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Friday, January 07, 2011

Human Rights Certificate Course. Wednesday 5/1/11.


Reading session and discussions
Why Wikipedia?
The collaborative editing process followed by Wikipedia allows frequent verification of facts and approaches an issue from various angles giving an understanding from different contexts. This method of regular updating and rechecking by different people ensures quick correction of errors. Other useful elements of Wikipedia include the Criticism/Reception section for most articles where the topic’s negative and positive criticism is acknowledged and discussed. Furthermore, the nature, quality and process of the editing and writing of the article itself is evaluated to give the reader an idea of the way the article has been written and by whom and what the reader should keep in mind while using the article as a reference.
For more on the process of editing at Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability_of_Wikipedia
What is a declaration?
A declaration is an acknowledgement. UDHR is not a law but a declaration. International covenant on women’s rights is still not sighed by India and so can’t impose sanctions.
Eleanor Roosevelt mentions the need for the UDHR as a declaration as opposed to a treaty, because treaties as an agreement on an issue, give space for revolt, debate and retaliation and like rules, are eventually broken. For example, Sati became more widespread after it was banned. After Sati was noticed in 1700s it was debated over for 50 years, as the British did not want to interfere in a religious practice. Its root in the Hindu religion was questioned and researched into, leading to the translation of Hindu scriptures. After the British translated the Bhagvad Gita, that was announced as the Holy book of the Hindus as the Bible was to the Christians, they could not find the religious root to back the practice of Sati and thereby banned it, as they could track no religious grounds. Ironically, the ban resulted in a wider spread of Sati. It was first banned in 1829 but after resurgence, it had to be banned again in 1956. There was another revival of the practice in 1981 with another prevention ordinance passed in 1987. (Source: http://www.hindustantimes.com/Sati-Belief-beyond-the-law/Article1-345245.aspx )

The Age of Enlightenment and Immanuel Kant
The Age of enlightenment and the works of European philosophers during this time are vital while tracing the origin of the idea of human rights and the drafting of UDHR. Documents include; Bill of Rights of England, Bill of Rights of United States and Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen in France.
One of the men to be immediately associated with this age is Immanuel Kant. The division of human knowledge into disciplines like Arts, Commerce, Humanities, Social Sciences etc was an idea propagated by him and is used in Universities today. He also explores and states the purpose of a University and its role in the development of a student.
Practicality and application of Human Rights
Why is Human Rights part of our Holistic classes?
It is mandatory for the Supreme Court to take the responsibility of teaching the citizens human rights. All UGs must essentially teach HR.
“Items once purchased cannot be returned”Such a practice is illegal. There is a law in India that protects the consumer such that compensation can be demanded if a store doesn’t refund your money on return of a purchased item.
Julian Assange and Afzal Guru, whose works involved huge controversies, could not directly be arrested, as their actions do not violate any law. Being arrested for Assange’s contribution to Wikileaks would go against the UDHR and the right to freedom. So instead, Assange and many others are being charged on account of rape, sexual harassment and spam mail with obscene content and in spite of lack of evidence and unfair trials are being held in custody.

Marxism and Labor
One of Marx’s biggest contributions is considered to be his theories on “Labor”. Readers of Marx today are Feminists and Environmentalists. Feminists explore the relevance of labor and its association in the fields of child bearing (woman in labor, labor room etc)
Environmentalists approach Marx’s concept of labor with the question, where did capital come from? Their argument extends to nature being the primary source of capital. 

