Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Why Grammatology was nonsense.

 

Any time-series whatsoever can be recorded or transcribed to some degree or other. Ideas can be represented by ideographs and a series of ideographs can represent a description, a prescription, a scientific hypothesis, a Cyrenaic hippopotamus or anything else that can be thought of or spoken of or imagined or represented by, or read into, a series of gestures or, indeed, any other phenomena. 

By the Sixties, when David Lewis published 'Conventions', and Derrida published 'Of Grammatology', there were very good phonetic alphabets to capture the exact sounds (phonemes) produced by different speakers of different languages. There was also 'Labonotation' to capture dance or martial arts choreography. Scientific and Commercial time-series had various types of mathematical representations for different purposes. 

Lewis, following Thomas Schelling, understood that all such semiotic systems had no 'naturality'. In other words, there was an arbitrary element in the choice of signs because they were merely conventional. But conventions are merely focal solutions to coordination and discoordination games which arise either in collective action problems or represent 'separating equilibria' which give rise to hedging and income effects. 

Derrida, who like Russell, had started off thinking Husserl might be on to something, and who had spent a year at Harvard in his late twenties and thus could not have been wholly ignorant, nevertheless based his soi disant 'science of writing' or Grammatology on the following absurd premises

1) Alphabetic languages are phonetic.

 They may be. They may not. English, notoriously, isn't. There are phonetic notations and musical notations and Labonotation for capturing the movements of the body. 

2) Alphabetic languages- like Latin or Greek- are superior to Chinese type or ancient Egyptian type languages. This simply isn't true. All that matters is which civilization is expanding for fiscal or technological reasons and which is declining.

3) Speech was considered superior to writing which was regarded as a 'supplement'. Apparently this was because 'presence' was ontologically superior to absence. This is obviously false. We prefer to have things 'put in writing'. What is even more sacred than the Church or the Mosque- both may be knocked down for some Civic purpose- is Holy Scripture. True, Catholics may puzzle over the 'real presence' in the Eucharist, but the rest of us needn't bother. The plain fact is that writing was superior to speaking because it was more considered. That's why Sophists got paid a lot of money to write speeches for people to learn by heart and repeat in the Assembly so as to win their law suit or push through their agenda. The fact is, at some early date, the first performance of a new play had in its audience people who had already ready the text. That is why the comment was made that the actors could safely sink their teeth into the more highly wrought passages without worrying that the audience would not be able to follow what was being said.

4) Aristotle's ideas still matter. They don't. Only pedants gas on about the dude. He had zero influence on anything despite having been Alexander's tutor. The fact is, what posh kids study, or what is taught in seminaries, doesn't matter in the slightest. Academic Credentials can be Zahavi handicaps. They serve a signalling purpose- viz. this dude was rich enough or stupid and sycophantic enough to spend years studying nonsense and could be useful for some mercenary or deeply stupid or sycophantic purpose for that reason. 

The Signifier and Truth

The Signifier is a word or gesture or painting or, in my case, a petulant fart. Either Utility or verisimilitude  or charismatic Schelling focality or some buck-stopped more or less protocol bound juristic process, makes determinations of Truth. But those determinations are immediately overturned by beating, bribes, or it becoming obvious that the thing is stupid shit. 

The “rationality”—but perhaps that word should be abandoned for reasons that will appear at the end of this sentence—which governs a writing thus enlarged and radicalized, no longer issues from a logos.

Rationality does not issue from a Logos. Rather Logos is a personification of Rationality. We don't say Americans issue from Uncle Sam. We say Uncle Sam is a personification of America. 

True one can say Uncle Sam is an emanation of God. Americans are God's beloved children. He who created all things, created the Yank and will, at the end of days, gather him back into his bosom. But this is merely a manner of speaking. 

Further, it inaugurates the destruction, not the demolition but the desedimentation, the de-construction, of all the significations that have their source in that of the logos.

Is this stupid cunt talking about the Gospel of John? Does he really think Lord Jesus Christ has been 'de-constructed'? True, the Jews in Israel, had won their third war in two decades. But they were fighting Arab Muslims- not White Christians. 

Particularly the signification of truth.

that is, its 'extension'. But this is undetermined and thus can't be destroyed or created or taken to the Prom.  

All the metaphysical determinations of truth,

are nonsense. What is 'beyond' physics is logorrhoea. Still, if you have a PhD in useless shite, it may be the only thing you can get paid to produce. 

and even the one beyond metaphysical onto-theology that Heidegger reminds us of,

Revealed Religion is fine because even if can't get you into Heaven there are reputational and psychological benefits from investing in it. Heidegger was a spoiled Catholic. After the War, the Centrum had to be rehabilitated so his & Schmitt's shite could be recycled. 

Anyway, maybe that stupid Kraut was plagiarising Okakura. Perhaps, the fucker was trying to become a Shinto, or Zen, or Noh 'shite'. Let him do so by all means. The Japs had gotten with the program. They put on a pretty good Olympics. Some people say they are starting to make quite good cars. That's a bit of a reach. Transistors maybe. Cars? Fuck off!

are more or less immediately inseparable from the instance of the logos, or of a reason thought within the lineage of the logos, in whatever sense it is understood: in the pre- Socratic or the philosophical sense, in the sense of God’s infinite under-standing or in the anthropological sense, in the pre-Hegelian or the post-Hegelian sense.

all of these senses only make sense to pedants who teach useless shite. Sadly, as the opportunity cost of acquiring academic credentials rises- because young people have exponentially rising general purpose productivity if they acquire STEM type skills rather than a wholly fraudulent paideia completely unmoored in philology, comparative history, or anything else worth a damn.  

Within this logos, the original and essential link to the phonè has never been broken.

On the contrary, if even the word 'logos' is no longer pronounced as it was, how much more must it be the case with any other term under its ambit where, indeed, some terms have changed in meaning or have been replaced entirely. 

It would be easy to demonstrate this and I shall attempt such a demonstration later. As has been more or less implicitly determined, the essence of the phonè would be immediately proximate to that which within “thought” as logos relates to “meaning,” produces it, receives it, speaks it, “composes” it.

G.E Moore knew of an elderly lady who didn't know what she thought till she heard what she said. But smart peeps keep mum and think without words for the excellent reason that their facial expression may change if they do so. Indeed, when they do speak, it is to disguise what they think. Language is strategic. But even the most abstract thought is a 'game against nature'.   

If, for Aristotle, for example, “spoken words (ta en to phone) are the symbols of mental experience (pathemata tes psyches) and written words are the symbols of spoken words” (De interpretatione, 1, 16a 3) it is because the voice, producer of the first symbols, has a relationship of essential and immediate proximity with the mind.

He was a pedant. I suppose his pupils took dictation from him. But what one dictates may be utterly mindless. Aristotle himself had noticed that some birds can imitate human speech. 

Producer of the first signifier, it is not just a simple signifier among others. It signifies “mental experiences” which themselves reflect or mirror things by natural resemblance.

Why stop there? Why not embrace a full blown doctrine of signatures or correspondences and then take up Voodoo?  

Between being and mind, things and feelings, there would be a relationship of translation or natural signification;

there could be but there could also be the reverse. Disguising your thoughts or not letting your mind react to things as they would naturally do may be vital for survival.  

between mind and logos, a relationship of conventional symbolization.

Conventions are solutions to coordination or discoordination problems. To be fair, David Lewis's book came out two years after Derrida's. Still, after Dr. Strangelove came out, everybody was talking about Game Theory and wondering whether getting Game Theory wrong would lead to Nuclear Apocalypse.  

And the first convention, which would relate immediately to the order of natural and universal signification, would be produced as spoken language.

Nope. Sign language would come first. Hunters need to be silent. We don't know at what point our Genu evolved vocal chords. It is likely that speech developed slowly in groups which already had other ways to communicate. It was a supplement. For all we know, the scratching of signs predated this. 

Written language would establish the conventions,

Nope. They pre-existed.  

inter-linking other conventions with them.

Writers could write about ways to interlink conventions. But talkers could talk about the same thing. Pointing could work just as well.  

Just as all men have not the same writing so all men have not the same speech sounds, but mental experiences, of which these are the primary symbols (semeia prôtos), are the same for all,

they aren't even for the same person at different times of the day or when considering different contexts.  

as also are those things of which our experiences are the images (De interpretatione, 1, 16a. Italics added) .

