“I would define a circle as a collection of circular lines that lead to circular shapes that are formed by circular motions.”
Bless his heart.

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“I would define a circle as a collection of circular lines that lead to circular shapes that are formed by circular motions.”
Bless his heart.
I made a venn diagram of straight boys
*previous iterations below
Both Sides
Okay, now when does the money start coming in?
On the reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit
“Although bullshit is common in everyday life and has attracted attention from philosophers, its reception (critical or ingenuous) has not, to our knowledge, been subject to empirical investigation. Here we focus on pseudo-profound bullshit, which consists of seemingly impressive assertions that are presented as true and meaningful but are actually vacuous. We presented participants with bullshit statements consisting of buzzwords randomly organized into statements with syntactic structure but no discernible meaning (e.g., “Wholeness quiets infinite phenomena”). Across multiple studies, the propensity to judge bullshit statements as profound was associated with a variety of conceptually relevant variables (e.g., intuitive cognitive style, supernatural belief). Parallel associations were less evident among profundity judgments for more conventionally profound (e.g., “A wet person does not fear the rain”) or mundane (e.g., “Newborn babies require constant attention”) statements. These results support the idea that some people are more receptive to this type of bullshit and that detecting it is not merely a matter of indiscriminate skepticism but rather a discernment of deceptive vagueness in otherwise impressive sounding claims. Our results also suggest that a bias toward accepting statements as true may be an important component of pseudo-profound bullshit receptivity.”
Listening to a wokie fuckhead go on and on about how dare we put Shakespeare on still because….ummm….racism….sexism…Umm wolf shit? These unfucking cultured swines honestly need to fuck off they don’t have the fucking brain power for it.
“It is a tale; full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
-– Macbeth
There's a profound irony in these pseudo-intellectuals and their extremely shallow takes on the Bard. They come from the same outrage mob mentality prevalent on Twitter, where the objective is to actively find a problem or invent a way to be offended, whether it's there or not, whether it's intended or not (Problematization).
Of course, these are the smooth-brains who insist that CRT is just about "teaching history" (it's not; or alternatively, is an obscure legal framework, which nobody is teaching - they can never decide which Motte to retreat to), and then proceed to get To Kill A Mockingbird removed because of the racism present in a compelling portrayal of history.
For people who declare themselves to be the most enlightened and awake of us all, aware of the invisible nuances the rest of us miss, they have only a few superficial dot-points cherry-picked from the stories, missing or ignoring the point entirely.
Othello is arguably one of the earliest examinations of racism; the lead and protagonist is the dark guy, not the white guy who's manipulating him. And when he succumbs to resentment, things go tragically wrong and there's no going back. A lesson the activist elite among us could well learn.
The Taming of the Shrew is literally a farce, and almost everyone in it is a terrible person doing terrible things; you’re not supposed to admire them. It’s like “Ruthless People”. It's the "shrew" herself who is the sympathetic character. In Macbeth, it's Lady Macbeth who motivates and pulls the strings of the entire thing, exercising her power and influence over her husband. (It actually reminds me, without the machiavellian aspects, of how Obama bragged that he ran every presidential decision by Michelle, effectively giving her the power of the Presidency; without the credit for success, but also with immunity to the consequences for failure. Women have always held power and influence, even when it wasn't in formal seats, in many ways more than the men who acted on their behalf.)
Romeo and Juliet is literally about two people who die directly as a result of tribalism and their families' inability to put aside old disputes.
https://www.magicalquote.com/60-life-lessons-from-william-shakespeare-quotes/
https://brightdrops.com/shakespeare-quotes
https://www.buzzfeed.com/sarahgalo/happy-451st-birthday-to-the-bard
Across all his works, one of the most consistent lessons is that people are complicated and flawed, because that is humanity. People can do good in their own way, and others who have good intentions can do bad things by circumstance, misunderstanding or manipulation. This is unforgivable to Wokistanians, as they hold fast to two-dimensional stereotypes and cliches. In order to sustain a war of "us vs them" collectivism based on superficial attributes, the individual must be kept at arm's length. It cannot and does not deal with an individual except through membership in its power categories.
Another is that of personal responsibility, which is outright rejected in preference to exalted helplessness in the face of a numinous "system," requiring wholesale emancipatory insurrection.
"The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings."
-- Julius Caesar
It's ironic in an almost Shakespearean way, that the people who could most stand to learn from Shakespeare are the shrill scolds who reject him.
"Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind; And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind."
-- A Midsummer Night's Dream
"This above all; to thine own self be true; And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man."
