Bio

I went to grad school in English for a while but ended up spending a lot of my time living abroad and doing some desultory reading. After quitting my doctoral program, I taught English at a private HS for four years. Now I'm married, live in San Francisco, and help to run a tutoring company on the peninsula.


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J. D. Fitzpatrick's Profile

J. D. Fitzpatrick
Name:
J. D. Fitzpatrick
Hometown:
San Francisco, CA
Joined:
Oct 23, 2010

Recent Comments

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Trink: Why do we not hear voices . . . words . .  truths . . like Dave's - from the lecterns of Congress?

Why? · 13 hours ago

Probably because they spend more time campaigning than studying the Constitution

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Pseudodionysius

Do you really need historical context to understand or Macbeth?

Understand enough of the Classical underpinnings and Catholic allusions to purgatorial ghosts as well as the rhetorical tropes and schemes isn't a trivial exercise, which is why Jacques Barzun -- to cite but one example -- thought teaching Shakespeare's plays to high school students was largely a waste of time. He believed it much better to pick only one, do it well, and teach it in the final year of high school (I quote from memory but I think it wasTeacher in America).

Well, there's certainly enough difficulty in Shakespeare to merit several supplementary courses worth of background material, have the teacher world enough and time. And Barzun's approach probably has its merits; an Englishwoman told me she didn't appreciate Shakespeare until the year her English teacher took most of a term to cover Richard II line by line. 

Still, there's a 5th-grade teacher in LA who has his students study and perform A Midsummer Night's Dream each year, so there must be some aspect of the plays that students can appreciate before they start planning for senior prom. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

As for whether to read The Crucible, a lot depends on your goals for the course. I regard the play as a good mid-level read; the average 10th-grader can handle it without too much difficulty. Some schools teach both it and Salesman

What I don't understand is how The Red Badge of Courage fell off so many syllabi. Is The Kite Runner really better?

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Larry Koler The notion of kangaroo courts and witch trials is one that applies to all times but it is interesting that the left's proclivity to project sins of their own onto others is the proof that most of this intellectual tradition is morally bankrupt. Further proof is that the left always hectors us in a tone of high dudgeon for our supposed moral failings.

We must always be suspicious of art in service to a political agenda. It seldom comes out well. Great art will always arise from hidden reaches only found in the cockles of the human heart and given expression through the mind. The top down approach won't work. · 16 hours ago

Agree about art in the service of politics. But do you think teachers of The Crucible could connect it to bogus accusations of racism, or Canada's human rights tribunal? 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

(cont'd)

When I taught Brit Lit myself, I found it helpful that most of my students had had AP Euro the previous year. They knew enough about the French Revolution to understand A Tale of Two Cities

Moreover, while I think lit is a great way to make history vivid, much of what lit teachers should aim for involves removing the text from historical context and making it relevant to the emotions that the students are feeling. After all, the only reason great lit survives is because it transcends its age. 

Do you really need historical context to understand Tintern Abbey or Macbeth? When teaching Romeo and Juliet, should you teach the history of Italy? The novel is the form that benefits the most from contextualization, but even Pride and Prejudice translates fairly well to the modern high school (spare me the jokes about petticoats vs. hook-up culture; students still experience romantic curiosity, rivalry, self-doubt, shame, and the determination to impress a girl). 

As I said, I'm sure matching history to lit can create memorable courses. But a standard self-contained lit course can be equally memorable. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Pseudodionysius: 

I follow the thought of David Hicks in Norms & Nobility -- the four year curriculum should have an integrated humanities program that consists of Literature & History coordinated as to time period each year.

I'm sure a good school can make this approach work, but I'm not convinced it's the dream-scheme many make it out to be. The high school I attended used this system. It was most helpful for the World History / World Lit sequence; we learned a little about India, Africa, Japan, and China while reading Nectar in a Sieve, The Dark Child, Things Fall Apart, some novel by Mishima, and some attempt at a bildungsroman by a Chinese woman. The lit wasn't "great," but we weren't mature enough to care about that; the stories did promote good discussion. 

