This document provides a summary and analysis of 5 essays from the anthology "American Indian Thought: Philosophical Essays". The essays discuss Indigenous philosophy, metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and aesthetics. A common theme is the poetic nature of Indigenous thought. Indigenous philosophy is described as a "prefacing" that constantly shifts between worlds without fully arriving in either. It prioritizes relationships and respect over rigid categorization or depth. Questions are seen as signs of confusion rather than vehicles for truth. Indigenous thought challenges Western philosophy to recognize its own poetic roots.
EAS 209 Second Response Paper Topic Assignment Due .docxjoellemurphey
EAS 209
Second Response Paper Topic
>>>Assignment Due Date: Friday, October 12, 2018<<<
Write 350 words, excluding works cited and references, on the following topic:
Dipesh Chakrabarty cites John Stuart Mill to show one dimension of historicist
consciousness: “a recommendation to the colonized to wait.” What does Chakrabarty
mean by this phrase? Consider, e.g. why, according to Mill, “Indians, Africans, and other
‘rude’ nations” had to be consigned to what Chakrabarty called “an imaginary waiting
room of history.”
To respond to this question, you might find it helpful to consider Chakrabarty’s discussion
on historicism or “stagist theory of history.”
▪ Submit a hard copy in your Tutorial Section on Friday, October 12.
▪ Papers must be type-written, double-spaced, appearing in 12 points Times New Roman font or
its equivalent with 1” margins. Do not exceed 400 words. You are responsible for keeping an
extra copy of your own paper.
▪ The assignment does not ask you to conduct additional research. Papers that do not respond
to the given topic or do not follow the specific instructions described above will receive no
marks. No resubmission allowed.
▪ You need to present your argument logically and clearly, fully demonstrate the precise
understanding of Chakrabarty’s argument and substantiate your argument convincingly and
with details.
▪ Observe the Chicago Manual of Style referencing practice and properly cite the passages you
quote (i.e. author, title, page number, etc.). Works cited or references should not be counted
toward the 350 word limit.
▪ Any ideas or expressions that are not your own must be placed in quotation marks and
referenced with page number. Academic misconduct will not be tolerated. See:
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/osai/The-rules/what-is-academic-misconduct
▪ You may share notes and discuss your ideas with others for preparation. But the paper you
submit must be exclusively written by you alone and in your own words clearly distinguishable
from others’. Papers that plagiarize, replicate others, or contain identical or near-identical
passages that appear in other papers will not be accepted or credited.
▪ You must proof-read before submission. Sentences that are incomplete or unintelligible will
not be read or credited.
▪ Late submission and papers submitted via e-mail will not be accepted or credited unless
under extraordinary circumstances. ABSOLUTELY NO EXCPETION!
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/osai/The-rules/what-is-academic-misconduct
I N T R O D U C T I O N
The Idea of Provincializing Europe
Europe . . . since 1914 has become provincialized, . . .
only the natural sciences are able to call forth a
quick international echo.
(Hans-Georg Gadamer, 1977)
The West is a name for a subject which gathers itself in
discourse but is also an object constituted discursively;
it is, evidently, a name always associating itself with
those regions, communities, and peoples.
English 1C Critical Thinking Essay (6 - 6 12 pages, MLA 12pt font .docxLinaCovington707
English 1C: Critical Thinking Essay (6 - 6 1/2 pages, MLA 12pt font times new roman)
Due Date: (8/2/17)
Assignment: Consider one of the topics: I choose to propose my own topic. (received teacher's approval)
Requirements: Use 1-2 in class philosophical texts (I have them in the attachment) and 3-4 academic sources (requires research) to analyze, explore, and make connections to each other. Needs to have at least one quote in each body paragraph.
My proposed topic:
In class, my teacher he talks about a scenario where people from different cultures tend to have different views and values, but people who were raised in both cultures can have an internal conflict between their cultures, causing to choose one over the other, have a mix of both (as in a hybrid form of culture), or identify themselves to another culture that lies somewhere in between, or maybe even reject both cultures.
