Wednesday, 28 January 2015

My Grammar and I (or should that be 'me'?) - Taggart & Wines

This is advertised as the "Eats shoots and leaves..." of Grammar.  Well it isn't as funny.  However, it is eminently readable and enjoyable.

I had heard that is was wrong to split an infinitive - but I didn't really know what that meant.  Apparently the verb after the word 'to' cannot be split.  Star Trek is the most famous error in this regard.  "To boldly go where no man has gone before."  This should be "To go boldly..."  You can't split the infinitive.

I must admit that it was grand to be able to put names to the turns of phrase that have irritated me.  I particularly loath modern sports parlance; but have not understood exactly why it is erroneous.  When sports players refer to themselves with the pronoun 'myself' when it should be 'me' or 'I'.  For example, '... the boys and myself' or '... they are to report to myself.'  This is the misuse of the reflexive pronoun.  It should be 'I' if you are a part of the subject or 'me' if you are the object.  The reflexive pronouns should only be used when the subject and the object of the verb are the same person.  'I speak for myself."

I really enjoyed the section on tense and moods.  Ever since I first came across Anslem's ontological argument, I have been fascinated by modal logic.  So, the subjunctive mood was a particularly interesting section.  However, you have to go step by step.

1)  We all know what a verb is but do we know what auxiliary verbs are? Well, auxiliary verbs are used to indicate the tense, voice and mood of another verb where this is not indicated by inflection.(pg.75)  Bet you didn't know that there are only twenty-three of them in the English language.  We can memorise auxiliary verbs by singing them to jingle bells:





There you go - the twenty-three auxiliary verbs.

2)  Conditional clauses in the subjunctive mood are statements of the possible or counterfactual.  For example, 'If I were rich, I would be happier than I am now'.  This is a conditional statement in the subjunctive mood - a counterfactual statement of the possible.  Now the auxiliary verbs 'was' and 'were' are crucial in these sentences.  The verb 'was' denotes a fact; 'were' is used for counterfactuals.  Dr who illustrates:

Rattigan (Child genius):  'If only that was possible'.   
Dr Who:  'If only that were possible.  Conditional clause.'   
Dr Who: The Sontarian Stratagem 
 This is a great book - full of interesting examples, funny anecdotes and lots of Grammar.  Enjoy.
5 stars






Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Cricket as I see it - Allan Border

A family holiday when I was 15/16 yrs. old was a turning point in my reading life.  We rented a house in a beautiful part of Phillip Island for a week or two over January.  We didn't have TV, but we did have a Pool Table.  I was a 'sleep in until midday' if possible type of teenager and most mornings I would wake at seven or eight and not get out of bed until twelve.  In the room that I was sleeping in was a bookshelf full of cricket books - I randomly picked up a book by Max Walker.  It was full of funny anecdotes about Doug Walters and 'Tangles' cricketing life.  I devoured three or four of them that holiday - and despite the fact that they are badly written they were rollicking tales and fed my love of cricket.  From that time I started to read cricket books - none of them are good literature - but they are an easy entertaining read.

That is until Gideon Haigh started writing about cricket; what a great writer.  I'm also glad for the Kindle that I got for my birthday a few years ago.  One feels somewhat embarrassed - like you are a voyeur - when one reads about Shane Warne.  I was able to download Haigh's great book on Warne, without having to ask for it in public.  Haigh's inspiring writing, magnificent metaphors of cricket paralleling life - his passionate embellishment an his intellectual prowess takes cricket reading to a new level.

So, I'm on holiday in Far North Queensland and in my lackadaisical mindset can't quite get into a book on Art metaphysics yet - so i saw Allan Border's book in the shop and thought that it would be a nice easy read.

My childhood friend, Tim, had an uncle who was an MCC member.  I remember sitting in the members stand and rushing over to the players walkway as they came out and patting Allan Border and Craig McDermott on the back.  I always admired Border, his sheer grit and determination, and the taking of the captaincy against the backdrop of the Kim Hughes debacle.

Well, this book is the trite cricket anecdotes that never fail to put a smile on my face.  Borders thoughts are repetitive and quite disorganised.  The problem with talking about 'cricket today' is that it rapidly becomes out of date.  Border extols Phil Hughes virtues as a batsman and thinks he should get another go in the team.  Of course, some weeks after the book was published - Hughes died in that tragic cricket accident.

