Hi, all,
Once you become aware of abduction as a mental operation, you start to see it everywhere. I saw it in Malcom Gladwell's three part series ( https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-standard-case/id1119389968?i=10004 44756825; https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/dr-rocks-taxonomy/id1119389968?i=10004 45285031; https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/descend-into-the-particular/id11193899 68?i=1000445850049)on Jesuitical casuistry. I always thought of casuistry as a form of sophistry or hypocrisy, but apparently it began is as method for incorporating the new experiences that global travel brought to the 16th Century Catholic World. As an inquiry into the identity of a particular case, it looks a lot like abduction to me. Because many of you live in NM, you may take particular interest in the third episode, which presents an analysis of the Angelo Navarro shooting by Albuquerque police. Was it case of a violent man charging the police with a weapon? Or was it the case of a racially motivated firing squad of unarmed men by heavily armed police? Or, ..? You would get a lot of benefit from just listening to this one episode, but to fully understand its philosophical impact, you need the other two to set the context. Enjoy. Or not. Nick P. S., Does anybody know anything about the relation between Peirce and the Jesuits? Nicholas S. Thompson Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
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