Our experiences aren't images. They may arise because of things outside ourselves but aren't reflections. Why did Derrida not know this? 

The feelings of the mind, expressing things naturally, constitute a sort of universal language which can then efface itself.

Which is why we are all telepaths.  

It is the stage of transparence. Aristotle can sometimes omit it without risk. 

Aristotle was paid to teach. What is important that you can say you spent years being taught shite. We understand that what you were taught was shite but that's what Paideia or a 'liberal education' means.  

In every case, the voice is closest to the signified, whether it is determined strictly as sense (thought or lived) or more loosely as thing.

No. The sight is closest to visual signs. The ear is closest to sounds. The nose is closest to farts which is what I use to communicate my boredom and general truculence.  

All signifiers, and first and foremost the written signifier, are derivative with regard to what would wed the voice indissolubly to the mind

The voice isn't bound to the mind. That's why it can be recorded and preserved. We can hear the voices of people who died long ago 

or to the thought of the signified sense, indeed to the thing itself (whether it is done in the Aristotelian manner that we have just indicated or in the manner of medieval theology, determining the res as a thing created from its eidos, from its sense thought in the logos or in the infinite understanding of God).

But the thing isn't 'created from its eidos'. It isn't the case that thinking about unicorns causes unicorns to appear.  

The written signifier is always technical and representative.

It may be. It may not- like the Indus Valley script which still hasn't been deciphered.  

It has no constitutive meaning.

It may do. A country can have a written constitution or else it may be constituted through an international treaty.  

This derivation is the very origin of the notion of the “signifier.”

Saussure got this availability cascade of the ground. But there can be a signifier without anything being signified and vice versa. 

The notion of the sign always implies within itself the distinction between signifier and signified,

No. When a new King is crowned he is the signifier and the signified. This is not the case if he crowned via proxy.

even if, as Saussure argues, they are distinguished simply as the two faces of one and the same leaf.

Nobody bothers to distinguish the sides of leaves.  

This notion remains therefore within the heritage of that logocentrism which is also a phonocentrism: 

only because Derrida says of. But, he is a cretin. Why take his word for it. 

absolute proximity of voice and being,

Which is why, if you are making a phone call you are in two places at the same time.- 

of voice and the meaning of being,

Being doesn't have a meaning. 

of voice and the ideality of meaning.

Meaning is pragmatic. It has no ideality. 

Hegel demonstrates very clearly the strange privilege of sound in idealization, the production of the concept and the self-presence of the subject.

No he doesn't. Derrida is making this shit up. 

This ideal motion, in which through the sound what is as it were the simple subjectivity [Subjektivität], the soul of the material thing expresses itself,

sadly, material things don't have souls which express themselves 

the ear receives also in a theoretical [theoretisch] way,

only in the sense that the receives farts in a theoretical way 

just as the eye shape and colour, thus allowing the interiority of the object to become interiority itself [läßt dadurch das Innere der Gegenstände fur das Innere selbst werden] (Esthétique, III. I tr. fr. p. 16).* . . .

Whose interiority becomes the same as the armchair they are looking at or the parrot they can hear? 

The ear, on the contrary, perceives [vernimmt] the result of that interior vibration of material substances

No it doesn't. External vibrations may be audible not interior ones.  

without placing itself in a practical relation toward the objects, a result by means of which it is no longer the material form [Gestalt] in its repose, but the first, more ideal activity of the soul itself which is manifested [zum Vorschein kommt] (p. 296) .

A disciple of Hegel's published his lectures on Aesthetics. Some question whether Hegel's accurately views are properly reflected. In nuce, Hegel's notion is that 'Beauty is determined as the sensible shining of the Idea'. Sadly, we don't notice a beauty we encounter everyday. There has to be something novel or arresting about it. 

** What is said of sound in general is a fortiori valid for the phone by which, by virtue of hearing (understanding)-oneself-speak—an indissociable system—the subject affects itself and is related to itself in the element of ideality.

It one thing to say that your health improves if you keep saying 'Day, by day, in every way, I'm getting better and better. It is another to maintain that phonemes have magical powers. 

We already have a foreboding that phonocentrism merges with the historical determination of the meaning of being in general as presence,

No we don't. A Hegelian may posit an 'end of history' where every consciousness, properly so called, agrees about everything that matters. But that does not involves phonemes. Also, there is no such thing as phonocentrism. Nobody greatly cares if you mispronounce words.  

with all the subdeterminations which depend on this general form and which organize within it their system and their historical sequence (presence of the thing to the sight as eidos, presence as substance/essence/existence [ousia], temporal presence as point [stigmè] of the now or of the moment [nun], the self-presence of the cogito, consciousness, subjectivity, the co-presence of the other and of the self, intersubjectivity as the intentional phenomenon of the ego, and so forth).

Intersubjectivity is easily established between you and your dog or horse. You may not be able to establish it with your wife. This leads to divorce.

Logocentrism would thus support the determination of the being of the entity as presence.

An entity retains being even when it is not present. Logocentrism doesn't support shit. 

To the extent that such a logocentrism is not totally absent from Heidegger’s thought, perhaps it still holds that thought within the epoch of onto-theology, within the philosophy of presence, that is to say within philosophy itself.

It is more probable that Heidegger wasn't doing philosophy. He was babbling nonsense. 

This would perhaps mean that one does not leave the epoch whose closure one can outline.

If one lives long enough, one does do so. Bertrand Russell was born in the Victorian age. He died after the Moon landing.  

The movements of belonging or not belonging to the epoch are too subtle, the illusions in that regard are too easy, for us to make a definite judgment.

No. It is easy enough to say that Russell was born a Victorian. He died in the age of Dr. Strangelove. Still, in fields where there is an objective function to be minimized or maximized,  categoricity of a Hegelian type might be achieved. The British Hegelian tradition can be considered non-metaphysical in this respect. 

It may be convenient for teachers to divide history into 'epochs' or 'ages' but it is folly to think that ideas changed fundamentally over their course. Rather it was a case of old wine in new bottles. People followed the fashion of the period to a greater or lesser extent but they didn't believe fashions greatly mattered. I suppose, one could say- at one time it was fashionable to write high falutin' nonsense. But not everybody did. Those who had something sensible to say could pass down something not wholly ephemeral or fraudulent. Grammatology wasn't one such thing. A pity, but there it is. 


Punkass Mishra vs Amish Tripati.

Punkaj Mishra's grandfather was born as the subject of the British King Emperor. This ceased to be the case when Britain found its Indian Empire a source of neither profit nor prestige. This did not mean that India & Britain ceased to cooperate in economic & military matters. But both became less and less important to each other.

In an article for Harper's, Mishra pretends such was not the case.  

Speaking Reassurance to Power “It may be,” Edmund Wilson wrote in 1929,

six years before the US decided to get shot of the Philippines. Imperialism was a waste of money. Also it increased the immigration of darkies.  

“that the United States will develop into a great imperialistic power with all its artists, critics, and philosophers as ineffective and as easily extinguished as the German ones were in 1914.”

Germany wasn't a 'great imperial power'. It had some shitty colonies which nobody else wanted. Most of its critics & philosophers were on the side of the Kaiser.  

Wilson, born in 1895, came of age when national energies were still turned inward,

America formally annexed the Philippines in 1898.  

and a largely Europhilic American intelligentsia

fuck off! Santayana observed that Americans- even in Europe- made it a point to cut their meat with the knife in the right hand & then transfer their fork to it. They seldom conformed to the sartorial conventions of the European aristocracy. Since they were as rich as fuck, they were applauded for this.  

possessed little cultural capital or self-confidence.

Nonsense! American heiresses were marrying into the European aristocracy- if such was their taste. America was had been self-confident since the time of Benjamin Franklin who was a big hit in Paris. 

He lived long enough to deplore his country’s midcentury turn from doctrinaire isolationism to righteous superpowerdom.

He was a posh cunt turned Lefty nutter.  

“Whenever we engage in a war or move in on some other country,” he wrote in Patriotic Gore (1962), “it is always to liberate somebody.”

Americans liberated Paris. Fuck you, Yankee Doodle.  

Wilson came to dislike the “all too conscious American literary self-glorification which is a part of our American imperialism.”

