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  • Paper sim cards developed for Samsung Blue Earth

    Samsung-Blue-Earth.jpg
    Portuguese telephone service provider TMN has joined the list of companies making an effort to protect the environment. TMN has collaborated with sim card suppliers Incard and Toppan to make sim cards from recycled paper to be supplied with the new eco-friendly phone, Samsung Blue Earth. Although you might think that making a sim card out of paper won’t have a great effect on the environment, but when you consider the plastic card which it is punched out of and the huge numbers in which sim cards are manufactured, this scheme seems to work.

    This sim card is currently only available for Samsung’s Blue Earth but there are plans to make it available for other phones too in the near future. Samsung’s Blue Earth, having the unique feature of a solar panel at the back in addition to standard features is available for about $318 in Portugal.
    [slashgear]

  • Rating Agencies Strike Again

    Standard and Poor’s downgraded Greece’s debt yesterday. This reflected–and added to–perceptions that Europe’s debt difficulties are worsening. Portugal, Spain and Ireland are now in deeper trouble as a result.

    First, one notes that the European Union has made an unbelievable hash of managing this crisis, making the problem worse as much as helping to solve it.

    The latest proposal, a 45 billion euro package by Europe and the I.M.F., has done little to calm the markets, and Germany’s statement this week that it must first see more deficit reduction from Greece before fulfilling its pledge has only increased concerns that Europe is not united behind Greece.

    Kenneth Rogoff, a former economist for the I.M.F. who has studied sovereign defaults, calls the latest assistance package puzzling. “They put their wad on the table, but they could have gone further,” he said of the international plan. “I never thought Europe could take the lead on this.”

    No indeed. But the role of the ratings agencies also needs to be looked at. Given the decisive part they played in the subprime mortgage debacle, how have they managed to escape reprisals from politicians and regulators? Now they are at it again, propagating a follow-on crisis in Europe. The question is not so much whether their new lower ratings on the PIGS’ debts are justified, but whether, supposing they are, their earlier high ratings of the same debt conveyed useful information in the first place–or actually did the opposite, providing false assurance to the markets. No information is better than bad information. Creating a regulatory requirement for action based on this bad information, which is current policy, is doubly perverse.





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  • iPhone Owners Downloading Opera Mini, But Are They Using It?

    Opera today shared a preview of its next “State of the Mobile Web” report, which focuses on Opera Mini for iPhone, the app that — to the surprise of many — was approved by Apple for inclusion in its App Store earlier this month. According to Opera, iPhone users are indeed downloading the app — but are they using it?

    For while Apple greenlighted the app, it won’t allow users to set Opera Mini as a default browser. And based on the limited preview numbers provided by Opera, it appears that while Opera Mini is finding its way to iPhones, iPhone users aren’t finding their to the way to the web through Opera Mini.

    According to a preview of the report:

    • The iPhone is currently the No. 3 device used by Opera Mini users worldwide; the other top 20 devices are all Nokia and Sony Ericsson handsets.
    • The iPhone is currently the No. 1 device used by Opera Mini users in the U.S., well ahead of BlackBerry (which previously occupied the top spot).
    • By mid-April, due to the iPhone launch, the U.S. jumped to No. 5 from No. 8 in the top 10 countries list.
    • Beyond the top 10 countries, Australia, Korea, Canada, Germany and Japan are other examples of places where the iPhone has become the device of choice for Opera Mini users.

    That all sounds good — but is it the result of users finding Opera Mini to be better than Safari, or a reaction to an alternative browser landing on a highly popular phone? Obviously we’ll have to see the full report to answer that question, but Opera does share some additional global information in today’s preview statement by supplying the top 10 handsets of unique users, downloads and page views per user for Opera Mini.

    Nowhere is the iPhone mentioned in the Opera Mini global numbers, although I fully expected it would be after reading the iPhone-specific data points. Instead, the global usage numbers are dominated by handsets from Nokia and Sony Ericsson. In fact, two specific Opera statements appear contradictory — how can the iPhone be the No. 3 device “used by Opera Mini users worldwide” and not appear in the top 10 handsets for Opera Mini unique users list? Perhaps it’s that “unique users” qualifier, that in fact only a relatively few iPhone users are accounting for total Opera Mini use on Apple’s handset.

    Even stranger to me is that the iPhone is a singular platform as compared to all of the other global handsets mentioned — put another way: a popular device with essentially one model should compete well in a market fractured by so many different handsets. I realize that Nokia has the strongest presence worldwide — the data should and does reflect that. But the iPhone not showing up in the top 10 handsets lends credence to what I thought would happen: iPhone owners may be installing Opera Mini, but for most of them, Safari will still rule the roost.

    Related content on GigaOM Pro (subscription required):

  • Cape Cod Wind Farm Gets Approved!

    Cape Wind from Nantucket

    Finally, after a decade of stonewalling from rich wine-sipping hypocrites, the offshore wind farm in Nantucket Sound (Cape Wind) has been approved.