What is Slavery?
Slavery is an economical concept, not social. It is covered under economics and not sociology, as an economical phenomenon.
Capital does not suggest the richest, but simple small activities like a roadside tea stall also involve dealing with capital. Capital primarily involves ownership not money; Ratan Tata paid ndian Rupee ₹ 1 for acres of land, Infosys in Mysore was given the land for its campus for close to nothing, it is the process of owning the land that gives capital.
The Material that comes from Capital is labored upon to form the final product. This laboring upon which transforms the capital into a product with higher utility value is rewarded with wages. A slave in this process can be located at the end of the laboring process, minus the wage payment; a slave is one who is not paid for his/her labor.
A mother cooks a stew; the raw vegetables are labored upon to produce the stew. She is not paid for this labor. Is mother a slave?
Child labor in India when put into this context cannot be termed as slavery because the children are paid, however minimally.
Further reading:
·      Right to refuse to kill and conscientious objection
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscientious_Objector#United_Nations
Reference:
Pinto, Anil. Introduction to Human Rights. Jan 5th 2011. Lecture.

STRUCTURALISM- FERDINAND SAUSSURE (Mr. Pinto's lectures in II CEP)

13th December 2010
STRUCTURALISM
FERDINAND SAUSSURE

Main concepts:
1.       Signifier and Signified
2.       Sign
3.       Signifying system
4.       Sign is arbitrary
5.       Diachronic, synchronic
6.       Langue, Parole
7.       Time
8.       Value, Difference

The relation between the signifier and the signified is arbitrary.
Diachronic means across time. Studies how language was and has evolved across the centuries.
Synchronic: studies language of the present. Not interested in studying how it used to be and how it should be, but how it is at this given point of time.
Language:
1.       Surface Structure  or Parole
2.       Deep Structure or Langue               

Noam Chomsky
When a child learns a language, it does not learn the surface structure but the deep structure and hence produces words that it has never heard or learnt before.
Saussure called the surface structure as “Parole” and the deep structure as “Langue”.
Chomsky said that every language has a deep structure, but not the same deep structure.

Saussure did not use the word semiotics but the word Semiology.
Semiotics-Charles Sanders Pierce. Saussure and Pierce worked around the same time on similar concepts but they did not know each other.
A signifier is always expressed in time. Only one word is written at a time.

Thoughts and Language:
You have access to thoughts through language and your thoughts are structured in language.
There is no thought beyond language.
HEGEL-gave the concept of dialectic (for more information on this topic: http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/05/dialectic.htm )
Each history has a spirit of its time and one cannot view it beyond its spirit.

Naming process- calling the object into your world.
The origin of the word in not important to structuralits.
Deleuze- Psychoanalyst, Zizek believed that the origin of a word was perpetually not to be answered.
Only fundamentalists go back to origins.
Origin-no point in arguing how or why it exists. The fact is that it exists.
Language does not require humans to exist. It is independent but it cannot exist despite us. We cannot explain why certain languages are spoken in two completely unrelated places.
“Language of the Gods” (book by B. John Zavrel) maps the history of Sanskrit.
 3rd and 4th century- Sanskrit spread to the west without any conquests or trade. Language requires only one person to exist.

18th December 2010
One signifier in the system has value because it is not any of the other signifiers in the system.
Language cannot have synonyms because each word has a different value.
E.g: ” bachelor” is different from “unmarried man”
Performance studies- speech act. Study speech as an act.

20th December 2010
1.       Syntagm
2.       Paradigm/ associative.
“Student”= one who studies. No flexibility.
Meaning = value and difference.

A word gets its meaning because of the relationship between syntagm and paradigm in a science system.
Horizontal or Syntagmatic relations- One cannot replace the other. E.g: MENU: Starters, Main course, Desserts- starters cannot be replaced by desserts.
Vertical or Associative relations-  One can be replaced by the other. E.g: MENU: Starters>Soup, momos, fries etc;

Plato's Republic

Notes by Simran Purokayastha , 2nd PSEng.


‘The safest generalization that can be made about the history of Western Philosophy is that it is all a series of footnotes to Plato.’

-Alfred North Whitehead

Plato occupies a central place in European philosophical tradition, for various reasons. He is the first Western philosopher whose works have survived (the fire of Alexandria) intact. These works remain significant in their wide scope, impact, undeniable logic, incisive reasoning and undoubtedly, their power to engage readers.