He disliked everything which wasn't him. Hilariously, he thought Nabakov's Russian was subpar.  

He caustically noted the behavior of onetime radicals rushing to embrace personal opportunities for wealth and status in their freshly affluent society.

The US overtook UK in per capita income before he was born. When was there a time when Americans didn't embrace wealth & status? John Jacob Astor, obviously, was an exception. He chose to give up his fortune to become a tramp. 

John Dos Passos, writing on Barry Goldwater, sounded like a “teenager squealing over the Beatles.”

He didn't want to pay yet more in tax to finance a bloated Federal bureaucracy.  

He identified John F. Kennedy as an intellectual poseur, defying a burgeoning cult of American writers who viewed the U.S. president as a serious reader and thinker.

Name one. Kennedy had his Camelot & those who were part of that charmed circle had an incentive to pretend the guy who thought them smart was smart himself.  

During the Vietnam War, Wilson refused an invitation from Lyndon Johnson with, as the president’s special consultant recorded, “a brusqueness” never before known at the White House.

 He was invited to read from his work during the White House Festival of the Arts held on June 14, 1965. This was to pave the way for the establishment of the National Endowment for the Arts. Nobody gave a shit for Wilson though some had a vague memory of having read 'Hecate County' which actually had some good bits. 

It is not hard to imagine what America’s preeminent critic

Trilling?  

would have made of the writers exulting over their inclusion in Barack Obama’s reading lists (issued occasionally while Obama worked, on Tuesdays, on “kill lists” targeting young men in South Asia and the Middle East).

Nothing at all. There was no connection between the two things. Obama wasn't a fucking serial killer. He had inherited a war against terrorists who had attacked New York & Washington. 

What do we think of Punkass who pretends to greatly care about Muslim terrorists who consider it an act of piety to kill innocent Hindus?  

It’s easier to guess what Wilson would have thought of Marilynne Robinson declaring, as late as 2024, that Joe Biden was a “gift of God, all eighty-one years of him,”

coz Wilson would have been a Trump supporter right?  

or of Timothy Snyder delivering, that same year, a “Biden benediction.”

Or Mishra delivering benedictions on murderous Ayatollahs?  

Wilson’s vision of the brittleness of the American intelligentsia

it kept rising in productivity & prestige 

before a brazenly imperialist regime

Britain had a King Emperor. That was brazen imperialism. Pretending America had any such thing is monumental bad faith. It's like saying 'Woke ideology has caused the American intelligentsia to undergo gene therapy so as to turn into goats being fucked by Hamas  

has never been more fully realized.

Than by Punkass. Yet he remains silent about gene therapy being used by American intellectuals who want to be such goats as appeal to the carnal appetites of murderous Jihadis like Donald Trump.  

While threatening the annexation of lands on multiple continents and absentmindedly supervising genocide

Israelis need supervision. Left to themselves they would turn into goats & let Hamas fuck them in the ass.  

in Palestine, Donald Trump is actively attempting to hollow out, with scarcely any effective opposition from their custodians, all major academic and cultural establishments in the United States.

He is hollowing them out so they can be fucked in the ass by Jihadis with ginormous dicks.  

Many Americans are demonstrably disgusted, shamed, and angered by their tyrants

some such aren't clinically insane. Not many, but some such do exist.  

, but mainstream literary and intellectual institutions seem unable or unwilling to give voice to them.

Because they have turned into goats and are being fucked in the ass by Jihadis like Donald Trump.  

As its icons flee to Canada and Europe,

Jason Stanley is a shithead, not an icon.  

“resistance liberalism” is being outsourced to Harvard University, where its pusillanimity is further revealed through a president carefully implementing Trumpian strictures against “campus culture.”

Why are US campuses not stringing up Jews? Is it because College Presidents are pussies?  

This swift and near-total capitulation to political depravity is for many

crazy 

people outside the United States an extraordinary sight.

Why aren't White Americans chopping off their own heads and shoving them up their own poopers? Is it because they are all a bunch of pussies?  

The American intelligentsia has presented itself since 1945 as the worldwide guarantor of intellectual and creative freedom.

No. It has acknowledged that it is stupid- when compared to guys who do STEM subjects.  

From the beginning of the Cold War, its cultural institutions,

remained shit or got shittier. Smart people stayed away.  

whether the Congress for Cultural Freedom, a number of prominent creative writing programs,

which are about becoming the next Stephen King & earning mega-bucks. The alternative is having to teach creative writing.  

or PEN America itself, have promoted the idea of a literary sphere that is credible and respectable only when it is independent from political parties, state-controlled institutions, and propagandistic media.

Unless you are a darkie or a lesbian in which case Grievance Studies is the way to go.  

Of course, it was always possible to argue, as Viet Thanh Nguyen

whose book 'the Sympathizer' made him a lot of money. The TV series starred Robert Downey Junior.  

did recently while complaining about “writers who say nothing,” that American literary institutions are not autonomous but “a part of empire, supported by the state or by powerful donors who benefit from the imperial machinery.”

Get rich, then get woke. Otherwise people think you suffer from a feeling of sour grapes.  

Indeed, Cold War–era American institutions and personalities who promoted the ideal of aesthetic autonomy while trying to dissuade writers and artists from left-wing politics and propagandizing (sometimes with the help of CIA subventions) represented a glaring contradiction.

Not really. Arthur Miller married Marilyn. If his plays made money- what was not to like?  

Their own failure to stand up to Senator Joseph McCarthy’s demagoguery

He gave Reagan, Nixon, Kennedy & Roy Cohn their start. Then, his services were dispensed with.  

hardly recommended their version of artistic iconoclasm and political neutrality.

Guys like Wilson may have seemed important in the Thirties. But times had changed. Keynesianism had rescued Capitalism from itself.  

Nevertheless, outsiders marveled at the pronounced American sense of moral and cultural primacy, which seemed to be guaranteed by hard power and enforced synergistically by the State Department, PEN America, the New York Times, Human Rights Watch, and Ivy League universities.

No. They marvelled at America's wealth & capacity for innovation. After 1965, the smartest scientists & mathematicians in the world- not just refugees- were queuing up for jobs on American campuses. When RK Narayan first took up a visiting Fellowship in the US, no one there knew a Tamil from a camel. By the time AK Ramanujan reached there, he found Neelakantha Sastri's book collection in the library stacks.  

The experience of fascism and despotism in Europe and Latin America, and racist imperialism in Asia and Africa, had forced nearly every writer and intellectual of stature around the world, from Albert Camus

Raymond Aron? 

and Julio Cortázar

Borges?

to Naguib Mahfouz

Taha Husayn? 

and Nadine Gordimer,

she was beaten up in her own home in 2006. She was 82. Coetze was smart. He got the fuck out of South Africa.  

into moral commitment, which became more explicit and articulate during crises. None of these ineluctably engagé authors, however, could count on, in their own nations, the same sprawling material infrastructure for literature and ideology that had been forged by the United States during its crusade against Soviet Communism.

Mishra does not understand that American private enterprise created that 'material infrastructure'.  

As it happened, many victims of tyrannical regimes and fanatical movements ended up seeking refuge in the United States.

Jim Crow America afforded Whites security and opulence.  

These exiles and expatriates, from Hannah Arendt to

Auden & Isherwood?  

Thomas Mann, Czesław Miłosz to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,

Salman Rushdie?  

helped define the intolerable pressures on the individual conscience in our time, and stressed the importance of saying “no” to violence and falsehood.

This is just as important as saying 'no' to the Grim Reaper.  

Their robust negations appeared to put both them and their American hosts on the right side of history, compared with writers in the unfree world of authoritarian regimes, who seemed to have been permanently tainted by lies, equivocations, and evasions.

Punkass is tainted by all the shit he spews out.  

It was from the elevated ground of the open society

as opposed to a Chinese concentration camp 

that Martin Amis, briefly a proponent of collective punishment for Muslims, exhorted Westerners in 2007 to feel morally superior to the Taliban, and Salman Rushdie, champion of a “war of liberation” in Iraq, condemned, in 2012, that year’s laureate for the Nobel Prize in Literature, Mo Yan, as a “patsy” of the Chinese regime.

A 'patsy' for the West who wanted China to be colonised for at least 300 years, had been given the Nobel Peace Prize. The Chinese, quite rightly, jailed the cunt.  Mo Yan thought this a good thing. 

