a celebration of intellectual trespassing by a retired "social scientist" as he tries to make sense of the world..... Gillian Tett puts it rather nicely in her 2021 book “Anthro-Vision” - “We need lateral vision. That is what anthropology can impart: anthro-vision”.
what you get here
Sunday, March 8, 2020
on Gods, Robots and the rest of us Superfluous People
Saturday, March 7, 2020
Breakdown and Crises
The photo is the great vegetable market I have access to in what used to be the oil city of Ploiesti, Romania
Thursday, March 5, 2020
More Tips for better Writing
But Robert Graves was the more brilliant word-merchant and that shows.
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
How to write well
A
year or so ago I stumbled on a useful format to help me present my thoughts
more briefly and clearly – viz a table with questions such as what had sparked
off the thoughts and what the basic message was which I wanted to leave with
the reader.
I also found that this was a useful format and discipline
when I wanted to make notes about a book which I had found interesting – not least
because it leaves a great archive for me to access eg https://nomadron.blogspot.com/2018/03/why-we-should-not-be-so-cynical-about.html
and https://nomadron.blogspot.com/2020/10/how-myths-take-root-and-are-difficult.html
The author (McCloskey)'s injunction
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What I think (s)he Means
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Writing is
the economist’s craft
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Most economists
are so focused on the message that they forget they are engaged in communications
– which implies a reader
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Writing is thinking
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Most writing is thinking aloud…trying to clarify
one’s own confusions….to be ready for an audience, it needs to go through
about a dozen drafts
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Rules can help,
but bad rules hurt
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A lot of books
have been written about how to improve one’s writing style – some of them
downright silly
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Be Thou clear
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Clarity is not
the same as precision – and requires a lot of experiment and effort. Indeed I
would rephrase the adage as “Strive to be Clear”
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The detailed
rules are numerous
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“most advice
about writing is actually about rewriting”!
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The rules are
empirical
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The next 2
adages confused me
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Classical rhetoric
guides even the economical writer
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Give up
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You too can be fluent
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Contains some lovely advice about the process of
composing and transposing one’s thoughts and words
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You will need
tools, tax deductible
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On the importance
of words
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Keep your
spirits up, forge ahead etc
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We’ve got to get
the words flowing on the paper….don’t be a perfectionist….it’s just a first
draft…many more to go!
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Speak to an audience of human beings
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Probably the most important point….who is the
paper for? Imagine a typical reader!
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Avoid boilerplate
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Don’t use clichés
or chunks of text everyone knows
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Control your
tone
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You can (and
probably should) be conversational – but if you want to be taken seriously
don’t joke around
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Paragraphs should have points
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Readers hate to see several pages of only text.
Break it up when you sense you’re moving to a new point
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Use tables and graphics – and make them readable
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For me, crucial
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Footnotes are
nests for pedants
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Love it!
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Make your writing cohere
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Very interesting section with points I had never
come across before
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Use your ear
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A sentence consists of a subject, verb and
object, We often overburden with qualifying clauses.
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Avoid elegant variation
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Clumsy way of saying we should not use a lot of
adjectives or adverbs to say the same thing
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Check and tighten; rearrange and fit
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Priceless advice….we should be doing this all
the time
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Rhetorical questions?
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Interesting question
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Use verbs, active ones
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Some good points made
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Avoid words that bad writers use
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Some very useful examples given
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Be concrete
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Great example of circumlocution
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Be plain
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Cut out the flowery language
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Avoid cheap
typotricks
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Don’t use acronyms
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Avoid this,
that, these, those
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Useful point
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Above all, look at your words
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Words so easily take over our thoughts. Be
suspicious of the words that come initially to mind ….
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Monday, March 2, 2020
Does being an outsider improve the quality of someone’s writing?
Name
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Status
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Outsider in what sense?
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Globetrotting political economist
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Spent first 20 or so
years in Greece; European perspective
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Writer, maverick Oxford
academic
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Came to UK as a child
(Russian parents); strong French connection
|
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Central European
journalist who made UK his home
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Was a communist in
Germany. Jailed in Franco Spain. Strong interest in science
|
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Prolific
Canadian/American economist and writer
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23
when he left Canada – American civil servant handling rationing; Ambassador
to India for JFK; attracted envy from academic colleagues
|
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US economic historian
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author of the famous “The
Worldly Philosophers”; very much a generalist;
|
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Irish management writer
and guru
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changed his career every decade |
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German
academic and politician; EC Commissioner, Director of LSE; and Lord
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Straddled
German and British academic and political worlds - for 25 years apiece
|
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Policy
analyst, writer
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had
been a young journalist, Came to UK when 27
|
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Maverick academic,
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Often complained that his
traditional brand of conservatism marginalised him
|
|
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Anthropologist, activist,
anarchist
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Author of “Bullshit Jobs”
Failed to have his
academic position renewed by Harvard. Anthropology, almost by definition,
means being an outsider
|
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Journalist
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Change of sex certainly gives
one a new perspective!
And (s)he’s half English
and half-Welsh – with this article explicitly referring to her felt “outsider”status
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Journalist and film maker
– culture and buildings
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His autobiography “An
Encyclopaedia of Myself” makes it fairly clear he felt he was an outsider
|
|
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Academic (Prof of
Journalism), writer
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He graduated in English;
Generalist; jewish
Author of “Cooked”, “In
Defence of Food” etc
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Pop philosopher
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Early years in
Switzerland
|
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British political
scientist; writer
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Author of “How Democracy
Ends”
Son of a famous father,
his case simply doesn’t fit!
|
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Development Economist
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Graduated from South
Korea; came to Cambridge for further studies and remained, Author of “23
things they don’t tell uoi about capitalism”
|
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Israeli historian
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Graduated Israel and now
writes bestsellers like “Homo Sapiens”
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Dutch
historian/journalist
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Author of “Utopia for
Realists”
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