Plato uses the dialogic form of writing to bring his views to light. Plato does not speak in his own voice, but has the characters of these dialogues speak for themselves, opening up numerous philosophical perspectives in the process. By doing this, he leaves his readers room to interpret his works in radically different ways, which is perhaps why there is little in Philosophy that isn’t covered in Plato’s works. Philosophy therefore, has so far only explained Plato, not challenged him.

In The Republic, one of his most celebrated works and the last book (X) of which is the object of our study, Plato sets out to answer numerous questions in his attempt to define the Ideal State. In the process, he deals with matters not only pertinent to the State and its smooth functioning but also those relevant to the individual and his/her well being.

In order to better understand Plato’s views, one must grasp the propositions he puts forward in his ‘Theory of Forms’, one of primary tenets of Plato’s philosophy. This theory proposes that the world that we perceive around us is a copy or reproduction of another realm, which is perfect (the world of the Ideal). It is a purely intelligible sphere of existence. These Forms of the ideal world are stable and unchanging and define all that exists fleetingly and imperfectly in the world of our senses. The Forms provide knowledge of objective truth. Plato used the term 'nature' to describe the physical world that we perceive through our senses. And, since nature is a copy of the Ideal, it is less perfect. Plato argues that art is only a mere representation or copy of the Physical World (which is already a copy of the Ideal) and is therefore twice removed from reality.

The theory may be reduced to six fundamental propositions. *

First, for every kind, there is a single nature common to things of the kind. For example, beautiful things all possess beauty. Or, humans all possess humanity.

Second, it is having these natures (or characters) that makes things be of the kinds that they are. Using the same example, and by extension, beauty makes beautiful things beautiful.

Third, these natures are necessarily as they are, and have necessary relations to one another. Beauty, for example, is always and necessarily the opposite of ugliness.

Fourth, philosophy is, at least primarily, the inquiry into these natures.

The fifth proposition is that it is by means of reason, and not our senses, that we discover the truth about these natures.

And the last general principle is that this discovery is possible only because the inquirer had prior knowledge of these natures.

Only those whose minds are trained to grasp the Forms—the philosophers—can know anything at all. In particular, what the philosophers must know in order to become able rulers is the Form of the Good—the source of all other Forms, and of knowledge, truth, and beauty. Plato cannot describe this Form directly, but he claims that it is to the intelligible realm what the sun is to the visible realm.

The metaphysical hierarchy proposed by Plato, to summarize, is as follows:

· Ideal

· Physical World (copy)

· Art (copy of the copy)

Based on these beliefs, Plato argues that art needs to be banned in an Ideal State since it gives a false picture of reality to the people. It appeals to the basest part of the soul and allows strong emotions to take control of a person and cloud their ability to reason making it difficult to reach the ultimate reality or Ideal. Furthermore, he has three reasons for regarding the poets as unwholesome and dangerous. First, they pretend to know a lot of things, but they really know nothing at all. It is widely considered that they have knowledge of all that they write about, but, in fact, they do not. The things they deal with cannot be known: they are images, far removed from what is most real. By presenting scenes so far removed from the truth poets, pervert souls, turning them away from the most real toward the least. Worse, the images the poets portray do not imitate the good part of the soul. The rational part of the soul is quiet, stable, and not easy to imitate or understand. Poets imitate the worst parts—the inclinations that make characters easily excitable and colorful. Poetry naturally appeals to the worst parts of souls and arouses, nourishes, and strengthens these base elements while diverting energy from the rational part.

Poetry corrupts even the best souls. It deceives us into sympathizing with those who grieve excessively, who lust inappropriately, who laugh at base things. It even goads us into feeling these base emotions vicariously. We think there is no shame in indulging these emotions because we are indulging them with respect to a fictional character and not with respect to our own lives. But the enjoyment we feel in indulging these emotions in other lives is transferred to our own life. Once these parts of ourselves have been nourished and strengthened in this way, they flourish in us when we are dealing with our own lives. Suddenly we have become the grotesque sorts of people we saw on stage or heard about in epic poetry.

