Blog Smith

Blog Smith is inspired by the myth of Hephaestus in the creation of blacksmith-like, forged materials: ideas. This blog analyzes topics that interest me: IT, politics, technology, history, education, music, and the history of religions.

Saturday, August 10, 2019

Roman Religion

Bryn Mawr Classical Review

BMCR 2017.02.13 on the BMCR blog

Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017.02.13

Duncan MacRaeLegible Religion. Books, Gods, and Rituals in Roman Culture.   Cambridge, MA; London:  Harvard University Press2016.  Pp. 259.  ISBN 9780674088719.  $49.95.   


Reviewed by Lindsay G. Driediger-Murphy, University of Calgary (ldriedig@ucalgary.ca)
Preview
This is an excellent and important book. Duncan MacRae’s aim is to illuminate the centrality of Late Republican writings about religion (especially those lost and fragmentary texts usually described as ‘antiquarian’ or ‘technical’) to both Roman and modern understandings of what constituted ‘Roman religion’. This work encourages a re-evaluation of the place and significance of texts in Roman religion, and is sure to generate further progress in this field.
The book consists of an introduction, six chapters (divided into three parts), and a brief conclusion. The introduction outlines MacRae’s approach, focusing on the appropriateness and definition of the term ‘religion’, and advocating a sensibly cautious handling of fragments. Rather than dividing Roman texts on religion by genre (legal, philosophical, grammatical, antiquarian, and so on), MacRae proposes to view them all as exemplars of ‘civil theology’, which he defines as writings that focused on ‘the intellectual discussion of the gods and their worship’ in the specific context of what their authors ‘perceived as particularly  Roman religious culture’.1
The three chapters of Part 1, ‘Writing Roman Religion’, elucidate the content, strategies, and context of the production of these texts. Chapter 1 draws on recent critiques of the polis-religion/‘civic religion’ model to sketch a view of the lived religion of Romans as diverse and extending far beyond civic cult. This sets up MacRae’s argument in succeeding chapters that the Late Republican writers on religion overrepresented the role of the state and the priestly colleges in shaping and mediating Roman religious experience. Chapter 2 turns to the texts themselves, to identify the style and strategies common to their writers. MacRae identifies their key shared features as the use of etymology, description, invocations of ethnography and the material remains of the city, and the adoption of the pose of the expert, unveiling to his readers what would otherwise have been lost or mysterious. Chapter 3 turns to the question of why there was a boom of such works in the Late Republic. MacRae sees them as the product of the competitive intellectual culture of the elite, a means by which priests and statesmen could enact (what they saw as) their own primacy in Rome’s religious system.
Part 2, ‘Comparison’, comprises one of the most innovative chapters of the book, a comparison between the Roman civil theological writings and the Mishnah. Whilst acknowledging the significant differences between Roman and Jewish religious priorities and theologies, MacRae argues convincingly that we see in both Late Republican Rome and the writings of the rabbis the desire to textualize religion, and to present this textual instantiation as the definitive or normative version of each religion.
The two chapters of Part 3, ‘Reading Roman Religion’, consider the influence of the civil theological texts on later centuries. Chapter 5 discusses their reception under the Empire, arguing that Augustus and his successors adopted and promoted the civil theological understanding of Roman religion. Chapter 6 moves to Christian reception, focusing on the responses to Varro’s  Antiquitates Rerum Divinarum in Tertullian and Augustine. Finally, the Conclusion addresses the broader place of writings on religion in Roman culture, arguing that our interpretations must move beyond a dichotomy between ‘Scripture’ and ‘literature’: though not canonized or considered sacred in the way promoted by more obvious ‘Religions of the Book’, these writings played a part in shaping Roman religion and made the religion itself ‘an object of writing and reading’.2
The most important and original contribution of MacRae’s book is to illuminate the vitality of the Late Republican writings on religion, and their importance to their readers and writers. By looking past generic classifications of these writings, MacRae adds a new dimension to our understanding of their effects on Roman knowledge. To Wallace-Hadrill’s perception of this writing as a shift in power from the elite to the specialist,3 and to Moatti's and Rüpke’s view of the process as one of rationalization,4 MacRae rightly adds that because many of the Late Republican writers were themselves priests and ritual experts, their work must also be read as an outworking of their own religious mastery and commitment. Using the surviving evidence for the dedicatees of these works, as well as for their implied readers, MacRae demonstrates masterfully that these texts were not mere exercises in academic speculation, or abstruse enquiries into the arcane, but had contemporary relevance and a wide elite readership. MacRae also provides an interesting, if difficult to prove, alternative perspective on the significance of such writing in the early Empire and even into Late Antiquity. He sees Varro’s ARD, for example, not so much as an unusual and abortive experiment in differentiating the religious as a distinct sphere of Roman life, nor as a text invoked but seldom read in later centuries, but rather as a construction of Roman religion that was not just accepted but actively realized and propagated by pagan readers before it was challenged by Christian ones.
