While it won’t help with my rent, I nonetheless have some very interesting work for the next few days.
I am doing a close read twice of Professor Peter Russell’s forthcoming memoirs, which has been a privelege because of the respect I have for him as a thinker and a person, and a joy because of their colour, humour, and personality.
I am also previewing a new series of James Burke’s TV show Connections, which previously ran in 1978, 1994, and 1997. I have seen those old shows many times, and I thought a lot about his book The Axemaker’s Gift back in high school. I have the chance to interview him from Monaco on Wednesday, so I am giving the new material a careful viewing and thinking through how to make the best use of the conversation. There is scarcely a person I can think of who has a more educated and wide-ranging understanding of the relationships between science, technology, and human society. Since human civilization is presently hurtling toward a brick wall which threatens to rather flatten us all, it may be invaluable to get Burke’s views on how a defensive strategy from here can be undertaken.
Related:
In Tribute to Peter H. Russell (1932 – 2024)
February 6, 2024
https://politics.utoronto.ca/2024/02/tributes-to-peter-h-russell-1932-2024/
MEMORIAL RESOLUTION Peter H. Russell, CC, FRSC Professor Emeritus, Department of Political Science, and Innis College University of Toronto (1932 – 2024)
https://politics.utoronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Memorial-Resolution-Peter-H-Russell.pdf