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We’re All Missourians Now

Politics

Kevin Hilke

“The challenge for all of us,” as Obama said yesterday, “is to identify good ideas.” And so Vandiver’s demand, the demand to roundly understand, must become our own. Having something shown to you in the Missourian sense is a process not of credulous reception but of active and incessant evaluation. For the product of the pragmatic Missourian’s deep skepticism, his demand to know not only the what but also the why of the what, is precisely the elimination of unworkable ideas in favor of workable ones. His search for proof is a continual querying and reconfirming of both the proof itself and the integrity of the criteria from which the proof derives meaning and legitimacy. We must help Obama find or create his whys and whats, and to articulate useful, socially productive, and popularly understandable relationships among them. Being shown is not a passive process. Proof, telling or irrelevant, genuine or counterfeit, is not found but made, and our new president has only two hands.

Snapshots of Proof: Sloppy Thinking on Climate Change

Politics

Kevin Hilke

Lest we dismiss the effects of dogged right-wing psychosis on the issue of climate change as innocuous, now come reports that The Politico reporter Erika Lovley, instead of researching her stories dealing with climate change, has been parroting long discredited right-wing talking points lifted from Congressional Republicans’ press releases. Lovley’s negligence here has nothing to do with her climate-change expertise or lack thereof, though some expertise couldn’t have hurt. Her negligence, like that of so many others in the media and certain wings of the social sciences, consists in never having been persistently trained in the art of rigorous thinking.

The Plasma Spring