In such a rich discussion there is always room for further debate. The characterization of opposing views sometimes reads as being a little too extreme. In Chapter 1 on the variety of Roman religious experience, for example, MacRae criticizes Scheid as well as Beard, North, and Price for holding that ‘citizenship (according to a juridical understanding of that term) entirely constituted religious identity for Romans and carried a set of obligations about forms of worship’.5This may be a fair summary of the impression created by Scheid’s early work, where ‘la communauté cultuelle romaine comprend donc avant tout et presque exclusivement les citoyens’,[6]] but I am not sure that it does justice to the more cautious position of Beard, North, and Price, who argue not that public rites were the only way Romans experienced religion, but rather that these are best documented in the evidence we have.7 Similarly, Chapter 2 reproaches ‘the use of modernity (…) whether in the guise of Enlightenment or Weberian rationalization’ as ‘an explicit or implicit comparison’ for Roman rationalization; MacRae objects that this ‘begs fundamental questions about how appropriately “modernity” describes the culture of late Republican Rome’, citing as culprits Moatti, Wallace-Hadrill, and Rüpke. I am not certain that modernity is a fair target here: the word is not a touchstone for Wallace- Hadrill, and Moatti seems to me to use it purely to denote the products of her ‘esprit critique’, explicitly disavowing the issue of ‘whether the Romans were rational in the modern sense of the word’.8 Rüpke does draw on Weber’s theories of rationalization, but whether this is inherently inappropriate requires demonstration. Further discussion of what MacRae means by modernity and the role he sees it playing in the scholarship would have been useful.
Taking up MacRae’s invitation to take Late Republican writings on religion seriously, I offer two further thoughts, less in the spirit of critique than in tribute to the engagement his work deserves. One key issue, it seems to me, is the relationship between the civil theological texts and actual practice. MacRae walks an interesting and unusual line, holding in essence that there was little overlap between the two in the Late Republican period, but more under the Empire, when Augustus, his successors, and those intellectuals in his orbit sought to implement in practice the civil theologians’ textual construction of Roman religion. This argument works well for the Empire, where MacRae supports it with such examples as Augustus’ revival (invention?) of the fetial spear-throwing ritual and reinvention of the Secular Games. There seems to be more room for debate when we turn to the Late Republican period. For example, MacRae rightly notes that the technical treatises whose fragments have come down to us cannot be viewed as ‘authoritative legal handbooks’, but perhaps accepts too readily the view that there were no other books used to guide ritual practice and considered authoritative amongst the priestly colleges. Given the mentions in our surviving sources of books ‘of’ the various priests, I am less comfortable than MacRae with saying that ‘On the whole (…) the pontifical and augural law were the creations of the theologians’, or even with concluding that ‘there is no evidence for a “real” set of secret pontifical books in Rome’.9 This view has become popular in the last few decades, and may be right, but it remains an assumption so long as we lack access to whatever priestly archives may once have existed. It would have been interesting to see more discussion of why, if there was no pre-existing body of ritual and religious law, the civil theologians considered it appropriate to speak as if there were.
The issue of the relationship between texts and practice is raised on a broader level by MacRae’s argument that the civil theologians ‘created, for the first time’ the concept of ‘Roman’ religion. MacRae must be right that the vision presented by the civil theologians was a selective one, which may have overstated the significance of the priestly colleges and the state religious apparatus, because the writers were themselves members of these. What seems less certain is whether the civil theological texts not only drastically narrowed the definition of what counted as Roman religion, but also created that concept itself. MacRae’s argument is that prior to these writers there was no ‘Roman state religion’, because ‘most interactions with the gods at Rome existed beyond the reach of the state and were not (…) the object of surveillance or legal regulation’10; even our texts’ focus on the city of Rome as defining ‘Roman’ religion was ‘an arbitrary delimitation, one that fit awkwardly with the complex realities of the religious landscape’.11 I wonder whether we need go as far as this. That the Roman state tended to leave its citizens to get on with their religion(s) so long as these did not threaten the authorities or lead to the abandonment of public rites is well known, but even these boundaries seem to me to testify to a sense that there were some rituals that were appropriate, and others that were not, for the Roman citizen qua citizen. Nor was the emphasis upon Rome and its priests restricted to the Late Republican civil theological texts: as early as Ennius, Rome is founded augusto augurio, the unique site where, in the words of Livy’s Camillus, the rites of ‘all public and private gods’ have ‘their appointed places no less than they have their appointed days.’12MacRae does not use Livy in his study save to assert that he, too, embraced the view of Roman religion crafted by the civil theologians, but there is a slight risk of circular argument here. Is nearly everything that now survives for us civil theology? And if so, on what basis can we safely claim that civil theology misrepresented the realities of Roman religious life?
These questions do not detract from what is a fascinating and thought-provoking work. Duncan MacRae has given Late Republican texts on religion an exciting new lease on life. We are indebted to him for a book which is sure to encourage further exploration of Rome’s ‘legible religion’.

