Category: philosophical counseling
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Using properly what you’ve got: An analysis
One of the three ways of making a living, I have urged, involves ‘using properly what you’ve got.’ In other posts, I have called this Category I. Let me analyze each part of this formulation. 1.) Got. One can get something by (a) finding, (b) taking, or (c) making. One could find truffles in a…
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Making room for, and sense of, largesse
In his otherwise scathing New York Review of Books review of Jean Starobinski’s Largesse, Ernst Gombrich notes at the outset that the term refers not just to gift giving of any sort but, ‘in a more technical context, [to] the ceremonial scattering of gifts expected from a king or prince on festive occasions.’ Largesse, Starobinski asserts, is an…
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The virtues corresponding to our economic relationships
I have been discussing three ways of making a living, which correspond also to three kinds of economic relationships. Cast as maxims, these ways are: I. Use what you’ve got. II. Exchange what’s in hand. III. Offer what you can. I. ‘Using what you’ve got’ is a territorial as well as a (for lack of…
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Why Kickstarter can’t work and other related matters
I now want to begin the slow and steady work of teasing out the implications of this tripartite model of making a living. Here is that schema again: I. Use what you’ve got. The ‘getting’ part refers to acquiring something or other. The ‘using’ part may have as its referent land, waste, plants, animals, tools, people,…
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Our 2 conceptions of work: work as toil vs. work as performance
Yesterday, I wrote about the three ways of making a living, and I still have many implications to spell out. Today, I set this subject off to the side and turn to a related topic, this being our conceptions of work. I believe that there are only two conceptions that vie and belie each other, that each…