the scientist’s original meaning). The Creationists tended to lack scholarly integrity, but they had lots of faith.
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As I learned their arguments I had to learn more about the sciences involved, especially about geology, paleontology, and the fossil record of life on Earth. This got me to attend college again to take geology courses, and from there I went on to study the philosophy of science and then to complete my philosophy degree – and eventually to teach high school history and philosophy. The controversy shook me out of my intellectual sloth. Outrage can be a powerful motivator.
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The Bible-Science movement is quite old, with many different affiliated groups. The Creation Research Society (CRS) has been around a long time. Branching off from it, and becoming one of the dominant Creationist organizations in the 1980s, was the Institute for Creation Research (ICR). Representatives from both of these outfits were there. They believe in a very young earth, under 10,000 years old (from Bible clues), and they believe in a scenario called “Flood Geology,” where the entire geological column and stratigraphic rock record (with what the entire mainstream scientific community sees as the evolutionary fossil record) was all caused by Noah’s Flood some mere thousands of years ago.
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Re: the Geocentrism at the conference. To be fair to the Creationist mainstream, Geocentrists are a very small minority in their larger belief group as well as at this conference. But they were there because they too claim (with justification) to be Bible-based and fellow Creationists (although the publicity they generated embarrassed the Creationists enough that Geocentrism was absent at the 1986 convention in Pittsburgh).
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The Cleveland conference that I attended had multiple presentations scheduled to pick from, most of them Creationist themed. Engineer R.G. Elmendorf gave a paper defending Geocentrism which I (and my skeptic friends) found confusing and impossible to follow, except when he used the Bible to back up his theories. Two computer scientists based in Cleveland are prominent in the Geocentric movement. (I must mention that modern Bible-based Geocentrists are usually Tychonian, not Ptolemaic, and much of their theory agrees with naked-eye observations.)
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The crowning event of the weekend conference was a big debate on Sunday night to wrap it all up. It was to be a debate on Heliocentrism vs. Geocentrism by two pair of Bible-scientists. Of the pair defending Heliocentrism, one would present the scientific case (i.e., Galileo et al) and one would argue the Biblical case. Of the Geocentrism defenders, one would present the scientific case and one the Biblical case.
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Unfortunately for me, I had to be at work at 11pm Sunday night and would have to miss this debate, as I had a three-hour drive. But I did order cassette tapes of the debate, which are now in an attic in the States. My fellow skeptics later told me that the hall was packed and that it was a truly bizarre affair, debating science that had been largely settled three centuries ago by Newton.  Our skeptic appraisal of the debate is that the Heliocentric side won the scientific argument, while the Geocentric side won the Biblical argument.
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Other subject matter presented at the convention was also interesting. I was disappointed that there was not much at all about the fossil record, because the famous Creationist fossil “expert” Duane Gish was not there. I had read his books closely, and it was one area I had some solid knowledge.
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But there was a presentation on the latest Bible-science expedition to find Noah’s Ark on Mt. Ararat in Turkey. I jumped at this because of my background in mountaineering and the many Creationist books and other books I had read on the history of both the ascent of Ararat and the search for the Ark. Mt. Ararat is close to 17,000 feet above sea level and glaciated at the top portions. It lies in the corner of Turkey that is militarized and politically volatile because it is close to the borders of Iran, Armenia and Azerbaijan (the last two being still “republics” within the USSR in 1985).
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The main presenter had led one of the most recent expeditions. He described how they climbed up to a summit saddle and tried to dig through the ice cap with chainsaws (because they lacked ice drills). They tie their hopes to the Ark being under the ice cap since the bare rock slopes do not reveal it. My fellow skeptic Frank Zindler heard the presentation with me, and he emphasized to me afterward that they were looking in the wrong place. If the Ark had indeed landed on the summit of Ararat, after several thousand years under the accumulating glacier ice it would have been carried slowly but surely down the mountain slope as the glacier moved with gravity, and it would have been ground to fragments by the glacial pressure over the rock. If they hope to find anything, they should study glaciology and look amongst the ground-up rock beneath the glacier.
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I made one friend among the Creationist faithful because we had a lot in common. He briefly spoke about the Ararat expedition, as he was their mountaineering expert. It turns out that he was a veteran US Marine and had a lot of mountain climbing experience – much more than me, and on higher mountains. Even though we were in different ideological camps, we remained friends throughout the conference. He told me that on Saturday night he had a phone call from some expedition members who were on the flanks of Mt. Ararat when he last knew, and now bandits in that unruly area had plundered their equipment in base camp and burned whatever they couldn’t take. The expedition had to withdraw.