In the American History / American Lit sequence, the match-up was only occasionally illuminating. Historical context is irrelevant to American Romanticism, Dickinson, and Whitman; a single class period on the Jazz Age gets you all you need to know about Gatsby (ditto McCarthy and The Crucible); Crane wrote Red Badge before he'd even seen war. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Dan Hanson: You keep setting up straw men and knocking them down. 

You either aren't reading what I'm writing, or you are debating dishonestly.  Either way, I think our conversation is done. · 54 minutes ago

Sorry. I'm typing while distracted by an infant, so it's the former. 

I think my main suspicion is that Libertarianism requires an unrealistically high standard of virtue. Even if one generation has it, the prosperity that follows from focusing on trade will create decadence in future ones. (cf. America since 1950.)

Moreover, the dark side of human nature all but ensures that governments eventually become tyrannical. Exceptions can occur among small, culturally homogeneous groups (Switzerland). 

Finally, I'm not convinced that tyranny is bad. Substantial elements of Western culture were created under governments that were hostile to freedom (European monarchies). 

Edited on May 17, 2013 at 5:42am
J. D. Fitzpatrick

Dan Hanson: And of course, the minute I say that libertarians don't believe in anarchy, someone will come along claiming to be a libertarian and demand that the police and roads be privatized, and that will give opponents ammo to point and say, "See?  Libertarians are anarchists."

Dan, you might have missed my response to this above. I gave over the anarchist point. 

If you want to read a short essay regarding spontaneous order in free markets, I highly recommend I, Pencil, which you can read in full at the link provided. · 10 minutes ago

I think markets are the greatest device for advancing prosperity that people have made. However, when Tolstoy tried to dramatize human nature on a large scale, he titled his novel War and Peace. Note the first word. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Dan Hanson

J. D. Fitzpatrick

No, mob violence is not an example of emergent order.  

Precisely. It sounds to me like you've implicitly defined "emergent order" as spontaneous order that does no harm. But any order, from an edged tool to a government, can be used to cause harm. 

Look folks; it's too much sunny talk for me. I suspect that most Libertarians are good-natured, not particularly impassioned people who think that the rest of the world can be just like them. They want to be left alone to improve their property and socialize with their friends. The human heart is darker than they realize, but as they are themselves so good-natured, such good neighbors (and I speak with the utmost sincerity), we can't really be surprised that they don't recognize as much. 

When I hear Libertarians start to talk about how bloody-minded humanity is at its core, I'll start to pay more attention. Until then, I'll continue to regard them as really nice people whose ideas about government are necessarily naive. 

Edited on May 17, 2013 at 4:06am
J. D. Fitzpatrick

In summer of 2000: "I think if Bush were elected, he would have to be assassinated." Even I, seriously considering voting for Nader, was shocked. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Dan Hanson

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Dan Hanson

Did you ever wonder how a flock of birds can swirl and turn on a dime in beautiful synchronization, despite not having some bird conductor telling them what to do?  That's emergent order.  

Yes. Order that took billions of years to develop.  · 1 hour ago

Emergent order happens on all kinds of timescales.  I notice you ignored the internet example - emergent order that has created an entire human ecosystem and market in two decades.  

OK, but I don't see the internet as substantially different from the markets that have developed throughout human history. Moreover, like all trade, it is also good at satisfying the human lust for power over fellow humans (cf. slavery, child porn, stealing trade secrets, bullying nations, etc.) 

I'll accept that natural impulses create spontaneous order. It's in the nature of birds to flock and of humans to trade. But there are other aspects of human nature. Would you consider mob violence an example of emergent order? What about a cult of human sacrifice? 

The blacksmith sells swords as well as ploughshares. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Dan Hanson

J. D. Fitzpatrick

the Libertarians on this thread are, as usually, deluded about whether systems of spontaneous order would be an improvement on--or even more Libertarian than--our current ones.