    Now, the country can finally start developing a huge renewable resource.  And a few loaded beachfront homeowners will have to get used looking at tiny white windmills in the distance (the horror!)

    Katharine Q Seelye, NYT:

    After nine years of regulatory review, the federal government gave the green light Wednesday to the nation’s first offshore wind farm, a sprawling project off the coast of Cape Cod.

    The approval of the 130-turbine farm gives a significant boost to the nascent offshore wind industry in the United States, which has lagged behind far Europe and China in harnessing the strong and steady power of ocean breezes to provide electricity to homes and businesses.

    Keep reading at NYT >

    See Also: Cape Wind: Wine-Sipping Hypocrites Love Renewable Energy–Except When It Wrecks Their View

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:


  • Salazar Approves Landmark Offshore Wind Project

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has awarded Boston-based developer Cape Wind a crucial federal permit supporting the development of a landmark, 420 megawatts offshore wind farm off Cape Cod.

    The federal permit in effect closes a nine-year  approval process for Cape Wind, which first announced the project in 2001 but quickly faced intense opposition from a diverse coalition comprised of local residents, Native American tribes and environmental groups, which did not oppose offshore wind development but the location of the Cape Wind project.

    From the start Cape Wind had a staunch ally in Secretary Salazar, who early in his term heading the Interior Department, vowed to develop the country’s largely untapped offshore potential.

    Indeed, Europe and in particular Denmark and the UK are years ahead of the U.S. in terms of developing and operating utility-scale offshore wind power plants. Earlier this year, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced an ambitious £75 billion ($119 billion) project to build thousands of offshore wind turbines as part of the country’s Round 3 of bids for leasing of portions of the British sea bed.

    Cape Wind says it can generate power by 2012 and aims to eventually supply three-quarters of the power on Cape Cod, reports New England Cable News.

    – More to follow

    Image: iStockphoto

  • Three Things to Keep in Mind as Financial Literacy Month Ends

    Before National Financial Literacy Month ends on Friday, it’s worth noting a few developments.

    The nation’s premier financial literacy organization, the JumpStart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy, which sponsored Financial Literacy Day on the Hill this week, still includes as a corporate partner the subprime lender CompuCredit. TWI last fall drew JumpStart’s attention to CompuCredit’s past problems, which include reaching a $114 million settlement with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Federal Trade Commission over charges that CompuCredit and two partner banks deceived hundreds of thousands of customers by failing to properly disclose upfront fees and credit limits on their cards, thereby sinking customers further in debt.

    I checked with JumpStart Executive Director Laura Levine recently — and CompuCredit remains a partner, benefiting from the attention of National Financial Literacy Month. For now, JumpStart also continues to employ as a consultant retired Experian executive William Cheeks, who also consults for CompuCredit, Levine said.

    Here’s Levine’s explanation: “Our governance committee has been working to develop partner criteria and some other policies, including conflict of interest. Our board was reluctant to take action on CompuCredit or any other partner without specific criteria to base it on. This was a discussion topic at our November board meeting and the board asked the committee to do some more work on it and bring it back. That’s really the progress update for now.”

    Moving along… For those worried about subprime lenders from rent-to-own stores to payday lending operations sponsoring financial literacy efforts in communities — and gaining unearned respectability for their efforts — the good news is that the latest research shows those education efforts don’t really work, according to several consumer finance experts I talked to. So while it may be frustrating to see rent-to-own stores sponsoring computer labs in schools, the positive spin is that the tactics aren’t effective. Teaching financial literacy as part of the curriculum beginning in elementary school goes much further.

    That’s important, because the current and most popular model for financial literacy efforts now remains corporate partners kicking in for financial literacy events, a reality that has led some critics to contend that financial literacy is tainted overall — and that it’s nearly impossible for a confused consumer to find unbiased, professional guidance. For Financial Literacy Day on Capitol Hill yesterday, just as an example, sponsors included Capital One, Experian and HSBC-North America.

    All this matters because, as this CNBC segment points out, there’s still a belief out there among some that a lack of financial literacy, more so than predatory lending, fueled the housing crisis. Financial literacy — even when sponsored by a payday lender or a financial services firm that issues high-rate credit cards — becomes the answer, instead of regulation, in this view.

    Just something to keep in mind as Congress continues fighting over financial regulatory reform and financial literacy month winds down.

  • EU’s Clean and Energy Efficient Vehicles Strategy calls for joint action on infrastructure.

