Borges' Library

A blog that will interest almost no one...

Way of the Octopus and Talking to Animals

 

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The Sun Gallery 朱雀 Vermillion Phoenix

My essays:

An Inter-Species Crowd: How To Talk To Animals And Space Aliens

Do Octopuses Have Souls?

 

Bay Area Thinkers:

The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins

Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene 3rd ed. Edition

Both by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing

Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene by Donna J. Haraway

How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy by Jenny Odell

How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence
by Michael Pollan

 

Other New Movement Philosophers

Dark Mountain Movement

Hyperobjects, by Timothy Morton

Also by Morton: Dark Ecology for a Logic of Future Coexistence

and Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People

Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist and Other Essays by Paul Kingsnorth

 

Inter-Species Crowd

When Animals Speak by Eva Meijir

Timothy Morton's Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People

Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene by Donna J. Haraway

Consciousness: Confessions of a Romantic Reductionist
by Christof Koch

Apocalypse

Leaning to Die in the Anthropocene

By Roy Scranton

Notes from an Apocalypse: A Personal Journey to the End of the World and Back
by Mark O'Connell

How Everything Can Collapse: A Manual for Our Times
by Pablo Servigne, Raphael Stevens

Southern Reach Trilogy: 

Weird Ecology: On The Southern Reach Trilogy
By David Tompkins

Human Contamination: The Infectious Border Crossings of Jeff VanderMeer’s Area X
By Sophia Booth Magnone

Bill Benson's fantastic essay at 3QD

Terror and Terroir: Porous Bodies and Environmental
Dangers
Brian Onishi

The New Yorker:

The Weird Thoreau, By Joshua Rothman

The Uncanny Power of Weird Fiction, in the Atlantic

Southern Reach Training: Fungus Safety (Protocol 3984SRT)

 

Space Aliens

Extraterrestrial Languages
by Daniel Oberhaus

Flying chariots and exotic birds: how 17th century dreamers planned to reach the moon

Other Notes

My 3QD Post: The Great Derangement

Searching for ExoPlanets with Christopher Columbus

The Great Derangement: Fiction and Climate

Sabbath Movement Notes

 

Way of the Octopus

Mark Solms' “The Hidden Spring: A Journey to the Source of Consciousness”

Peter Godfrey Smith’s new book, Metazoa: Animal Life and the Birth of the Mind, h

Peter Godfrey-Smith's Other Minds: The Octopus, the Sea, and the Deep Origins of Consciousness

Sy Montgomery's Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonder of Consciousness

Christof Koch's Consciousness: Conversations of a Romantic Reductionist

Douglas Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid? & I Am A Strange Loop

Peter Wohllenben's The Hidden Life of Trees

Deborah Gordon's Ants at Work

Lierre Keith's The Vegetarian Myth: Food, Justice, and Sustainability

Union of Concerned Scientist's Cooler Smarter: Practical Steps for Low-Carbon Living

Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing's Mushroom at the End of the World

Timothy Morten's Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World

Martin Heidegger's The Question Concerning Technology

Donna Haraway's Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene

Michael Pollen's How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence

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Also recommend Sean Carroll's podcast with David Chalmers (who is working on a new book on the subject) on Consciousness, the Hard Problem, and Living in a Simulation

And Paul Stamets (who has a new book coming out called Fantastic Fungi) video Fantastic Fungi

New Atlantis/Understanding Heidegger on Technology

New Atlantis: Do Elephants Have Souls?

Documentary Film: Soil! The Movie

Film: Salt of the Earth

 

 

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The Totem Poles

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Susan Orlean, in her latest bestseller, The Library Book, describes her fond memory of the piles and piles of library books of her childhood; those stacks of checked-out books forming totem poles of the narratives she had visited. I was quite taken by this description, as I too loved those towers of stacked books from my childhood.

Books mainly kept in the The Black Tower 玄武

2018

The Tower of el Quixote

The Tower of Thomas Bernhard 

"The Way" of the Octopus and Talking to Animals (Kept in Sun Gallery 朱雀) 

Books on Foraging (Kept in Sun Gallery 朱雀) 

Venice

 

2020

The Tower of Venice

The Tower of Borneo

2021

THE PHILOSOPHIES OF HOSPITALITIES: LEVINAS, DERRIDA & CIXOUS

Books on Flowers (Kept in Sun Gallery 朱雀) 

 

 

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MINI-SYLLABUS: THE PHILOSOPHIES OF HOSPITALITIES: LEVINAS, DERRIDA & CIXOUS

The Green Library 青龍 Blue-Green Dragon

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Waiting For The Messiah: Derrida And The Philosophy Of Hospitality (2/1/2021 at 3 Quarks Daily)

