How Japan Invented Daisugi, the Ancient Method of Growing Lumber Without Cutting Down Trees

Ask any­one, of most any age and in most any soci­ety, how we get wood, and you’ll hear one answer: by cut­ting down trees. It’s there­fore nat­ur­al that any method of lum­ber pro­duc­tion that leaves trees stand­ing will get a lot of atten­tion. Such has been the case with daisu­gi, the 600-year-old Japan­ese tech­nique we’ve pre­vi­ous­ly fea­tured here on Open Cul­ture. The Leaf of Life video above explains just what it involves: “Spe­cial­ly plant­ed cedar trees are pruned heav­i­ly. Think of it as a giant bon­sai.” While these oper­a­tions take place bien­ni­al­ly, “har­vest­ing takes 20 years, and old tree stock grows up to 100 shoots at a time,” pro­duc­ing a stronger and more flex­i­ble wood to boot.

Such an unusu­al method of cul­ti­va­tion, you may imag­ine, must have arisen in unusu­al cir­cum­stances. As the video explains, daisu­gi was orig­i­nal­ly invent­ed in the west­ern Japan­ese region of Kitaya­ma, well south of the Osa­ka-Kyoto-Nara conur­ba­tion.

Work­ing under a short­age of seedlings and flat ter­rain, the arborists of Kitaya­ma devel­oped this method of forest­ing that made it pos­si­ble to “reduce the num­ber of plan­ta­tions, make the har­vest cycle faster, and pro­duce denser wood as well.” More than a lit­tle of the demand for it owed to the four­teenth-cen­tu­ry elite vogue for sukiya-zukuri, an ele­gant form of res­i­den­tial archi­tec­ture much expand­ed from the tra­di­tion­al Japan­ese tea house.

For a more nuts-and-bolts — or rather, trunks-and-branch­es — expla­na­tion of how daisu­gi is done, have a look at the video just above from Roji Gar­den­ing. You first need a sugi tree, also known as a Cryp­tome­ria japon­i­ca or Japan­ese red­wood, whose fast growth makes it all work. When it reach­es six or sev­en meters, which takes about as many years, “you do some­thing West­ern gar­den­ers would nev­er dream of”: cut the trunk at the height of half a meter, prune back the remain­ing branch­es, and cul­ti­vate the buds that appear on the remain­ing “plat­form seed­er.” Con­tin­ue reg­u­lar­ly prun­ing the series of “per­fect­ly ver­ti­cal” new trunks into which they grow, even­tu­al­ly remov­ing every­thing but the top 30 cen­time­ters on each. With­in a decade, you’ll end up with a good source of wood, if you need it, but also an “ever-chang­ing, inter­est­ing state­ment tree” — that, as a bonus, will also look like some­thing out of a Ghi­b­li movie.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Daisu­gi, the 600-Year-Old Japan­ese Tech­nique of Grow­ing Trees Out of Oth­er Trees, Cre­at­ing Per­fect­ly Straight Lum­ber

The Art of Cre­at­ing a Bon­sai: One Year Con­densed Con­densed Into 22 Mes­mer­iz­ing Min­utes

The Biol­o­gy of Bon­sai Trees: The Sci­ence Behind the Tra­di­tion­al Japan­ese Art Form

What Makes the Art of Bon­sai So Expen­sive?: $1 Mil­lion for a Bon­sai Tree, and $32,000 for Bon­sai Scis­sors

A Dig­i­tal Ani­ma­tion Com­pares the Size of Trees: From the 3‑Inch Bon­sai, to the 300-Foot Sequoia

This 392-Year-Old Bon­sai Tree Sur­vived the Hiroshi­ma Atom­ic Blast & Still Flour­ish­es Today: The Pow­er of Resilience

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

When Bill Murray Unexpectedly Adapted a W. Somerset Maugham Novel: The Razor’s Edge (1984)

In sum­mer of 1984, Amer­i­can pop­u­lar cul­ture was dom­i­nat­ed by Ghost­busters, a block­buster that com­bined sharp com­e­dy and spec­tac­u­lar visu­al effects on a scale — and in an unlike­ly har­mo­ny — movie­go­ers had nev­er seen before. Its great suc­cess advanced the careers of every­one involved, not least that of Bill Mur­ray. Hav­ing already been an ear­ly (if not imme­di­ate­ly beloved) Sat­ur­day Night Live cast mem­ber and giv­en much-praised per­for­mances in come­dies like Cad­dyshackStripes, and Toot­sie, he brought his famous­ly detached sen­si­bil­i­ty to the role of the ghost-bust­ing Dr. Peter Venkman and there­by became the most in-demand com­ic actor in Hol­ly­wood. When, less than six months lat­er, The Razor’s Edge opened with Mur­ray in the star­ring role, fans bought tick­ets in hopes of more laughs.

It’s not as if they had­n’t been warned. The Razor’s Edge was adapt­ed from a nov­el by W. Som­er­set Maugh­am, a pop­u­lar writer in his day, but hard­ly a straight­for­ward humorist. On the pro­mo­tion­al cir­cuit, Mur­ray stressed that this was “a seri­ous movie,” not a com­e­dy but a dra­ma. Nev­er­the­less, both crit­ics and audi­ences at the time had trou­ble accept­ing him in the role of Lar­ry Dar­rell, a once-light­heart­ed young man who comes back from World War I over­whelmed by the need to ven­ture back out into the world in search of the ulti­mate truths of exis­tence. Mur­ray was dri­ven to make the film (for which he took pay only as co-screen­writer) out of the deep iden­ti­fi­ca­tion he felt with the char­ac­ter, which can only have inten­si­fied the sting of its fail­ure.

That Lar­ry was a fel­low Chicagoan only explains part of the appeal. Mur­ray’s thir­ti­eth birth­day, the birth of his first child, and the death of friends like Doug Ken­ney and John Belushi (who’s indi­rect­ly eulo­gized in the film) had put him in a reflec­tive state of mind, while his grow­ing wealth and fame brought per­son­al and psy­cho­log­i­cal chal­lenges of their own. The prospect of exot­ic loca­tion shoots in Paris and the Himalayas, where Lar­ry’s peri­patet­ic seek­ing takes him, may have sweet­ened the deal. Revis­it­ed today, the result has plen­ty of mem­o­rable moments, some of them pos­sessed of gen­uine beau­ty and grandeur. Alas, the sto­ry Maugh­am tells in the nov­el, rich with the sub­tleties of mem­o­ry, per­cep­tion, and decep­tion, does­n’t sur­vive the Hol­ly­wood ten­den­cies toward over-com­pres­sion and lit­er­al-mind­ed­ness.