-- Hamlet
"Reputation is an idle and most false imposition: oft got without merit, and lost without deserving."
-- Othello
“Strong reasons make strong actions.”
-- King John
“Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.”
-- All's Well That Ends Well
In my last two essays I set about trying to give an account of what “deconstruction” is as it has been picked up and used by woke activists in our current cultural context
By: Wokal Distance
Published: July 18, 2022
In my last two essays I set about trying to give an account of what “deconstruction” is as it has been picked up and used by woke activists in our current cultural context. I gave a brief primer on what deconstruction is and how it is used. The idea I wanted to drive home is that the way that while deconstruction originated in the very dense and difficult philosophy of Jacques Derrida it has metabolized into the culture in a very specific way, and it is now used as a method of attacking the meaning of concepts, arguments, messaging, communication, and ideas that go against the woke vision of social justice.
Now that I have explained what deconstruction is, what purpose it has been appropriated for, and how it is put to use, I want to take a look at a specific instance of deconstruction so that we can see what it actually looks like when deconstructive philosophy is put to use. It is one thing to explain what deconstruction is and how it works, but I think that giving specific examples is necessary to help people actually be able to see how deconstruction works in the real world. To that end let’s take a look at an example of what deconstructive thinking looks like in practice.
The following is a passage that was taken from an essay called “What’s all the Fuss About this Postmodern Stuff.” by Barry W. Sarchett. These next two paragraphs are Mr. Sarchett seeking to give an example of how a deconstructive reading is supposedly able to demonstrate the mistaken, flawed, incomplete, low-resolution, nature of a statement.
The statement being deconstructed was a statement by Lynn Cheney in which she claimed that it is an “enduring,” and “transcendental,” truth that “people love children.” As we look at this example I want you too keep in mind a point made in my last essay: that in practice deconstruction very often looks like nitpicking at the meaning of words in order to deliberately miss the point of what is being said. With hat in mind let’s see how Mr. Sarchett uses a deconstructive reading to take apart Lynn Cheney’s statement that “people love children.”
“Lynne Cheney asserted . . . that it is an "enduring" or "transcendental" truth that "people love children." But what exactly does Cheney mean here? After all, a timeless truth must be very clear or how could it be true? So just what does "love" signify? Is there a universally shared intrinsic meaning here? But there are many possible meanings for this word, even if just the English language is considered. Which did she mean? We seem to be inundated lately with kinds of "love" for children of which "we" disapprove violently. So maybe we ought to agree that incestuous love or molestation isn't "love"? Surely that's not what Cheney meant by "love," was it? But this is a specific cultural agreement to limit the possible significations of the word—and the more we try to specify what Cheney means by her statement, the more we will have to come to a shared, highly qualified agreement that will become more and more specific and seems less and less universal. When does too much "love" cease to be love and become something like (to borrow a particularly unclear signifier) "co-dependency"? Or did Cheney mean that people and children are co-dependent? What amount of "love" is not enough and becomes something like "like"? What has happened to the possibilities of "people love children" by now? And does Cheney mean all people by "people"?
WC. Fields would disagree (let's keep his films out of the canon). Does Cheney mean that "people" (whoever that is, by now; most people? Just how many is that?) love all children? Or do we like some and love others? Does she mean babies as well as 17-year-olds (still legally children in our society)? People love minors but not necessarily 18-year-olds? Obviously, we could go on and on, and we haven't even left our culture (and dominant family structure) or our language yet. So our "enduring truth" now seems something like this; "some people love some children in particularly proper ways that are what I really mean by 'love' if we can agree on my definition." With universals like that, who needs particulars?””1
Now that you have read that (and I hope rolled your eyes at the silliness of it all) let’s highlight some of the tactics that are going on.
First off we see Mr Sarchett nitpicking about the meaning of the word “love.” He claims that it is unclear exactly what Lynn Cheney was referring to and says:
“So just what does "love" signify? Is there a universally shared intrinsic meaning here? But there are many possible meanings for this word, even if just the English language is considered. Which did she mean? We We seem to be inundated lately with kinds of "love" for children of which "we" disapprove violently. So maybe we ought to agree that incestuous love or molestation isn't "love"?”
This is, of course, absurd. It is quite clear for anyone with a lick of common sense that Lynn Cheney is not referring to erotic love, or sexual love, when she claims that people love children. Pretending that this is some matter of widespread disagreement, or that we are unsure what type of love Lynn Cheney is talking about when she says “people love children” is just nitpicking at the meaning of term in order to miss the point.