He includes poets along with atheists and contact with foreigners in a list of corrupting influences that stand in the way of an Ideal State.

Despite the clear dangers of poetry, Socrates regrets having to banish the poets.

He feels the aesthetic sacrifice acutely, and says that he would be happy to allow them back into the city if anyone could present an argument in their defense.

All these ideas become clearer through Plato’s cave allegory.

(Please access the following link for an interesting representation and explanation of the same:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2afuTvUzBQ)

It is evident that each of the elements in the allegory stands for something greater. The chained prisoners represent the uneducated mass of humankind. The shadows on the wall are dim representations of imitations of real things. The reality for the prisoners is the people’s poor understanding of the nature of the things they see. The released prisoner’s forced, steep ascent out of the cave into the sunlight is akin to the difficulty of an education in Mathematics that, according to Plato, is essential in one’s preparation for philosophy. The reluctance of the prisoners to make the steep climb is like students’ inclination to think that hard work is not worth the effort. The bright sunlit world outside is actually the abstract realm that reason reveals to the soul. And the prisoner who is acclimatized to the outside world is a symbol for the philosopher who has mastered the dialectic. The parallels are numerous!

Plato, in the voice of Socrates then outlines a brief proof for the immortality of the soul. The proof is essentially this: X can only be destroyed by what is bad for X. What is bad for the soul is injustice and other vices. But injustice and other vices obviously do not destroy the soul or tyrants and other such people would not be able to survive for long. So nothing can destroy the soul, and the soul is immortal.

Plato’s arguments are extremely convincing and often deal with and outline inscrutable nuances of human life and eternal quest. It is not in the least surprising, therefore, that his works continue to be relevant in today’s times and definitely more engaging than most other philosophical treatises.

References:

· Pinto, Anil. Plato. Christ University. Dec. 2010. Lecture.

· The Sparknotes piece on Plato’s ‘The Republic’ http://www.sparknotes.com/philosophy/republic/section10.rhtml

· The sources mentioned below.

* The books ‘Coffee with Plato’ by Donald R. Moor and ‘The Cambridge Companion to Plato’ edited by Richard Kraut (both available in the Christ University Library, UG Section (Philosophy)) were extremely helpful in understanding Plato’s works. Strongly recommended.

Thursday, January 06, 2011

National Conference on ELT: Language and Culture’

English Language Teaching Institute of Symbiosis (ELTIS) is organizing a National Conference in collaboration with English Language Teachers’ Association of India (ELTAI) on February 11 & 12, 2011. The theme of the conference is ‘ELT: Language and Culture’.


For further details click here
(Information sent by Shardool Thakur, Pune)

BA IV Semester EST 431 Literary Theory Syllabus for Mid Sem for PSE, JPE, CEP

Unit 1
Terry Eagleton 'What is Literature?'
What is Literary Theory?
Humanist Literary Theory: Plato from Repulic "Book 10" ;Aristotle, Horace, Sir Philop Sidney, Sir Francis Bacon,Joseph Addison,Edmond Burke, Samuel Johnson, Sir Joshua Reynolds, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. John Keats, Edgar Allan Poe, Mathew Arnold.

Unit 2
Structuralism: Ferdinand de Saussare "Nature of linguistic Sign" . Excerpts from 'Course in General Linguistic' Claude Levi-Strauss and 'The Structural Study of Myth';
Humanism, Structuralism, Poststructuralism
Deconstruction: Binay Opposition; The Role of the Centre; Bricolage

Unit 3
Psychoanalysis: Sigmund Freud 'Creative Writers and Day Dreaming'

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Human Rights Certificate Course. Tuesday 4/1/11.



UN and Human Rights and Duties
What are human rights?
Most of the class agreed with ‘they are the basic rights an individual should have by the virtue of being a human.’ 
If they are rights given to an individual, who gives him/her these rights?