It must be said that some of the blame lies with Mur­ray him­self, whose goof­ball instincts clash against the nine­teen-twen­ties set­ting; as he lat­er admit­ted, he and direc­tor John Byrum were wrong to insist on a peri­od piece. (Just imag­ine the pos­si­bil­i­ties of Mur­ray play­ing a returned Viet­nam vet­er­an instead.) Regard­less, he con­tin­ued to fol­low his inner Lar­ry in the after­math, decamp­ing to Paris with his young fam­i­ly in order to live and learn far from the Amer­i­can scene he knew. It was there that he encoun­tered the teach­ings of the mys­tic G. I. Gur­d­ji­eff, whose influ­ence on Mur­ray’s per­sona we’ve pre­vi­ous­ly fea­tured here on Open Cul­ture. That marked anoth­er step along the path of expe­ri­ence that would lead him to play wis­er, sad­der, yet nev­er entire­ly unfun­ny char­ac­ters in pic­tures like Wes Ander­son­’s Rush­more and Sofia Cop­po­la’s Lost in Trans­la­tion — and, in so doing, win dra­mat­ic respectabil­i­ty after all.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

The Phi­los­o­phy of Bill Mur­ray: The Intel­lec­tu­al Foun­da­tions of His Comedic Per­sona

The Zen of Bill Mur­ray: I Want to Be “Real­ly Here, Real­ly in It, Real­ly Alive in the Moment”

Lis­ten to Bill Mur­ray Lead a Guid­ed Med­i­ta­tion on How It Feels to Be Bill Mur­ray

An Ani­mat­ed Bill Mur­ray on the Advan­tages & Dis­ad­van­tages of Fame

Bill Mur­ray, the Strug­gling New SNL Cast Mem­ber, Apol­o­gizes for Not Being Fun­ny (1977)

15 Great Films Adapt­ed from Equal­ly Great Nov­els

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

Rare Film of Sculptor Auguste Rodin Working at His Studio in Paris (1915)

We’ve pre­vi­ous­ly fea­tured a series of remark­able lit­tle films of French artists Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Claude Mon­et and Edgar Degas. Here we wrap things up with just one more: a rare glimpse of the great sculp­tor Auguste Rodin.

The footage was tak­en in 1915, two years before Rod­in’s death. There are sev­er­al sequences. The first shows the artist at the columned entrance to an uniden­ti­fied struc­ture, fol­lowed by a brief shot of him pos­ing in a gar­den some­where. The rest of the film, begin­ning at the 53-sec­ond mark, was clear­ly shot at the pala­tial, but dilap­i­dat­ed, Hôtel Biron, which Rodin was using as a stu­dio and sec­ond home.

The man­sion was built as a pri­vate res­i­dence in the ear­ly 18th cen­tu­ry, and served as a Catholic school for girls from 1820 until about 1904, when it became ille­gal for pub­lic mon­ey to be used for reli­gious edu­ca­tion. When the last of the nuns cleared out, the rooms of the Hôtel Biron were rent­ed out to a diverse group of peo­ple that includ­ed some notable artists: Jean Cocteau, Isado­ra Dun­can, Hen­ri Matisse and Rain­er Maria Rilke, who served for a time as Rod­in’s sec­re­tary. It was Rilke’s wife, the sculp­tor Clara West­hoff Rilke, who first told Rodin about the place in 1909.

Rodin first rent­ed four rooms on the main floor, but was alarmed when he learned of plans to sell the prop­er­ty off in pieces to devel­op­ers. So he made a deal with the gov­ern­ment: In exchange for bequeath­ing all his works to the French state, the sculp­tor was allowed to occu­py the man­sion for the rest of his life, and after he died, the estate would become the Musée Rodin.

By the time actor Sacha Gui­t­ry and his cam­era­man arrived to film this scene from Ceux de Chez Nous, or “Those of Our Land,” Rodin was the sole occu­pant of the Hôtel Biron. The film shows the 74-year-old artist walk­ing down the weed-cov­ered steps of the man­sion and work­ing inside, chip­ping away at a mar­ble stat­ue with a ham­mer and chis­el. When Rodin was asked once about how he cre­at­ed his stat­ues, he said, “I choose a block of mar­ble and chop off what­ev­er I don’t need.”

Note: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this post appeared on our site in 2012.

If you would like to sup­port the mis­sion of Open Cul­ture, con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion to our site. It’s hard to rely 100% on ads, and your con­tri­bu­tions will help us con­tin­ue pro­vid­ing the best free cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als to learn­ers every­where. You can con­tribute through Pay­Pal, Patre­on, and Ven­mo (@openculture). Thanks!

Writ­ten by Mike Springer

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Watch 1915 Video of Mon­et, Renoir, Rodin & Degas: The New Motion Pic­ture Cam­era Cap­tures the Inno­v­a­tive Artists

Time Trav­el Back to 1926 and Watch Wass­i­ly Kandin­sky Make Art in Some Rare Vin­tage Video

Geor­gia O’Keeffe: A Life in Art, a Short Doc­u­men­tary on the Painter Nar­rat­ed by Gene Hack­man

 

The Great Moon Hoax of 1835: Where “Fake News” Began

Think­ing back to the many child­hood gro­cery-store trips made with their par­ents, Amer­i­cans of a cer­tain age will remem­ber noth­ing so vivid­ly as the Week­ly World News. It always stood out on the check­out stand’s impulse-buy rack, in part because of its adher­ence to stark yet jum­bled black-and-white cov­er designs even as all the oth­er mag­a­zines grew slick­er and sim­pler. But what real­ly caught our young and impres­sion­able eyes had even more to do with the con­trast between the sur­round­ing pub­li­ca­tions’ mun­dane cov­er­age of home, fam­i­ly, and celebri­ty and the WWN’s unfail­ing­ly, scream­ing­ly out­landish head­lines: “I WAS BIGFOOT’S LOVE SLAVE!” “WILD WEST TOWN ON VENUS!” “BAT BOY LEADS COPS ON 3 STATE CHASE!”

For many of us, the temp­ta­tion to buy (or at least flip through) an issue of the WWN lay in keep­ing up with the exploits of Bat Boy, the most promi­nent of many fic­tion­al char­ac­ters to which its extrav­a­gant­ly lurid yet odd­ly sober sto­ries returned again and again. Though intro­duced only in 1992, he has notable ances­tors in his indus­try: take the “Ves­per­tilio-homo,” or “man-bat,” a race found to have made its home on the moon in 1835.