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Another presentation I went to was about a new Creationist research station on the northern rim of the Grand Canyon area of Arizona. Earlier, there had been a high-profile legitimate scientific study in the news about a unique species of squirrel living on the northern rim of the canyon. Because of this squirrel’s longtime geographic isolation (by the huge canyon gap) from closely related squirrels on the southern rim, its adaptation to a different environment was showcased as a great example of Darwinian Natural Selection. It was big science news at the time. So the old Creationist Research Society (CRS) decided to do its own study, hoping to refute the evolutionist interpretation. Also, because they believe in Flood Geology, they announced that they would do research of the Grand Canyon’s stratigraphy looking for evidence contradicting the fossil record of evolutionary paleontology. The whole presentation was sad more than anything else.
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The presenter was a venerable old CRS fellow, but the audience was very small. He attempted to impress us with the seriousness of their research. The CRS had moderately decent resources, so they outfitted a “research station” on the desert north rim. He used an overhead projector to list the assets of their station. (Now, to be fair, this was 1985 and technology was not nearly what it is today.) He listed an IBM-compatible computer, a good semi-portable model in that era. Then he saved the best for last and triumphantly listed a telephone!
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That was it. The idea that any Creationists would run around the desert trying to study elusive squirrels was a joke. They just don’t have their feet in the ground of strenuous empirical scientific research. Were there any squirrel experts within the CRS? I felt acute embarrassment for the presenter and for the small Creationist audience. It was pathetic.
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Our small group of skeptic observers would meet up several times a day and then get together in our hotel room after the last presentation late in the evening. Finally alone together, we howled with laughter about the mad absurdities we had witnessed that day. On Saturday night, hotel security had to come to our door twice to tell us we were too noisy and disturbing people next door. (Why can’t they ever build hotel rooms with sound-proofing?)
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One in our little group of skeptics was the late, great Robert Schadewald (1943-2000). Bob was a fine gentleman and an internationally recognized expert on weird science. He had one of the world’s finest personal libraries of Flat Earth writings, and he had interviewed the president of the Flat Earth Society – which is Bible-based. (I first read Bob’s stuff in a wonderful chapter, “The Evolution of Bible-science,” in Scientists Confront Creationism (1983), ed. by Laurie Godfrey; and also in articles around that time in Skeptical Inquirer. Science writing lost a master when Bob passed away much too early.
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Sadly, I could not attend the next year’s Bible-science conference in Pittsburgh. By then the Creationists had realized that treating Bible-based Geocentrists as legitimate allies was bad PR, and they excluded them from the next conference, which was called The 1986 International Conference on Creationism. I read the reviews of it by Bob Schadewald and other Creationist watchers.
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It seems that the internal controversy dominating this 1986 meeting was Young Earth Creationists vs. Old Earth Creationists. Young Earthers (CRS, ICR) believe the Earth to be less than 10,000 years old, using the Bible as an “inerrant” source. They believe that the entire rock/fossil record is just a jumbled up chaos of sediment from Noah’s Flood and that there is no rhyme or reason to how the different strata were laid down, and to them there is certainly no ordered layers of this geologic column that records, over long eras, more primitive life forms at the bottom (older) strata and more modern ones in the newer (upper) strata as evolutionary scientists see it and predict it.
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Old Earth Creationists usually agree with mainstream science that the Earth is around 4.5 billion years old and that the sedimentary rock fossil layers show a definite change through time, but they also believe that life was divinely created – perhaps through divine fiat, perhaps through divinely directed evolutionary processes (theistic evolution, etc.), depending on the person’s beliefs – just as the fossil record shows. And these guys often really know their geological science.
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A high point of the 1986 conference for the skeptics was the presentation by a respected Creationist geologist – an Old Earther. He has had a successful career as a genuine petroleum geologist who did routine exploratory research to find oil-bearing rock strata, by identifying the ages and layered order of strata by their fossil content just as the evolutionary scenario would predict and just as accepted by all paleontologists and geologists – but directly contradicting Young Earth Creationism. His presentation was dramatic.
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He said that he had hired two recent (and naïve) geology graduates from ICR (the fundamentalist Young Earth school) for a season in the field as apprentice petroleum geologists under his wing, because their common ground is Christianity. At ICR, these grads had been taught that the geologic column – as geologists and evolutionary scientists and paleontologists find it, documenting the evolutionary history of life dramatically – was a pure fiction by deluded evolutionists who were motivated by a “religion of secular humanism.” The ICR grads were taught Flood Geology and were totally unprepared for real-world geologic work.
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As they worked with this senior geologist, the grads sampled the drill-cores of these all-important micro-fossils to identify and correlate the rock strata according to these index fossils (in order to fix the age/order of the strata and search for known oil-bearing strata), and they saw – every single day – that the heretical geologic column, used by evolutionary scientists and paleontologists, was consistent and real, where earlier life forms are found lower and more modern life forms are found higher in the strata, just as the geologists, paleontologists and evolutionary thinkers predict. The empirical evidence was irrefutable, and he said the two grads had to admit its truth, and that they had severe “crises of faith” as they acquired this reality.
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No shit. Sometimes evidence has to hit you on the head like a rock.
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-Zenwind.
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