More recently, cultural organizations and academic institutions reenacted the old Cold War skit casting the eastern seaboard as the vanguard of human emancipation as they denounced Vladimir Putin’s assault on Ukraine

Why weren't they praising Putin?  

and extended support to Ukrainian writers and academics.

They should have shat upon them.  

For all its claims to superior virtue,

Why does it not claim to suck off hobos at truck stops?  

the liberal American intelligentsia manifests very little of the courage and dignity it has expected from artists and thinkers in less fortunate societies, as hooded and masked officials disappear students for the crime of writing school-newspaper op-eds and liking social-media posts.

It doesn't take either courage or dignity to do useless shit.  

Dissenters from far-right orthodoxies in the United States did not face such a concerted onslaught even in the early Fifties, when, threatened by the House Un-American Activities Committee, pursued by the FBI, and canceled by the Library of Congress, Thomas Mann departed the arsenal of democracy for Switzerland.

His kids were left wing. Switzerland, it must be said, had lower taxes than the US at that time. Mann didn't want to pay 90 percent marginal tax on royalties. He wanted to pay 6.5 percent.  

Today, the “disgusting exhibition,” as Mann saw the witch hunts of McCarthyism

Highly progressive taxes are a witch hunt against rich authors.  

“of primitive Puritanism, hatred, fear, corruption and self-righteousness” is much more extensive.

Yet few American intellectuals are moving to Tehran.  

The destruction of U.S. institutions

is imaginary.  

in order to suppress criticism of Israeli war crimes

such criticism can only be effectively made by those who undergo gene therapy, turn into goats, & get sodomized by Hamas.  

speaks to a pathology of self-mutilation that is striking even when measured against Stalin’s and Mao’s regimes (which, though infinitely more brutal, cared, above all, about projecting an image of national autonomy and sovereignty).

There you have it folks. Punkass thinks America isn't doing enough to catch up with Stalin's Soviet Union.  

But the American intelligentsia is very far from manifesting a movement of moral and political self-criticism comparable to that of the intrepid dissidents it celebrated during the Cold War.

Dissidents weren't 'self-critical'. They didn't say 'you know, maybe I was too hard on Mao. 30 million people may have been happy to starve to death. I too may have enjoyed 're-education'.'  

No second “Harper’s Letter” has emerged,

because nobody noticed the first.  

locating the threats to free expression in an extremist ruling class, narcissistic Silicon Valley oligarchs, free-speech hucksters, and cravenly self-censoring media organizations and think tanks.

The more cunts like Punkass talk, the more support those guys get.  

The writers crying “Je suis Charlie” in 2015

didn't like Muslim terrorists 

have not made themselves heard saying “Je suis Refaat Alareer.”

Coz he was a Muslim. If Hamas hadn't killed him, chances are he was one of them.  

Nor has an institutionally backed solidarity rally of the kind that occurred after the attempted assassination of Rushdie been witnessed at the New York Public Library over the targeted killings of writers and journalists in Palestine. (Rushdie himself has accused student protesters of anti-Semitism and of supporting a “fascist terrorist group.”)

Nor has Punkass turned into a goat. Is it because he is a homophobic kaffir cunt who doesn't sincerely love and desire sodomy at the hands of Jihadis?  

More than seven hundred writers signed a letter endorsing Kamala Harris.

Much good it did her.  

No one among them attempted, against the genocidal foreign policy of a senile president and his loyal deputies, the type of mild but prominent dissent voiced by Robert Lowell

who was as crazy as a bed bug. He tried to strangle his wife.  

in an open letter to Lyndon Johnson that the New York Times published on its front page on June 3, 1965: “I . . . can only follow our present foreign policy with the greatest dismay and distrust.”

It was shitty. The Federal Government was pissing tax payer money against the wall.  

Resistance liberalism yet again demonstrated its limits when Anne Applebaum,

who knows Gaza & Iran take attention away from Ukraine which is bad for Poland.  

one of the most voluble heralds of global “autocracy,” took a strict vow of silence over the American-Israeli campaign of extermination—perhaps because she had once argued, in an article titled “Kill the Messenger,” that assassination was a legitimate strategy against Palestinian journalists.

Is she of Jewish heritage? No. Her pappy was an Ayatollah.  

It is possible that many writers believe, as John Updike did during the napalming of Vietnam, that they “had voted,” thus earning their “American right not to make a political decision for another four years.” Like Updike, they may think that their “stock in trade as an American author” includes an identification with the United States’ “national fortunes,” and that, as “privileged members of a privileged nation [they] believed that their pleasant position could be maintained without anything visibly ugly happening in the world.”

Worse yet, American dentists refused to turn into goats so as to be sodomized by Hamas just because, as they said, 'dentistry has nothing to do with exterminating those fucking animals'.  

In any case, only a few writers, strikingly almost all of non-Western ancestry,

but mainly settled in the West.  

have taken the risk of pointing out truths distorted or concealed by interlocking class and ideological interests. As Kaveh Akbar

who shows little interest in returning to the land of his birth.  

put it recently: “It is excruciating to be the Muslim in every room forcing people to think about genocide, but I do not have the luxury of shitty cynicism or breezy despair.”

He enjoys the luxury of not being killed for homosexual acts.  

It is also excruciatingly awkward for me, a nonresident alien (in IRS parlance),

i.e. a guy getting paid in dollars for writing shite of this sort 

to say this: that the liberal American intelligentsia seems to have relaxed too cozily into imperial cultures of exaggerated self-esteem and self-satisfaction.

Very true. I was talking the other day to the current Viceroy of Pakistan who is from Texas. He wears solar topee & says 'panee lao y'all'. I asked why he felt so comfortable slipping so cosily into the rule of Imperial proconsul. He replied that he had originally undergone gene therapy so as to turn into a goat & had travelled to Waziristan so as to offer his anal cherry to Jihadi terrorists. Sadly, he was intercepted by Field Marshall Munir who appointed him Viceroy so as to have somebody to blame if Imran dies in jail. 

A professionalized, even bureaucratized, and politically neutered literary-intellectual elite long ago shredded whatever countercultural aura the vocation had acquired over centuries;

George Washington was a hippie. He opposed George III's wars against American Indians. Washington Irving was his homosexual lover.  

its compromised and enfeebled state is more vividly revealed today by the demons of sadism and stupidity rampaging across the United States.

Not to mention Sir Keir Starmer rampaging over England's green & pleasant land.  

Until 1945 at least, American writers resembled their counterparts elsewhere around the globe:

No. They were distinctive. Wilson, it is true, was programmatic in the manner of a Continental intellectual.  

mostly uncertain about their nation’s role in the world

No. There was a consensus that they shouldn't be dragged in to the problems of the 'Old World'. Still they wanted freedom of navigation & thus Hitler declared war on them.  

and troubled, if not personally damaged, by the age of extremes.

Some were. Most weren't.  

The endless economic crises, wrenching social and political conflicts, and far-right insurrections of the low, dishonest decade

were irrelevant to the US. If Commies or Nazis wagged their tail, they would be slaughtered.  

made it impossible for many writers to remain neutral observers of social and ideological struggles. The pressures of conscience and craving for drama took Dos Passos

who moved to the right 

and Hemingway

who liked Castro 

to the Spanish Civil War. Edmund Wilson reported from picket lines during the Great Depression,

America had its own indigenous tradition in this regard- Henry George, John Steinbeck, Upton Sinclair etc. 

travelled to the Soviet Union, and authored an introduction to revolutionary thought.

He thought the American intelligentsia should 'take Communism away from the Communist party'. 

After 1945, an isolationist country

It was no longer so. Only the US Navy could ensure 'freedom of navigation'. The Brits were too broke to do an effective job.  

found itself the world’s preeminent power, made stronger and more prosperous by a war that had reduced much of Europe and Asia to ruins.

Productivity & capacity utilization had greatly increased. The American capacity to do both pure & applied science had qualitatively increased. But the Soviets were nipping at their heels & got to Outer Space first.  

Visiting the United States in 1960, Italo Calvino noted the growing “abyss” between America and the rest of the world that made the country seem as alien as the moon.

Italy would become more Americanised. By the late Eighties you could even get proper Chicago style pizza in Naples.  