It is as though hospitality were the impossible: as though the law of hospitality defined this very impossibility, as if it were only possible to transgress it, as though the law of absolute, unconditional, hyperbolical hospitality, as though the categorical imperative of hospitality commanded that we transgress all the laws (in the plural) of hospitality, namely, the conditions, the norms, the rights and the duties that are imposed on hosts and hostesses, on the men or women who give a welcome as well as the men or women who receive it. And vice versa, it is as though the laws (plural) of hospitality, in marking limits, powers, rights, and duties, consisted in challenging and transgressing the law of hospitality, the one that would command that the “new arrival” be offered an unconditional welcome--Derrida

Course Description

Hospitality is a notion that most people are familiar with. An everyday word for an everyday experience. Why, then, has it become a burning topic in philosophical and political debate in recent decades? Judith Still in her book Derrida and Hospitality suggests reasons for this could include debate surrounding immigration into Europe and elsewhere. It is also loosely connected to issues of colonialism and post-colonialism. And finally, she suggests, there is its co-opting by consumer culture brands and the service industry.

This course is designed to consider the philosophies of hospitality in the work of Derrida, Levinas, and Cixous: French philosophers knew a thing or two about being an outsider. Each hailed from counties outside of France—from North African lands, and in the case of Levinas, Lithuania. In order to understand underlying notions, we will try and understand how these three philosophers themselves navigated issues of inside and outside, native and Other. In addition, as all three thinkers have Jewish backgrounds, we will try and uncover ways hospitality found in the Torah informed their thinking.

As a class, each week we will sit down to a shared meal together. Student grades will be based entirely on the creation and implementation of a shared meal. That’s right, you will be hosting a shared meal at which fellow students will act as guests. During the meal, the host for that week will bring up challenges they faced in the creation of their meal. In the Sikh langur, for example, vegetarian food is prepared. Vegetarianism in the Sikh religion is not mandatory, but vegetarian food is prepared in the communal kitchens to ensure the greatest number of people can partake. Priya Basil in her book, Be My Guest, has written how difficult it was for her to stop serving meat. Not that she likes meat as she is a vegetarian herself. But so ingrained was the notion of “giving the best’ to guests that she worried that she would appear mean or stingy. Students must keep in mind that in many traditional cultures, hospitality is considered a moral virtue and the best foods and beverages are reserved for guests. There are even times when people are willing to go into debt in order to show hospitality.

During the shared meal, student hosts will lead a conversation about their own personal histories of being hosts and guests; their perceived status as insider or outsider; they experience of storytelling, family recipes and shared meals. These conversations should be clearly informed by the class readings, and any other optional reading that students’ engaged with; such that, by the end of the class, we will have compiled a set of case studies.

We will watch the film Babette’s Feast in our last meeting. If time, we will also watch Michael Pollen’s documentary Cooked.

Discuss: The time spent with family and friends around the table is more precious than anything in the world. It does somehow seem sacred or at least what life is and should be about. For as Michael Pollan says in his film, Cooked, “This is more important than people realize.”

Topics to consider:

  • What is the role of meals vis-à-vis today’s prevalence of identity creation based on consumer choice and other preferences is not coming at the cost of communal cohesion. This is to discuss what are the obligations of being a guest.
  • Compare and contrast the host-guest relationship within the home and between people versus that between nation-states and cultures
  • What do we owe refugees? Discuss in terms of Derrida’s Parasite/Guest
  • Discuss examples from around the world, ie: The Sikh Langar—where all are welcome to partake in the communal meals and serve in the temple kitchens; Germany’s “We can do this” campaign; storytelling between Palestinian and Israeli youths
  • How is “hospitality” related to traditional/religious notions of sacrifice, gift-economies, Heidegger’s notion of “care,” Girard’s “Scapegoat,” and virtue ethics in general?

Main Pedagogies: Embodied Ethics, Deconstructionist, Process

BOOKS

  • Priya Basil’s Be My Guest: Reflections on Food, Community and the Meaning of Generosity
  • Judith Still, Derrida and Hospitality
  • Andrew Shepherd’s The Gift of the Other: Levinas, Derrida, and a Theology of Hospitality
  • Of Hospitality: Anne Dufourmantelle Invites Jacques Derrida to Respond (Cultural Memory in the Present) by Jacques Derrida, Anne Dufourmantelle
  • Word to Life: A Dialogue between Jacques Derrida and Helene Cixous
  • Girard’s Scapegoat
  • Deconstruction in a Nutshell: A Conversation with Jacques Derrida (Perspectives in Continental Philosophy) 
    by John D. Caputo

OTHER RESOURCES

  • Eat up you'll be happier
  • Chef's Table with Massimo Battura (Trailer)
  • com with Chef Battura
  • Michael Pollan's Cooked
  • Babette’s Feast

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