2021-04-23 ------------------------------------------------------------------ I watched Adam Curtis' "Can't get you out of my head" during the past couple of days. I don't know if I am ready to say anything about it yet, except that it seems extremely relevant. It focuses on the loss of individuality in the West, China, Russia and the Middle East during the past century. What it seems to have brought up in my mind is the marginalized space of philosophy. I have only had one course in philosophy during my education. That was in high school. Towards the end. What the hell? Philosophy is the basis of logic, math, science and so on. It should be the first thing that you teach to the next generation. "It's too hard". No it isn't. Focus on the stuff that has to do with reality. If you have to build a fantasy world before you start working, you are doing it wrong. That is another thing that they completely failed in my high school philosophy. They put stuff in there in sort of a chronological order, but kept only the important people in. What this gets you is a strange collection of stuff that doesn't really make sense anymore. I suppose they were doing it so that you could get the sense of what is possible. I remember reading Spinoza at some point. It's fine, I didn't really understand it most of the time, but it seemed to be onto something. Then he pulls god out of the hat, pretty much randomly. "Since there always has to be someone to perceive the world, there has to be god" No, you have built a fantasy world. There doesn't have to be anyone to perceive it. Or maybe the microbes are doing the perceiving when mammals aren't looking. Just skip this stuff! Build the curriculum to reflect where the actual real world philosophy is at this moment! There is a huge amount of philosophy being reignited by what is happening in the AI scene. You should be pointing these out, instead of treating phisolophy as something between history and theology. I think what it is, it's that they are afraid of philosophy. If you look at the long timeline, it seems that it came to an end with cynicism and endless angst in the twentieth century. I think they are afraid to put that into the curriculum. There is a hump you have to get over when you get to the end of it. I think the educators didn't get over it, and stopped trying. It's fine to just keep trying. When you give up is when you start lying. ------------------------------------------------------------------