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Yearly Archives: 2015

The Way we Talk

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Speak softly.  Speak with a smile.  Speak clearly.  Use vocabulary. Be firm, fair, and friendly.  Be consistent.  Speak and then listen.  Listen before you speak.  Speak descriptively.  Speak with refinement.  Speak about important things.  Find something important to you in what’s important to them.

Church vs. State

imgresHere’s a quiz question:  When was the phrase “separation of church and state” first introduced into American jurisprudence?

a)  1789; b)  1800;

c)  1840; d)  1947

Most of us would answer 1789, with the ratification of the United States Constitution and the First Amendment, guaranteeing religious freedom.

Guess again.

According to Columbia law professor Philip Hamburger (cited by Eytan Kobre in Mishpacha Magazine), the first use of the phrase was during the presidential election of 1800, when defenders of Thomas Jefferson responded to attacks that their candidate was anti-religious by invoking the “need to separate religion from politics.”  Jefferson himself used the phrase in a letter in support of Connecticut Baptists who feared political oppression.  Jefferson’s overture was ignored by religionists who could not imagine the absence of religion from public life, even in their own defense.

Around 1840, when Catholics in New York City began claiming access to funding for religious schooling, Protestants responded by asserting church and state separation, eventually seeking a new constitutional amendment to that effect in the 1870s.  When that effort failed, reinterpretation of the First Amendment became their next strategy.

But it was only in 1947  in Everson vs. Board of Education that, despite a 5-4 split in the Supreme court ruling, the justices agreed unanimously that a “wall of separation between church and state” was implicit in the First Amendment.  The majority opinion was authored by Justice Hugo Black, a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama.

Thus, the origins of a tradition that everyone thinks believes goes back to the framers — most of whom would be horrified by the popular outlook that has come to define the First Amendment, in the words of Joseph Lieberman, as protecting not freedom of religion but freedom from religion.  The “wall of separation” has been critiqued by Justice Clarence Thomas as “born in bigotry,” by Justice Potter Stewart as “nowhere to be found in the Constitution,” and by former Chief Justice William Rehnquist as “a metaphor based on bad history, a metaphor which has proved useless as a guide to judging.  It should be frankly and explicitly abandoned.”

Writes American University law professor Daniel Dreisbach:  “Indeed, this wall has done what walls frequently do — it has obstructed the view.  It has obfuscated our understanding of constitutional principles…”

It’s not always wise to look to the skies

geese-in-flight_custom-408d5c16d3bcce1c3e58b4a95e5d436b345f5e5c-s800-c85Just ask the bar-headed goose, famous for traversing the Himalayan Mountains on its annual migration from the Indian subcontinent to central Asia.  According to NPR, researchers have now determined that the migrant birds, although once believed to soar at heights near the peak of Everest,  keep much lower to the ground, rising over obstacles and then settling back into a tighter, more earth-bound trajectory.

It’s worth considering the lesson for those of us who aspire to lives of spiritual elevation.  Man is a creature of contradictions, a divinely inspired being whose ethereal soul is nevertheless trapped in a body of flesh and blood and sentenced to live his life amidst the material attractions of the physical world.  We long for the heavens but, like Icarus, we risk losing our bearings and plummeting into the abyss if we neglect the needs of our earthly selves.

And so, like the goose, we rise up, we drop down, we endure the peaks and valleys of personal challenge as we try to chart our course through the uncertain terrain that is life in this world.

Kung Fu Sociology

imagesI often say sociology is a martial art, a means of self-defense. Basically, you use it to defend yourself, without having the right to use it for unfair attacks.

Pierre Bourdieu

As with all data, facts, information, or intellectual discipline, social science can be used honestly to reveals truths about the human condition or applied selectively to support preconceptions and bolster entrenched ideology.  In this blog post, the writer who cites Professor Bourdieu correctly identifies examples of disingenuous conclusions reached through misapplication of facts and logic.  At the same time, however, the writer indulges his own personal biases by making sweeping assumptions about headline events without regard for established facts.

In the same way we have no right to misapply data to fit our preexisting notions, neither are we justified imposing our world view on specific situations that objectively refuse to fit our own personal narrative.

Civil society depends upon debate that is both civil and intellectually honest.  When we manipulate conclusions, we fail in the art of social kung fu.  I imagine that Professor Bourdieu would agree.

End of an Icon

imagesDarrell Winfield, one of the original Marlboro Men who rode on horseback across the western countryside in cigarette ads, has died at age 85.

The image of rugged individualism is credited with the most successful advertising campaign in history, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, transforming an obscure brand into the world’s number one seller.

Which should make us ask ourselves:  what are the influences that drive us in the decisions we make?  As Eric Fromm wrote, everyone knows that the blonde in the ad doesn’t come with the sports car, but the mere possibility that the buyer might end up with her makes the sale anyway.

The questions extend far beyond cigarettes and cars; they apply to every aspect of our lives:  What are we being sold?  Who are the salesmen?  How much are we paying?

 

Integrity

IntegrityOf course, it’s easier when you know that Someone is always watching.

Why we love conspiracy theories

Why do we love conspiracy theories?  New Scientist Magazine weighs in.
In short, we want the world to make sense, so ideological cabals and aliens offer a more attractive solution to the appearance of randomness than does randomness itself.  On the one hand, we have to temper our impulse to impose order on chaos by reining in our imaginations with common sense, logic, and civil discussion.On the other hand, this reveals our deeply rooted conviction that there is a purpose to our existence and that there is true meaning in our lives and in our world.

The Aroma of Ideology

images1A NYT op-ed cites a study by social scientists at Brown, Harvard, and Penn State that people we agree with smell better to us.

For a theological critique, see my article, The Scent of Spirit.

Symbiosis — Blueprint for Peace

imgresHere’s a beautiful spread from Cosmos Magazine on cooperation in nature.  If natural enemies can make peace with one another for mutual advantage, shouldn’t human communities be able to recognize how much more we stand to gain by setting aside our petty differences… or even working through our substantive differences?

It’s largely a matter of will.  We have to want to resolve our disagreements more than we want to be right.  Some earlier thoughts on conflict resolution here.

Thanks to Rabbi Yaakov Feitman for his article in this week’s Mishpacha Magazine.

Don’t Beat Stress… Meet Stress

12111312_f520Doctors can’t tell you much about migraines. According to Healthline.com, a partial list of triggers includes lack of sleep, caffeine, foods, food additives, hunger, dehydration, alcohol, strong odors, bright lights, loud sounds, weather change, exercise, hormones and — my personal favorite — stress.

At their best, migraines will interrupt my sleep several times a night. At their worst, they shoot burning needles of agony into my brain for 14 hours straight until I finally pass out from exhaustion.

I’ve dealt with migraines for about a quarter century now. During my last series, a new neurosurgeon put me on steroids to relax my muscles, a regimen that prevents headache Armageddon while allowing the cycle to slowly run its course.

It’s working, mostly, for which I’m enormously grateful. But not without a curious side-effect.

Now I’m too relaxed.

Read the whole article here.