Borders thoughts are interesting because they are Border's thoughts.  However, they are superficial and somewhat banal.  It was a bit tedious when he went through his best world XI - then his best Australian XI - then his best fun XI - sigh.

If you like cricket books - it's a fun read though.

2-3 Stars.


Tuesday, 20 January 2015

The Soul - JP Moreland

Moreland is one of my favourite philosophers - I never fail to be challenged by what I have learnt and in every book he shows himself to be the real deal.  I was fascinated with the Mind/Body issue after reading his chapter in "Philosophical foundations of a Christian Worldview" many years ago.  In 2012 I purchased his remarkable book "Consciousness and the Existence of God: A Theistic Argument."  I read about half of it with a pencil in my hand, defining words and trying to link ideas.  It was too hard for me.  I put it back on the shelf and thought that I must come back to it later.  Then Moreland published this - a laypersons account of his argument and I rushed to buy it.  Complete with his argument against Naturalism, "The Recalcitrant Imago Dei: Human Persons and the Failure of Naturalism," I am ready to digest what Moreland has to say about the Soul and it's existence.  

So, this is the first of his three books on the Mind/Body issue that I will try to read this year.  I have a couple of others to balance out my views too.  So, wow, what an easy book to read, he defines some terms and is helpful for the lay reader whenever possible.  In fact, the chapter summary and glossary at the end of each chapter is fantastic.  There is a few pages of difficult reading when Moreland looks at different types of Physicalim and he shifts easily into more academic philosophical writing.  He states that one should feel free to skip over this section of the book if it causes issues.  Many would do that I think.

This book is written for Christian’s as a defense of the belief of the Soul.  In fact, Chapter 2 is dedicated to analyzing the Biblical text to see if belief in a non-material Soul is a necessary part of Christian belief.  He concludes that it is – I think he is correct.

However, this book is not just for Christians – it should be picked up by anyone wanting to understand the basic arguments around the mind/body issues.  This is an outstanding introduction to philosophy of the mind.  In chapter one there is a section where Moreland states that modern advances in Neuroscience have not advanced the dialogue in any meaningful way.  He repeatedly makes the point that substance dualism/property dualism and various brands of Physcialism are empirically equivalent.  The scientific data fits with all the views and the philosophical arguments are where the real issues lie.  This is clearly not the view of the Physicalists as they view dualism as ‘Folk psychology’.  Moreland is really quite persuasive here.

Leibneitzian laws of identity are the key to understanding the arguments.  Moreland does a great job explaining it all.  I like the modal argument myself and find it very convincing although I understand that most people don’t feel its force.

The last chapter is worth the price of the book itself – Moreland seeks to explain why the Soul is important and how it links to Christian belief.  He provides a persuasive case for Christian Theism and gives thoughtful response to objections. 

I think that this is an area in which Christians will need to understand more &more, and actively engage with.  What constitutes personhood in the cases of Euthanasia and Abortion?  These are issues of contention and areas of attack from the secular world.  This world is becoming increasingly secular and I believe this will increasingly rob humanity of hope, meaning, purpose and moral truth.  The 'Soul' is a key battleground and one everyone should be conversant with.

I particularly enjoyed Moreland’s dealing with Near Death experiences and with Ebon Alexander, a materialist Neurosurgeon changing his mind about the soul after a Near Death Experience in recent years; Dualism is not going away.


Any negatives?  I would like more on the difference between Cartesian and Thomistic Dualism.  I would also like to see other non-identity based arguments for and against Dualism.  I'm sure that I will get this as I delve more into the literature.