Others answered that any issue against an individual would be a human rights issue. With the example of the Sufi shrine in Shimoga it was explained how religious issues (in terms of claiming land) are not treated as human rights violations.
Another response was that human rights are the rights acquired at conception. This brought us to discussing the ‘inalienable’ nature of human rights.
Mapping out Human Rights
The most important concept that is the foundation of the understanding of Human Rights: is the role of the state.
It is essential to understand that Human rights violations are charged against the state.

Many have claimed the existence of human rights in Indian history. But the acceptance of human rights would suggest a neglect of the ‘divine right’, which was the dominant guiding force through the history of Indian society.
John Locke and Natural rights

Challenging the then predominant belief of original sin and the inheritance of this sin by every individual of the human race, Locke propagated the idea of Tabula Rasa. This marked the shift from the Divine right of the King and the Christian Monarchy. This suggested that a child is born with a clean slate and it is society that ‘writes’ on this slate. The Lockean doctrine of natural rights approached the individual as free to define his/her character based on interaction with society.  To read about the understanding of Tabula Rasa from the 11th C Ibn Sina, and following through St. Thomas Aquinas, Locke and Freud, and its application in different fields: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabula_rasa

Social Contract Theory

The relationship between the individual and the state, which involves the rights of an individual, is no longer considered a divine rule; it is a contract. This introduced the concept of the contract theories, a broad class of theories that explain the ways in which people form states to maintain social order. It implies that people give up sovereignty to a government to receive social order through the rule of law. (Law can only be enforced on a body, it cannot function without a physical human body; someone has to be held responsible, a face to represent.)
For further references to the social contact theories of Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_contract#Philosophers .

It is in a way, legitimate state authority, derived from consent of the governed. For example, Hitler is often seen as a dictator who forcefully took over Germany. But we forget that he was democratically elected and that it was a state sponsored violence. Once at power, he claimed that the Jews are his people and he is free to do with them as he pleases, even sending them to concentration camps in a similar way that a parent claims authority over his/her child defending their reasons and power to beat the child when they feel right.
The contract between you and state is to be protected by the police. So violation of our rights happens when the state steps past its role as protectors to exploiters; Fence eating the grass.
Theoretically, no citizen can say no to war and is expected to pick up a gun and fight for the state at a war situation. This sweeping power that is allowed to be imposed upon us by the state began to be questioned; the protection of human rights from the state.
The question of Human rights only comes into the picture in a state that enforces control. Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) declares a protection of the people against violation by the state. (Declaration, not law) The situation of mass violation of people’s rights by different states, brought the need for a UDHR and for the United Nations, an international body that would keep a watch on the governments of countries, ensuring they don’t overstep their power and violate citizens.
Context of UDHR
By questioning the claim that ‘human rights are western rights’, the argument of the drafting of UDHR was discussed. 
The developing countries including Latin America, Africa, India etc drafted the declaration that reflected the fundamental beliefs shared by countries around the world regarding human rights, in an attempt to ensure they avoided a situation such as the suffering of Germany. These declarations were later inculcated and the provisions of human rights were made part of the Indian constitution.

The allies supported these third world countries; (Atlantic Charter 1941) a joint statement by Franklin D Roosevelt and Winston Churchill of their mutual goals for post WWII. It explained the objectives of the war and reaffirmed the four freedoms; “the freedom of opinion, of expression, of religion and the right to basic needs”. This was an ‘assurance that all men in all the lands may live put their lives in freedom from fear and want’, that promised an evolution, avoiding another Germany of repressed citizens.
The UDHR was drafted in 1948 after WWII as the first global expression of rights that every human being is entitled with.
Hence the UN and the UDHR was created with the purpose of watching over and protecting the citizens of countries.
RSA and ISA
The Repressive State Apparatus and the Ideological State Apparatus was discussed in response to categorizing human rights violation in public schools and private schools.  The RSA includes Heads of State, government, police, courts, army etc. that can intervene and act in favor of the ruling class by repressing the ruled class, while the later includes ideological practice by institutions like the media and education systems.
For further details of RSA and ISA and the difference between their functions, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Althusser#Ideological_state_apparatuses
Questioning the fundamentals
The previous discussion led to another, which pointed out that the media is always for the government; commenting on their ideologies but never questioning them. For example, though the Times of India might comment on the slow or poor development of the metro, it will not question if the metro is required in the first place. Similar questions can be raised with respect to every field; in Social work for instance; Why should the poor be uplifted? Why must a boy in the slum be educated? 
This highlights the importance of developing a critical faculty of thought as an approach.