Or at least that’s what the read­ers of New York news­pa­per the Sun were told in a series of illus­trat­ed arti­cles, lat­er col­lect­ed in book form, that cred­it­ed the dis­cov­ery to the astronomer Sir John Her­schel. Her­schel was real, but as the Sun admit­ted the fol­low­ing month, the Ves­per­tilio-homo was­n’t — nor were the uni­corn-goats, minia­ture zebras, and beavers walk­ing on their hind legs report­ed­ly also seen through his tele­scope.

The “Great Moon Hoax,” as it’s now known, and about which you can learn more from the BBC video at the top of the post, was­n’t Her­schel’s doing. A reporter called Richard Adams Locke admit­ted to the fab­ri­ca­tion, seem­ing­ly moti­vat­ed by a desire to boost the cir­cu­la­tion of the Sun, one of the many “pen­ny paper” tabloids of the day that lived and died by sen­sa­tion and scan­dal, and also to make light of the extrav­a­gant astro­nom­i­cal claims then in the air. Much like the writ­ers of the Week­ly World News — or lat­er, the Onion — Locke want­ed less to fool read­ers than to enter­tain them by sat­i­riz­ing an over-cred­u­lous pop­u­lar cul­ture. Yet what he pio­neered was, quite lit­er­al­ly, “fake news,” though that label by now refers to media cre­at­ed with clear intent to deceive. The world has changed since the eigh­teen-thir­ties, and indeed, even since Bat Boy’s late twen­ti­eth-cen­tu­ry hey­day, when the WWN pre­dict­ed his elec­tion as Pres­i­dent of the Unit­ed States in 2028. Stranger things have cer­tain­ly hap­pened.

via Boing Boing

Relat­ed con­tent:

“Moon Hoax Not”: Short Film Explains Why It Was Impos­si­ble to Fake the Moon Land­ing

The 1957 “Spaghet­ti-Grows-on-Trees” Hoax: One of TV’s First April Fools’ Day Pranks

The Birth of the Moon: How Did It Get There in the First Place?

A Field Guide to Fake News and Oth­er Infor­ma­tion Dis­or­ders: A Free Man­u­al to Down­load, Share & Re-Use

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

When The Surrealists Expelled Salvador Dalí for “the Glorification of Hitlerian Fascism” (1934)

Image by Carl Van Vecht­en, via Library of Con­gress and Wiki­me­dia Com­mons

We may be con­di­tioned to offer­ing an opin­ion at the push of a but­ton, but before ven­tur­ing on the ques­tion of whether we can, or should, sep­a­rate the art from the artist, it seems ever pru­dent to ask, “Which art and which artist?” There are the usu­al case stud­ies, in addi­tion to the crop of dis­graced celebri­ties: Ezra Pound, P.G. Wode­house, and, in phi­los­o­phy, Mar­tin Hei­deg­ger. One case of a very trou­bling artist, Sal­vador Dalí, gets less atten­tion, but offers us much mate­r­i­al for con­sid­er­a­tion, espe­cial­ly along­side an essay by George Orwell, who rumi­nat­ed on the ques­tion and called Dalí both “a dis­gust­ing human being” and an artist of unde­ni­ably “excep­tion­al gifts.”

Like these oth­er fig­ures, Dalí has long been alleged to have had fas­cist sym­pa­thies, a charge that goes back to the 1930s and per­haps orig­i­nat­ed with his fel­low Sur­re­al­ists, espe­cial­ly André Bre­ton, who put Dalí on “tri­al” in 1934 for “the glo­ri­fi­ca­tion of Hit­ler­ian fas­cism” and expelled him from the move­ment. The Sur­re­al­ists, most of whom were com­mu­nists, were pro­voked by Dalí’s dis­dain for their pol­i­tics, expressed in the like­ness of Lenin in The Enig­ma of William Tell. It’s also true that Dalí seemed to pub­licly pro­fess an admi­ra­tion for Hitler. But as with every­thing he did, it’s impos­si­ble to tell how seri­ous­ly we can take any of his pro­nounce­ments.

Anoth­er paint­ing, 1939’s The Enig­ma of Hitler is even more ambigu­ous than The Enig­ma of William Tell, a col­lec­tion of dream images, with the recur­ring melt­ing objects, crutch­es, mol­lusk shells, and food images, set around a tiny por­trait of the Ger­man dic­ta­tor. Kami­la Kocialkows­ka sug­gests that psy­cho­an­a­lyt­ic motifs in the paint­ing, some rather obvi­ous, reflect Hitler’s “fear of impo­tence, and cer­tain com­men­ta­tors have not­ed that Hitler’s enthu­si­as­tic pro­mo­tion of nation­al­is­tic breed­ing can fur­ther explain the innu­en­do present in this image.”

The Hitler obses­sion began years ear­li­er. “I often dreamed of Hitler as a woman,” Dalí sup­pos­ed­ly said,

His flesh, which I imag­ined as whiter than white, rav­ished me. I paint­ed a Hit­ler­ian wet nurse sit­ting kneel­ing in a pud­dle of water….

There was no rea­son for me to stop telling one and all that to me Hitler embod­ied the per­fect image of the great masochist who would unleash a world war sole­ly for the plea­sure of los­ing and bury­ing him­self beneath the rub­ble.

The paint­ing Dalí alludes to, The Wean­ing of Fur­ni­ture-Nutri­tion, is the work that first raised Breton’s ire, since “Dalí had orig­i­nal­ly paint­ed a swasti­ka on the nurse’s arm­band,” notes art his­to­ri­an Robin Adèle Gree­ley, “which the Sur­re­al­ists lat­er forced him to paint out.” Dalí lat­er claimed that his Hitler paint­ings “sub­vert fas­cist ide­olo­gies,” Gree­ley writes: “Bre­ton and com­pa­ny appear not to have appre­ci­at­ed a fel­low Sur­re­al­ist sug­gest­ing that there were con­nec­tions to be made between bour­geois child­hoods such as their own and the fam­i­ly life of the Nazi dic­ta­tor.” Like­wise, his creepy dream-lan­guage above is hard­ly more straight­for­ward than the paint­ings, though he did write in The Unspeak­able Con­fes­sions of Sal­vador Dalí, “Hitler turned me on in the high­est.”