Notes:
1.   MacRae 2016: 3.
2.   MacRae 2016: 141-146.
3.   Wallace-Hadrill, A. 2008. Rome’s Cultural Revolution. Cambridge.
4.   Moatti, C. 1997. La raison de Rome. Naissance de l’esprit critique à la fin de la République. Paris; Rüpke, J. 2012. Religion in Republican Rome. Rationalization and Ritual Change. Philadelphia, PA.
5.   MacRae 2016: 16.
6.   Scheid, J. 2001. Religion et piété à Rome. Paris. 34. Note however a more nuanced approach to polis-religion and its limits in Scheid, J. 2013. Les Dieux, l’État et l’individu: Réflexions sur la religion civique à Rome. Paris (and the English edition with forward by Clifford Ando: Scheid, J. 2016. The Gods, the State, and the Individual: Reflections on Civic Religion in Rome. Philadelphia.)
7.   Beard, M., North, J., and Price, S. R. F. 1998. Religions of Rome. Cambridge. E.g. vol. 1: ch. 1.
8.   Moatti 1997 with additions to the English edition, Moatti 2015 (Cambridge): 1.
9.   E.g. Cicero, Rep.2.54; Div. 1.72; Varro, Ling. Lat.5.21; cf. MacRae 2016: 43, 66-8, 179 n. 76.
10.   MacRae 2016: 18.
11.   MacRae 2016: 35.
12.   Ennius, Ann. 245 M = 494 V; Livy, AUC 5.52. 
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Friday, August 9, 2019

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Oratory and Political Career in the Late Roman Republic

BMCR 2017.02.19 on the BMCR blog
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017.02.19

Henriette van der Blom, Oratory and Political Career in the Late Roman Republic.   Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 2016.  Pp. xiii, 377.  ISBN 9781107051935.  $120.00.  


Reviewed by Joanna Kenty, University of New Hampshire (joanna.kenty@unh.edu)
Preview

Henriette van der Blom’s new monograph is an exciting and important contribution to a new wave of scholarship on Roman oratory and rhetoric. She has gathered a trove of useful information about well-known figures of the late Republic, but much of that information will be new to her readers, who know figures like Pompey, Caesar, and Antony better as military leaders than as practitioners of oratory. Likewise, scholars familiar with these individuals have a strong sense of each man’s personality; van der Blom argues that each man in fact constructed and communicated that personality through speech above all. She therefore leads us back to the orations that helped the Roman populus to get to know each man in the first place.

In her first monograph, Cicero’s Role Models (2010, BMCR 2011.07.49), van der Blom focused on Cicero’s orations (and particularly his use of exempla). Here, she removes Cicero from the picture (insofar as that is possible in any study of the late Roman Republic) to examine oratory in the context of the careers of six of his fellow statesmen: Gaius Gracchus, Pompeius Magnus, Julius Caesar, Piso Caesoninus (cos. 58), Cato the Younger, and Marcus Antonius. Cicero, she rightly observes, exploited oratory more than any of his contemporaries in carving out a political niche for himself. He is not representative or typical, and his tendency to describe Roman politics as if his own behavior and career were normative can further distort our understanding of the world in which he operates. As a corrective, van der Blom’s selection is intended to offer a representative sample of the full spectrum of ways in which and the degree to which oratory was used as a tool in Roman public life, as opposed to other means of self-promotion (p. 9). She also seems to have chosen generally well-attested figures, even those of no more than adequate eloquence (see especially Piso), at the expense of lesser known individuals whose eloquence was more noteworthy but whose biography would necessarily be incomplete or spotty because of a lack of evidence. van der Blom offers a condensed political biography of each of these individuals in discrete chapters, focusing particularly on the important orations that each delivered in the course of his life.

Throughout these case studies, van der Blom provides clear, straightforward, and meticulous discussion of what we know about a given speech occasion, why the individual in question might have chosen to use oratory as a tool on that occasion, and what (if anything) we can reliably know about the content of what he said. van der Blom’s experience working on Catherine Steel’s Fragments of the Republican Roman Orators database, a much-needed update to Malcovati’s collection, clearly offered inspiration and facilitated the research for the monograph. van der Blom often translates fragments of orations in the course of her chapters and even extracts some speculations about the orator’s style as evident in the fragment. Much of her material derives from Plutarch’s Roman lives, and she attempts to sort fact from Plutarch’s embellishments, especially when it comes to the personality or character of each of her case study subjects. She also explores the implications of choosing to run for the tribunate and of balancing military service with political office, and notes how each man foregrounded certain features of his persona (ancestry, ideological bent, military exploits, e.g.) at the expense of others in campaigning for office. Each political biography, in her view, amounts to the sum of a sequence of conscious choices of career paths, and a series of choices about self-presentation, primarily but not exclusively through oratory. In her words, “the most important factor for political success in Rome was the willingness and ability to communicate the various elements in a politician’s public profile ... in a credible, consistent and appealing manner through a range of communicative means..., not least, public oratory” (285).

