War and Nonhuman Agency

by Venkat on June 19, 2013

Mike is a 2013 blogging resident visiting us from his home blog Omniorthogonal.

There are no men, only artillery, infantry, cavalry. Huge masses and the instruments of their direction. Each member of these masses remembers everything and completely forgets himself. In this there must be and is pleasure…

— Tolstoy

Warfare is about killing people. Everyone seems to acknowledge that normal rules of moral behavior go out the window during war, but also that war is not completely free of rules – there are different codes of conduct that hold, and violating those rules gets will get you in trouble, especially if your side ends up losing. Nobody is quite sure what those rules are, and even less sure how such they are to be enforced. Soldiers are trained to kill, yet expected (at least in the modern era) to keep their killing carefully circumscribed. Killing civilians is a criminal atrocity when done at ground level, but perfectly acceptable when done from above. Or maybe the distinction is not altitude but scale, or whether the killing is authorized by someone who went to college.

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The Tristate area Refactorings meetup group is holding its monthly meetup in New York, on Wednesday (the 12th) at Pete’s Tavern at 6:30 PM. The group has been active online and offline for about six months now, thanks to the efforts of Jay Hinton and Adam Hogan, and I am looking forward to finally meeting a few people I’ve only interacted with online so far.

If you can make it, it would be great to see you there. Email me or RSVP on Facebook if you plan to attend. If you do, you’ll also be able to join the associated Facebook group (as with the Bay Area chapter, the group limits membership to people who have met other group members offline).

Venue: Pete’s Tavern, 129 E 18th Street, New York, NY 10003
Time: 6:30 PM

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On the Unraveling of Scripts

by Venkat 06.06.2013

I am fascinated by scriptlessness: the state of not having a script telling you what to do. I’ve danced around this question a lot in my writing, mostly with reference to the American middle-class life script. But I’ve never really tackled the phenomenon head-on. I’ll define scripts as collections of learned patterns of behavior that [...]

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Aphorisms: Collection 1

by Venkat 05.30.2013

For the past few months, I’ve been experimenting with shorter forms of writing, ranging from one-line aphorisms to shorter 100-200 word vignettes. I find I enjoy the challenge of producing interesting prose at these lengths. My writing seems to exhibit a barbell curve of comfort. The nightmare zone for me is between 500 to 1500 [...]

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Civilization and the War on Entropy

by Drew Austin 05.23.2013

Drew is a 2013 blogging resident visiting us from his home blog over at Kneeling Bus. “The ‘abstract’ and the ‘concrete’ from now on would have lives of their own, participating in a perpetual ballroom dance where partners are exchanged promiscuously according to design.” -Sanford Kwinter Two threads of discourse dominated twentieth-century urbanism in the United States: the Jane [...]

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The Gervais Principle VI: Children of an Absent God

by Venkat 05.16.2013

And so here we are, ready for an assault on our Everest: the mind that lies behind the low-reactor Sociopath face. A face that gazes upon the worlds of Losers and the Clueless with divine inscrutability. It’s certainly been a long climb. Series Home | Part I | Part II | Part III | Part IV | [...]

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Roundup, January-April 2013

by Venkat 05.09.2013

Busy week so I thought I’d do a roundup and let you guys catch up a bit with a roundup. The year has had a rocky but solid (heh!) start, with some pretty strange posts. Not counting a couple of meta posts, we have had 15 posts in the first third of the year, 9 [...]

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The Economics of Social Status

by Kevin Simler 05.01.2013

Kevin is a 2013 blogging resident visiting us from his home blog over at Melting Asphalt. In economics, a good is anything that “satisfies human wants and provides utility.” This includes not just tangible goods like gold, grain, and real estate, but also services (housecleaning, dentistry, etc.) as well as abstract goods like love, health, and social status. As an [...]
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Branches and Roots: 2013 Call for Sponsorships

by Venkat 04.25.2013

Another year, another set of lessons big and small, pleasant and harsh. It’s time for the third annual call for sponsorships and backstage-peek day. If you read the 2012 and 2011 posts, you know the drill.  First, we’ll talk money, then we’ll go backstage to talk philosophy, do a little retrospective and look out at [...]

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So I Shall be Written, So I Shall be Performed

by Mike Travers 04.17.2013

Mike is a 2013 blogging resident visiting us from his home blog Omniorthogonal. I want to take it as a starting point the idea that there is a certain fictional quality to our selves. The elusive nature of the self has been a perennial issue for psychologists and philosophers; there are nihilistic and mystical and mechanistic and pluralistic theories of what we [...]

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