Oth­er pieces of evi­dence for Dalí’s pol­i­tics are also com­pelling but still cir­cum­stan­tial, such as his friend­ship with the proud­ly pro­fessed Nazi-sym­pa­thiz­er, Wal­lis Simp­son, the Amer­i­can Duchess of Wind­sor, and his admi­ra­tion for Span­ish dic­ta­tor Fran­cis­co Fran­co, whom he called, as Lau­ren Oyler points out at Vice, “the great­est hero of Spain.” (Dalí paint­ed a por­trait of Franco’s daugh­ter). Oyler points out that Dalí’s “wicked­ness,” as Orwell put it in his scathing review of the artist’s “auto­bi­og­ra­phy” (a spu­ri­ous cat­e­go­ry in the case of ser­i­al fab­ri­ca­tor Dalí), mat­ters even if it were pure provo­ca­tion rather than gen­uine com­mit­ment.

The claim car­ries more weight when applied to the artist’s attest­ed sadism in gen­er­al. Dalí spends a good part of his Con­fes­sions delight­ing in sto­ries of bru­tal phys­i­cal and sex­u­al assault and cru­el­ty to ani­mals. (The famous Dalí Atom­i­cus pho­to, his col­lab­o­ra­tion with Philippe Hals­man, required 28 attempts, Oyler notes, and “each of those attempts involved throw­ing three cats in the air and fling­ing buck­ets of water at them.”) Whether or not Dalí was a gen­uine Nazi sym­pa­thiz­er or an amoral right-wing troll, Orwell is com­plete­ly unwill­ing to give him a pass for gen­er­al­ly cru­el, abu­sive behav­ior.

“In his out­look,” writes Orwell, “his char­ac­ter, the bedrock decen­cy of a human being does not exist. He is as anti-social as a flea. Clear­ly, such peo­ple are unde­sir­able, and a soci­ety in which they can flour­ish has some­thing wrong with it.” But per­haps Dalí means to say exact­ly that. Allow­ing for the pos­si­bil­i­ty, Orwell is also unwill­ing to toss aside Dalí’s work. The artist, he writes “has fifty times more tal­ent than most of the peo­ple who would denounce his morals and jeer at his paint­ings.”

When it comes to the ques­tion of Dalí as fas­cist, some less-than-nuanced views of his work (“Marx­ist crit­i­cism has a short way with such phe­nom­e­na as Sur­re­al­ism,” writes Orwell) might miss the mark. The Wean­ing of Fur­ni­ture-Nutri­tion, writes Gree­ley, seems to reveal “a secret about his own mid­dle-class back­ground” as a nurs­ery for fas­cism, espe­cial­ly giv­en the “dis­turb­ing” fact that “the nurse is a por­trait of Dalí’s own, and that she droops hol­low­ly on the shore near the painter’s Cata­lan child­hood home, sug­gest­ing that Dalí him­self might have had a ‘hit­ler­ian’ upbring­ing.”

Gree­ley’s fur­ther elab­o­ra­tion on Dalí’s con­flict with Bre­ton fur­ther weak­ens the charges against him. “Ten days before the Feb­ru­ary meet­ing, he had defend­ed him­self to Bre­ton,” she writes, “claim­ing, ‘I am hit­ler­ian nei­ther in fact nor in inten­tion.’ ” He point­ed out that the Nazis would like­ly burn his work, and chas­tised left­ists for “their lack of insight into fas­cism.”

The ques­tion of Dalí’s fas­cist sym­pa­thies is inco­her­ent with­out the biog­ra­phy, and the bio­graph­i­cal evi­dence against Dalí seems fair­ly thin. Nonethe­less, he has emerged from his­to­ry as a vio­lent, vicious, oppor­tunis­tic per­son. How much this should mat­ter to our appre­ci­a­tion of his art is a mat­ter you’ll have to decide for your­self.

Note: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this post appeared on our site in 2018.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

George Orwell Reviews Sal­vador Dali’s Auto­bi­og­ra­phy: “Dali is a Good Draughts­man and a Dis­gust­ing Human Being” (1944)

Ernest Hem­ing­way Writes of His Fas­cist Friend Ezra Pound: “He Deserves Pun­ish­ment and Dis­grace” (1943)

Heidegger’s “Black Note­books” Sug­gest He Was a Seri­ous Anti-Semi­te, Not Just a Naive Nazi

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC.

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Leonardo da Vinci’s Notebooks, Separated for 400 Years, Have Been Reunited and Put Online

Leonar­do da Vin­ci was a painter, draughts­man, engi­neer, sci­en­tist, the­o­rist, sculp­tor, and archi­tect, to pro­vide only his most wide­ly agreed-upon list of occu­pa­tions. It is he, more than any oth­er sin­gle fig­ure, who comes to mind when we think of the ide­al of the “Renais­sance man.” Though con­sid­ered rather less prac­ti­cal today than it was in fif­teenth-cen­tu­ry Italy, the relent­less quest­ing for both sci­en­tif­ic knowl­edge and artis­tic per­fec­tion implied by that title has nev­er entire­ly ceased to appeal. For aspir­ing mod­ern Renais­sance men, one of the most endur­ing sources of inspi­ra­tion remains Leonar­do’s own note­books, full of back­wards-writ­ten explo­rations of ideas both real­ized and unre­al­ized that move unpre­dictably from one intel­lec­tu­al domain to anoth­er.

That last qual­i­ty seems to have dis­pleased the sculp­tor Pom­peo Leoni, who even­tu­al­ly came into pos­ses­sion of Leonar­do’s note­books after they were inher­it­ed by his last stu­dent Francesco Melzi. Leoni “dis­mount­ed and cut the folios, sep­a­rat­ing the mate­ri­als into two albums accord­ing
to his own judge­ment,” notes the Ital­ian Embassy in Lon­don, “the larg­er por­tion for tech­ni­cal and sci­en­tif­ic top­ics,” and the small­er for “Leonardo’s artis­tic and fig­u­ra­tive work­ings.”

In the ear­ly sev­en­teenth cen­tu­ry, Leoni’s son-in-law sold the for­mer album, now known as the Codex Atlanti­cus, to a count who in turn donat­ed it to the Veneran­da Bib­liote­ca Ambrosiana; the lat­ter end­ed up in Eng­land’s Roy­al Col­lec­tion by 1670 or so. Only now have they been reunit­ed, thanks to a project called Leonar­dothe­ka.

