I frequently read The Stone, a New York Times blog devoted to contemporary philosophy. Today’s [column](http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/27/cambridge-cabs-and-copenhagen-my-route-to-existential-risk/?hp) showed how far away the field is from dealing with reality, something philosophy is supposed to do well. The column, written by Huw Price,�the Bertrand Russell professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge. With�Martin Rees�and� Jaan Tallinn, he is a co-founder of a project to establish the�Centre for the Study of Existential Risk. Existential risk, if I understand the article, is the risk that we will self-destruct at the hands of some technology that has decided it is superior to humans and wipes… Read More
Continue ReadingQuestioning Capitalism
My last [post](http://www.johnehrenfeld.com/2013/01/i-have-just-finished-proofread.html) argues strongly for a new vision of a world of well-being for humans and non-humans alike. The vision is that of flourishing, that is, existing in a state reflecting the best life available within the evolutionary context of all the species. Sustainability is the ability of the Planetary system of interlinked material resources and cultural institutions to enable flourishing to become presence and linger for a while. I argue further that this will and can happen only with a paradigmatic or transformational shift in the basic beliefs that underlie the structures of our societies and the institutions… Read More
Continue ReadingSustainability in 10 Bullet Points
I have just finished proofreading my new book, *Flourishing: A Frank Conversation about Sustainability,* written with my former PhD student, Andy Hoffman. It’s hard to be objective about one’s own work, but I think it is very good. In the five years since *Sustainability by Design* was published, my thinking about sustainability has become clearer, at least to me. I think this new book is more accessible and focused on the most important issues. I gave a talk yesterday at the Northeastern University Business School to a small group of the faculty that left me with a sense that little… Read More
Continue ReadingHuman Beings Machines
I am just back from about 10 days traveling in Europe. I always return quite impressed with the public infrastructure I encounter. This trip was primarily aimed at visiting a few old friends, but I did take a few hours to visit a couple of my former colleagues at the Technical University of Delft. I can’t quite explain my feeling that, on the one hand, technology is at least as advanced as it is here in the US, but there is, on the other hand, less obsessive use of it. My wife and I ate out several times with our… Read More
Continue ReadingAway for 10 Days
I will be gone until the 20th. My wife and I are traveling to the Netherlands and Switzerland to visit some very old and close friends.
Continue ReadingA Tough Year Ahead
I would like to start the year off on a high note, but I find it very hard to do it without pushing hard against my intuitive feelings. The memory of Newtown remains fresh, kept active by all the talk about gun control. Not being either a gun owner or believer that the Second amendment ever was intended to permit the kind of gun proliferation we have now, I have sympathy with the heated suggestions that we have gone overboard emanating from the gun crowd. Here’s an [example](http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2013/01/obama-hitler-gun-control.php?ref=fpb) from TPM: > On Wednesday, the Drudge Report splashed an image of… Read More
Continue ReadingThe New MBA?
2013 is here and I am not ready for her. 2012 came and went too fast. It was a year for me of finishing and starting things all at the same time. Today about one I finished. I retired myself from my teaching at the Marlboro College Graduate School MBA in Managing for Sustainability program with mixed feelings. Programs like this are still extremely rare, but continue to represent the future of business schools truly concerned about sustainability. My own thoughts on this were reflected in a recent [article](http://www.economist.com/whichmba/academic-view-new-philosophy-leadership?fsrc=scn/ln_ec/academic_view_a_new_philosophy_of_leadership) (undated) in The Economist by Ken Starkey of the Nottingham University… Read More
Continue ReadingThe Theory of No Relativity
You may have seen this. I do not know who originally posted this, but whoever you are, I do thank you. You have said in pictures what I have often said in words.
Continue ReadingHappy New Year
I will be heading for Vermont again this year in just a few hours. It’s hard to believe that another year has slipped by. I went back and read by 2011 year-end post. I could easily write the one for this year by just saying ditto. Too much more of the same, with the exception raised by the re-election of President Obama. But even there the frozen framework of our society is still in place. Well, it could have been worse. I’ll try to capture some of what were the high- and low-lights when 2013 rolls in. Happy New Year.
Continue Reading“Good Credit is Sexy” Duh?
> “Good Credit Is Sexy,” says one site, Creditscoredating.com, which allows members to view the credit scores of potential dates who agree to provide the numbers. This is a tidbit from a recent [story](http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/26/business/even-cupid-wants-to-know-your-credit-score.html?_r=1&hp=&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1356791531-cbr6lhkvmUFS/z5Q3uWuaQ) in the NYTimes. I may be old, quite old, but even in my advanced stage, credit scores and sexy are about as far apart as I can imagine. I have often written about the use of scores to represent, or better to claim to represent some quality of a product. Invariably, I argue that scores that attempt to capture the quality of anything or some aggregate… Read More
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