In Part I (Chapters 1-2), van der Blom offers a concise, basic introduction to oratory and Roman public life more generally, which undergraduates might find extremely helpful. She reviews the main venues of oratory (contio, senate, and courts) and the relative importance of oratory for various magistracies. She discusses the import both of the mere act of speaking and of the opportunity to communicate particular messages, which could allow the orator to publicize his ideological stance for the long term or to influence events in the short term. Those with noteworthy oratorical ability could seek out or generate occasions to display their skill and use it to achieve their goals, while others chose not to manufacture those opportunities, or deliberately avoided them, choosing to operate through other means. van der Blom’s discussion of changes in the political arena in the first century BCE, including the under-studied era of Sulla’s dictatorships and the Social Wars, is particularly useful.

The real meat of the project, however, comes in Part II with the case studies, beginning with Gaius Gracchus in Chapter 3. van der Blom’s thorough scrutiny of the sources, contexts, and historicity of our well-known portrait of Gaius Gracchus is fascinating, delving beyond the apocrypha of a semi-mythologized martyr to reveal a canny political actor of great eloquence and energy. Gracchus knew that in the arena of speech, he had an advantage over his opponents, and van der Blom shows that he consistently shifted his political battles to that arena in order to exploit his abilities. By contrast, in Chapter 4, van der Blom argues that Pompeius Magnus, while “a master of staged events and planned speeches of self-praise” (p. 123), generally turned to other means of self-fashioning and avoided giving speeches when he could. Oratory helped him to nurture and maintain his popularity, but he benefited more often from orations by other speakers than from his own speaking efforts. When he did speak, he was perceived as either diffident or evasive. Whether or not van der Blom is right to give him the benefit of the doubt in arguing that he consciously cultivated that effect,1 oratory was not one of his preferred tools. Julius Caesar, the subject of Chapter 5, falls more on Gracchus’ end of the spectrum, both in his inclination to deploy his eloquence whenever possible for political ends, and in his use of popularis political markers in his orations. His funeral speech for his aunt Julia shows a rather opportunistic exploitation of one such occasion. From his spectacular debut — prosecutions of Dolabella and Antonius Hybrida for maladministration (de pecuniis repetundis), the “springboard” referred to in the title of van der Blom’s chapter, and speeches against Sullan reforms — to his controversial consulship, Caesar’s use of the contio as a vehicle for political self-promotion is, as van der Blom shows, distinct and consistent. van der Blom emphasizes the important question of when Caesar chose to publish his speeches, and when our later sources seem to be relying on notes taken by others or on mere hearsay for their evidence of Caesar’s eloquence.

In chapter 6 we move on to Caesar’s father-in-law Piso Caesoninus, the least familiar of van der Blom’s subjects, and a politician whose speaking abilities allowed him to function adequately in public, but hardly made oratory a preferred medium. Cicero includes oratory among Piso’s many failings in his bilious In Pisonem, for instance. van der Blom’s assertion that Cicero’s scornful assessment is shown “to be misleading, even wrong” (p. 202) seems to me to be overly kind to Piso, but the discussion of his career is useful nonetheless in raising awareness of a senator like Piso, who was (after all) a consul and a prominent public figure who is usually allowed to fall into obscurity as we focus obsessively on Caesar, Pompey, and Cicero. In developing a sense of Piso’s persona, van der Blom elucidates a pattern in Piso’s oratory (such as it is) of appealing to precedent and the letter of the law, as well as principled and perhaps Epicurean insistence on not getting involved in other men’s battles. This kind of rigidity emerges much more strongly, of course, in chapter 7, in van der Blom’s profile of Cato the Younger. No Late Republican politician, as van der Blom notes, impressed his contemporaries with a stronger sense of his idiosyncratic personality, and no politician relied more on his personality for auctoritas, for Cato’s influence is quite striking given his electoral failures. Cato, like Gracchus, is often seen distorted through the lens of hero worship, but van der Blom’s portrait is detailed and careful, avoiding over-generalization or speculation. Cato was principled in the extreme, but demonstrably capable of pragmatism and occasionally guilty of nepotism. Like Piso’s Epicureanism, Cato’s Stoicism appears to have been an element that he could but did not always invoke as a driving principle of political action. A strong pattern of resistence to the “first triumvirate” emerges from the assembled testimonia, as does the proclivity to nonconformity and obstructionism for which Cato is so well known, and which, as van der Blom shows, Cato made the centerpiece of his own spectacular self-fashioning.