Calvino was struck by the relatively luxurious circumstances of American writers, and wondered whether the price for such plenitude was a “death of the soul.”

He was already making good money. But he would get a lot richer. This didn't hurt his soul any. 

Others worried, especially after the quick intellectual surrender to McCarthy in the early Fifties,

What surrender? The ban on the Communist party was never enforced. It was McCarthy who was driven out of public life.  

about more tangible threats to the life of the mind in a simultaneously rich and conformist civilization.

The Puritans on the Mayflower were non-conformist in religion. The had no objection to getting rich. Punkass has done quite well for himself.  

The intellect in

Jewish 

America, Irving Howe

who was Jewish 

warned in his classic 1954 essay “This Age of Conformity,” was increasingly prone to “some undignified prostrations” before wealth and power.

What if Jews start assimilating, not just culturally, but also religiously? The solution was simple. Build truly upscale Synagogues in posh suburbs & pay your Rabbi top dollar. Also, get your shiksa g.f. to convert to Reform Judaism. Think of the money you'll save on nose jobs for your daughters. 

External observers have long been struck by the rampant depoliticization

which means there is less money for being 'politicized' 

that has made the most celebrated American writers

George R.R Martin? No. This cunt means some guy who teaches Grievance Studies & is promoted by a small citation carter.  But this means Suraj Yengde is to be preferred to Punkass Mishra.

susceptible to the lures of unprincipled power and vacuous celebrity: for instance, David Foster Wallace spending over twenty thousand words to investigate, indecisively, whether John McCain was a moral hero and a “real leader or merely a very talented political salesman,” when a quick glance at the voting record of the warmongering Republican senator would have sufficed.

McCain was a genuine war hero. That's why he wasn't popular. It is no accident that America prefers draft dodgers or those who pulled strings to stay the fuck away from Vietnam.  

In recent years, writers abroad who are, or romantically see themselves as, necessarily alienated critics of society

coz otherwise who'd pay to read their shite.  

have been baffled to see American counterparts gratefully receiving laurels from Barack Obama,

who was and still is very popular 

“our own Black shining prince,” as Ta-Nehisi Coates, borrowing from Ossie Davis’s eulogy of Malcolm X, put it. In their eyes, some unprecedented confusion of literature with neoliberal chic occurred when Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie read aloud, at the PEN America World Voices Festival, her Atlantic article that she had wanted to title “Why Is Hillary Clinton So Widely Loved?”

Clinton looked like a sure-fire 2 termer.  

as the former secretary of state looked on fondly. These spectacles of writers speaking reassurance to power confirm Christopher Lasch’s diagnosis of more than half a century ago: that American “intellectuals, as a class, had achieved official recognition, affluence, prestige, and power, and something of the mentality that goes with them”:

50 years ago, there were 'intellectuals'. Now there are guys whose research is the basis of a billion dollar tech start-up, on the one hand, and, on the other, there are losers who beg for favours from Epstein.  

they had developed a stake in the perpetuation of the Pax Americana.

Whereas non-intellectuals eagerly looked forward to the day they were nuked to death.  

Robert Frost matched the most spineless Stalinist hack

because he had a penis. Lots of Stalinists did so too. This proves Frost was a Stalinist.  

by hailing the advent of “a golden age of poetry and power” when Kennedy arrived at the White House. In a new poem written for the inauguration, Robert Frost proposed an unprecedented alliance between imperial and literary authorities: 
We see how seriously the races swarm 
In their attempts at sovereignty and form. 
They are our wards we think to some extent
For the time being and with their consent,
To teach them how Democracy is meant.

Fortunately, he had been unable to read out this shite because 'the sun was in his eye'. He forgot Kennedy was Irish. The English had colonised Ireland as they had planted colonies in America. His Elizabethan triumphalism was a red rag to Irish patriots who had not forgiven 'Gloriana' for her nine year war on O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone.

The central working assumption of PEN America and of the State Department—that the liberal American can teach the seriously swarming races what is meant by democracy

there was no such assumption. The US preferred military dictators like Franco, Ayub, Park, etc.  

—has been annihilated. Even some commonly used concepts that once seemed self-evident—American democracy, globalization, the West, and the rules-based international order—

Biden's 'Summit for Democracy'? The thing was a joke. The US is happier with Munir than Im the Dim.  

lie shattered. And it won’t be possible anymore for the liberal American intelligentsia to run up massive intellectual and moral deficits with American power as the invisible reserve currency.

Anyone can run up imaginary deficits or surpluses. What is becoming unaffordable is 'boots on the ground'.  

Its helplessness today puts into sharper contrast its will to power,

Fuck power. Money matters. You have enough of it, you also have power.  

its often peremptory redefining of what art, literature, politics, democracy, and human rights are or are not.

Fuck off! Cretins can't define shit.  

Shorn of its revolving door to the State Department and the Democratic Party establishment, PEN America will henceforth eke out a miserable existence, trying to simulate moral and intellectual supremacy long after its demise.

Nobody gives, or gave, a fuck about it. 

Other enforcers of America’s postwar cultural hegemony are also likely to find themselves diminished.

Because they haven't 'enforced' shit. Either your new Netflix series clicks with viewers or they end up watching Korean soaps.  

And, perhaps, a brutal estrangement from sources of power and patronage would be salutary in the long term. It will be hard, though not impossible, for the beneficiaries of the remarkable American bonanza of grants, fellowships, and awards to break out of their elitist self-isolation and turn into dissidents.

There are some Foundations with deep pockets which sustain this 'eco-sphere'. But  if you pay people to tell stupid lies, all you end up with is lazy shitheads endlessly recycling their own stupid lies.  

At the same time, adaptation to a regime of insolent cruelty and mendacity would require

emigration to Iran? 

an amount of shitty cynicism that is fatal to intellectual and imaginative work.

Nonsense! Cynics are good writers. Wide eyed idealists produce dreck.  

Too many consciences will be torn and shaken.

& anal cherries will be lost to randy Jihadi goat-fuckers.  

American intellectual and literary culture may or may not abandon its deference to power and wealth and go to that necessary war against itself

by chopping off its own head & shoving it up its own rectum to show solidarity with Jihadi goat-fuckers.  

in order to salvage its dignity and purpose.

It is a great indignity for a writer or intellectual not to have his head securely lodged up his own rectum.  

But there is some cause for hope in the certainty that the best and brightest in the American intelligentsia won’t go looking for crumbs from the presidential table.

Nor will they seek to gain some protein in their diet by sucking him off.  

Spurning breezy despair and jovial resignation, they might even assume the usual condition of writers elsewhere: a bitter but spiritually liberating powerlessness.

Punkass may be powerless. Amish Tripati, who is 6 years younger than him, is rich, sells millions of copies of his books, makes India's most watched documentaries  & presided over the Nehru Centre in London as a senior diplomat. I suppose he will end up in the Cabinet. 

Meanwhile, Punkass has to get by on intellectual affirmative action. 

Monday, 23 March 2026

Brouwer & the Gita


I think most non-Mathematicians have a vague idea that Brouwer was in the tradition of Poincare and Borel- i.e. critical of logicism- and intuitionistic in some special sense which pragmatism has had reason to value. It would be interesting to see how he is viewed by Dutch mathematicians. 

In a paper titled  L. E. J. Brouwer’s philosophical views and the Bhagavad Gita  Teun Koetsier writes-

 The philosophical views of the Dutch mathematician L. E. J. Brouwer had a crucial influence on his mathematical work.  His conviction that mathematics at heart consists of language-free and logic-free introspective constructions stems from his epistemological solipsism. This solipsism is embedded in an original world view based on Schopenhauerian ideas. In particular Brouwer’s references to the Bhagavad Gita are striking. 

I think a Hindu would say that Brouwer was a Samkhya dualist- the fundamental intuition for him is the 'two-ity' between what in Dutch is called ‘ikheid’ (‘the property of being me’ which corresponds to Purusha) &  the ‘images’ (‘voorstellingen’ which would correspond to Prakriti) appearing before the ego. In Samkhya the ikheid is a passive observer. Brouwer was an energetic 'constructivist' yet he longed for the restoration of a state of absolute purity and thus the 'Yogishvara'- Lord of Yoga- as depicted in the Gita appealed to him. This peculiarity of his makes it difficult to class him with the types of solipsism familiar to Western Philosophy. Instead, it would be more usual to see him as Schopenhauer style transcendental idealist. However, by the Thirties, it had become apparent that his notion of 'choice-sequences' (e.g in the hands of Turing) could do something Husserl's transcendental subject could not do. It seemed Brouwer, not Husserl or Wittgenstein, would be more philosophically fecund for the same reason he was so mathematically fecund. Alas, to my knowledge, what that philosophy might be yet eludes elucidation. 