5 Stars – Should be read by everyone

Friday, 16 January 2015

A Rightful place - Noel Pearson (Quarterly Essay Issue 55 2014)

Although the Quarterly Essay is not strictly a book – Noel Pearson wrote this for me, and people like me.  Pearson wants to change the Australian constitution to give recognition to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.  Bleeding heart radicals will faun all over the idea of constitutional recognition – so Pearson will be preaching to the choir if he is solely speaking to them.  Pearson realises that constitutional change through a national referendum needs bipartisan support:

“It [constitutional change] cannot just be for a progressive cause:  it has to be a liberal cause; it has to be a conservative cause if you want [constitutional] amendment.” (pg.  71)

Pearson is completely honest in this, and he has gone to great lengths to genuinely understand the conservative view.  He is writing to people like me.  Now my blogging about this is also to clarify my own thought.  I had just read Wolfgang Kasper’s essay in the Jan-Feb Quadrant Vol. 59 No 1-2 entitled “Looking Backwards for Constitutional change”.  Kasper ends his essay:

“Spending political energy and administrative resources on a constitutional amendment is a backward-looking gesture and the result of guilt and shame among some Australians.  What is really needed is a forward-looking, pragmatic engagement.  Hard work lies ahead, but the promise is that Australians – who have successfully integrated manifold waves of immigrants into a free and prosperous community – can do the same for future generations of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.”

It is the conservatives and some liberals who will be skeptical about constitutional change – I am.  Kasper, would be considered a neo-liberal by Pearson, who “… tend[s] towards a free market with even fewer protections for the vulnerable.” (pg. 43).  Kasper is not indifferent to the plight of the vulnerable, he sees room for interventions and welfare – however, he doesn’t believe that race should be an issue in the constitution.  His words are better:

“Singling out one race for preferential treatment has the potential to poison any society’s political atmosphere.  Judging by the record of the of the Aboriginal advocacy industry, mere constitutional recognition will soon be used by lobbies and courts to increase material transfer programs and create an increasing plethora of racial preferences.” Pg. 42

For Kasper, the Market sees no colour and is the great leveller to assimilation in society.  It is this assimilation that he desires.  There are many things in Kasper’s essay that resonate as true, Pearson would agree.  However, Pearson’s essay is significantly more nuanced than Kasper’s; it also has more heart.

So, Pearson is writing to me as he says, “The challenge is to gather in conservatives and Liberals (sic) and people with genuine anxieties about amending what is a foundational document.”  I am one with concerns about amending this document, about the judicial action that may follow, about whether or not real good is done.  Well, Pearson is self-effacing about trite caricatures of conservative thinking and, he genuinely wants to engage with conservative views.  I have always respected Pearson’s view, because I see his cause in wanting to conserve indigenous tradition and to fight for his people and I see the same fight needing to be waged against the loss of Western culture in the West.  Pearson picks up on this and his existential angst is gripping, convicting and worthy of deep respect.  I feel that I can, in some small way, relate to him and his struggle; and I see him as a profound thinker on these issues.  He has tried hard to grapple with little conservative me.  He has read Scruton, Theodore Dalrymple and even Windshuttle gets a mentions. 

This essay is laidened with what Pearson calls ‘existential angst’; the story of the Tasmanian massacres of the early nineteenth century haunts him as does the death of Truganini the last full blooded Tasmanian Aboriginal to pass away.  He is a man at war on two or more fronts.  He is forthrightly confronting the social problems in Indigenous communities – trying to forge a vision for the future for Australia’s Indigenous and dealing with the political obstacles.  Now that there is political will to make such a change – Pearson now needs the voice of the people to endorse this in any referendum.  Noel Pearson is a force of nature.  It is oft reported that Pearson has a temper (implicitly he confesses to this in the essay) and a tirade of abusive invective can follow.  Whatever shortcomings Pearson has, none of this is evident in the essay.  This is not an emotive screed, it is a passionate plea.  He does not pander to conservatives – often asking them to understand him as well as asking the Indigenous culture to understand us.  However, he is genuinely engaging and trying to provide arguments and reasons for conservatives to vote for constitutional recognition.

The most important nuance of Pearson’s essay is the distinction between race and indigeneity.  This is indeed a nuance, but it is the lynchpin of Pearson’s argument.  Without this nuanced distinction Kapser would be correct in labelling this amendment ‘…singling out one race for preferential treatment…’.  Rather, Pearson would say that he is - acknowledging indigenous people for appropriate recognition.  Pearson wants to end discussion of race.  He finds ‘race’ an illegitimate idea– we are all one race, members of the Human race – however, all of us are ‘…indigenous to some place on the planet…’ (pg. 37).  What need for racial discrimination laws are there then?  Shall we remove racial discrimination from our laws as we remove notions of race from the constitutional recognition?  Pearson says ‘No’.  Racial discrimination laws should stay in place as he ‘…sees no contradiction in banishing notions of race from our constitution while at the same time ensuring protection of peoples against the illegitimate use of this distinction.’  (pg. 53).  This sounds like a contradiction to me – Pearson gives no reasons to refute this clear contradiction – he merely asserts that it doesn’t exist.