    The European Hydrogen Association, EHA, (www.h2euro.org) welcomes the Commission’s Communication on Clean and Energy Efficient Vehciles (COM 2010/186) as an important step forward in policy support for green car technologies. The video’s, shown during Commissioner Tajani’s press conference (April 28, 2010)  of hydrogen cars,  filling up at public hydrogen refuelling stations in Berlin and driving through the center of Brussels, demonstrate that the European hydrogen and fuel cell sector, has achieved major technological breakthroughs over the last years to introduce hydrogen as the other energy carrier, next to electricity, to accelerate EU’s decarbonisation objectives for transport. Many European companies, including SME’s, are market  leader in developing fuel cell and hydrogen applications and components as demonstrated at last week’s Hanover Fair,  where the EHA joined over 140 companies gathered in the 16th H2 anf FC Group Exhibit .  
    The EHA especially welcomes the Commission’s intention “to provide a leading role in working with Member States at national and regional level on the build-up of charging and refuelling infrastructure in the EU”.
    As indicated in its position paper on this strategy (for download at www.h2euro.org ), the EHA is fully committed to contribute actively to the assessment to be made “whether synergies exist between capacity build up for electric and hydrogen vehicles and their connection to low-carbon electricity sources” as mentioned in the Action list of the Communciation. For more information on the strategy visit the Commission’s website.  The EHA press release on the strategy you find above.

  • Primal Nutrition and Fertility

    First Place!Although for many of us starting a family simply happens (surprise!), others among us take an intentional approach. Maybe we delay having children for professional, financial or relationship reasons. Maybe we begin trying when we’re young. Regardless of timing, facing our fertility (so to speak) is an intensely personal and often emotional passage. It can inspire joy and wonder in our basic human capacities – our deep-seated physical impulse and emotional expansion toward parenthood. For some of us, however, the journey takes on anxiety and disappointment. Although varied and nuanced factors define our reproductive health (some not fully understood even today in the medical community), experts agree that lifestyle factors contribute to overall fertility.

    I get emails from time to time on the fertility question, and I appreciate these readers’ stories and interest. The growing science of nutrigenomics, the study of how diet influences gene expression patterns, will undoubtedly offer more insights in the future. Research, however, offers plenty of suggestions already for enhancing reproductive results through dietary measures – a briefing of sorts on what to eat, what not to eat, what to consider supplementing, etc. For everyone who’s tried, is trying or interested in trying somewhere down the line, here’s a Primal primer for fertility nutrition.

    For Both Men and Women…

    Achieve a Normal Weight. Obesity is a known factor in infertility for both men and women. Obesity early in life presents the most reproductive risk.

    Reduce Oxidative Stress. Oxidative stress from a whole host of factors, including oxidized fats, intense physical activity, alcohol, illness and regular metabolic functioning, negatively impact conception success and pregnancy outcomes. For men, oxidative stress has been shown to damage sperm DNA and lower sperm count and motility. For women, oxidative stress impacts conception ability by decreasing the permeability and function of the egg, impairing successful implantation of a fertilized egg in the uterine lining, and decreasing the viability of the embryo. (image)

    Up your antioxidant and fish oil intake. We know antioxidants and anti-inflammatory fatty acids like omega-3 fight oxidative stress elsewhere in the body. The same goes for reproductive functioning. Research has shown time and again that antioxidants support fertility in both men and women. Vitamins C and E and cofactors like selenium, zinc and copper, appear to be especially key. There are probably many other antioxidants that can benefit as well. As for fish oil, sperm actually depend on a generous polyunsaturated fatty acid supply for well-functioning, fluid membranes that are required for fertilization.

    For the Men…

    As already suggested, the onus is on both halves of a hopeful couple. Here are a few key recommendations for men.

    Avoid soy. I’ve never been a fan of soy, and prepping for pregnancy is a good time to reassess your intake. The issue with soy of course is the estrogenic effects, which animal and human studies have shown decrease sperm counts. The inevitable question is raised why Asian countries where soy is prevalent don’t suffer a fertility crisis. It’s a perfectly valid point – one which research hasn’t fully addressed. From my own perspective, I’d venture to guess that at least part of the discrepancy might be traced to the consumption of unprocessed, often fermented soy in Asian cuisine versus the heavily processed versions in Western menus.

    Supplement strategically. Studies of male infertility have shown that zinc and vitamin C levels correlated with sperm count and quality. Additionally, L-carnitine and L-acetyl-carnitine have been useful supplements for enhancing sperm motility and quality.

    For the Women…

    Female infertility that can be traced to hormonal disruption, as in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) or luteal phase deficiency, responds especially well to dietary intervention. A few years ago, a book called The Fertility Diet highlighted results obtained from studying 18,000+ women and the associations between their diets and respective fertility rates. Critics suggested that the study design was far from air tight and that the book’s findings were most useful for women with PCOS. The book, however, offered generally sensible recommendations for the most part. Somehow the findings related to carbs was re-spun to suggest “good carbs” as opposed to low carbs as the specific results suggested, but that’s of little surprise. Based on the bulk of research out there, here are a few recommendations for women.

    Achieve Normal Insulin Levels. Excess insulin can impair ovarian function and increase hormone-binding globulin, which raises androgen levels and commonly decreases ovulation. Although getting insulin under control can help boost fertility, avoid chromium picolinate during the preconception period, since it has been linked to DNA mutation and sterility.

    Supplement Strategically. Iron and zinc are particularly crucial for early cell division once the egg is fertilized. Folic acid both pre-conception and in early pregnancy cuts the risk of neural tube effects. Higher iron levels have been linked to higher fertility.

