Hi David,
Interesting Stanford article about The Farm in the 1960s ... http://news.stanford.edu/2017/ 07/23/1967-year-summer-love- stanford/
1967: The year of the Summer of Love at Stanford
Stanford students celebrated the counterculture hippie movement with their own be-ins, concerts and protests in the darkening shadow of the Vietnam War.
And in this article is this reference ...Trip: http://stanforddailyarchive. com/cgi-bin/stanford?a=d&d= stanford19670131-01.2.15 ... and a link to a Stanford professor - https://history.stanford.edu/ people/mark-mancall - who might have knowledge of some of this.
Farm at Stanford in 60s https://t.co/E7OBl6JOcd What was it/Harbin's relationship like? https://t.co/izC80n0zsy— HarbinBook (@HarbinBook) August 24, 2017
(-https://t.co/vBkgXM8kgv )
https://twitter.com/
Thanks for sharing your thoughts via Nancy about slowing the "development" down on Cuttyhunk.
Great!
Scott
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Hi David,
Nice to talk recently.
More about tmThe Farm in Tennessee here ...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/ wiki/The_Farm_(Tennessee) ... and here ...
http://thefarmcommunity.com ... and which looks like its still going, emerging from the 1960s somewhat continuously ... wonder what it's like on the ground (and re Harbin) ...
Wonder too what sort of gathering and totality emerged there for the eclipse.
Fond regards,
Scott
Scott
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Richard Rorty (1931–2007) developed a distinctive and controversial brand of pragmatism that expressed itself along two main axes. One is negative—a critical diagnosis of what Rorty takes to be defining projects of modern philosophy. The other is positive—an attempt to show what intellectual culture might look like, once we free ourselves from the governing metaphors of mind and knowledge in which the traditional problems of epistemology and metaphysics (and indeed, in Rorty's view, the self-conception of modern philosophy) are rooted. ... https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rorty/
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Thanks, Richard Rorty ! > ? https://t.co/SBOyr3aVNb— scottmacleod (@scottmacleod) August 22, 2017
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Philosophy is blind to its— Jan Mieszkowski (@janmpdx) August 22, 2017
Descartes: own premises
Kant: own premises
Hegel: own premises
Marx: own premises
Nietzsche: own non-existence
https://twitter.com/janmpdx/status/899822847547252737
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Is Harbin Hot Springs similar to CANYON: THE STORY OF THE LAST RUSTIC COMMUNITY IN METROPOLITAN AMERICA— HarbinBook (@HarbinBook) August 24, 2017
Van der Zee https://t.co/moHEBwl9F1?
https://twitter.com/HarbinBook/status/900784676926652416
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