The monograph concludes with a chapter on Marcus Antonius, a man whose career is well known and who delivered several famous speeches of great historical import. Nevertheless, van der Blom notes, no fragments survive to confirm or refute assessments of Antonius’ oratory or Plutarch’s characterization of Antonius’ oratory as Asianist. Indeed, the lack of specific information about Antony’s speeches means that this chapter remains rather frustratingly speculative. van der Blom does make the important point, however, that Antonius’ clash with Cicero in late 44 challenged the great orator on his own turf, so to speak, and that Antony must either have chosen or been forced by circumstance to use oratory as a tool on this occasion nonetheless (p. 271).

The importance of oratory as an arena of political action in this tumultuous period thus emerges clearly. Brief mention is also made of the importance of propaganda in the triumviral period, much of which was disseminated through oratory. van der Blom occasionally remarks in the course of the book on the apparent increase in the relative importance of oratory as a component of public life in the first century BCE, as military achievements and provincial administration experienced a corresponding decline in their potential to confer prestige and influence. This comes out most prominently in van der Blom’s conclusion, in which she sets aside Cicero’s schema in the Brutus of good versus bad orators in favor of a new schema: good versus (unstudied) bad builders of public profiles. Politicians could use oratory to as great or as small an extent as they liked in creating such a public profile, and speech was hardly their only tool; in fact, van der Blom notes, this flexibility opened all kinds of possibilities for accessing political influence and made the Roman political elite rather more open to outsiders than has previously been thought by some scholars. This all bears directly on Cicero’s own career, of course: his Philippics offer our best evidence for the oratorical fray of 44-43 BCE, and more broadly, his published speeches and spectacular career spurred, if they did not initiate, the growing importance of oratory. This, however, remains unstated in van der Blom’s project, as a result of her more general goal of avoiding Cicero.

This study exposes myriad opportunities for further study, investigation, and analysis, in the best possible way. By shedding light on the speech-making activities of these prominent late Republican politicians, van der Blom has convincingly demonstrated that oratory was an essential tool for them, and has broadened our perspective on oratory in the period, far beyond a myopic spotlight on Cicero.

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Constitution Quiz

constitution-quiz

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

Sunday, August 4, 2019

Becoming Moses: Deuteronomy 32

Moses

Saturday, August 3, 2019

Haverford College Study Tree

Kelly Wilcox

Dean for Learning Resources, Director - Office of Academic Resources, Associate Dean of the College at Haverford College


Associate Dean of the College & Dean for First-Year Students at Haverford College

Friday, August 2, 2019

Neumann University Study Tree

Jason Fitzpatrick

Assistant Dean of Student Services
Greater Philadelphia Area
E-Learning

Alfred Mueller II

Experienced Academic Leader ☞ Helping People Achieve Their Goals One Day at a Time ☞ Curious? Read On!

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Delaware County Community College Study Tree

Mujtaba Talebi

Director of Web Services at Delaware County Community College
United States

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Villanova University Study Tree

Brian Galloway

Director of Student Retention at Villanova University
Greater Philadelphia Area


Susan Leighton

Executive Administrative Assistant to the Provost at VillanovaUniversity

Stephen Fugale


Vice President and CIO │ Villanova University │ Delivering IT Expertise that Ensures Business and Revenue Growth

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Niall Ferguson, H.R. McMaster, Intellectual Treason

treason

Immaculata University Study Tree

John D. Stafford, Ed.D.

Vice President for Student Development & Engagement & Dean of Students

Monday, July 29, 2019

Ian Hunter, Henning Kvitnes, I Wish I Was Your Mother

Shaky Ground ‎– What's Shaking

Label:
RecArt Music ‎– R 60072-2
Format:
CD, Album 
Country:
Released:




I Wish I Was Your Mother
Backing Vocals – Jan Kaspersen (2)Rikke MachBass – Terje StøldalDrums, Percussion – Erik LodbergFeaturing – Henning KvitnesGuitar – Erik JepsenJan MolsKeyboards – Niels Ole ThorningLead Vocals, Acoustic Guitar – Henning KvitnesProducer – Henning KvitnesNiels Ole ThorningShaky GroundWritten-By – Ian Hunter

Sunday, July 28, 2019

Saturday, July 27, 2019

If You Want Peace, Prepare for War

“Si vis pacem, para bellum,” Publio Flavius Vegetius Renatus

Friday, July 26, 2019

Ian Hunter, Studio Jam

Came across a tape I’ve not heard before – Ian Hunter – studio Jam Inc. Suite 3105 875 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 60611, 25 June 1979.’ Anyone? [Justin says: a little-known one-hour syndicated radio show; likely an edited version of the Park West local radio broadcast from 22nd June.]