    Eat Clean Protein. The Fertility Diet authors suggests that balancing plant and animal protein corresponded with fewer fertility difficulties; however, no attention was given to the possible impact of livestock hormones, antibiotics, etc. If there’s any time to go organic, preconception is the time.

    Eat Plenty of Good Fats. Trans fats are paramount in fertility impairment. One study showed that a 2% increase in trans fat intake resulted in a 75% increase in fertility risk. Full fat dairy showed a positive effect, but go for clean organic sources.

    Go Low/No Alcohol and Caffeine. Both alcohol and caffeine have been shown to decrease fertility in women.

    This has been sort of a brief, straight-to-the-point, text book overview of nutrition and fertility. Now it’s your turn. I know that many Mark’s Daily Apple readers have stories about going Primal and getting pregnant. Do you have recommendations and experiences for enhancing fertility? Share your thoughts and anecdotes in the comment board. Grok on!

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. Weighing the Evidence: Science and Anecdote in Nutrition Studies
    2. The Question of Seasonality in Human Health and Nutrition
    3. Get a Life: Second Life Game to Teach Nutrition Habits
  • More Hubble goodness, this time with… Data? | Bad Astronomy

    NASA has put together a pretty cool video to celebrate Hubble Space Telescope’s 20 years in space.


    If that narrator’s voice sounds familiar, that’s because it’s Brent Spiner, the actor who played Data on “Star Trek: The Next Generation”. Apparently, Hubble is fully functional and programmed for multiple techniques.



  • Pictures: BlackBerry Pearl 3G

    As you know, I’m live on location at WES 2010 in Orlando, Florida, where the BlackBerry Pearl 3G was announced earlier this week.  With a trackpad, revised keyboard, 802.11n support, OS 5.0, and (of course) 3G connectivity.  It’s a nice little device, and if US carriers follow Telus’ lead (of pricing it below $50), I think it will be quite the success.

    Want an up close and personal look at the new device?  Check out the gallery below, and stay tuned for more WES 2010 coverage!

     

     

     


  • Daigo Umehara signs up with Mad Catz

    Daigo “The Beast” Umehara, currently reigning as the world Street Fighter IV champ and possibly the best Ryu user who ever played Street Fighter, has now teamed up with the company that provides pros and avid players

  • Coffee Shop Reopens After Entire Staff Quit, Business Is Tepid

    Gorilla Coffee, closed for 16 days after its entire staff quit simultaneously, has reopened, to decidedly decaf customer response.

    There were just three patrons when I visited this morning at 8:35, a time when it wouldn’t be uncommon for the line to be out the door. An all-new staff worked behind the counter. I don’t know if I was just looking for faults but my large coffee, which normally makes me feel like I could rip apart the fabric of reality with my bare hands, only rated a “market perform.” We may never know what horrible injustices the old barristas suffered at the hands of their fascist bean barons, but maybe it takes a little mean to make a mean cup of coffee.

    gcoffee.jpg

    PREVIOUSLY: Entire Coffee Shop Staff Quits Simultaneously
    RELATED: GORILLA RETURNS; PARK SLOPE GETS CAFFEINATED [The Brooklyn Ink]

  • BREAKING: 2003 Toyota Sequoia to be recalled over traction control

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Toyota made big headlines recently because of sliding floor mats and then sticky gas pedals – both resulting in unintended acceleration. Well, let’s call today’s recall announcement unintended deceleration. According to The Detroit News, Toyota is preparing to recall 50,000 of its full-size model year 2003 Sequoias.

    According to the daily, there have been 160 reports of “inappropriate activation of the electronic stability control or the traction control system.” Which is a fancy way of saying the vehicles suddenly seem to slow down on their own. Here’s what the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is saying:

    “During the activation of either system, the driver loses throttle control and one of more brakes may apply, causing the vehicle to slow suddenly. During these activation events, the brake lights are not illuminated to signal to following traffic that the vehicle is slowing.”

    For its part, Toyota admits that:

    “…the VSC system could, in limited situations, activate at low speed (approximately 9 mph) for a few seconds after acceleration from a stopped position and, as a result, the vehicle may not accelerate as quickly as the driver expects. There have been no reported injuries or accidents as a result of this condition.”

    Obviously, if your vehicle suddenly slows unexpectedly while under acceleration without warning (and without brake lights!), that’s an issue. For its part, Toyota initially admitted it was a problem with the traction control system (not the stability control), but for some reason it didn’t feel a recall was necessary. However, that was sixteen months ago, before the Japanese giant’s woes began in earnest. Today, they’re going to fix the issue. Toyota would do well to remember their Nixon: it’s not the crime, it’s the cover up. Official press release available after the jump.

    [Source: The Detroit News]

    Continue reading BREAKING: 2003 Toyota Sequoia to be recalled over traction control

    BREAKING: 2003 Toyota Sequoia to be recalled over traction control originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 11:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Canadian bank dividends: The wait continues

    With global banks facing pressure from regulators in terms of their capital levels, Barclays Capital analyst John Aiken believes there is a very real risk that target payout ratios at Canadian banks will reverse themselves, reverting back to between 35% and 45% of earnings.

