I thought some might be interested in this comment on Angell Dust:
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Date: Tue, 01 Dec 1998 15:07:09 +0900
To: Caspar Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From: Hendrik
Subject: Re: More Angell Dust
Hi Caspar,
some background information on Professor Ian O. Angell:
1) A very short bio with picture:
http://www.lse.ac.uk/experts/information/angelli.htm
2) A list of papers:
http://www.csrc.lse.ac.uk/Academic_Papers/List_of_Papers.htm
The second article on that list appears to be an older version of the
paper
that you sent me a copy of.
From reading some of his stuff i think that he is serious as far as the
facts and trends are concerned that he comments on. I suspect that he does
what Jonathan Swift did, namely speak out the usually unspoken in order to
help us be/become aware of the moral questions we will have to face in the
context of technological and social development (perhaps hoping we
will make
moral decisions that balance the "raw" evolution that he defines in
terms of
power). I think someone like him, who is willing to think things
through, is
doing us a great service. A "side thought": there is a book (i have
forgotten who the author is) called "A Criminal History of the World" - in
it the author says, like Angell in one of his papers, that our view of
criminality is misguided and thus leads to ineffective action...
I relish living in this present time where i have access to seemingly
limitless information (i am not sure that this bounty will always be there
for me), and i am, like Angell, Theobald, and others, convinced that the
kinds and magnitude of the changes we are already beginning to see will be
psychologically unmanageable for many, perhaps most people, presently
alive...
All the best: Hendrik
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Caspar Davis
Victoria, B.C., Canada
A wall of infinite dimension stands before the course of human evolution.
It is the finitude of the earth and its resources.
--Steve Morningthunder