Horse’s Mouth (Issue #181, Feb 2017)


Thursday, July 25, 2019

Project One, Angel

angel.co/project-one

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Vesting

.entrepreneur.com/article

founders-agreement-template-with-vesting

investopedia.com/terms/f/fully-vested

Ownership in startup companiesEdit

Small entrepreneurial companies usually offer grants of common stock or positions in an employee stock option plan to employees and other key participants such as contractorsboard membersadvisors and major vendors. To make the reward commensurate with the extent of contribution, encourage loyalty, and avoid spreading ownership widely among former participants, these grants are usually subject to vesting arrangements.
Vesting of options is straightforward. The grantee receives an option to purchase a block of common stock, typically on commencement of employment, which vests over time. The option may be exercised at any time but only with respect to the vested portion. The entire option is lost if not exercised within a short period after the end of the employer relationship. The vesting operates simply by changing the status of the option over time from fully unexercisable to fully exercisable according to the vesting schedule.
Common stock grants are similar in function but the mechanism is different. An employee, typically a company founder, purchases stock in the company at nominal price shortly after the company is formed. The company retains a repurchaseright to buy the stock back at the same price should the employee leave. The repurchase right diminishes over time so that the company eventually has no right to repurchase the stock (in other words, the stock becomes fully vested).
Beginning in the 1990s, vesting periods in the United States are usually 3–5 years for employees, but shorter for board members and others whose expected tenure at a company is shorter. The vesting schedule is most often a pro-rata monthly vesting over the period with a six or twelve month cliff.
In the case of both stock and options, large initial grants that vest over time are more common than periodic smaller grants because they are easier to account for and administer, they establish the arrangement up-front and are thus more predictable, and (subject to some complexities and limitations) the value of the grants and holding period requirements for tax purposes are set upon the initial grant date, giving a considerable tax advantage to the employee.

Nailed Mueller on Instigator of Russia Probe

Nailed

Dazed & Confused Mueller

Dazed & Confused

I've had my own doubts about Mueller's ability since he bungled the Boston Bombing case but the left-wing should be ashamed of themselves for trotting out and embarrassing a Marine veteran like this.

The Left has been hiding behind his reputation but clearly he is not capable since he does not even seem to know what is in his Report.

The Report was fueled by hostile, anti-Trump apparatchiks.

Mueller Ignores the Bill of Rights

Former Special Counsel Robert Mueller is testifying about his investigation into Russian collusion on Capitol Hill. During questioning by Republican Representative John Ratcliffe from Texas he was able to get Mueller to admit that he held President Trump to a different standard.

According to Town Hall:
Republican Congressman John Ratcliffe didn't waste anytime with his brief, five minute questioning period and ripped Mueller for making up a standard of guilt only applicable to President Trump.

"Now your report, and today you said that “All times the Special Counsel team operated under, was guided by, and followed Justice Department policies and principles,” so which DOJ policy or principle sets forth a legal standard that an investigated person is not exonerated if their innocence from criminal conduct is not conclusively determined?" Ratcliffe said.

"Which DOJ policy or principle sets forth a legal standard that an investigated person is not exonerated if their innocence from criminal conduct is not conclusively determined? Where does that language come from, director? Where is the DOJ policy that says that? Let me make it easier, can you give me an example other than Donald Trump where the Justice Department determined that an investigated person was not exonerated because their innocence was not conclusively determined?" he continued.

"I cannot but this is a unique situation," Mueller responded.
Mueller also revealed that President Trump could be charged when he leaves the office. This because of the standard from the Justice Department not to indict a sitting president.

However, Mueller never explicitly stated if Trump could be indicted.

The problem with the standard is we have never been told why this standard exists.

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Monday, July 22, 2019

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Study Tree

App

5:26




Companies: Study Tree

Study Tree


1:52

A.I + Personalized Learning = Future Of Education



Silviu Nedelciuc

Xueye Yan

Steve Calabro

Ao Yan

Leon Kim

Lafayette

Pierce

Montgomery County Community College

Ethan Keiser, Study Tree CEO on BbWorld 2016, :55

https://youtu.be/Q-1e0dNJAP4



May 2015 College Demos: StudyTree, 5:25

StudyTree is a mobile platform designed to connect students and tutors. StudyTree creates a network of university tutors and students.

https://youtu.be/Tj4fy3MGJ6U
























Saturday, July 20, 2019

Restored Apollo 11 Moonwalk - Original NASA EVA Mission Video

Restored Apollo 11 Moonwalk - Original NASA EVA Mission Video

"Play Ethics: Values, Virtues and Videogames" Sicart M.