    He warned that industry earnings would have to increase by almost 25% from the strong levels in the first quarter of 2010 to reach the mid-point of this range.

    “Should the banks begin to lower their payout ratios, investors could have to wait several more quarters before they see material dividend increases,” Mr. Aiken said in a note. “Additional growth would be required to generate dividend increases.”

    So while the banks are suggesting that higher interest rates will have a positive impact on margins and earnings, if dividends remain static, valuations may come under pressure.

    With the industry’s payout ratio now back down below 50%, concerns regarding dividend cuts have subsided. However, increases could ne another issue entirely.

    Jonathan Ratner

  • California County Wants To Take The Toy Out Of Your Happy Meal

    If your kids pester you into purchasing McDonald’s Happy Meals, they could be severely disappointed the next time they visit Santa Clara County in California, where the county supervisors have voted to pass a law forbidding toys in Happy Meals and other fast food kids meals that don’t meet the county’s nutritional guidelines.

    Among the nutritional guidelines set forth in the new law, toys can not be included in meals totaling more than 485 calories, or containing more than 600 mg of sodium. This means that some meals — like Wendy’s 4 chicken nugget meal with mandarin oranges and low-fat milk — would still have the toy, while many meals containing french fries or soda will not.

    For now, the new law only effects the unincorporated portions of the county. Of the 151 restaurants in the county offering kids meals with toys, only around a dozen will actually be required to follow the regulations.

    “This ordinance breaks the link between unhealthy food and prizes,” said the county supervisor who sponsored the initiative. He claimed the goal of having toys in the fast food meals is “to get them hooked on eating high-sugar, high-fat foods early in life.”

    The law will come up for a final vote on May 11. If passed as is, the county health dept. would be able to fine restaurants for violating — $250 for the first violation; $500 for the second and $1000 for each violation thereafter.

    Is this a bold move toward preventing childhood obesity? Or is the county trying to interfere where it shouldn’t?

    Santa Clara County: Supervisors ban toys with fast-food meals [MercuryNews.com]

  • I’m speaking at Harvard Friday on science blogging

    HarvardI welcome thoughts on some of the key points I should raise.

    The all-day workshop is titled, “Unruly Democracy: Science Blogs and the Public Sphere.”  It is jointly sponsored by the Program on Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School, the Shorenstein Center at the Harvard Kennedy School, and the Knight Science Journalism program at MIT.

    I’m on an afternoon panel.  There is still a little space available.  You can register here.  Click on poster to enlarge (big PDF).

    Full agenda and fellow panelists are below:

    Friday, April 30, 2010, 9:30am–4pm
    Bell Hall
    Belfer Building
    79 JFK Street
    Harvard Kennedy School

    PROGRAM

    9:30am
    Introduction/Framing
    Sheila Jasanoff (STS Program, Harvard Kennedy School)

    10:00am-11:00am
    Panel 1: BLOGGING AS BUSINESS
    Henry Donahue (CEO, Discover)
    Gideon Gil (Science Editor, Boston Globe)
    Representative of Seed Magazine [pending confirmation]

    11:15am-12:15pm
    Panel 2: SCIENCE ON THE WEB
    Francesca Grifo (Union of Concerned Scientists)
    Chris Mooney (MIT and Discover)
    Jessica Palmer (ScienceBlogs: Bioephemera)

    1:15pm-2:30pm
    Panel 3: RULES AND RESPONSIBILITY
    Amanda Gefter (New Scientist)
    Kimberley Isbell (Citizens Media Law Project)
    “Dr. Isis” (ScienceBlogs)
    Thomas Levenson (MIT)

    2:30pm-3:30pm
    Panel 4: NORMS AND LAW
    Sam Bayard (Citizen Media Law Project)
    Phil Hilts (Knight Program, MIT)
    Joseph Romm (Center for American Progress)
    Cristine Russell (Harvard Kennedy School)

    3:30pm-4:00pm
    Open Discussion and Wrap-Up

  • Remembering Pierre Hadot – Part I

    Hadot It was with sadness that we learned of the passing of Pierre Hadot, one of France’s most extraordinary intellectual figures and a many-time HUP author. There have been obituaries in the popular press, but in the service of furthering this memory and elaborating our understanding, we asked Hadot’s one-time student and long-time collaborator Michael Chase, currently of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris, to provide us with a more in-depth look at Hadot’s remarkable intellectual trajectory. Below please find Part I, in which Chase details that trajectory, from Hadot’s early interest in philology and mysticism to his later engagement with Marcus Aurelius and the idea of "spiritual exercise." Tomorrow we’ll publish Part II, in which Chase shares his memories of a man who practiced what he preached, a man who "like Plotinus … was always available to himself, but above all to others."