Considering, as I do, the Mahabarata to have a mathematical structure (because it is careful to give each character or episode a dual so as to preserve symmetries such that karma and dharma, as principles of causality across time and space, are conserved, it would be interesting to see which parts of the Gita- considered as a Samkhya-Yoga text converging to the Advaita of the Chandogya- the great man found most evocative. 

In 1905 Brouwer published a remarkable booklet called Life, Art and Mysticism (LAM) in which he described science and technology as evil forces that lead mankind astray. The only way out of this sad world is via introspection. By turning-into-one-self liberation is possible.

Brouwer had joined the Remonstrant Church- a liberal Arminian (i.e. pre-destination means God knows who will come to truly believe and thus pre-destines them for Grace) sect which required converts to write a personal profession of faith. In other words, his mystical views were directly related to his hope of salvation. As with his mathematical work, he was serious and highly motivated. What made him different from ordinary people was his extraordinary mind and strong character. We may not understand exactly why Brouwer's work is helping create what appear to us to be magical new technologies, but such indeed appears to be the case.  

Brouwer quoted medieval mystics to illustrate his views. He also quoted from the Bhagavad Gita, for example, Book II, 62: “While contemplating the objects of the senses, a person develops attachment for them, and from such attachment lust develops, and from lust anger arises”, and Book II, 64: “But a person free from all attachment and aversion and able to control his senses through regulative principles of freedom can obtain the complete mercy of the Lord”. 

'regulative principles of freedom' is a stretch. Self-control and being sensible is all that is required.  

What is interesting is Brouwer's youthful conviction that '“In his life of lust and desire the intellect renders man the devilish service of linking two images of the imaginations as means and end.

we can imagine a virile young student needing to delink the image of a Dutch prostitute from a means, which. though pleasant enough, ends in Syphilis and a rapid decline in mental power. Also your nose falls off. Help me, Jesus! 

 Once in the grip of desire for one thing he is made to strive after another as a means to that end 

Hang on. Maybe the guy is talking about the misuse of mathematics! The lust for solvability may lead to striving after moonshine! Prior to Hilbert's formulation of his second problem, showing the consistency of axioms meant constructing a model. Brouwer thought the use of the law of the excluded middle (which gets us quickly to solvability)  was illicit for infinite sets. Hilbert countered that this was like not letting a boxer use his fists. This sounds like 'funktionlust'- the fist wanting to hit things because it confuses the reason it exists- which is precautionary- with its purpose in life- i.e. aggression.

It is certainly true that in any applied field, there must be strict scrupulousness or 'restricted comprehension'. This may not be the case for pure math. It may be that any and every 'maTam' (dogma) yields the same 'vigyaan' (science). Certainly, that is one way- an ecumenical way- to read the Gita. 

The act aimed at the means, however, always overshoots the mark […] Man’s blinkered view prevents him from recognizing the sometimes very detrimental effect of such action

Indeed. The misuse of fixed point theorems have resulted in generations of economists and game theorists writing nonsense.  

Brouwer speaks directly about karma-

The fourth chapter is about life after one realizes the corruptness of the world: “You look on this life as the direction of your duty, and you live it as directed from within the self; in other words: you recognize that all these earthly bonds remain your inevitable karma until God releases you. No new desires will be able to deflect you from your path and you will not wantonly increase the burden of your karma” ([3], p. 400).

I suppose Brouwer was speaking metaphorically. He wasn't saying that his 'prarabdha karma' in this life was created in his past lives. His duty had been laid out for him by God's mysterious economy. Nothing wrong with that at all. What is interesting is that the Theosophists, at that time, were talking about how karma was like an arrow in flight. But a superior archer could deflect that arrow with an arrow of his own. Arjuna and other warriors in the Mahabharata did this all the time. I suppose one might think of the debate between the Intuitionists and the Formalists as an attempt to deflect the arrow of progress in their discipline.

 In this chapter the word ‘karma’ occurs for the first time. Brouwer uses it more than 40 times in the last six chapters of the book. He uses it to denote that what is inevitable in this world.

The Hindu view is that karma is a delusion (Maya). But if you truly lurve the Lord and want nothing more than to fulfil His Divine Plan, then you want Him to be the 'Mayin' or magician controlling you. This is Dualistic Theism and no one can say it is inferior to Mystical Monism. But, equally, there would be little point saying the reverse. In this sense Brouwer is right to condemn language devoted to such ends.  

 Chapter six is on immanent truth, that is the “Truth which in this world points to the inevitability of the karma of this world”. An important source of immanent truth is art. True art reveals the situation man is in. “Art which is real truth, belies common sense, causality, and science everywhere […] it sees the avenging of fate in everyone’s life, how the illusion, the hope, and the trust in the stability of this world is turned into misery” ([3], p. 405).

I suppose, 'Art' back then meant Wagner or Tolstoy rather than Disney Cartoons. 

The next chapter is on transcendent truth.

Which, for Hindus, is just Being- though it may be apprehended as Beauty or Bliss 

That is truth that guides a man to a life free from the shackles of fear and desire. In this chapter and the next Brouwer quotes rather extensively from a German translation of the Bhagavad Gita. He quotes from Book II, texts 60-66, from Book V, texts 20-24, Book VI, texts 20-23. Brouwer calls the quotations an example of “mystical sounds that hover above the previous chapters” ([3], p. 420).

For Christians, this may be the 'still small voice' or it might be as a great rushing wind or the cooing of doves etc.  

And in the next chapter on the liberated life he quotes Book III, 17-19, 27-28 and again from Book V, 7-12. Brouwer quotes Book III, 17: “But for one who takes pleasure in the self, whose human life is one of self-realization, and who is satisfied in the Self only, fully satiated – for him there is no duty”,

The Bhagvad Gita deals with the duty of the agent. Self-realization means you become a principal- like the Vyadha (butcher) of the Vyadha Gita who has attained the honeyed wisdom of the Chandogya while living an affluent life.  

and Book III, 18: “A self-realized man has no purpose to fulfill in the discharge of his prescribed duties, nor has he any reason not to perform such work. Nor has he any need to depend on any other living being”, Book III, 27: “The spirit soul bewildered by the influence of false ego thinks himself the doer of activities that are in actuality carried out by the three modes of material nature [goodness, passion, and ignorance – TK]”. In the German translation that Brouwer uses the ‘the three modes of material nature’ are simply called ‘the forces of nature’. And also Book V, 7: “One who works in devotion, who is a pure soul, and who controls his mind and senses is dear to everyone, and everyone is dear to him. Though always working, such a man is never entangled”, Book V, 8-9: “A person in the divine consciousness, although engaged in seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, eating, moving about, sleeping and breathing, always knows within himself that he actually does nothing at all. Because while speaking, evacuating, receiving, or opening or closing his eyes, he always knows that only the material senses are engaged with their objects and that he is aloof from them”, and Book V, 12: “The steadily devoted soul attains unadulterated peace because he offers the result of all activities to Me; whereas a person who is not in union with the Divine, who is greedy for the fruits of his labor, becomes entangled”.

The context is important. If you are a soldier you may have to kill people but you don't have to enjoy killing.  

The last chapter of LAM on economics contains a warning against attempts to improve society. Brouwer: “Trying to exert outside influence for the sake of a better world or one’s own power is vanity, blind folly, and lust for power.

Nothing wrong with trusting to the 'invisible hand' or 'mysterious economy' which holds at bay the Eschaton.  

The free man rather looks on his fellow men as burdensome hallucinations, luring him away from the right path and trying to make him join their ways because they cannot tolerate his freedom. The free man will carefully avoid them”.

Sound enough advise for a Christian who was also a Mathematician of genius. It may be that his faith sustained him in his work. What few could have appreciated at the time, was that his work would turn out to be so very useful in diverse fields.  But so would the work of Andre Weil- who knew Sanskrit- & Grothendieck's various 'Yogas' which seek to unify algebraic geometry. 