Further reading:
·      Upendra Baxi and PIL
·       Non-human persons rights; Animal rights.
·       Alternative Law Forum: http://www.altlawforum.org/
Reference:
Pinto, Anil. 'Introduction to Human Rights.' Christ University. 4 Jan 2010. Lecture.

Critical Animal

Critical Animal

Animal Law Blog

Animal Law Blog

Critical Madness Theory

Critical Madness Theory

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Jacques Lacan and Subjectivity

22 December, 2010

Notes by: Sneha Sharon

'I' might seem a mono-syllabic innocent usage but it has been subjected to a wide range of observations. This 'I' is seen as a realisation of oneself and modern as well as post modern set ups have wondered whether one's usage of 'I' is similar or different to somebody else's usage of 'I'. If so, how similar or how different is it? Does an individual's usage of 'I' also differ from situation to circumstances?

Platonian notion of Essence preceedes existence and the Aristotelian notion of existence preceeds essence to Descartes idea of 'I think therefore I'm' have been followed up by the Marxists who understood consciousness as being determined by social existence; Freud, wherein this notion of the 'I' is broken and Lacan who re-read Freud thus extending him today is a widely read name in the field of philosophy, psychoanalysis and contemporary feminist art.

In the cultural theories of understanding of the 'self', 'subject' is a major keyword such that many a times it has been used as though it were a substitute for the other. The 'self' is therefore subject to the manifold concerns we as humans face today be it social, cultural, economical or political.

Subjectivity is therefore something that connects us with the outside world- the 'self' is not a sole entity, it is always being played upon by circumstances governed from the world outside. Subjectivity then helps us understand why the 'I' and the 'other' are so linked. It is then to understand that the 'subject' is a construct.

Lacan's most influential statement has been- "the unconscious is structured like a language". This gave a feeling that the unconscious too then was a system just like language and thus was the communication/ language was the very thread of subjectivity. Lacan could be taken to have followed a certain Sassurean understanding too.

According to Lacan, there are three stages - The real, imaginary and the symbolic. The real for Lacan is not reality per se. This 'real' is but outside language and is thoroughly different from the symbolic. It is a 'need' stage, all your needs are fulfilled but you are not aware of the same. This is the stage where you do not other your mother, do not find yourself as being separate from her. It is therefore an organic/ whole stage. Between the 'real' and the 'imaginary' is a gap. The 'self' is 'real' but the 'subject' is 'imaginary' and thus displaced. The 'subject' stage is when you start realising yourself as a separate, individual entity. The imaginary dwells in the realm of of imagination and deceptions. The relationship between the ego and the image within the mirror stage are also places of radical isolations, a narcissitic relationship. This stage is that of wants.

The Symbolic order is a stage of desires, the big 'other'. You are then the subject as well as the perpetrator. Meaning to say that one becomes a desiring subject, always needing something but still not being able to achieve it. Desire then comes as a component to fill up the void between the real and the imaginary orders, that is the 'needs' and 'want' stages. For Freud, this lack was a sexual lack. This order is not in the lines of language but restraints. It is somewhere understood as being in the dimensions of the signifier. In this order, the unconscious is the discourse of the 'other'. It is also a realm of the culture unlike the Imaginary which was a realm of the nature.

Thus, it is to understand that in the questioning of the 'I', there is no particular 'I'. It is either the 'self' or the 'subject' or both used interchangeably.

Reference
Abraham, Renu. Subjectivity. Christ University. 22 Dec. 2010. Lecture.