At this time of year (August/September) the Royal Academy of Arts is usually bustling, if not bursting, with visitors to the Summer Exhibition of all-comers’ art, of all qualities and none. It’s not just an exhibition to be viewed- with reverence, excitement or raised eyebrows; it’s also a fair. The art is mostly for sale. Little red “sold” dots grow like pondweed under many of the works (especially the prints).
Monday, August 31, 2020
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Walking Near Combe, West Berkshire
Walking Near Combe, West Berkshire
The highest point in Southern England (an area of fluid definition) is at, or vey near, Walbury Hill in West Berkshire, on the edge of that region of the Downs facing the Kennet Valley (in modern parlance, the M4 valley).
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Being a Zoom Student
Being a Zoom Student
Many months ago, I signed up to a summer art history course at the Courtauld Institute: a week’s intensive study of Manet and Cezanne. The course would include guided time looking at works by these artists in the Courtauld’s gem of an art gallery in Somerset House. Alas, the suffocating blanket of Lockdown fell on us all. The Summer School was in jeopardy.
The Courtauld decided to move some of the courses online, including mine, discounting for the lack of the real art. So it was, in mid-July, that some 20 students filed into a virtual lecture hall via their “devices” (the preferred, rather old fashioned, word for all our phones, tablets, lap and desktops).
Saturday, July 4, 2020
The Covid Trolley Problem
The Covid Trolley Problem
Every student of modern Anglophone philosophy is familiar with the “Trolley Problem”, a thought experiment designed to tease out our moral intuitions when confronted with life-and-death dilemmas.
Saturday, May 30, 2020
Hobbes's Leviathan in the time of Coronavirus
Hobbes’s Leviathan in the Time of Coronavirus
Thomas Hobbes’s famous treatise on political philosophy, Leviathan (published 1651) has been the subject of a couple of recent articles (May 2020). In The Guardian the political philosopher David Runciman writes that the imposition of national lockdown displays the raw power of governments over their subject citizens, in ways that Hobbes would have recognised and indeed advocated.
Monday, May 11, 2020
Spanish Walk Before The Lockdown
Before the Lockdown – a Last Hike in Spain
Long ago – you must forgive my faltering memory; age and distance make things so blurred, and ancient events hold on by their fingertips, and then drop away. It must have been March 2020 (can you remember then?).
Well, in those times, I went walking in the sierra behind Nerja, guided with friendship and expertise by professional guide, John Keo.
Monday, May 4, 2020
Cars in the Lockdown
Cars as Garden Sheds and Other Uses
In these days of sparse traffic, even if volumes are slowly increasing, I’ve come to note certain features of the vehicle use that still persists.
I leave to one side the obvious – the great numbers of delivery vans chasing after their time slots, and the ghostly empty (at most times of the day) buses.
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