Don’t know the words, but the tune sounds the same

by liberal japonicus

from this link

Yesterday we reached an agreement with the Pentagon for deploying advanced AI systems in classified environments, which we requested they also make available to all AI companies.

From Anthropology goes to war: Professional Ethics and Counterinsurgency in Thailand by Eric Wakin

In late March 1970 the Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (SMC) sent selected anthropologists copies of a series of documents detailing extensive contacts between distinguished American academics and the U.S. Defense Department.’ Among the recipients were two members of the newly formed Committee o n Ethics of the American Anthropological Association (AAA)-its chair, Eric Wolf, and Joseph Jorgensen. The documents, which had been copied surreptitiously from the files of anthropologist Michael Moerman, suggested that a number of American social scientists had been doing contract and consultation work for the Defense Department. Most importantly, the documents also seemed to indicate that these social scientists were providing information that was being used in an ongoing U.S. counterinsurgency campaign in Thailand.

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novakant
novakant
3 hours ago

Thanks. I hope it’s ok if I use this as no open thread:

Juergen Habermas has died. I doubt many people made it through “The Theory of Communicative Action” but his (and Apel’s) discourse ethics were certainly influential when I studied philosophy. The idea that the better argument will eventually win out, together with Gadamer’s principle of charity, i.e. assuming that your interlocutor is rational and possibly correct, seems strangely antiquated in these times.

I only ever read The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity and took away that Habermas tried to valiantly defend Kantian reason against various irrationalists and postmodernist upstarts – however, I wasn’t really buying it, especially since he seemed to contradict his own maxims by not really trying to understand where, say, Foucault and Derrida were coming from.
His concept of “Verfassungspatriotismus” (patriotism based on the constitution) was a useful corrective to the nationalist and xenophobic tendencies in Germany.

Finally, he recently made some contentious remarks about Ukraine (“compromise”) and Gaza (“Jewish lives are a priority”) which exposed the limits of his universalism, a generational shift in German intellectual discourse and left a bit of a sour aftertaste. But then this just showed that even the most rational thinkers are children of their time.