Play Ethics: Values, Virtues, and Videogames, 56:43

From the Interactive Media & Games Seminar Series; Miguel Sicart, Computer Games & Research, IT University of Copenhagen asks what roles do playthings, from games to other forms of interactive entertainment, play in shaping our culture? Are games, and play, in realms beyond morality, or is play an intrinsically moral activity? And how can we make games more ethically compelling, while still respecting the creative nature of play? Drawing on virtue ethics, philosophy of information, and play theory, he introduces a model of understanding ethics in digital games, as well as ways of analyzing, and designing, ethical play experiences.

Friday, July 19, 2019

Conference Proposal

October 2017

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Drexel Current Companies

Current Companies






Study Tree

StudyTree

StudyTree is a B2B platform which integrates academic support services of higher education institutions with artificial intelligence to provide students with a mobile academic assistant. StudyTree analyzes students’ grades and behavioral patterns to construct customized recommendations to improve their academic performance. Examples include building unique study schedules for students by aggregating course material, creating jigsaw study groups, and leveraging peer tutors. Additionally, StudyTree serves advisors and administrators by providing them managerial access to the application, which enables insight to useful statistics and an overview of each student’s individual progress.
  • Contact: Ethan@studytreeapp.com
  • Site: www.studytreeapp.com/
  • Founders: Ethan Keiser
  • Founded: January 26, 2015

Highlights

  • U.S Microsoft Start-Up Competition, 1st Place
  • DreamIt EdTech Accelerator Spring '16
  • Partnered with Blackboards and Canvas
  • Supports over 25,000 students.

Social Media

Team

Ethan  
Ethan Keiser, Founder

Ethan@studytreeapp.com

Ethan’s passion for coding started back in 7th grade when he purchased a C++ book. Unfortunately, he did not have a computer to begin coding. The entire summer of 2003, Ethan rallied his local neighborhood friends and began landscaping. Managing seven lawns, Ethan concluded the summer purchasing his first computer. Having come a long way, Ethan has already developed and coded two live mobile applications. Ethan is current pursing his Bachelor of Science in Computer Science in The Drexel College of Computing and Informatics.

Ethan spent several summers as a counselor at a computer science camp for middle school students. Balancing academics with athletics, Ethan formerly competed as a Drexel wrestler. Ethan knows seven languages: English and six computer languages.





Boost Linguistics

Boost Linguistics

Boost Linguistics

Boost Linguistics is a neurolinguistics software company that supports a new generation of writers using artificial intelligence to craft emotionally compelling stories.
  • Contact: ethan@boost-ling.com
  • Site: http://boost-ling.com/
  • Founders: Ethan Bresnahan, Jeff Nowak, Alexandra Dodson
  • Founded: 2015

Social Media:

Highlights:

  • First Place at the Baiada Institute’s Business Model Competition
  • Third Place at the Baiada Institute Business Plan Competition

Awards

Orai

Orai

Public speaking is always a little bit terrifying, but one of the best ways to get over that is to prepare as much as possible. With Orai, you can practice public speaking with a tap of a button.
Orai helps you prepare by analyzing everything you say. Whether you are practicing for a presentation or interested in improving your everyday communication, our mobile app tracks your umm's and uhh's, pace, clarity, and much more. So if you're wondering how your pace and volume changed over time, or how clearly you pronounced each individual word, Orai has you covered.

Highlights

  • Drexel Startup Day 2016 Business Plan Competition, First Place
  • Oh-Penn Pitch Competition, First Place
  • PittJohnstown LIVE Pitch Competition, First Place
  • Drexel Startup Day 2015 Pitch Competition, Second Place
  • Drexel Business Model Competition, Second Place
  • Startupalooza Pitch Competition, Third Place

Social Media

Team

Danish  
 
Danish Dhamani, Founder

Mechanical Engineering ‘18

paritosh  
 
Paritosh Gupta, Founder

Computer Science ‘18

Hillsdale College: Census Controversy

census-controversy

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps

/historyofphilosophy.net

Bryn Mawr Classical Review

BMCR 2017.01.53 on the BMCR blog

Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017.01.53

Peter AdamsonClassical Philosophy. A history of philosophy without any gaps, 1.   Oxford:  Oxford University Press2014.  Pp. xx, 346.  ISBN 9780199674534.  $29.95.   


