Friday, July 4, 2008

History Compass - podcast review

In this short series, I'll start with the promotional podcasts. Here is the first.

History Compass Blog is a promotional podcast for an on line journal, History Compass. Writers are telling in short about what article they have written. It is an incentive to buy subscription, or pay a one time fee to read the article. I find the price for the full content rather high, although I have little to compare it with.

The articles seem very interesting and the podcast is long enough to get a real impression. I can imagine to pick up, may be not all episodes, but at least those that are of interest to me.

Buying a subscription or an article is something I can imagine one would do if one is professionally engaging in research.




AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Anne the man's quick screening of new history podcasts

This weekend I am undertaking a quick screening of new history podcasts taken from the iTunes history listing. I will try to have them all reviewed by Sunday.

Fact or Fiction - promotional podcast from the history section at HowStuffWorks.com

History Compass - promotional podcast by History Compass, an on-line history magazine where the previews are free, but the full articles have to be paid for.

Historicast - history told with the help of audio fragments

German Cultural History - German culture through the ages, as told by a student of history

Oxford Biographies - promotional podcast from the Oxford biographies website. Short bios from relatively unknown people in history

The Pope podcast - the history of the popes as told by a born again Roman Catholic; taking one pope at a time (so there are still some 250 podcasts to go)

Backstory - Radio program digging up the history behind issues that reach headlines in contemporary news

Ancient history - alternative theories - a podcast engaging in unconventional conjectures about the faraway past.

One that, unfortunately, I am not going to be able to review is The antique history of Iran. It looked so accessible in iTunes' list and description and the titles of the episodes promised a real thorough run through Persian history. Until this point all was in English, but the audio is all in the Persian language. If anybody of my blog followers understand the language and listened to the podcast, let me know and I will happily invite you to write a guest post.

Subscribe in a reader

Paste the link 
http://feeds.feedburner.com/Anne_Is_A_Man 

 into the RSS reader of your preference.

You can let your preferences (I'd love get new podcast recommendations) know by commenting on the blog or sending mail to The Man Called Anne at: Anne Frid de Vries (in one word) AT yahoo DOT co DOT uk

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Life on the Scales - Philosophy Bites podcast review

Philosophy Bites is a podcast that delivers concise weekly conversations on a philosophical topic. All this happens in a balance act between the levels of academic philosophy and the target of wrapping up the academic discourse in ten, fifteen minutes and have a product that is accessible to a relatively wide public. Generally the podcast succeeds in doing that and it makes it a treasure trove from which you can pick the subject that appeals to you and get boosted with insight, perspectives and level of your starting point.

I am very interested in controversies that pit our intuitions and rationality, our various values and principles against each other in real dilemmas. One such hot potato is the discussion around stem cell research and more general discussions on bio-technology and ethics. All this is about life and drags us into the position we have to weigh lives or consider how this can be done (if it can be done at all and if it is ethical to even engage in such questions). Hence, the last issue of Philosophy Bites drew my immediate attention: John Broome on weighing lives. (John Broome is a philosophy professor at Oxford, and wrote a book with on weighing lives.)

Broome handles the uncertainties involved in the issue with decision theory. And this allows for rationalizing and while not always people take their decisions this way. During the podcast I could forget my qualms about raising the question at all - intuitively I have a feeling the question of the weight of life is vicious to begin with. The examples are of practical nature, both individually as well as on the level of policy. Broome also adds to the decision theory; he introduces fairness and goodness. He also understand the horror I feel around this question, but by emphasizing that decisions must be made and any old tool that helps should be appreciated. It remains a balancing act with contradicting principles after all - also with what Broome contributes.

More Philosophy Bites:
David Hume,
Several issues of Philosophy Bites,
Free rider problem,
Humanism,
Is war innate?

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Socrates - OVT podcast recensie

OVT is een serie begonnen over beroemde executies. De terechtstelling als politiek instrument, iemand geslachtofferd voor de hogere zaak. De kop moet eraf, voor de natie, voor de gerechtigheid, voor de bevestiging van de gevestigde orde.

Er is begonnen met Socrates en het gesprek raakt zo verhit, dat het wel lijkt alsof het over Pim Fortuyn of Theo van Gogh gaat, of iets dat nog actueler en nog heikeler is. Misschien dat de status van de Griekse Filosoof nogal vergelijkbaar is met Jezus, Mohammed of Mozes. We hebben het over een held wiens met autoriteit omklede visie op wereld en zeden nog altijd geldig zijn vandaag.

Gasten zijn Gerard Koolschijn, Ineke Sluiter en Fik Meijer (die ook ooit bij Simek te gast was). Op de vraag of ze Socrates waarderen reageren ze al met gemengde gevoelens, maar nog pittiger wordt het na een audio-fragment van een theatrale versie van Socrates' monoloog voor het gerecht - dat unaniem geen goedkeuring kan wegdragen. Hoe de man dan wel geduid moet worden, daarover wordt men het niet eens.

Socrates' motieven waarom hij zo'n lastpost was, daarover lopen de meningen uiteen. Is hij een anti-democraat? Een egoist uit op het eigen heil? Uiteindelijk een fundamentalist? Of een tragische figuur die de fundamentele onkunde van de mensheid almaar onder de aandacht moet brengen, juist om de zelfgenoegzaamheid van democratie en een soort van political correctness (hij eerde de goden niet, hij bedierf de jeugd) steeds wakker te schudden. Socrates, de heilige luis in de pels?