There is also an element of re-framing going on here: ”When does too much "love" cease to be love and become something like (to borrow a particularly unclear signifier) "co-dependency"? Or did Cheney mean that people and children are co-dependent? When Sarchett brings up co-dependancy. To bring in the idea of co-dependancy is to bring in an unhealthy emotional state which is clearly excluded by the frame of reference (love of children) that Lynn Cheney has in mind.
Next, Mr Sarchett seeks to further blur the meaning of what Lynn Cheney said by attempting to blur the boundary between “love” on the one hand, and “like” on the other saying: ”When does too much "love" cease to be love and become something like (to borrow a particularly unclear signifier) "co-dependency"? Or did Cheney mean that people and children are co-dependent? What amount of "love" is not enough and becomes something like "like"? What has happened to the possibilities of "people love children" by now? And does Cheney mean all people by "people"?”
Again, this is nitpicking at the definition of “love” in order to deliberately miss the point. This is floowed up by a an obscure reference to the movies of WC fields:
WC. Fields would disagree (let's keep his films out of the canon).
This line is in reference to a line by the comedian Leo Rosten who once remarked of WC fields that “any man who hates dogs and babies can’t be all bad.” This line is a bit of sarcasm meant as a humorous dig at WC fields and it has nothing to do with anything that Lynn Cheney said. It is a completely irrelevant comment that brings in a humorous one-liner as though it makes up part of the interpretive context of what Lynn Cheney said. Notice how in order to attack the meaning of what Lynn Cheney said Mr. Sarchett brings in a totally unrelated comment and grafts it into the interpretive context as though it were relevant.
It seems to me that Mr. Sarchett is trying to make the point that not all people like children and he seeks to do so in a humorous way which misdirects from the centrl point Lynn Cheney is making. The problem is that Lynn Cheney is making a general statement. She is not making an exhaustive statement that “for all times and places on earth there has never been a human on earth who did not love children.” Her point is a general one that as a general rule people do, in fact, love children. In bringing up an uncommon exception to the rule Mr. Sarchett does not show her general rule is false, only that the general rule is, indeed, a GENERAL rule; there are exceptions. The nice thing about generalities is that they are general, not specific.
As we come to the end of Mr. Sarchett’s deconstruction we find him nitpicking the definition of what “people” means when Cheney says “people love children,”:
““Does Cheney mean that "people" (whoever that is, by now; most people? Just how many is that?) love all children?”
And to finish of his deconstruction Mr. Sarchett goes about blurring the meaning of the term “children” by pointing out that everyone under the age of 18 is legally speaking a child. He then asks if Lynn Cheney is referring to both babies and 17 year olds, and wonders aloud if Lynn Cheney is saying that the cutoff for loving people is when they turn 18:
“Or do we like some and love others? Does she mean babies as well as 17-year-olds (still legally children in our society)? People love minors but not necessarily 18-year-olds? “
Once he has engaged in all of this silliness and intentional missing of the point, he then proudly announces that what was once a universal statement is not nothing more then a heavily qualified very limited statement:
“Obviously, we could go on and on, and we haven't even left our culture (and dominant family structure) or our language yet. So our "enduring truth" now seems something like this; "some people love some children in particularly proper ways that are what I really mean by 'love' if we can agree on my definition." With universals like that, who needs particulars?””
In this way Mr Sachett thinks he has shows that “an "enduring" or "transcendental" truth that "people love children."" has now been shown to really only indicate that “some people love some children in particularly proper ways that are what I really mean by 'love' if we can agree on my definition."
This is how deconstruction very often operates in the real world. What Mr Sarchett could have done was said “Yes, most people do love kids, that is why we so often way ‘think of the children’ when we are making public policy. That said, there will always be some exceptions to this general rule.” That would have been a perfectly fair claim that would have left the point of the original statement intact while adding some nuance. But this is not what Mr.Sarchett did. As we saw, Mr Sarchett: -engaged in absurd reframes, -used silly re-contextualization -asked absurd rhetorical questions -ignored the plain and common sense general point -nitpicked the meaning of simple words -reinterpreted various elements of Lynn Cheney’s statement in the most absurd and uncharitable way possible.
And he did all this in an attempt to attack the general principle that “people love children.”
This example typifies the way that Derrida’s deconstructive methods operate. As you can see, what is going on here is not a good faith attempt to understand what Lynn Cheney was saying when she said “people love children.” What Mr. Sarchett did was use interpretive absurdities and nonsense in order to attack the MEANING of Lynn Cheney’s statement.
This is what deconstruction does.