If we banish any idea of race from our constitution and give recognition to the indigenous peoples – what will that accomplish?  Well, Pearson is clear here, this is not jut symbolic rather deeply pragmatic.  Pearson believes Indigenous people are responsible for getting themselves out of the welfare trap, that they need to be agents of their own development; that they need a bicultural future and need to be empowered to do so – by taking back liberty and responsibility.  This recognition will invoke ‘psychological liberation’ for as Aboriginals or Torres Strait Islanders, regarding themselves as a people with distinct heritage and language not as a certain race will be deeply beneficial. As a conservative, these aims are grand; indeed, it seems to require of me a certain largesse in return.  These goals certainly should be applauded and supported.   However, will these goals be realised this way?  Can they be realised this way?

Pearson’s chapter entitled “Conservative arguments for constitutional reform” he spells out his reasons of why conservatives should approve of and support Constitutional reform.  Pearson quotes Waleed Aly as saying that conservatism “eschews utopian designs and adopts far more modest and pragmatic approaches to policy.”  The first part is most certainly correct – with good reason utopian ideals should be treated circumspectly.  Unfortunately, some of these things that Pearson has proposed seem a little Utopian – especially banishing race as a category.  It is loaded with ideological zeal and leaves me quite suspicious – suspicious in the same way that socialism, when expressed as a moral virtue, does.

Moreover, I hear the ideological zeal of Pearson in trying to reach conservatives loud and clear – and it seems to amount to wishful thinking.


“We can find a way of…”
 “Perhaps we could consider…”
 “Constitutional recognition could therefore include…”
 "A new body could be established…”

I want what Pearson wants – I would be happy to support him, but how do I know that these views are not more widely held in the Indigenous leadership, let alone the raft of lawyers and bureaucrats that will oversee the process. Are these merely statements in the subjunctive mood or are they widely held beliefs that are actionable?  It is Pearson’s dealings in counterfactuals that are most concerning.

I want Aboriginal self-determination; I want the bilingual and bicultural assimilation into society. I want to acknowledge the brutal treatment of colonialism and to make peace with the Indigenous community.  I eschew collectivism and separatism and desire national unity; and want responsible indigenous voices in indigenous affairs.  Will constitutional change bring that?  I don’t know.  Will it bring an activist judiciary – probably.  Will it bring further positive discrimination, that will not seriously effect an Indigenous self-determination – probably.

Where I live we have huge problems with indigenous issues.  Money is being thrown at the communities to keep kids in school and there is free University education.  Yet, there is a shortage of Aboriginal nurses – no girls who finish Year 12 go on to University and will take up these roles.  The community actively discourage it.  The Aboriginal leadership in the area is one family who drive around in expensive co-op cars, managing little and leading none.  White welfare class single mothers cannot afford to enrol children in swimming lessons – Aboriginal mothers in the same position get it all free.  This positive discrimination is a hotbed of bitterness and angst for those around.  At every meeting I attend, acknowledgement is given to the first owners of the land.  Indigenous recognition is given; it is in the consciousness of most people now.  The Scottish divine Andrew Fletcher once said ‘Let me write the Songs of a nation and I care not who writes its Laws’.  The acknowledgement of Indigenous recognition has more wings in meetings, school halls and public gatherings than in the preamble. 
Will a constitutional change mean anything to Aboriginal girls in Bairnsdale High School or in Lakes Entrance?  Will they be empowered to go to University and invest positively in their culture or will they continue the cycle of poverty and the Government sanctioned welfare-trap?  Apart from Pearson and a few others, real Aboriginal leadership is a silent void.  Aboriginal advocacy groups have failed in providing real leadership or vision for their peoples.

