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Gord Barentsen

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Blog Entries posted by Gord Barentsen

  1. Gord Barentsen
    Hello,
    My apologies to anyone who might be looking to register on the site, but email addresses with mail.com will not be allowed on the site, as their servers are set up to automatically reject SMTP emails, which is what this server uses.  So Members or Tutor Clients with mail.com email addresses wouldn't be able to receive any notifications or updates via email.
    Sorry for the inconvenience, but it's easy enough to get an email account with Outlook or Gmail.
  2. Gord Barentsen
    Just a note to let all Tutor Clients know that they no longer have Forums where they previously were.  Instead, all Tutor Clients have their assets and accounts moved to private Domains in the new Domains section of the website.
    All of you should now have correct access; if you can't get into your areas, please PM me.  Thanks!
  3. Gord Barentsen
    Hello all,
    Since this site will be "officially" going live in the next while, I wanted to draw your attention to some coding-related issues which affect how the two newer themes (Dashboard, Chameleon) display.
    In short, you will see the odd part of a webpage which seems to have no background, where the text at times can be very difficult to read against the static background graphics.  This apparently has to do with the way certain blocks of code were formatted in Invision's CSS, and I am waiting on this issue to be resolved (it affects many other people out there as well!).
    So if you want to see everything without these formatting issues, I suggest you use the default LF_Blue theme - there's no background eyecandy, but everything will display fine.  Of course, registered Members are still free to use the new themes...everything works fine - it's just the odd display block that's affected.
    Invision promise to address it as soon as they can; you'll know as soon as I do!
    Note: as I've said before, while they will display on mobile screens the newer themes are too involved to display correctly on mobile devices - they're more for the desktop/laptop/tablet experience.  I recommend using the default LF_Blue theme, which is much easier on your mobile bandwidth anyway. 
  4. Gord Barentsen
    Hello,
    LiquidFractal is pleased to welcome the Complex Processes Research Group, based in Swinburne University, Melbourne, Australia!
    The CPRG is a reading and research group centered around the process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead and Charles Peirce, but the intellectual history of process philosophy extends further back to Friedrich Schelling as perhaps the first process philosopher.  Process philosophy essentially emphasises becoming and unfolding over rigid, static paradigms, and is sometimes marked by a desire to reconcile the various aspects of human experience (scientific, religious, political) into a coherent, holistic whole.  As to what this "whole" ultimately looks like and how it functions, well, that will be the subject of many, many interesting discussions to come.
    A warm welcome to the CPRG at LiquidFractal!  For more information, please visit the CPRG Space.
     
  5. Gord Barentsen
    Well...in and amidst preparing chapters for publication, reading, research, and squeezing a couple of new Tutor Clients in to the mix, I'm pleased to announce something I've wanted to add to the community for some time now - the LiquidFractal Public Humanities Initiative!
    The PHI is designed to bridge the stereotypical gap between scholarly research and what some people still so quaintly call (in the age of Trump!) "the real world."  Articles in Public Humanities are meant to showcase research and deepen understanding of philosophical issues in ways which resonate with people inside and outside the academy.
    Open Learning is all about breaking down these faux boundaries and making knowledge available to everyone, but this doesn't mean commodifying ideas and watering them down to make them more "marketable" or "palatable."  So even if there are philosophical concepts and technical jargon, the idea is for both sides of the divide to talk to each other and ask questions.
    You can access the Public Humanities area off the Content option in the top menu, or if you're lazy like me and just want a link....
    https://www.liquidfractal.org/research/public-humanities/
    The first PHI contribution is a shortened, abbreviated version of an article due for publication in Cosmos and History.  It focuses on Schelling's idea of Nature and the implications it has for the notion of an "ecological civilisation," which is seen as a counterbalance to the neoliberalist objectification and plundering of the environment.  Other articles may well be more informal in nature; the idea is to present a varied and organic selection of thinking and scholarship.
    Enjoy, and as always post your suggestions and ideas!
  6. Gord Barentsen
    Hello,
    I have had a paper recently published in Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy!
    The full citation:
    Gord Barentsen, "Schelling's Dark Nature and the Prospects for 'Ecological Civilisation'," Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 15.1 (2019): 91-116.
    It's open access, so I've included the PDF for anyone interested.
    Cosmos and History
     
    Barentsen, Schelling's Dark Nature and the Prospects for 'Ecological Civilisation'.pdf
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