The cul­mi­na­tion of a decade’s work involv­ing the Veneran­da Bib­liote­ca Ambrosiana as well as the Bib­liote­ca Leonar­diana and the Roy­al Col­lec­tion Trust, Leonar­dothe­ka dig­i­tal­ly reunites those albums after four cen­turies apart. Such a task also entailed the recon­struc­tion of 50 long-sun­dered indi­vid­ual pages and their replace­ment into their orig­i­nal con­text. The note­books com­bined “decades of anatom­i­cal stud­ies, fly­ing machines, land­scapes, and gro­cery-list-adja­cent mus­ings, all tan­gled togeth­er the way Leonar­do’s mind may have worked,” writes Anas­ta­sia Scott at Dis­cov­er. Yet he’d “like­ly nev­er intend­ed to sep­a­rate art from sci­ence in the first place. A sin­gle page might hold a machine, a horse, and a poem, and Leoni sev­ered con­nec­tions the artist had made on pur­pose.” With those con­nec­tions restored, we here in the twen­ty-twen­ties — a time plagued by its own doubts about the rela­tion­ship between what we now call “human­i­ties” and “STEM” — can see once again how a real Renais­sance mind worked. Enter the Leonar­dothe­ka here.

via Kot­tke

Relat­ed con­tent:

A Com­plete Dig­i­ti­za­tion of Leonar­do Da Vinci’s Codex Atlanti­cus, the Largest Col­lec­tion of His Draw­ings & Writ­ings

Leonar­do da Vinci’s Vision­ary Inven­tions Ren­dered in 3D Ani­ma­tion: Heli­copters, Robot­ic Knights, The First Ever Div­ing Suit & More

Why Did Leonar­do da Vin­ci Write Back­wards? A Look Into the Ulti­mate Renais­sance Man’s “Mir­ror Writ­ing”

The Doo­dles in Leonar­do da Vinci’s Man­u­scripts Con­tain His Ground­break­ing The­o­ries on the Laws of Fric­tion, Sci­en­tists Dis­cov­er

Leonar­do da Vinci’s Hand­writ­ten Resume (Cir­ca 1482)

Leonar­do da Vinci’s To-Do List from 1490: The Plan of a Renais­sance Man

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

How to Cook Like Frida Kahlo & Georgia O’Keeffe

It’s a myth that starv­ing artists don’t eat.

They do, just not often or well. Their meals rarely rate recipes, let alone cook­books.

Those cook­books do exist though.…

The most­ly con­cep­tu­al Starv­ing Artist Cook­book put togeth­er by EIDIA (aka artists Paul Lamarre and Melis­sa Wolf) comes close to the spir­it of sus­tain­ing life through mea­ger ingre­di­ents… like spaghet­ti or 4 pages of shred­ded Prav­da.

Not so this oth­er title, which approach­es cute over­load with an abun­dance of Insta­gram-wor­thy illus­trat­ed fare—mojitos, an unstruc­tured berry tart, a “man­ly” burg­er.…

Do “starv­ing” artists no longer fear being out­ed as posers?

Suc­cess­ful artists may not wor­ry about that, as they eat what­ev­er and how­ev­er they want.

Andy Warhol had the taste of an eccen­tric child.

Mari­na Abramović takes the ascetic route.

Many have glad­ly trad­ed the can­dle in the Chi­anti bot­tle for the most rar­efied restau­rants in town.

Geor­gia O’Keeffe and Fri­da Kahlo, PBS Dig­i­tal Stu­dios’ series the Art Assign­ment informed us, took cooking—and eating—seriously.

So seri­ous­ly, their culi­nary efforts led to cook­books, which the Art Assignment’s host, cura­tor Sarah Urist Green, tried out on cam­era.

O’Keeffe, who grew up in Wis­con­sin on home­made yogurt, home­made cheese, and plen­ti­ful home­grown pro­duce, ground her own flour in order to bake dai­ly loaves of whole wheat bread.

Green treats view­ers to a brief overview of O’Keeffe’s life and work as she strug­gles with the grinder. (You might get the same, or bet­ter, results if you take a $5 bill to a good bak­ery right at open­ing.)

She also tack­les the wheat germ Tiger’s Milk smooth­ie advo­cat­ed by Adelle Davis, a nutri­tion­ist whom O’Keeffe admired, and Green Chiles with Gar­lic and Oil and Fried Eggs, using recipes from the cook­books A Painter’s Kitchen and Din­ner with Geor­gia O’Keeffe.

Before attempt­ing the same, you might want to watch the Kahlo-cen­tric episode, above, in which Green dis­cov­ers a much bet­ter method for roast­ing the poblano pep­pers she hap­less­ly sub­sti­tut­ed for New Mex­i­co chiles in O’Keeffe’s egg dish.

Here, they’re used for Chiles Rel­lenos, a dish whose pro­nun­ci­a­tion the self-effac­ing Green butch­ers, along with a mul­ti­tude of oth­er Span­ish phras­es, a fact not lost on the video’s Youtube com­menters. They also take issue with the pres­ence of plan­tains, her prepa­ra­tion of the Nopales Sal­ad, and her cook­ing skills in gen­er­al. No won­der Green—a self-pro­claimed wussy where ser­ra­nos are concerned—seems so eager to reach for a shot of tequi­la as din­ner is final­ly served.

Green chose the dish­es for this episode from Frida’s Fies­tas: Recipes and Rem­i­nis­cences of Life with Fri­da Kahlo by Marie-Pierre Colle and Kahlo’s step­daugh­ter, Guadalupe Rivera.

Kahlo her­self learned to cook from her mother’s copy of El Nue­vo Cocinero Meji­cano, and from hus­band Diego Rivera’s first wife, Guadalupe (lead­ing one to won­der if some of that cook­book’s recipes aren’t mis­at­trib­uted to the more famous cook).

As with the O’Keeffe video and the cook­books cit­ed here­in, there’s a wealth of vin­tage pho­tos and repro­duced art­work on dis­play.

Even though Green alludes to Kahlo’s dark side, sen­si­tive stom­achs might have trou­ble with the inclu­sion of the graph­i­cal­ly vio­lent Unos Quan­tos Piqueti­tos. Anoth­er paint­ing, My Nurse and I is at least relat­ed to eat­ing, if not cook­ing and recipes.

Those with stom­achs of steel on the oth­er hand can con­tin­ue on to anoth­er Art Assignment—the supreme­ly gross Meat Sculp­ture from the Futur­ist Cook­book.

