Hey All,

Not sure if this op piece was mentioned before (I searched my email, didn't see 
any mention of the author so I am guessing not). This is from the New York 
Times "The Stone" series. "When Philosophy Lost It's Way" by Robert Frodeman 
and Adam Briggle from earlier this year (Jan 2016). 

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2016/01/11/when-philosophy-lost-its-way/

There are two main points in this article. Although Pirsig is not cited, its 
hard to imagine the authors are not drawing from ZMM (or Dewey's later works).

The first point is the "sterilization" of philosophy as a process of removing 
it from 'everyday lived experience'. "Philosophy, then, as the French thinker 
Bruno Latour would have it, was “purified” — separated from society in the 
process of modernization."

The second point is a "sterilization" of philosophy in the following way. 
"There is another layer to this story. The act of purification accompanying the 
creation of the modern research university was not just about differentiating 
realms of knowledge. It was also about divorcing knowledge from virtue. ... 
Knowing and being good were intimately linked."

The authors conclude, "The point of philosophy now is to be smart, not good. It 
has been the heart of our undoing."

I'm not presenting this short article as anything I expect any of you to find 
earth-shattering, this is ground that Pirsig (and others) exposed decades ago. 
But I thought, since appeared very recently in the NYT, it would be worth 
sharing.

Arlo

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