ABC Studies in Economy, Culture, Real Estate, Public Health, Society & thu Environment ๐Ÿฆ˜๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ

For the last two episodes, weโ€™ve been discussing what might be called negative or aversive responses to radical disappointment with the world โ€” even though, as weโ€™ve seen, both despair and fear have characteristics which commend them. In the next two episodes, weโ€™re turning to rather more positive responses.

There is little doubt that pessimism enjoys a certain cultural cache these days. It is easy to say that things are bad and getting worse. And yet such a claim can have a corrosive effect on the democratic bonds on which the very possibility of change depends.

Likewise, the demand on the part of some to be optimistic โ€” whether that is the meliorist appeal that โ€œitโ€™s not all that badโ€, or the political pledge that โ€œthe guardrails will holdโ€, or the techno-utopian promise that โ€œtechnology will save usโ€ โ€” can act as a pressure-release valve on our moral emotions. At worst, such optimism can function as what Martin Luther King, Jr. called the โ€œtranquilizing drug of gradualismโ€.

So does optimism absolve us of moral agency, or is a tempered optimistic disposition โ€” what we could call a certain โ€œcheerfulnessโ€ โ€” the condition of possibility whereby we are willing to rely upon one another and entrust ourselves to each otherโ€™s care?

Guest: Adam Lovett is a Lecturer in the School of Philosophy at Australian Catholic University, and the author of Democratic Failures and the Ethics of Democracy.

Upcoming live events:

In the first week of April, as part of a special โ€œWeek with Studentsโ€ โ€” a joint initiative by Radio National and ABC Education โ€” Waleed Aly and Scott Stephens will be recording two episodes of The Minefield with an audience of Year 11-12 students, parents and teachers.

Are we on the brink of a world without books?

The irony is unavoidable: a novel that imagines a world in which books are banned โ€” and in which entertainment has swallowed up education โ€” has earned a stable place on the Australian high school curriculum. For this live recording of The Minefield, Waleed Aly and Scott Stephens are leaning all the way into that irony and will discuss Ray Bradburyโ€™s novel โ€œFahrenheit 451โ€ with students, parents and teachers at the Parramatta Library. The future Bradbury imagined in 1953 has never felt closer; is it too late to heed his warning?

Is AI a technology to be feared, or a tool to be taught?

Over a short period of time, AI has become pervasive. Immensely powerful platforms have placed artificial intelligence at our fingertips, and more than two-thirds of Australian students admit to using AI chatbots like OpenAIโ€™s ChatGPT and Microsoftโ€™s Copilot. But as with any technology, alongside the convenience and new capabilities come certain risks and unforeseen consequences. The debate is raging over what it would take to ensure that AIโ€™s power can be made to serve the common good. Is education and greater technological literacy part of the solution?

Johnny the Bonghead, Isle of Patmos off Beruit

Operations BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER, SNACK and DESSERT

John Foster Dulles, โ€˜The Churchโ€™s Opportunities in World Affairs,โ€™ 1947 + โ€˜Sec. of State on [FAITH AND OUR FATHERS],โ€™ 1954

“The last helicopter took off from the roof of the US embassy in the South [so designated and officially registered with the United Nations Organisation on the tinsistence of the French government and the Christian or Chretien church of Rome (Italy) after the humiliation of the colonisers at the battle of Dien Bien Phu 13th Mar to 7 May 1954] Vietnamese capital, Saigon, in April 1975. But that did not mark the end of the [extra-] regional apocalypse. In the previous few years, Nixon and Kissinger had authorised an initially secret carpet-bombing campaign in Cambodia that devastated the country and helped the rise of the Maoist Khmer Rouge rebels. Kissinger’s Operation MENU, as the B-52 bombing raids were called, was broken down into Operations BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER, SNACK and DESSERT. More than 100,000 civilians died as part of those military ‘meals.’ Even as [‘] the Americans [‘] made their final withdrawal from Vietnam, the Khmer Rouge seized power in the Cambodian capital, Phnomh Penh.”

p 73 Prosecuting the Powerful; War Crimes and the Battle for Justice, Steve Crawshaw, The Bridge Street Press http://www.hachette.co.uk http://www.littlebrown.co.uk Great Britain 2025

Sen Fatima Payman Western Australia & PM Albanese 2022

John Blundell

Antipodean-scholar ๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ๐Ÿฆ˜๐ŸŒŽ๐ŸŒ๐ŸŒ

GEA & Air-conditioned Sheds Fullโ€™ Billionaire Monkeys ‘Employees’ with @MIT Olivetti Group Typewriters