Andere gevonnisten die aan de orde gaan komen deze zomer zijn: Petrus en Paulus, Jeanne d‘Arc, Maria Stuart, Giordano Bruno, Danton en Mata Hari.

Meer OVT:
Hoeren en Agenten,
1943 - Polen,
1943 - Stalingrad,
1941 - Handlangers,
1940 - Heesters, Petain, Leopold achteraf.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Waste Management - podcast review

Two podcasts, two witness reports on how civilians turn in their waste. The first is Distillations (feed); the witness brings an old TV to a special gathering point for discarding electronic equipment (in short eWaste) in New York City and is surprised to find hardly anybody there. So many people live in the metropolis and each day so many of them throw away old PCs, TVs, printers and such. The subtext is that all of this waste is dumped with regular garbage and that that is a bad thing. The show pays attention to heavy metals and their distinctive uses and qualities - it is a chemistry podcast after all.

A central point, any which way you look at it, simply is: no matter goes lost, no matter is created anew. I would add: nature recycles and makes us do the same, even if we do not do so actively and consciously. The other podcast, Social Innovation Conversations (feed), delivers reports from the UK and Germany. Witnesses observe traffic jams around garbage collection; everybody seems to do it consciously. The podcast is a panel discussion that becomes rather heated. Recycling as a behavior is both attacked and propagated with a zeal that borders on the religious.

Here is a point being made: in Germany (and Britain is about to follow) public morality has developed a dedication for recycling that, with backing of law enforcement, requires of citizens to meticulously reduce their waste, sort it out, deliver it to the right address and what not. If upon scrutiny we could conclude that none of that time consuming activity is in actuality contributing to a better environment, than what is it? A new religion with its meaningless rituals? This critique is voiced by speaker Thomas Deichmann who goes on to not just reproach this latent puritanism, but continues to dismissively depict any form of civic involvement in waste management as a total waste of time and suggests to leave any possible problem entirely to engineers, to producers and large scale technological solutions. He even goes on to actually deny there are real problems of resources running out and pollution becoming irretrievably devastating.

His position is met with counter-critique by two female speakers named Julie Hill and Julia Hailes, which on account of sounding so similar are mixed up by the audience. The two of them disagree with Deichmann on all points. Civic waste management is not a waste of time, there is a serious problem of sustainability and the closing words sum it all up. They mention facts, which Deichmann fights with data about which one of the Julies exclaims indignantly: "That is just NOT true!"

A very interesting point comes up when the advantages of individual waste management are evaluated. The adherents emphasize in addition to the concrete contribution to the environment the 'feel good' factor. People reduce and separate their garbage and that renders the satisfaction of doing the right thing. Inherently this shows a point of agreement: the morality of recycling bears the qualities of religion. In addition I observed that the attackers of this religiousness have their own zeal, which struck me as coming out of belief (for example in human inventiveness and in historical progress) rather than dry rationality and evaluation of facts. I am left with the feeling I witnessed a church dogma discussion between Catholics and Protestants, in which the practical problems are forgotten in a competition of world views.

The way I see it, we are stuck with our waste and so we need to manage it, any which way you perceive it as a lethal problem or just a mild annoyance. Similarly, we are facing ever-growing cost of obtaining the raw materials for production and could consider addressing those costs by using the commodities in a more effective fashion regardless of the question whether the resources are actually running out or simply harder to come by. And also, there is enough data to agree the climate is warming and there is plenty pollution we commit and could crank down, regardless of the question whether that is going to deeply or just hardly compensate further global warming. We need not either completely rely on technological innovations or attempt to change behaving how we have been behaving, we need both. Practical problems ask practical solutions. Definitions of what the problem is and how deep it goes, as far as I am concerned, may be as practical and flexible as can be. Otherwise the discussions are at best semantic and at worst of the religious kind that only sets us apart.

More Distillations:
Distillations - a chemistry podcast review.

More Social Innovation Conversations:
Social Innovation Conversations - podcast review.


More environmental podcasts:
Exploring Environmental History - podcast review,
Free riders - Philosophy Bites,
October 15, 2007 - blog action day.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Controversial subjects on Anne is a Man!

Three upcoming posts in this blog will report on podcasts that contained very heated discussion and if not that touched on such a controversial subject, heated discussion simply must follow. And if you thought the death of Socrates could be one such subject and wouldn't result in a podcasted panel discussion with speakers doing nothing but heartily disagree, I can only wish you understand Dutch, for this is one that happened in a Dutch language podcast.

Another subject that came up and exposed wall to wall opinions, expressed with a zeal one would expect in debates on religion was the issue of waste management. Should your everyday individual citizen bear the responsibility for reducing and separating household garbage and if so, why? We'll hear advocates of recycling and hear ardent opponents of the very same.

The last subject expands on one that this blog is explicitly interested in. I keep reporting about the controversies around stem cell research in particular and bio-technology in general.In an upcoming post I'll report a philosophical discussion that takes these issues to the higher level of weighing human life. Can we even begin to think of asking the question whether life can be weighed, can have comparative value and not dive head first in controversy, before even contemplating the question itself, let alone answer it?

Subscribe in a reader Paste the link
http://feeds.feedburner.com/Anne_Is_A_Man
 into the RSS reader of your preference.

You can let your preferences (I'd love get new podcast recommendations) know by commenting on the blog or sending mail to The Man Called Anne at: Anne Frid de Vries (in one word) AT yahoo DOT co DOT uk