I read Pearson’s vision and whole-heartedly agree – I wish more Indigenous Australians held his views. See Here.

However, in the same Quadrant edition as Kasper wrote his article, Luke Torrisi wrote an excellent article entitled “Tradition and Reaction in Conservative Politics”.  Let me quote from Torrisi quoting Russell Kirk:

“’…prudence is the chief among virtues.  Any public measure ought to be judged by its probable long-run consequences, not merely by temporary advantage or popularity.  Liberals and radicals, the conservative says, are imprudent:  for they dash at their objectives without giving much heed to the risk of new abuses worse than the evils they hope to sweep away.’  Nevertheless, sometimes the conservative is forced to question exactly what it is that he is conserving.

I don’t want to conserve what we have – I want what Pearson wants.  I want Indigenous culture to be a serious culture.  The Elephant and mouse in the room in Indigenous discussions, says Pearson, is the fact that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders are 3% of the population.  They are a serious minority.  Pearson says that voices are not heard at Parliamentary levels and Indigenous leaders have little power to change things.

My heart goes out to Pearson, he is truly a leader among men, not just his people.  He has been tested in the most personal and heart-wrenching areas of existence – the demise of his people and their identity.  He is clearly vexed and distressed when he says that maybe activist judges can do something – why is that so bad?  At times one feels that he is groping for solutions – any solution, lets do something, as doing something is better than nothing. 

Torrisi ends his article with the following quote:

“When people ask me to summarise my conservative disposition to them in a single sentence, I usually reply:  To impart a life for my grandchildren what my grandparents would have wanted for them.”


This is Pearson’s conservatism too.  However, how should I vote in any upcoming referendum?  I honestly don’t know!

5 Stars - Must be read.

Thursday, 1 January 2015

The narrow road to the deep north - Richard Flanagan



The last book I read that was a winner of the Booker prize was Roddy Doyle's "Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha" and I didn't enjoy it.  Maybe it was the consistent, post-modern vignettes that drove me mad, maybe I was too immature to understand.  I had read "The Commitments" and "The Snapper" and enjoyed them somewhat, so I thought that I'd enjoy it.  I didn't.  I remember the brouhaha that surrounded Arundhati Roy's "The God of small things" and was tempted to read it, but no.  "The true history of the Kelly gang" seemed absurd and I consciously skipped "Life of Pi" just as I skipped the movie.

I don't read a lot of fiction, however, I make sure that I read at least one book a year.  So I tend to pick something that I will enjoy.  That hasn't worked so well for me in all honesty.  I did enjoy "Moby Dick" a few years ago, but it was difficult wading through those chapters on 19th century whaling techniques - worth it, but hard going. I chose a stupid Ben Elton book one year - figuring it would be light and funny - it was badly written and dull.  In July I read John Le CarrĂ©'s "The perfect spy", a 700 page semi-autobiographical spy novel that was very well written but a bit sentimental for me; frankly not enough prestidigitation to keep one enthralled.  I wanted a thoughtful spy book and should've picked another of the George Smiley books - alas, another bad choice.

So, Christmas arrives and my brother obviously got 3 for the price of 1 (he probably kept the steak knives) and he emphatically told my Dad, brother and me that "The narrow road to the deep north" was a must read and gave each of us a copy.  So I have embarked upon Flanagan's book.

My initial impression was at how different the writing was.  No talking marks here, not even in rapid-fire dialogue sections.  I thought that maybe he'd get rid of commas and apostrophes too, maybe capital letters, after all, this is modern fiction.  Some sentences just don't make sense - I re-read them to make sure.
"They were the first beautiful thing I ever knew, Dorrigo Evans said." (pg. 14)
Here he is referring to Tennyson's poem 'Ulysses' and a woman named Amy.  They are two different things.  Maybe it's typo, but a number of things like this occur.  The lead characters name 'Dorrigo' seems unbelievable, especially as it is shortened to Dorry - which sounds to me like a dottily old lady who plays the organ in church.

This may just be a curse of not reading enough fiction.  So, I'm ignoring them and moving onwards; and justly so because the book becomes a little engrossing.  The sections set in the Japanese concentrations camps in Burma/Thailand are enthralling.  The great themes of human weakness and human moral virtue come into play early one hundred and fifty pages in you're hooked.  