    —–

    Pierre Hadot – Part I

    By Michael Chase

    Pierre Hadot, emeritus Professor at the Collège de France and Director of Studies at the École Pratique des Hautes Etudes, died on the night of April 24-25 at the age of 88.

    Born in Paris in 1922, Hadot was raised at Reims, where he received a strict Catholic education, and was ordained to the priesthood in 1944. But he soon became disenchanted with the Church, particularly after the conservative encyclical Humani Generis of August 12, 1950, and he left it in 1952 (Eros also played a role in this decision: Hadot married his first wife in 1953).

    As a Researcher at the CNRS (National Center of Scientific Research), Hadot was now free to devote himself to scholarship. He began with Latin Patristics, editing Ambrose of Milan and Marius Victorinus. This was the period, from the late 1950s to the 1960s, when, under the guidance of such experts as the Jesuit Paul Henry, he learned the strict discipline of philology, or the critical study and editing of ancient manuscripts, an approach that was to continue to exert a formative influence on his thought for the rest of his life. Also during this period, Hadot’s deep interest in mysticism led him to study Plotinus, and, surprisingly enough, Wittgenstein, whose comments on “das Mystische” (Tractatus 6.522) led Hadot to study the Tractatus and the Philosophical Investigations and publish articles on them, thus becoming one of the first people in France to draw attention to Wittgenstein.1 Hadot wrote Plotinus or the Simplicity of Vision2 in a month-long burst of inspiration in 1963, a lucid, sincere work that is still one of the best introductions to Plotinus. Hadot would continue to translate and comment upon Plotinus throughout the rest of his life, founding in particular the series Les Ecrits de Plotin3, a series, still in progress, that provides translations with extensive introductions and commentaries to all the treatises of Plotinus’ Enneads, in chronological order. On a personal level, however, Hadot gradually became detached from Plotinus’ thought, feeling that Plotinian mysticism was too otherworldly and contemptuous of the body to be adequate for today’s needs. As he tells the story, when he emerged from the month-long seclusion he had imposed upon himself to write Plotinus or The Simplicity of Vision, he went to the corner bakery, and “seeing the ordinary folks all around me in the bakery, I […] had the impression of having lived a month in another world, completely foreign to our world, and worse than this—totally unreal and even unlivable.”4

    Elected Director of Studies at the 5th Section of the École Pratique des Hautes Etudes in 1964, Hadot married his second wife, the historian of philosophy Ilsetraut Marten in 1966. This marked another turning point in his intellectual development, for it was at least in part thanks to his wife’s interest in spiritual guidance in Antiquity that the focus of Hadot’s interests would gradually shift, over the following decade or so, from the complex and technical metaphysics of Porphyry and Marius Victorinus to a concern for the practical, ethical side of philosophy, and more precisely the development of his key concept of philosophy as a way of life.

    At Hadot’s request, the title of his Chair at the EPHE Ve was soon changed from “Latin Patristics” to “Theologies and Mysticisms of Hellenistic Greece and the End of Antiquity.” In 1968, he published his thesis for the State Doctorate, the massive Porphyre et Victorinus5, in which he attributed a previously anonymous commentary on Plato’s Parmenides to Porphyry, the Neoplatonist student of Plotinus. This monument of erudition arguably remains, even today, the most complete exposition of Neoplatonist metaphysics.

    It was around this time that Pierre Hadot began to study and lecture on Marcus Aurelius—studies that would culminate in his edition of the Meditations6, left unfinished at his death, and especially in his book The Inner Citadel.7 Under the influence of his wife Ilsetraut, who had written an important work on spiritual guidance in Seneca, Hadot now began to accord more and more importance to the idea of spiritual exercises, that is, philosophical practices intended to transform the practitioner’s way of looking at the world, and consequently his or her way of being. Following Paul Rabbow, Hadot held that the famous Exercitia Spiritualia of Ignatius of Loyola, far from being exclusively Christian, were the direct heirs of pagan Greco-Roman practices. These exercises, involving not just the intellect or reason, but all a human being’s faculties, including emotion and imagination, had the same goal as all ancient philosophy: reducing human suffering and increasing happiness, by teaching people to detach themselves from their particular, egocentric, individualistic viewpoint and become aware of their belonging, as integral component parts, to the Whole constituted by the entire cosmos. In its fully developed form, exemplified in such late Stoics as Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, this change from our particularistic perspective to the universal perspective of reason had three main aspects. First, by means of the discipline of thought, we are to strive for objectivity; since, as the Stoics believe, what causes human suffering is not so much things in the world, but our beliefs about those things, we are to try to perceive the world as it is in itself, without the subjective coloring we automatically tend to ascribe to everything we experience ("That’s lovely," "that’s horrible," "that’s ugly," "that’s terrifying," etc., etc.). Second, in the discipline of desire, we are to attune our individual desires with the way the universe works, not merely accepting that things happen as they do, but actively willing for things to happen precisely the way they do happen. This attitude is, of course, the ancestor of Nietzsche’s “Yes” granted to the cosmos, a “yes” which immediately justifies the world’s existence.8 Finally, in the discipline of action, we are to try to ensure that all our actions are directed not just to our own immediate, short-term advantage, but to the interests of the human community as a whole.