Reviewed by Eve A. Browning, University of Texas at San Antonio (Eve.Browning@utsa.edu)
Preview
Since 2010, Peter Adamson has been at work on a monumentally extensive series of podcasts designed to deliver the history of philosophy “without any gaps”. The podcast collection now extends from Thales through early Christian philosophy, medieval philosophy (with especially strong coverage of Islamic philosophers), and into Indian philosophy. Averaging from 15-20 minutes in listening time, all podcasts are available here: Preview
With this book, handsomely produced by Oxford University Press, Adamson moves these podcasts into print with only the most minor of changes (a very occasional word substitution). The podcasts translate into individual chapters of 5-10 pages.
The podcast is a medium typically enjoyed under conditions of some degree of distraction: running on a treadmill, washing the dishes, waiting for a plane, actually suffering through air travel. For that reason the podcasts that work best employ a somewhat simpler mode of conceptual delivery than books, to which we usually try to bring our A-game in terms of concentration.
Adamson’s podcasts are pleasantly read from a script verbatim, and are more challenging than a typical podcast but less demanding than a typical book. Reading them in book form, therefore, is a mixed experience. The level of analysis and interpretation is unavoidably thinner than we typically expect when reading histories of philosophy.
Given the burdensome scope of the project Adamson is imposing on himself, he frequently attempts to lighten the mood through humor, including individual podcast and chapter subtitles such as these: “All You Need is Love, and Five Other Things: Empedocles” (64), “We Don’t Need No Education: Plato’s Meno (123)”, “God Only Knows: Aristotle on Mind and God” (278). Sometimes he seems to be addressing a younger reader, as when he refers to Anaximander’s structured cosmos as “pretty cool” (11). He also employs lightening devices such as a somewhat tone- deaf running joke about James Brown’s dancing that adversely affects the chapter entitled “Soul Power: Aristotle’s On the Soul” (250). And there are puns—so many puns. The cumulative effect of the puns alone is that of being repeatedly dug in the ribs by a mischievous sibling.
Beginning a history of philosophy ‘without any gaps’ with Thales might seem odd, since at least as regards a written tradition, Thales is mostly one enormous gap. Adamson explains the widespread choice of Thales to begin western philosophy as follows: “(H)e was the first person to gain a reputation for the sort of independent analysis of nature we describe as ‘scientific’” (6).
The chapters all aim at providing entry-level discussions while not avoiding complexities—a difficult balancing act, and one at which Adamson is quite skilled. The approach is least well exemplified when treating individual dialogues of Plato, where it tends to devolve into play-by-play paraphrase of the form, “And then he said . . .” For example, “Here Critias makes a surprising move . . . This leaves Socrates more confused than ever . . . (etc.)” (111). In chapters like these, it is hard not to conclude that the reader would be better served by just reading the dialogue.
However there are some really significant strengths. Chapter 11 on the Hippocratics (“Good Humor Men: The Hippocratic Corpus”) and Chapter 12 on the Sophists present treatments that are both nuanced and sympathetic.
Adamson is at his best when he abandons the text-by-text organizational scheme and the attempt to cover individual texts from front to back. Thus, Plato’s Republic gets two chapters, 21 and 22, and takes up only two themes but those of enormous importance: justice, and the Allegory of the Cave. Adamson is able in these two chapters to provide important textual and conceptual beacons that would be of significant help to a reader who ventures further into the work itself.
The chapters on Aristotle’s logic (30 and 31) do a wonderful job of explaining the relation of the several logical works in the Aristotelian corpus to one another; I have never seen this done so well or so clearly. Adamson discusses Aristotle’s CategoriesOn InterpretationPrior Analytics, and Posterior Analytics, giving a surprising amount of clear coverage in chapters that add up to only 14 pages. Every student or reader who enters into these challenging texts, and every instructor who takes on the fearsome responsibility of teaching them, would be benefitted by a careful reading of these two chapters.
Also very strong are two thematic chapters on Plato: Chapter 26 on the Timaeus, and Chapter 28 on Plato’s use of poetry and myth. Here Adamson is at his best, making the philosophical issues fresh and enticing, giving enough analysis to equip a reader to appreciate what is at stake and the tools to venture further.
The penultimate Chapter 42, “Anything You Can Do: Women and Ancient Philosophy” devotes 8 pages to the sadly few names of women philosophers that have come down to us (e.g. Perictione, Theano, Aspasia) with appropriate circumspection as to the authenticity of claims made about them. It also reminds us of some key texts in previously discussed male philosophers which have implications for ancient views on sex and gender.
In summary, there are real treasures here. These are the same as those that are available on the website noted in the first paragraph of this review. (The website has recently made all podcasts searchable by theme.) This fact makes me wonder about the thinking behind Oxford University Press’s decision to publish the podcasts in book form.
However there is no question that Adamson has done, and is doing, the discipline of philosophy an enormous service with his huge and growing collection of podcasts. The website has a ‘comments’ section below each individual recording, and there are numerous loyal and faithful listeners who give heartfelt thanks, or ask questions that Adamson frequently answers. Through prodigious labor, he has opened doors, and opened a dialogue with the wide world concerning the history of philosophy that is invaluable and he is to be warmly thanked for this. 
Read comments on this review or add a comment on the BMCR blog

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