Note: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this post appeared on our site in 2017.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

The Futur­ist Cook­book (1930) Tried to Turn Ital­ian Cui­sine into Mod­ern Art

The Recipes of Famous Artists: Din­ners & Cock­tails From Tol­stoy, Miles Davis, Mar­i­lyn Mon­roe, David Lynch & Many More

MoMA’s Artists’ Cook­book (1978) Reveals the Meals of Sal­vador Dalí, Willem de Koon­ing, Andy Warhol, Louise Bour­geois & More

Sal­vador Dalí’s 1973 Cook­book Gets Reis­sued: Sur­re­al­ist Art Meets Haute Cui­sine

Andy Warhol’s Vibrant, Imprac­ti­cal, Illus­trat­ed Cook­book from 1959: A Feast for the Eyes

Ayun Hal­l­i­day is an author, illus­tra­tor, the­ater mak­er in NYC.

This Man Has Been Drawing a Map of an Imaginary Land Since 1963

At one time or anoth­er, we all feel twinges of anx­i­ety about what will con­sti­tute the lega­cy we leave behind. Jer­ry Gret­zinger may well be sub­ject to just the same dis­com­fort, but at least he can point to the Map: an enor­mous rep­re­sen­ta­tion, made of thou­sands and thou­sands of indi­vid­u­al­ly cre­at­ed and con­tin­u­al­ly mod­i­fied pan­els, of an entire­ly fic­tion­al land called Ukra­nia. You can see Jer­ry’s Map painstak­ing­ly laid out in its most up-to-date state in the new Peo­ple Make Games video above. As inter­est­ing as the prod­uct is so far, the work that goes into it is just as com­pelling, which Gret­zinger per­forms every day accord­ing to a com­plex and strict­ly defined set of pro­ce­dures dic­tat­ed by a deck of heav­i­ly mod­i­fied play­ing cards.

It would take an astute lis­ten­er to grasp the rules of the project the first time through, but they’re also avail­able for sup­ple­men­tary study at the offi­cial site of Gret­zinger’s map. They may bring to mind Bri­an Eno’s Oblique Strate­gies, the deck of cards print­ed with sug­ges­tions meant to dis­lodge cre­ative jams in the music stu­dio or else­where.

The map itself may look more rem­i­nis­cent of the work of Hen­ry Darg­er, anoth­er “out­sider artist” who pro­duced riots of col­or and hap­haz­ard-look­ing mate­ri­als with an obses­sive under­ly­ing order of their own. But unlike Darg­er, who died in obscu­ri­ty only for his askew epics to be dis­cov­ered among his belong­ings, Gret­zinger has become famous for his cre­ation in his life­time, so much so that there exists an active sub­red­dit of ama­teurs fol­low­ing his exam­ple.

Still, the Map did first have to be redis­cov­ered. What Gret­zinger began as the expan­sion of idle doo­dles in urban form made dur­ing breaks at the ball bear­ing fac­to­ry in 1963 had to be shelved in the eight­ies, when a cloth­ing busi­ness he’d start­ed with his wife took off. A cou­ple of decades there­after, his son’s dis­cov­ery of the Map in the attic inspired Gret­zinger to resume work on it, which has con­tin­ued apace ever since. When inter­viewed, he sounds less like a cre­ator than an observ­er, help­less­ly watch­ing as the city of Ukra­nia becomes more abstract as it grows — and as great swathes are inex­orably con­sumed by a white space, made of scraps of his own cor­re­spon­dence and oth­er life arti­facts, that he por­ten­tous­ly calls “the Void.” Now that he’s in his mid-eight­ies, Gret­zinger appears to find it all more freight­ed with mean­ing than ever. Soon­er or lat­er, alas the Void comes for us all; what’s left to us is how we pre­pare for it.

via Metafil­ter

Relat­ed con­tent:

Invis­i­ble Cities Illus­trat­ed: Artist Illus­trates Each and Every City in Ita­lo Calvino’s Clas­sic Nov­el

Japan­ese Design­er Cre­ates Incred­i­bly Detailed & Real­is­tic Maps of a City That Doesn’t Exist

William Faulkn­er Draws Maps of Yok­na­p­ataw­pha Coun­ty, the Fic­tion­al Home of His Great Nov­els

Map of Mid­dle-Earth Anno­tat­ed by Tolkien Found in a Copy of Lord of the Rings

The Medieval City Plan Gen­er­a­tor: A Fun Way to Cre­ate Your Own Imag­i­nary Medieval Cities

An Intro­duc­tion to Out­sider Artist Hen­ry Darg­er and His Bizarre 15,000-Page Illus­trat­ed Mas­ter­work

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

How Can I Know Right From Wrong? Watch Philosophy Animations on Ethics Narrated by Harry Shearer

The his­to­ry of moral phi­los­o­phy in the West hinges prin­ci­pal­ly on a hand­ful of ques­tions: Is there a God of some sort? An after­life? Free will? And, per­haps most press­ing­ly for human­ists, what exact­ly is the nature of our oblig­a­tions to oth­ers? The lat­ter ques­tion has long occu­pied philoso­phers like Immanuel Kant, whose extreme formulation—the “cat­e­gor­i­cal imperative”—flatly rules out mak­ing eth­i­cal deci­sions depen­dent upon par­tic­u­lar sit­u­a­tions. Kant’s famous exam­ple, one that gen­er­al­ly gets repeat­ed with a nod to God­win, involves an axe mur­der­er show­ing up at your door and ask­ing for the where­abouts of a vis­it­ing friend. In Kant’s esti­ma­tion, telling a lie in this case jus­ti­fies telling a lie at any time, for any rea­son. There­fore, it is uneth­i­cal.

In the video at the top of the post, Har­ry Shear­er nar­rates a script about Kant’s max­im writ­ten by philoso­pher Nigel War­bur­ton, with whim­si­cal illus­tra­tions pro­vid­ed by Cog­ni­tive. Part of the BBC and Open University’s “A His­to­ry of Ideas” series, the video—one of four deal­ing with moral philosophy—also explains how Kant’s approach to ethics dif­fers from those of util­i­tar­i­an­ism.

In the video above, Shear­er describes the most util­i­tar­i­an of thought exper­i­ments, the “Trol­ley Prob­lem.” As described by philoso­pher Philip­pa Foot, this sce­nario imag­ines hav­ing to sac­ri­fice the life of one for those of many. But there is a twist—the sec­ond ver­sion involves the added crime of phys­i­cal­ly mur­der­ing one per­son, up close and per­son­al, to save sev­er­al. An anal­o­gous but con­verse the­o­ry is that of philoso­pher Peter Singer (below) who pro­pos­es that our oblig­a­tions to peo­ple in per­il right in front of us equal our oblig­a­tions to those on the oth­er side of the world.

