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Brady Hurlburt / microblog (rss)


2022-07-05

Here we go again.


2022-06-20

Brown sugar is like, whole-wheat sugar, right?


2022-06-20

This is my first post from the Ruby client I just wrote. I can now post quickly from the CLI. Look for quality to take a sharp downturn.


2022-05-01

Love Wins book cover

Love Wins by Rob Bell.

Why did nobody tell me ten years ago that Love Wins is just a Great Divorce study guide? American Evangelicals making any claim on C.S. Lewis is ridiculous, because The Gospel Coalition blog would immediately declare him a wolf.

The final chapter is a telling of the Gospel that is indistinguishable from (and accredited to) Tim Keller’s. It wasn’t weakened by following the “we all eventually turn away from Hell” chapter; on the contrary, I felt it more powerfully than I have anything in a long time.


2022-03-15

Democracy and Education book cover

Democracy and Education by John Dewey. 🎧

There’s so much in this book, but I lived in “Chapter 23: Vocational Aspects of Education” for a while. (Emphasis below is mine.)

There is a standing danger that education will perpetuate the older traditions for a select few, and effect its adjustment to the newer economic conditions more or less on the basis of acquiescence in the untransformed, unrationalized, and unsocialized phases of our defective industrial regime. Put in concrete terms, there is danger that vocational education will be interpreted in theory and practice as trade education: as a means of securing technical efficiency in specialized future pursuits. Education would then become an instrument of perpetuating unchanged the existing industrial order of society, instead of operating as a means of its transformation. The desired transformation is not difficult to define in a formal way. It signifies a society in which every person shall be occupied in something which makes the lives of others better worth living, and which accordingly makes the ties which bind persons together more perceptible—which breaks down the barriers of distance between them. It denotes a state of affairs in which the interest of each in his work is uncoerced and intelligent: based upon its congeniality to his own aptitudes. It goes without saying that we are far from such a social state; in a literal and quantitative sense, we may never arrive at it. But in principle, the quality of social changes already accomplished lies in this direction. There are more ample resources for its achievement now than ever there have been before. No insuperable obstacles, given the intelligent will for its realization, stand in the way.

Dewey argues that all education should be vocational education (“The only adequate training for occupations is training through occupations” is perhaps the most frequent statement in the entire book) so long as we remember that:

Keeping these things in mind prevents vocational education from perpetuating separation between leisure and working classes.