    Hadot finally came to believe that these spiritual attitudes—“spiritual” precisely because they are not merely intellectual, but involve the entire human organism, but one might with equal justification call them “existential” attitudes—and the practices or exercises that nourished, fortified and developed them, were the key to understanding all of ancient philosophy. In a sense, the grandiose physical, metaphysical, and epistemological structures that separated the major philosophical schools of Antiquity—Platonism, Aristotelianism, Stoicism, Epicureanism9—were mere superstructures, intended to justify the basic philosophical attitude. Hadot deduced this, among other considerations, from the fact that many of the spiritual exercises of the various schools were highly similar, despite all their ideological differences: thus, both Stoics and Epicureans recommended the exercise of living in the present.

    Hadot first published the results of this new research in an article that appeared in the Annuaire de la Ve section in 1977: “Exercices spirituels .” This article formed the kernel of his book Exercices spirituels et philosophie antique10, and was no doubt the work of Hadot’s that most impressed Michel Foucault, to the extent that he invited Hadot to propose his candidacy for a Chair at the Collège de France, the most prestigious academic position in France. Hadot did so, and was elected in 1982. Hadot’s view on philosophy as a way of life consisting of the practice of spiritual exercises was given a more complete narrative form in his Qu’est-ce que la philosophie antique?.11

    Another aspect of his thought was more controversial: if philosophy was, throughout Antiquity, conceived as a way of life, in which it was not only those who published learned tomes that were considered philosophers, but also, and in some cases especially—one thinks of Socrates, who wrote nothing—those who lived in a philosophical way, then how and why did this situation cease? Hadot’s answer was twofold: on the one hand, Christianity, which had begun by adopting and integrating pagan spiritual exercises, ended up by relegating philosophy to the status of mere handmaid of theology. On the other, at around the same historical period of the Middle Ages, and not coincidentally, the phenomenon of the European University arose. Destined from the outset to be a kind of factory in which professional philosophers trained students to become professional philosophers in their turn, these new institutions led to a progressive confusion of two aspects that were, according to Hadot, carefully distinguished in Antiquity: doing philosophy and producing discourse about philosophy. Many modern thinkers, Hadot believed, have successfully resisted this confusion, but they were mostly (and this again is no coincidence) such extra-University thinkers as Descartes, Spinoza, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer. For the most part, and with notable exceptions (one thinks of Bergson), University philosophy has concentrated almost exclusively on discourse about philosophy. Indeed, one might add, extending Hadot’s analysis, that the contemporary university, whether in its “analytic” manifestation as the analysis of language and the manipulation of quasi-mathematical symbols, or its “continental” guise as rhetorical display, irony, plays on words and learned allusions, seem to share one basic characteristic: they are quite incomprehensible, and therefore unimportant to the man or woman on the street. Hadot’s work, written in a plain, clear style that lacks the rhetorical flourishes of a Derrida or a Foucault, represents a call for a radical democratization of philosophy. It talks about subjects that matter to people today from all walks of life, which is why it has appealed, arguably, less to professional philosophers than to ordinary working people, and to professionals working in disciplines other than philosophy.12

    Pierre Hadot taught at the Collège until his retirement in 1992. In addition to Plotinus and Marcus, his teaching was increasingly devoted to the philosophy of nature, an interest he had picked up from Bergson, and which he had first set forth in a lecture at the Jungian-inspired Eranos meetings at Ascona, Switzerland, in 1967.13 Combined with his long-term love of Goethe14, this research on the history of mankind’s relation to nature would finally culminate in Le Voile d’Isis, a study of the origin and interpretations of Heraclitus’ saying “Nature loves to hide,” published a mere 6 years before his death.15 Here and in the preliminary studies leading up this work, Hadot distinguishes two main currents in the history of man’s attitude to nature: the “Promethean” approach, in which man tries to force nature to reveal her secrets in order better to exploit her, and the “Orphic” attitude, a philosophical or aesthetic approach in which one listens attentively to nature, recognizing the potential dangers of revealing all her Secrets.

    —–

    1 These articles have been recently reedited: see Wittgenstein et les limites du langage, Paris: Vrin, 2004. (Bibliothèque d’histoire de la philosophie).

    2 Plotin ou La simplicité du regard, Paris 1963; 4e éd. Gallimard, 1997 (Folio essais; 302). English version: Plotinus or The simplicity of vision, transl. by Michael Chase; with an introd. by Arnold I. Davidson. Chicago: University of Chicago Pr., 1993.

    3 Les écrits de Plotin publiés dans l’ordre chronologique, sous la dir. de P. Hadot, Paris: Éd. du Cerf (Coll. Textes). More than a dozen volumes have appeared in the series, two of them (Traité 38 (VI,7), 1988; Traité 50 (III,5), 1990) by Hadot himself.