Final­ly, the last video sur­veys one of the thorni­est issues in moral philo­soph­i­cal history—the “is/ought” divide, as prob­lem­at­ic as the ancient Euthy­phro dilem­ma. How, asked David Hume, are we to deduce moral prin­ci­ples from facts about the world that have no moral dimen­sion? Par­tic­u­lar­ly when those facts are nev­er con­clu­sive, are sub­ject to revi­sion, and when new ones get uncov­ered all the time? The ques­tion intro­duces a seem­ing­ly unbridge­able chasm between facts and val­ues. Moral judg­ments found­ed on what is or isn’t “nat­ur­al” floun­der before our ter­ror of much of what nature does, and the very par­tial and fal­li­ble nature of our knowl­edge of it.

The prob­lem is as star­tling as Hume’s cri­tique of causal­i­ty, and in part caused Kant to remark that Hume had awak­ened him from a “dog­mat­ic slum­ber.” What may strike view­ers of the series is just how abstract these ques­tions and exam­ples are—how divorced from the messi­ness of real world pol­i­tics, with the excep­tion, per­haps, of Peter Singer. It may be instruc­tive that polit­i­cal phi­los­o­phy forms a sep­a­rate branch in the West. While these prob­lems are cer­tain­ly dif­fi­cult enough to trou­ble the sleep of just about any thought­ful per­son, in our day-to-day lives, our deci­sion mak­ing process seems to be much messier, and much more sit­u­a­tion­al, than we’re prob­a­bly ever aware of.

Note: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this post appeared on our site in 2015.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Free Online Phi­los­o­phy Cours­es

A His­to­ry of Ideas: Ani­mat­ed Videos Explain The­o­ries of Simone de Beau­voir, Edmund Burke & Oth­er Philoso­phers

How Did Every­thing Begin?: Ani­ma­tions on the Ori­gins of the Uni­verse Nar­rat­ed by X‑Files Star Gillian Ander­son

What Makes Us Human?: Chom­sky, Locke & Marx Intro­duced by New Ani­mat­ed Videos from the BBC

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC.

The History of Soccer and the World Cup: A Short Introduction

Every four years, human­i­ty under­goes a great increase in its num­ber of soc­cer fans — or rather, foot­ball fans, depend­ing on what part of the world we’re talk­ing about. That’s not to imply that the world oth­er­wise suf­fers from a dearth of enthu­si­asts of that par­tic­u­lar sport. Nor is foot­ball an obscure sec­ondary term: the lan­guage of most every coun­try obsessed with the thing itself has local­ized that name for it, result­ing in a vari­ety of words from fút­bol to fut­bol to fute­bol to Fußball. There remains the mat­ter of cal­cio, but then, Ital­ians have always done things their own way. So do Amer­i­cans, as this year’s World Cup has empha­sized, but you’ll find that soc­cer actu­al­ly turns out not to have orig­i­nat­ed as yet anoth­er awk­ward cus­tom exclu­sive to the Unit­ed States.

In fact, it derives from a few let­ters of the full British name of the game, “asso­ci­a­tion foot­ball.” Com­mon­ly heard in the U.K. up until the nine­teen-sev­en­ties, soc­cer even­tu­al­ly came in handy on the oth­er side of the pond to dif­fer­en­ti­ate it from what most of the world calls “Amer­i­can foot­ball.”

As explained in about 20 min­utes in the Geo His­to­ry video at the top of the post, the his­to­ry of soc­cer, foot­ball, fút­bol, or what­ev­er you may call it is full of facts that will sure­ly sur­prise those of who only pay it any atten­tion when the World Cup comes around — and may occa­sion­al­ly sur­prise the die-hards who live and breathe the game even dur­ing the off years. For a much deep­er (and more humor­ous) dive into a nar­row­er slice of the past, we also have this two-hour his­to­ry of the World Cup from foot­ball YouTu­ber Vizeh.

If you want to avoid a name spe­cif­ic to any one nation­al lan­guage, you can always refer to “the beau­ti­ful game,” but even if that adjec­tive applies to the action on the field, at least on a good day, it sits less eas­i­ly with the pol­i­tick­ing, back­bit­ing, and not-always-above-board deal­mak­ing char­ac­ter­is­tic of its busi­ness and admin­is­tra­tion at a glob­al scale. The whole enter­prise has come to rep­re­sent all the glo­ries and ugli­ness of moder­ni­ty, reduced to a rigid­ly stan­dard­ized bat­tle­field on which increas­ing­ly many nations of the world aspire to achieve first pres­ence, then dom­i­na­tion. For exam­ple, South Korea, where I live, has made its seri­ous­ness on the pitch suf­fi­cient­ly known over four straight decades of World Cup par­tic­i­pa­tion that you might want to learn the Kore­an word chukgu — at least if the com­ing match with South Africa goes its way.

Relat­ed con­tent:

Restored Footage from the First World Cup: Uruguay, 1930

Pelé’s Great World Cup Goals (RIP)

Albert Camus’ Lessons Learned from Play­ing Goalie: “What I Know Most Sure­ly about Moral­i­ty and Oblig­a­tions, I Owe to Foot­ball”

The Mon­ty Python Phi­los­o­phy Soc­cer Match: The Ancient Greeks Ver­sus the Ger­mans

Why Jorge Luis Borges Hat­ed Soc­cer: “Soc­cer is Pop­u­lar Because Stu­pid­i­ty is Pop­u­lar”

The Rules of 100 Sports Clear­ly Explained in Short Videos: Base­ball, Foot­ball, Jai Alai, Sumo Wrestling, Crick­et, Pétanque & Much More

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.

The Encyclopedia of Women Philosophers: A New Web Site Presents the Contributions of Women Philosophers, from Ancient to Modern

In a con­ver­sa­tion with Julian Bag­gi­ni on why there are so few women in aca­d­e­m­ic phi­los­o­phy, Mary Warnock once not­ed that “of all the human­i­ties depart­ments in British uni­ver­si­ties, only phi­los­o­phy depart­ments have a mere 25% women mem­bers.” That num­ber is even low­er in the US. “Why should this be?” Warnock asked. She assert­ed that the prob­lem may lie with the dis­ci­pline itself. “I think that aca­d­e­m­ic phi­los­o­phy has become an extra­or­di­nar­i­ly inward-look­ing sub­ject,” she said, “If you pick up a pro­fes­sion­al jour­nal now, you find lit­tle nit­pick­ing respons­es to pre­vi­ous arti­cles. Women tend to get more eas­i­ly bored with this than men. Phi­los­o­phy seems to stop being inter­est­ing just when it starts to be pro­fes­sion­al.”