While not all deconstruction follows this exact pattern, the same idea is at play whenever you find deconstruction at work. The goal is, as I repeatedly state, to attack ideas, concepts, texts, art, songs, writing, speeches, messages, communication, tweets, and anything else you can think of at the level of meaning. Deconstruction wants to open up the interpretation of literally everything and attack it by hollowing it out and reducing it to mere expressions of power, self-interest, bias, and cultural chauvinism. In this way of thinking there is no such thing as objective truth, or objective moral values.
The quote Mr. Sarchett again:
”The postmodern turn then requires that we pay as much attention to who is speaking and who is not authorized to speak as we do to what is being spoken. It requires a sense therefore that all knowledge and values depend on power differentials: some voices have cultural power to define good and bad, high and low, true and false, while others must live inside those definitions because they are relatively voiceless. When people talk about what is true or false, good or bad, the postmodern response is to pose more questions: better or worse for whom? In what context? For what purposes?”2
This way of thinking asks us to say that there is no such thing as an objective standard for true or false, but rather to accept that there are no objectively true or false claims, just claims that may be true or false relative to a particular group at a particular time. The same is true for morality. Postmodernism asks us to say that there is no such thing as an objective standard for good or bad, but rather to accept that a thing is only ever good or bad relative to a particular group at a particular time.
This is relativism and nihilism rolled into one, and we ought to reject it.
In my next essay I will attempt to answer the questions that we are left with: how do we deal with deconstruction? How do we push back on it when we see it, and what tools do we have at our disposal to prevent the slide into relativism and nihilism that deconstruction pulls us toward? In doing so I hope to give you the tools to be able to communicate effectively in a way that can withstand the acid of postmodern deconstruction.
Thank you for reading
Sincerely,
Wokal_distance
-
1 Barry W. Sarchett “What’s all the Fuss About this Postmodern Stuff”, from Campus wars: Multiculturalism and the politics of difference, edited by John Arthur and Amy Shapiro. (Routledge, 2020) Google play version, P.33
2 Barry W. Sarchett “What’s all the Fuss About this Postmodern Stuff”, from Campus wars: Multiculturalism and the politics of difference, edited by John Arthur and Amy Shapiro. (Routledge, 2020) Google play version, P.34
==
Notice how pseudo-intellectual it is, while being amazingly shallow and childish.
One of the goals of postmodernism is to unmake society by undermining how we understand it, and does so by going after how we discover, categorize and describe it, not by demonstrating that our understanding is incorrect. It does so by pretending that imprecision is the same as invalidity. That if there isn’t one single, unique, defining attribute that works 100% of the time, then a concept we have is false.
This is not unlike Xians who demand that perfect generation-by-generation “transitional fossil” record be supplied. Otherwise, there’s a “missing link” and evolution itself is false. What’s the saying? “Religion demands perfect evidence from science, but no evidence from itself.” Same thing.
The progress of modern science has been a truly global phenomenon.
By: Lawrence M. Krauss
Published: June 2, 2021
The progress of modern science has been a truly global phenomenon, a fact worth celebrating, just as the technological fruits of science have, to varying degrees, impacted the lives of everyone on the globe.
Scientific breakthroughs have paid no heed to geographic boundaries. Modern algebra owes its origins to 10th century Arabic mathematicians. Around the same time Chinese astronomers recorded an early supernova that formed the Crab Nebula, even when no record of this remarkable object was made in Europe. In spite of the attempts by British astrophysicist Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington to quash the impact of an otherwise unheralded young Indian physicist, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, the latter’s groundbreaking work on stellar evolution altered our picture of stars so significantly that he was later awarded the Nobel Prize for his work.
Nevertheless, the postmodern notion that empirical scientific knowledge is somehow culturally derived, with little or no objective underpinning, has continued to persist in various social science and literary corners of academia far removed from the rush of scientific progress.
Until recently, it seemed inconceivable to imagine that any physical or biological scientists could become so misguided as to argue against the empirical basis of their own fields. But we are living in strange times. This week, the Divisional Dean of Social Sciences at the University of Oregon sent an email to faculty “to encourage you all to attend this exciting presentation!”, by a visiting physicist, which was described as follows:
Title: Scientists vs. Science: Race, Gender, and Anti-Intellectualism in Science
Abstract: Black thought can help us free science from the white supremacist traditions of scientists. Scientists vs. Science will use Black feminist and anti-colonialist analyses to show that white supremacy is a total epistemic system that affects even our most “objective” areas of knowledge production. The talk hinges on the development of the concept of white empiricism, which I introduced to give a name to the way that anti-intellectual white supremacy plays a role in physicists’ analysis of when empirical data is important and what counts as empirical data. This white empiricism shapes both Black women’s (and other) experiences in physics and the actual knowledge produced about physics. Until this is understood and addressed directly, systems of domination will continue to play a major role in the practice of physics.
