Stephen R.C. Hicks's Blog, page 43
May 25, 2024
Week-long seminar on Ayn Rand & Objectivism, at University of Illinois, Springfield
Update: Thanks to sponsor generosity, some travel stipends for students now available. A five-day seminar this summer; June 24-28 at the University of Illinois, Springfield, on the philosophy originated by Ayn Rand. Join professors William Kline (Business), Carrie-Ann Biondi (Philosophy), Richard Salsman (Politics and Economics), and me (Philosophy). We will give three talks each and […]
Published on May 25, 2024 08:00
May 24, 2024
The death penalty in fifteenth-century Europe
“By the mid-fifteenth century crimes subject to the death penalty … included the following: rebellion, fraud, bigamy, incest, arson, theft, adultery, carrying off a woman against her will, blasphemy, moving signs of property boundaries, attacking someone, high treason, child murder, using dishonest weights and measures, murder, counterfeiting, rape, attempted suicide, striking someone to death, converting […]
Published on May 24, 2024 09:53
May 23, 2024
“What Business Ethics Can Learn from Entrepreneurship” — text and audio versions
My short essay on “What Business Ethics Can Learn from Entrepreneurship” [pdf] was published in the Journal of Private Enterprise in 2009, just when entrepreneurism was beginning to get attention in the business ethics literature. The abstract: “Entrepreneurship is increasingly studied as a fundamental and foundational economic phenomenon. It has, however, received less attention as […]
Published on May 23, 2024 15:07
May 22, 2024
Humor: Herbert von Karajan and God
Reprising this amusing jibe at the great conductor Herbert von Karajan, whose perfectionism and sometimes-authoritarian leadership style could cause enmity. “St. Peter calls upon Freud and tells him that God is evidently in need of psychiatric help. ‘I should be glad to help, but tell me, what seem to be His symptoms?’ asked Freud. ‘God […]
Published on May 22, 2024 21:30
Two portraits of Charles
For comparison purposes, two artists’ views:
Published on May 22, 2024 15:37
Women’s and men’s college graduation rates
Anecdote: I gave an extra-credit assignment in one of my courses. The course had twenty students, eleven men and nine women. Six students chose to do the assignment — and then I noticed something in my grade book: all of them were women. Getting all statistic-y about it: 66.7% of the females were willing to […]
Published on May 22, 2024 06:22
May 21, 2024
Empires of conquest and empires of commerce
Reposting this question: In this post-colonial era, what explains the dramatically different levels of prosperity in nations after they become independent of their colonizing powers? Why, for example, has the prosperity of North America been consistently higher than that of Central and South America? Both are rich in natural resources, both involve nations started from scratch, […]
Published on May 21, 2024 08:31
May 20, 2024
Dueling billboards, Oklahoma style
Reposting this from a trip that took me to Texas and Oklahoma. I saw this sign along a highway a little across the OK border. “Steve,” the sign seemed to say to me, “you’re not in Illinois anymore.” So I took a tourist memento picture. It turns out that they are not worried about what weirdos […]
Published on May 20, 2024 14:29
May 16, 2024
Artistic representation: Picasso versus Matisse
From Jack D. Flam’s Matisse and Picasso: The Story of Their Rivalry and Friendship (2003): ‘Picasso characterized the arbitrariness of representation in his Cubist paintings as resulting from his desire for “a greater plasticity.” Rendering an object as a square or a cube, he said, was not a negation, for “reality was no longer in […]
Published on May 16, 2024 13:15
May 14, 2024
David Hume’s current influence
David Hume topped this 2009 PhilPapers survey of most influential and admired philosophers (scroll down to bottom of the page to “Non-living philosophers most identified with”). Aristotle came in second and Kant third. I’ve been thinking much about Nietzsche and Heidegger recently: eleventh and eighteenth, respectively. Overall, the list was still dominated by thinkers in […]
Published on May 14, 2024 09:08
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