It’s a provoca­tive claim, one I’m sure many women in phi­los­o­phy would con­test, though the more gen­er­al idea that aca­d­e­m­ic phi­los­o­phy has become an arid prac­tice divorced from real life con­cerns might have wider sup­port. The data on women in aca­d­e­m­ic phi­los­o­phy presents a very com­plex pic­ture. “No sin­gle inter­ven­tion is like­ly to change the cli­mate,” as Tania Lom­bro­zo writes at NPR. Explic­it and implic­it bias­es do play a role, as do instances of sex­u­al harass­ment and coer­cion by those in posi­tions of pow­er. But anoth­er sig­nif­i­cant issue Warnock seemed to ignore is the way that phi­los­o­phy is gen­er­al­ly taught at the under­grad­u­ate lev­el.

In the research on which Lom­bro­zo reports, stud­ies found that “the biggest drop in the pro­por­tion of women in the phi­los­o­phy pipeline seems to be from enroll­ment in an intro­duc­to­ry phi­los­o­phy class to becom­ing a phi­los­o­phy major. At Geor­gia State, for exam­ple, women make up about 55 per­cent of Intro­duc­tion to Phi­los­o­phy stu­dents but only around 33 per­cent of phi­los­o­phy majors.” This may have to do with the fact that “read­ings on the syl­labus were over­whelm­ing­ly by men (over 89 per­cent).” As Geor­gia State grad­u­ate stu­dent Mor­gan Thomp­son explained at a con­fer­ence in 2013:

This prob­lem is com­pound­ed by the fact that intro­duc­to­ry phi­los­o­phy text­books have an even worse gen­der bal­ance; women account for only 6 per­cent of authors in a num­ber of intro­duc­to­ry phi­los­o­phy text­books.

Does this dis­par­i­ty reflect an unal­ter­able truth about the his­to­ry of phi­los­o­phy? No, and it can very well be reme­died. The Cen­ter for the His­to­ry of Women Philoso­phers and Sci­en­tists is work­ing to do that with a new site, the Ency­clo­pe­dia of Con­cise Con­cepts by Women Philoso­phers. The joint project of Pader­born University’s Ruth Hagen­gru­ber and Cleve­land State’s Mary Ellen Wait­he, this resource aims to intro­duce “women philoso­phers who most­ly have been omit­ted from the philo­soph­i­cal canon despite their his­tor­i­cal and philo­soph­i­cal influ­ence.” So far, reports Dai­ly Nous, “there are around 100 entries… with more to be added every few months.”

Each entry is writ­ten by a rec­og­nized schol­ar. The easy-to-nav­i­gate site has four main sec­tions: Con­cepts, Key­words, Philoso­phers, and Con­trib­u­tors. There are a few names most peo­ple will rec­og­nize, like Mary Woll­stonecraft, Ayn Rand, and Simone de Beau­voir. But most of these thinkers will seem obscure, despite their mean­ing­ful con­tri­bu­tions to var­i­ous fields of thought. Inte­grat­ing these philoso­phers into syl­labi and text­books could go a long way toward retain­ing women in phi­los­o­phy depart­ments. As impor­tant­ly, it will broad­en the tra­di­tion, giv­ing all stu­dents a wider range of per­spec­tives.

For exam­ple, much of the aca­d­e­m­ic work on social ethics in democ­ra­cy might ref­er­ence Adam Smith’s “The­o­ry of Moral Sen­ti­ments” or the pro­lif­ic 20th cen­tu­ry work of John Dewey. But it might over­look the work of Dewey’s con­tem­po­rary Jane Addams (top), who also wrote crit­i­cal stud­ies on democ­ra­cy and edu­ca­tion and who “sees a con­nec­tion,” writes Mau­rice Ham­ing­ton in a short entry about her, “between sym­pa­thet­ic under­stand­ing and a robust democ­ra­cy.… For Addams, it is cru­cial that cit­i­zens in a democ­ra­cy engage with one anoth­er to reach across dif­fer­ence to care and find com­mon cause.”

Addams brought her philo­soph­i­cal con­cerns into real world prac­tice. She made impor­tant inter­ven­tions in the treat­ment of immi­grants and African-Amer­i­cans in Chica­go, sup­port­ed work­ing moth­ers, and helped pass child pro­tec­tion laws and end child labor. But while she has long been renowned as a social reformer and Nobel Peace Prize win­ner, “the dynam­ics of canon for­ma­tion,” notes the Stan­ford Ency­clo­pe­dia of Phi­los­o­phy, “result­ed in her philo­soph­i­cal work being large­ly ignored until the 1990s.” Now, many philoso­phers rec­og­nize that works like Democ­ra­cy and Social Ethics antic­i­pat­ed key con­tem­po­rary issues in polit­i­cal phi­los­o­phy a cen­tu­ry ago.

Oth­er thinkers in the Ency­clo­pe­dia of Con­cise Con­cepts by Women Philoso­phers like Dio­ti­ma of Man­ti­nea (whom Socrates revered) and ear­ly Amer­i­can thinker Mer­cy Otis War­ren made impor­tant con­tri­bu­tions to the the­o­ries of beau­ty and gov­ern­ment, respec­tive­ly. Yet they may receive no more than a foot­note in most under­grad­u­ate phi­los­o­phy cours­es. This may have less to do with explic­it bias than with the way pro­fes­sors them­selves have been edu­cat­ed. But the his­to­ry, and cur­rent prac­tice, of phi­los­o­phy needs the inclu­sion of these views. Learn more about many his­tor­i­cal­ly over­looked women in phi­los­o­phy at the Ency­clo­pe­dia here.

Note: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this post appeared on our site in 2018.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Meet Héloïse, the Medieval Woman Philoso­pher Who Turned a Doomed Love Affair into a Med­i­ta­tion on Ethics

The Con­tri­bu­tions of Women Philoso­phers Recov­ered by the New Project Vox Web­site

An Ani­mat­ed Intro­duc­tion to the Fem­i­nist Phi­los­o­phy of Simone de Beau­voir

The Map of Phi­los­o­phy: See All of the Dis­ci­plines, Areas & Sub­di­vi­sions of Phi­los­o­phy Mapped in a Com­pre­hen­sive Video

An Ani­mat­ed Intro­duc­tion to the Fem­i­nist Phi­los­o­phy of Simone de Beau­voir

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC. 


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