 


Heidegger vs Einstein


Heidegger, in his 1924 lecture on the 'Concept of Time', said 

The explicit question concerning the 'essence' of time ordinarily remains within the everyday experience of time.

The essence of a thing is what is true it in all possible worlds. Our lived experience of it can't be its essence if there is some other way it could be. The only lion I ever met was very friendly and gentle. But the essence of a lion isn't friendly or gentle.  Newtonian 'absolute' Time might be thought off as being the same everywhere. But our lived experience is that sometimes it goes by quickly and sometimes it drags on at a snail's pace. Newton's 'absolute' time proceeds at the same pace with respect to any mechanical or biological entity. But Einstein had shown this was not true of clocks or twins if they were separated and subjected to acceleration. 

Time is the heavens or, rather, their revolving motion; time is movement.*
Newton considered the "fixed stars" an approximation of an absolute, non-accelerating frame of reference (absolute space) against which true motion and inertial behavior are measured. While Newton believed in a fixed absolute space, the distant stars provide a practical, stationary background to determine if a body is experiencing net forces. Sadly this had been experimentally refuted by the time Heidegger wrote this.
It is clear from both statements that one looks for time in those things one refers to when one specifies the 'Then' of one's concerns on a daily basis: the heavens and the course of the sun.

Germans had calendars & clocks & watches by then.  

The first surviving treatise on time, whose findings have subsequently been, and still are, highly authoritative, namely Aristotle's discussion in his Physics (ontology of the world),
No. Physics is from φύσις (physis), meaning "nature," "origin," or "the essential quality of natural things". The word ontology is not Aristotelian. It dates from the 17th century & refers to Metaphysics- that which is beyond Nature. 
also adheres to the most common way of encountering time.**

We don't encounter it any more than we encounter gravity or oxygen.  

Aristotle calls to mind the state of affairs addressed in these statements and concludes: although time is not movement, it is nevertheless part and parcel of what is moved.

He lived long ago. What he called to mind was ignorance from the perspective of the Twentieth Century.  

What is time itself?

It appeared to be the fourth dimension of Space-Time. Might there be yet more 'infolded dimensions'? Kaluza & Klein had begun thinking along these lines by 1921.  

The possibility of highlighting the phenomenon of time and grasping it ontologically in light of this given state of affairs  requires us first to understand 'movement' ontologically.

This is done geometrically.  

Aristotle discovered movement as an ontological characteristic of entities and conceptualized it ontologically.

No.  He defined motion (kinesis) as the actuality of potentiality—the process of a being fulfilling its capacity to change. He viewed all change, including location, growth, and quality alteration, as driven by natural tendencies for objects to seek their rightful, restful place. This is what we would call teleology, not ontology. 

Compared with Plato,

who was right to emphasize the importance of geometry 

he reached a more original ground within the same research project.

No. He was saying 'things move because it is in their nature to do so'. Heavy things will fall faster than light things because the nature of heaviness is such. 

For the first time, this opened up the possibility of delineating 'time' ontologically.

Delineation is geometric. It is the establishment of a metric. Aristotle wasn't mathsy.  

... when Dasein

According to Heidegger- the Dasein is the human place of spatialization and temporalization – the place where space becomes and is space and time becomes and is time

explicitly inquires into the essence of time,

it doesn't do any such thing. It is a useless lump of shit. Time & Space are dimensions in a geometrical description of the Universe. They have a physical interpretation. This changes when new data becomes available. But interpretations aren't the thing itself. My interpretation of the Bible has changed over time. I no longer believe, as Pope John Paul suggested to me, that the central teaching of the Sermon on the Mount is 'fuck the Police!' But the Bible itself hasn't changed. 

it puts forward questions and solutions in terms of presencing concern . But this reckoning with time never turns it into 'space'.

I suppose, if Time were absolute, it would exist even where no Space existed. But Liebniz, not Newton, was on the right track in this matter. Kant sought for a priori reasons why Newton must be right. But he wasn't right. He was wrong.  

Time cannot be spatialized.

Yes it can if the multiverse hypothesis is true and there is a metric based on Lewis-Stalnacker 'closest possible worlds'. This is why Spiderman can visit universes where Dr. Strange is a cat.  

The analysis of the ontological meaning of the clock

or the cat 

and Aristotle's interpretation; have shown that the calculational approach to time is a particular kind of temporalization [Verzeitlichen] in the mode of presencing [ Gegenwdrtigen ].

Nonsense! Calculating the age of a dinosaur fossil doesn't make dinosaurs 'present'. Otherwise they would eat the guy doing the calculation.

Though one allows 'non-reversibility' as a distinct predicate of time,

Classical Physics doesn't. There could be a 'Maxwell demon' reversing entropy.  

one does so on the understanding that one would much rather reverse time's direction, that is, that one would very much like to repeat and retrieve time and have it completely available in the present moment as something present -at-hand.

Nobody wants any such thing. Time-travel, however would be cool.  

Heidegger was aware of Einstein's theory

The current state of this research is established in Einstein's relativity theory. Some of its propositions are as follows: Space is nothing in itself; there is no absolute space.

Leibniz was on the right track. Einstein's general theory gives us equations for the geometry of Space Time. However, things like the 'cosmological constant' had to be changed when empirical evidence suggested the Universe was expanding. 

It exists merely by way of the bodies and energies contained in it. (An old proposition of Aristotle's:)

We don't know why it exists or, rather, we don't know the precise mechanism by which the Big Bang occurs- though there are some very promising theories. Aristotle rejected the 'void' or 'vacuum' which Nature abhors. He also believed matter to be eternal. 

Time too is nothing.

It is a dimension of Space-Time geometry.  

It persists merely as a consequence of the events taking place in it. There is no absolute time, and no absolute simultaneity either.

But there is absolute bullshit. Einstein says he is offering a physical interpretation- not a metaphysical one- of equations which, it turned out, had superior predictive power. They were accepted because it was very useful to have more accurate predictions. 

In seeing the destructive side of this theory, one readily overlooks what is positive about it, namely, that it demonstrates precisely the invariability, with respect to arbitrary transformations, of those equations describing natural processes.

It turned out, that wasn't the case. If there was a Big Bang then there would be quantum effects at the cosmological level. A 'grand unified theory' combining General Relativity & QMT would be required. 

Heidegger wrote

Here we shall not go into the problem of the measurement of time as treated in the theory of relativity.

 There is no such problem. Clocks remain clocks. Twins remain twin. It is just that one clock or twin is sent on a round trip journey under high acceleration, when they return they will show less elapsed time than their counterpart. One clock will be behind the other. One twin will have aged less. 

If the ontological foundations of such measurement are to be clarified,

There is no unique metaphysical foundation for a purely physical interpretation.  

this presupposes that world-time and within-time-ness have already been clarified in terms of Dasein's temporality,

Because shit is clarified to shit by shit.  

and that light has also been cast on the existential-temporal Constitution of the discovery of Nature

That light would involve learning tensor calculus not talking nonsense. 

and the temporal meaning of measurement.

which is its utility. What Einstein was doing enabled Astronomers etc. to make better predictions. That was useful.  

Any axiomatic for the physical technique of measurement

there are heuristics. There is are no axiomatics.  

must rest upon such investigations, and can never, for its own part, tackle the problem of time as such.

Because the problem of shit can only be tackled by talking stupid shit.  

Sunday, 22 March 2026

Begriffsgeschichte's behemoth




What matters it, if Capitalism is in Lysis or Crisis?
I am not Puruvaras. No- nor I an Anchises
Since. my son, Vikram, won't reply either way
Whom can my puerility engage yet in play?

Envoi- 

Prince! 
Every Aeneas has the same shitty Begriffsgeschichte descent
Absence, the Father, we, its Behmoth, bitterly resent.

Iqbal's sher on the Ramadan War

How would Iqbal- a great believer in Islamic solidarity- have responded to the current Iran war?

This is my guess-                                     

Hairat khud hairaan hai ki gul‑e‑Shiraz, 
Kiya shagufta, missile se, dasht‑e‑Hijaz. 
Bulbul‑e‑Lahore ki hai itni buland aawaaz,
Har khisht‑e‑Hospital‑e‑Kabul hui gudaaz.