Dorrigo is an outwardly virtuous (though privately immoral) leader of men, based on Weary Dunlop, in the hell-hole of a Burmese prison camp; yet he despises virtue as he is aware of his deep Human frailty.  Complex psychological stuff, indeed I found Dorrigo, the chief protagonist, neither a likeable or a believable character.  This is largely due to his almost incoherent, vaguely philosophical ramblings.

The affair chapters and the particularly the dialogue surrounding the affair (with his Uncle's wife, Amy) was sad - indeed demonstrative as a precursor to our current social malaise.  As I was reading I recalled CS Lewis's excellent essay 'We have "No right to Happiness'''.  Lewis is on the money here in the article and the affair in this book is an archetype of what he wrote about.  I found it difficult reading; sentimental nonsense juxtaposed with unnecessary crassness, and wanted to move forward in time to the POW experience which I found more engaging.

When the POW sections got going, they too were hard to read.  Very graphic descriptions of the life in a Burmese/Thai prison camp.  The apex of this disturbing narrative is the violent beating and tragic death of Darky Gardiner (who is hinted at being Dorrigo's nephew later in the book).  After reaching this climax we focus on the post-war lives and deaths of various characters.  There is an interesting inclusio (meaning structural brackets - to borrow a word from Biblical literary criticism) - the beginning structural bracket is around page 115 where we have a conversation between Japanese officers, Nakamura and Koto.  This conversation primes us for the Japanese side of the war story.  It sets the scene for the end bracket which follows particularly Nakamura after the war and the existential angst that he went through in justifying his violent and murderous behaviour as a POW officer.  Flanagan really greases the wheels to make us feel sympathetic to the Japanese - honour, Japanese glory, accomplishment of a railway 'against the odds', are repeatedly (too much to be subtle) presented as reasons to make us feel injustice for them.  Nakamura, in particular, ends his section with the most astounding soliloquy (page 409) where he, in a moment of honest clarity,

'...wondered; what if this had all been a mask for the most terrible evil? The idea was too horrific to hold on to ... he must henceforth conceive of his life's work as that of a good man.'
Structurally these chapters are important to the story.  Within the major themes of the book are articulated, namely:

  1. What is love?
  2. Does life have a purpose?
  3. Is morality relative or objective?
Great themes, great questions.  They have dominated the work of great minds throughout the centuries. Are Flanagan's treatment of these themes insightful?  Does it build on the great philosophical tradition of the Western world?  Not really.  His dealing with these issues are banal and bland.  Wet lettuce type of bland.  Unfortunately, question 1 & 3 get no real answer, just weird assumptions and a passive acceptance that any expression of love is equally valuable - I'm just not inclined to agree.

Overwhelmingly the sense that there is no purpose, no meaning, no overarching plan for humankind resonates loudly throughout the book.  Sisyphus is mentioned by Dorry on pg. 401 - and that is the metaphor for life, there is no meaning there just is.  Dorry says this repeatedly - "The world is ... it just is" (pg. 420).  Much like Carl Sagan's statement in 'Cosmos'.  It is a declaration of meaningless.  What could be more meaningless that those people beaten, tortured, emaciated and stripped of all dignity building a railroad in slave labour.  There deaths were in vain; without meaning.  

Flanagan highlights this point repeatedly  - an excellent example is where he describes the death of an emaciated man during a food drop by American planes (pg. 381).  The irony is that he was killed by a 44 gallon drum of Hershey Bars - by soldiers on his side.  How could this death be meaningful?

The book finds no solace in love (of any kind) and no meaning.  It is essentially the nihilism of Satre and Nietzsche.  It offers little.

While suffering is a challenge for the Christian, I do not think it is insurmountable, and while it is easy to paint a picture of suffering on the Burmese/Thai railway that life is ultimately meaningless - I am not convinced.  Richard Wumbrand's outstanding little book "Tortured for Christ" or the book "Anointed for Death" about the revival in Cambodia just prior to the Pol Pot Khmer Rouge are a testament to a cosmic purpose - even in suffering.  Dorrigo cannot see purpose - but that doesn't mean that it is not there.
2-3 stars