    4 Hadot, La philosophie comme manière de vivre. Entretiens avec Jeannie Carlier et Arnold I. Davidson, Paris: Albin Michel (Itinéraires du savoir), 2001, p. 137. I quote from the revised second edition I am currently preparing of The Present Alone is Our Happiness, Conversations with Jeannie Carlier and Arnold I. Davidson, translated by Marc Djaballah, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009 (Cultural Memory in the Present).

    5 Porphyre et Victorinus, 2 vols., Paris : Études Augustiniennes, 1968. See also Hadot’s “Complementary thesis”: Marius Victorinus, Paris: Études Augustiniennes, 1971.

    6 Marc Aurèle, Écrits pour lui-même. Tome 1, Introduction générale. Livre I ; éd. et tr. Pierre Hadot, avec la collab. de Concetta Luna. Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1998. (Collection des Universités de France).

    7 La Citadelle intérieure. Introduction aux Pensées de Marc Aurèle, Paris: Fayard, 1992. English: The Inner Citadel: The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius, translated by Michael Chase, Harvard University Press, 1998.

    8 Nietzsche, Posthumous Fragments, end 1866-Spring 1887, 7, [38], cited in Hadot, La philosophie comme manière de vivre, p. 277.

    9 I leave out Cynicism and Scepticism, partly because it is debatable whether they were actually “schools” as opposed to philosophical tendencies, and partly because, unlike the other schools, they refrained from metaphysical speculation.

    10 Pierre Hadot, Exercices spirituels et philosophie antique, Paris: Études augustiniennes, 1981, several reprints. English: Philosophy as a Way of Life. Spiritual Exercises from Socrates to Foucault, edited with an Introduction by Arnold I. Davidson, translated by Michael Chase, Oxford/Cambridge, Mass.: Basil Blackwell, 1995.

    11 Qu’est-ce que la philosophie antique?, Paris: Gallimard, 1995. English: What is Ancient Philosophy?, translated by Michael Chase, Cambridge, Mass.-London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2002.

    12 As of 2006, Hadot’s works had been cited by researchers working in management studies, economics, the study of Chinese thought, education, sociology, political science, and women’s studies, to name but a few.

    13 “L’apport du néoplatonisme à la philosophie de la nature en Occident”, in Tradition und Gegenwart, Eranos-Jahrbuch 37 (1968), 91-132.

    14 See now N’oublie pas de vivre. Goethe et la tradition des exercices spirituels, Paris: Albin Michel (Bibliothèque Idées), 2008.

    15 Le Voile d’Isis. Essai sur l’histoire de l’idée de Nature, Paris: Gallimard, 2004. English: The veil of Isis. An essay on the history of the idea of nature, translated by Michael Chase, Cambridge, Mass.-London, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2006.

  • The Greek “Bailout” Is Ballooning To €135 Billion And Germany Is Not Pleased

    Michael Ballack

    The IMF and EU are currently negotiating the full bailout package for Greece, which actually means Germany and the IMF are discussing how much Germany is going to have to shell out to cover the Greek debt mess.

    Some facts from Der Spiegel:

    • Germany had planned to fund €8.4 billion a year to Greece for the next three years
    • The number has grown to a potential total of but now it is €25 billion for this year alone
    • Germany’s opposition is taking advantage of the crisis, saying that Chancellor Merkel’s slow progress on the deal has made the problem much more expensive, not less
    • It remains unlikely German parliament will pass the bailout, as is
    • The deadline for resolving this crisis is May 19, as Greece faces a call from creditors then that they have to meet

    Now Check Out Who Gets Pounded When Greek Debt Holders Take Their Haircut >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Are You Living in a Former Meth Lab?

    Jaimee Alkinani and her husband had just bought their first home in a quiet suburb of Salt Lake City, Utah. The house was nice: three bedrooms, tree-lined street, kids riding bikes down the sidewalk, and friendly neighbors who waved when they passed. The family was on their way—they’d also just opened a small business near their home, had an eleven-month-old child, and Jaimee was eight months pregnant. Life had officially started for the Alkinanis. But soon things turned for the worse.

    A few days after they had moved in, a neighbor welcomed them with disturbing news. “Your house used to be a meth lab,” he said—a fact that the seller had never disclosed. So they called their realtor. He told them not to worry, that the house had been decontaminated. He even produced a certificate from the local health department to prove it.

    Then the family started getting sick. Within five months, Jaimee and her husband developed sinus problems that required surgery. When their baby was born, he had serious lung issues that caused him to stop breathing a few times. He also wasn’t gaining weight, and was in and out of the hospital…

  • Solar Light Pipe Illuminates Office Space

    Texas A&M Aggies win EPA competition for their solution that harvests daylight. …

    … "Utilizing an outdoor light collector, the apparatus, dubbed Horizontal Hybrid Solar Light Pipe: An Integrated System of Daylight and Electric Light, funnels sunlight from the collector through a pipe of highly reflective material into a simulated office space built within a rail car container. " …

    Via Texas A&M University: Sustainability Competition