On its own, this racist nonsense would not deserve remarking on here, even if it does lead one to wonder how its author, who apparently doesn’t understand the empirical basis of her own discipline, could gain an appointment at a physics department. But the response it produced by the administrator at Oregon is more worrisome.
The Dean at U. of O. should know better, being a professor of Anthropology, although his specialization in Folklore and Public Culture suggests he might be particularly sympathetic to arguments that knowledge is culturally or racially derived.
The Dean’s email apparently received wide circulation beyond U. of O. in the academic community. A tweet from Bruce Gilley, who is a professor of Political Science and Public Policy and on the board of the National Association of Scholars saw what the U. of O. Dean had missed, namely that the underlying pretext of the talk was itself racist. As he remarked “Neo-racism is now spreading like wildfire in the academy with the normalization of racist and anti-scientific ‘research’ that freely denigrates people based on their race. This talk below will use ‘black feminist and anti-colonial analysis’ to debunk ‘white empiricisim [sic].'”
Galileo would have discovered four moons of Jupiter with his telescope regardless of his sex or pigment, and DNA is a double helix regardless of whether it was Rosalind Franklin’s crystallography that demonstrated it, or Watson and Crick’s analysis of that empirical data. Empirical evidence is not white, or black, and the term “black theory” makes no intellectual sense.
As it turns out, the U. of O. talk was abruptly cancelled, with no reason given in the announcement. I agree with Professor Gilley’s assessment that, having been announced, a better course would have been to have proceeded with the talk, and allowing those present to then ridicule its premise via intelligent rebuttal.
I wonder however, whether that would have happened, or whether there would have been polite applause, for fear of appearing racist by asking pointed questions. I happened to attend another online talk by this individual, in this case a physics seminar. Each slide shown also included a reference to a different racist incident that had happened in the US. Speaking to other colleagues after the seminar, I wasn’t the only one who questioned the appropriateness of this political commentary from beginning to end in a seminar on dark matter, as would I would have equally squirmed had each slide quoted a different lie uttered by Donald Trump when he was President. Yet none of us spoke up at the time to raise any concerns.
We need to be willing to be more vocal up front in our critical assessment of nonsense emerging in academic science settings. In more reasonable times, this nonsense would never have passed the selection criteria applied by seminar organizers in any serious academic department in the first place. In current times, such gibberish instead helps promote a dangerously distorted view of science that can fall upon receptive ears among even senior academic administrators.
==
Neil deGrasse-Tyson is a scientist. But that doesn’t make everything he does “science.” If he puts on an interpretive dance show, his arabesques and Dougies, while likely moving, wouldn’t suddenly become “science.”
That the presenter is a physicist doesn’t make big pseudointellectual words hiding empty, shallow assertions “science.” It doesn’t even qualify as social science, because social scientists also use empirical data.
The claim of “anti-intellectualism” appears to be the academic equivalent of the “you should be more open-minded!1!” that we often hear about “god” or vague, ill-defined “spiritual” (whatever that means) claims; the truly close-minded expecting belief uncritically. Formulating a concept out of thin air to justify the assertions is pretty good evidence of this.
Science (i.e. natural sciences) and social sciences (e.g. politics) attempt to describe the world and society, respectively, as accurately as possible. Expressing subjective feelings is the realm of the humanities. Thus, her presentation would probably best be described as live action, multimedia performance art.
And that’s not science; natural or otherwise. No matter who does it.
Aka “Word Salad as Surrogate Substance During Authorship of Annals Relevant to Indulgence in Nonsensical Pseudoscience as Perfunctory Pseudointellectual Fulfilment of Annual Remuneratory Vocational Obligations.”
This is an actual published, and cited, paper. And is therefore regarded, academically at least, as “knowledge.”
https://newdiscourses.com/tftw-autoethnography/
“Autoethnography” refers to a form of research (if we must) in which one’s own reflections upon life, often written in autobiographical form, are treated as authoritative analyses of broader society. More specifically, these self-reflective observations are utilized to do an ethnographic study of the culture in which one finds oneself. The approach has therefore been, for rather good reasons, referred to by its critics as “me-search.”
I hope I don’t have to explain why this “research” isn’t knowledge. It should bother people that this sort of self-indulgent, unevidenced nonsense leaks into the world as citable, insightful knowledge, which can then influence policy and those making it, as much as it bothers us when the unevidenced self-indulgence of “my bible says that my god...” influences policy and those making it.
We need to care about truth: what’s true and how we figured it out.