Amazement is bewildered that the Roses of Shiraz
As missiles, so blossom in the deserts of Hijaz
So strong is the song of Lahore's bulbul
It blows up Hospitals in far Kabul!

Iqbal would be proud that when Iran bombs Saudi Arabia, Pakistan too contributes its mite to the cause of Islamic solidarity by blowing up a Hospital in Afganistan. 


Orwell on Hayek

This is a review Orwell wrote of Hayek's 'Road to Serfdom' & another book by a Labour party politician/

Taken together, these two books give grounds for dismay.

Why? There was a War on. Even after the War, there was bound to be a long period of high taxes, tight regulations, rationing etc. Everyone would be worse off- whether in  

The first of them is an eloquent defence of laissez-faire capitalism,

Which couldn't return for a long while. The UK was deeply in debt. Exchange Controls & rationing would remain in place till at least the end of the decade.  

the other is an even more vehement denunciation of it.

It was obvious that under conditions of total war the Government had to take a hand in almost everything.  

They cover to some extent the same ground, they frequently quote the same authorities, and they even start out with the same premise, since each of them assumes that Western civilization depends on the sanctity of the individual.

As opposed to his incessant sodomization. Oddly, guys who had the money & education to buy the type of books written by these erudite authors, preferred sanctity to sodomy. 

Yet each writer is convinced that the other’s policy leads directly to slavery, and the alarming thing is that they may both be right.

Hitler would have conquered Britain if it hadn't become a command economy & conscripted soldiers. But, if it had a Socialist government- like that of Blum in France- the upper class may have had no incentive to fight. 'Better Hitler than Blum' was quite a popular slogan in Paris. Some still think that Britain should have done a deal with the Nazis. The problem was that Hitler never stuck to any agreement he made. 

Of the two, Professor Hayek’s book is perhaps the more valuable, because the views it puts forward are less fashionable at the moment than those of Mr Zilliacus.

The truth is, industrialists were glad of government contracts & 'administered pricing'.  

Shortly, Professor Hayek’s thesis is that Socialism inevitably leads to despotism,

It was the claim Churchill made in his infamous 'Labour Gestapo' drunken radio speech.  

and that in Germany the Nazis were able to succeed because the Socialists had already done most of their work for them, especially the intellectual work of weakening the desire for liberty.

Germans didn't want liberty. Everybody wants security & enough to eat & a job which pays a decent wage.  

By bringing the whole of life under the control of the State, Socialism necessarily gives power to an inner ring of bureaucrats, who in almost every case will be men who want

you anal cherry? 

power for its own sake and will stick at nothing in order to retain it. Britain, he says, is now going the same road as Germany, with the left-wing intelligentsia in the van and the Tory Party a good second. The only salvation lies in returning to an unplanned economy, free competition, and emphasis on liberty rather than on security.

Which was cool provided V2 rockets weren't being fired at you.  

In the negative part of Professor Hayek’s thesis there is a great deal of truth.

One better expressed by Lord Acton- power corrupts, absolute poverty corrupts absolutely.  

It cannot be said too often – at any rate, it is not being said nearly often enough – that collectivism is not inherently democratic, but, on the contrary, gives to a tyrannical minority such powers as the Spanish Inquisitors never dreamed of.

Actually, the Brits genuinely didn't like being tyrants. I don't suppose most people do. Maybe it is because British officials don't wear uniforms & click their heels & zeig heil each other. Instead they wore bowlers and carried brollies.  

Professor Hayek is also probably right in saying that in this country the intellectuals are more totalitarian-minded than the common people.

They might talk that way, but there was a long tradition of talking bollocks. Doing evil shit, on the other hand, was frowned on. It was...Continental. There is a Napoleonic Code. There is no Wellington Code. There is a Wellington boot and there is beef Wellington- which, sadly, tastes like a old boot if my g.f. makes it. 

But he does not see, or will not admit, that a return to ‘free’ competition means for the great mass of people a tyranny probably worse, because more irresponsible, than that of the State.

Capitalists will insist on personally sodomizing every worker at least twice a day.  

The trouble with competitions is that somebody wins them.

If the most meritorious win, then more seek to acquire merit. The trouble with giving everybody a medal is that there is no incentive to work hard & achieve excellence.  

Professor Hayek denies that free capitalism necessarily leads to monopoly, but in practice that is where it has led,

Not in publishing. The BBC, at that time, was a monopoly. Newspapers & magazines had to compete with each other.  

and since the vast majority of people would far rather have State regimentation than slumps and unemployment, the drift towards collectivism is bound to continue if popular opinion has any say in the matter.

Rationing would change their minds.  

Mr Zilliacus’s able and well-documented attack on imperialism and power politics consists largely of an exposure of the events leading up to the two world wars. Unfortunately the enthusiasm with which he debunks the war of 1914

caused by Germany's refusal of a British alliance in 1898.  

makes one wonder on what grounds he is supporting this one.

 because if the Tories did a deal with Hitler, Labour would split & become unelectable. This is because Labour, but not the Tories, had lots of Pacifists, Vegetarians & other such cranks. 

After retelling the sordid story of the secret treaties and commercial rivalries which led up to 1914, he concludes that our declared war aims were lies and that ‘we declared war on Germany because

we wanted to sink their ships & bottle their navy up in the Baltic. You have to declare war before you are allowed to do so.  

if she won her war against France and Russia she

could conquer England 

would become master of all Europe, and strong enough to help herself to British colonies’.

They were far away. England is close to the Continent. Fat ladies were swimming across the Channel all the time. 

Why else did we go to war this time?

Same reason. You have to be at war to sink ships. The Royal Navy kicked ass.  

It seems that it was equally wicked to oppose Germany in the decade before 1914

we offered them an alliance. They told us to fuck off.  

and to appease her in the nineteen-thirties,

that was the French & the Poles. We needed a casus belli to have an excuse to sink German ships.  

and that we ought to have made a compromise peace in 1917,

 With whom? The Kaiser was bat-shit crazy. 

whereas it would be treachery to make one now. It was even wicked, in 1915, to agree to Germany being partitioned

 There was no such plan. Perhaps the Ottoman Empire is meant. 

and Poland being regarded as ‘an internal affair of Russia’:

which it would be if it occupied it- not otherwise.  

so do the same actions change their moral colour with the passage of time.

Breaking a treaty is immoral- unless you are dealing with darkies.  

The thing Mr Zilliacus leaves out of account is that wars have results, irrespective of the motives of those who precipitate them.

If you break a treaty or violate neutrality, the result will be that people don't trust you. Their options are surrender or to fight to the finish.  

No one can question the dirtiness of international politics from 1870 onwards:

It was clean enough- if you were West European.  

it does not follow that it would have been a good thing to allow the German army to rule Europe.

Sinking German ships was a good thing. That's what Britain focused on. However, the efficiency of the Expeditionary Force in 1914 came as a shock to the Germans.  

It is just possible that some rather sordid transactions are going on behind the scenes now, and that current propaganda ‘against Nazism’ (cf. ‘against Prussian militarism’) will look pretty thin in 1970,

Orwell was wrong about that.  

but Europe will certainly be a better place if Hitler and his followers are removed from it. Between them these two books sum up our present predicament. Capitalism leads to dole queues,

No. Capitalism leads to jobs. No country can offer a 'dole' if there are no fucking jobs.  

the scramble for markets,

what were the Soviets scrambling for?  

and war.

Very true. The Trojan war was caused by Greek Capitalists seeking to enter the Trojan olive oil market.  

Collectivism leads to concentration camps,

Britain & the US used them in South Africa & the Philippines respectively.  

leader worship, and war.

Trojan War was caused by Greek Socialists seeking to overthrow the Trojan feudal aristocracy.  

There is no way out of this unless a planned economy can somehow be combined with the freedom of the intellect,

put Old Etonians like Keynes in charge. Orwell too was an Old Etonian.  

which can only happen if the concept of right and wrong is restored to politics.

Churchill & Atlee had no such concept. That is why they sodomized Aneurin Bevan incessantly.  

Both of these writers are aware of this, more or less;

Nobody was aware of stupid shit which only existed in Orwell's brain.  

but since they can show no practicable way of bringing it about the combined effect of their books is a depressing one.

Out of Orwell's depression came some immortal works of literature. But, au fond, he was a silly ass.