Tag Archives | Personal

Ronsard Rocks

Memory lane: I memorised this poem for French class in summer school, 1980. The following year I rediscovered the poem when studying Renaissance French poetry during senior year of high school, and also heard the haunting musical version for the first time from the local college chorale.

I don’t know why the last one says “anonymous.” The poem is “Ode à Cassandre” by Pierre de Ronsard (1524-1585), and the musical version, usually known by the opening line “Allons voir si la rose,” was composed by Guillaume Costeley (1530-1606).

(Note: the singers aren’t incompetent speakers of French; they’re trying to capture the Renaissance pronunciation.)


Alabama Philosophers Invade Florida

Hilton Pensacola Beach Gulf Front Hotel

The Fall 2011 meeting of the Alabama Philosophical Society will be September 23-24 in Pensacola, Florida. (Why Florida? See last year’s hint.)

My Auburn colleague Mike Watkins (author of the best book ever on the metaphysics of colour – see my remarks here) will be the keynote speaker.

Papers can be submitted either to the regular program or to the undergraduate essay contest. Submission deadline: 7/22; hotel reservation deadline: 8/30. More details on the website.


Reaching Left, Part 3

My piece on how to reach the left is now up on Mises.org.

Tim Cavanaugh also has a comment on my piece, though he seems to interpret my point as being solely about evangelisation – whereas I was arguing that we need to abandon not just our unhelpful rhetoric but our mistaken views.


Reaching Left, Part 2

Keith Preston has a critique of my Mises Circle paper. (CHT Ralph Raico.) Needless to say, I have some comments to make about it, but no time right now (I just got back from San Diego), so I’m simply linking to it for the moment. (But three smiley faces to the first reader to identify the glaring non sequitur in his first paragraph ….)

In related news, Martin a.k.a. Mr. Civil Libertarian has a piece on left-libertarianism here.


Labyrinth in Aqua

The Molinari Society session on Gary Chartier’s book will run from 6 to 9 p.m., Saturday, 23 April 2011, in San Diego’s Hilton Bayfront. For anyone planning to attend, I can now announce the room: Aqua 300.

The Hilton Bayfront’s floors are identified by shades of blue – Indigo, Aqua, Sapphire – rather than by numbers (though they are not actually painted the shades they are named after), but the Aqua level is essentially the 3rd floor. Finding room 300 is non-obvious, since it’s not near most of the other meeting rooms and the signage is unhelpfulage; but once you get off the escalator on Aqua, head straight ahead toward the windows. When you see a UPS store to the right, turn right, going past the UPS store (keeping it on your left), then turn left and head all the way back.

Or you can just look at the following map of the Aqua level. Aqua 300’s at the lower left. (Click for increased hugeness.)

Hilton Bayfront, Aqua level


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