Spontaneous orderwithin the constraints of a civil society and rule of law.

Why do conservatives in this thread keep treating libertarians as anarchists?    The vast majority are not.  In fact, most libertarians would be comfortable calling themselves classical liberals who believe in the structure of the United States as it was originally envisioned and enshrined in the Constitution.   

. · 18 minutes ago

I'm encountering a different species of libertarian on this thread than the ones I encountered on the open borders threads. I'll try to bear your points in mind in the future. 

I've made these comments because to me, Libertarians often sound too blithe about what it takes to preserve civil society and rule of law. I don't think the NAP will provide a check on the blood-dimmed tide of human history or that human aggression will naturally channel itself into trade alone. Remember that the founding fathers enjoyed taking lands from Indians and tried to take land from British Canada.  

J. D. Fitzpatrick

GayFreedomLover

J. D. Fitzpatrick

GayFreedomLover

J. D. Fitzpatrick: 

Quoting Hobbes is a straw man.  Nobody's advocating anarchy that I've seen. · 9 hours ago

Oh. I forgot--so long as you aren't advocating something, you aren't responsible when your policies produce it.  · 26 minutes ago

Did I miss the part where you explained what policies, being advocated by who, were going to produce anarchy?  And how? · 13 minutes ago

I'll take back the suggestion that Fred's proposals might produce anarchy. As I've suggested above, humans will continue to create systems of political order. 

My original point was to dispute Fred's use of the plant metaphor by saying he was appealing to the state of nature as an ideal. Looks like I was wrong about that as well. 

However, as I've suggested in my most recent post, the Libertarians on this thread are, as usually, deluded about whether systems of spontaneous order would be an improvement on--or even more Libertarian than--our current ones. Consider this review of The Rule of the Clan (h/t Sabrdance). 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Also, I don't buy these appeals to natural systems as metaphors for human society. Let's review some of the ways in which plants (Fred's metaphor) and flocks of birds (Dan's metaphor) are radically different from human beings. 

- They don't have consciousness. No need to plan for half a century into the future or to consider how to improve on the past. 

- They don't have egos. They don't defend principles, revenge themselves on enemies, or take pride in trifles. They don't find pleasure in subtle manifestations of power, nor do they decree stately pleasure domes. 

Most ironically, from the perspective of this discussion, they have no interest in sitting up late debating the ideal arrangement of their roots or the proper training of their flocks. 

Of course civil society will recover after breaking down. It's what human beings create--it's what makes us different from plants and animals. There's even a certain beauty to watching the "Disastrous rhythm, the heavy and mobile masses, the dance of the / Dream-led masses down the dark mountain."

People just shouldn't delude themselves into thinking that that this new order will be better. 

J. D. Fitzpatrick

Fred Cole

J. D. Fitzpatrick: Libertarians are so enamored of the state of nature (Fred's description of the Korean DMZ) and yet so ignorant of what it looks like for human beings (as opposed to those pretty little seedlings that are actually fighting stalk and root for space). 

I'm afraid you missed the point of my metaphor.  It wasn't so much about the state of nature so much as about the power of it to regenerate itself if left alone.

It I wanted to talk about the state of nature I would take about a place that has always been free of human habitation. · 6 hours ago

Well, you are certainly right; if the state disappeared tomorrow, humans would adapt. But the Libertarians would be shocked and dismayed by the way the adaptation played out. (For example, religion would probably make a big comeback.)

J. D. Fitzpatrick

GayFreedomLover

J. D. Fitzpatrick: 

Let's have a few reminders from some classic discussions of political science. Here's Thomas Hobbes. 

during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against every man. 

If the Libertarians disagree with this description, let's hear why.

Quoting Hobbes is a straw man.  Nobody's advocating anarchy that I've seen. · 9 hours ago

Oh. I forgot--so long as you aren't advocating something, you aren't responsible when your policies produce it. 

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