In Nietzsche's essay "On Truth and Lying in an Extra-Moral Sense", he says "for between two absolutely different spheres such as subject and object, there can be no expression, but as most an aesthetic stance, I mean an allusive transference, a stammering translation into a completely foreign medium. For this, however, in any case a freely fictionalizing and freely inventive middle sphere and middle faculty is necessary." In connection to people who have lived in two different cultures this inventive "middle ground” and “aesthetic stance” is essential for them to embrace their own set of values and beliefs.
For the research part of the essay, I wanted to explore people who have immigrated to another country from their own home country since a young age, for their development is heavily influenced by the struggles of living in multiple cultures. (I’m one of them myself). In sociology, Ruben Rumbaut was the first to coin the term “1.5 generation immigrant”, which means the people who have arrived in another country before their adolescence. Based on the age in which they immigrated, some of these immigrants might feel a stronger connection to a particular culture where some might feel they belong right in the middle, being unable to identify themselves to either of their ethnicities. (Just providing possible examples)
Optional (If there isn’t enough topics): Also for immigrants who might choose one culture over another. It can possibly relate to another philosophical text. In Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave,” Aristotle argues that there are two mediums of knowledge that exists: the physical/sensory world(cave), where people(prisoners) are living happily in an illusion, and the intelligible world, where people can achieve a perfect form of knowledge through learning philosophy. For people, who have acquired the “perfect knowledge” of philosophy, when they go back to the sensory world, they will have a better and clearer perception of the world than those in the sensory world. They also have developed a responsibility of “quietly ruling” the people in the sensor.
In post colonial studies some of the Indian theorists has contributed very well. In this presentation I gave short information about them and their work.
Current Anthropology Volume 40, Number 4, August–October 1999OllieShoresna
Current Anthropology Volume 40, Number 4, August–October 1999
1999 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved 0011-3204/99/4004-0001$2.50
Debating Self,
Identity, and Culture
in Anthropology1
by Martin Sökefeld
This paper explores relations between ‘‘identity’’ and ‘‘self’’—con-
cepts that tend to be approached separately in anthropological
discourse. In the conceptualization of the self, the ‘‘Western’’
self, characterized as autonomous and egocentric, is generally
taken as a point of departure. Non-Western (concepts of) selves—
the selves of the people anthropology traditionally studies—are
defined by the negation of these qualities. Similar to anthropolog-
ical conceptualizations of identity, this understanding of non-
Western selves points exclusively to elements shared with others
and not to individual features. Consequently, anthropological dis-
course diverts attention from actual individuals and selves. A dif-
ferent approach is exemplified by a case from northern Pakistan
in a social setting characterized by a plurality of contradictory
identities. It is argued that an analysis of how a particular indi-
vidual acts in situations involving contradictory identities re-
quires a concept of a self as it emerges from the actions of indi-
viduals that is capable managing the respectively shared
identities. Besides any culture-specific attributes, this self is en-
dowed with reflexivity and agency. This concept of self is a nec-
essary supplement to the concept of culture in anthropology and
should be regarded as a human universal.
martin sökefeld teaches at the Institute of Social Anthropol-
ogy of the University of Hamburg (his address: Kamerstücken 28,
22589 Hamburg, Germany [[email protected]]). Born in
1964, he received his M.A. from the University of Cologne in
1990 and his Ph.D. from the University of Tübingen in 1997. He
has done fieldwork in Gilgit, Pakistan (1991–92, 1992–93), and
has published Ein Labyrinth von Identitäten in Nordpakistan:
Zwischen Landbesitz, Religion und Kaschmir-Konflikt (Köln:
Köppe, 1997), ‘‘ ‘The People Who Really Belong to Gilgit’: Theo-
retical and Ethnographic Perspectives on Identity and Conflict,’’
in Transformation of Social and Economic Relationships in
Northern Pakistan, edited by Irmtraud Stellrecht and Hans-Georg
Bohle (Köln: Köppe, 1998), and ‘‘On the Concept ‘Ethnic
Group,’ ’’ in Karakorum-Hindukush-Himalaya: Dynamics of
Change, edited by Irmtraud Stellrecht (Köln: Köppe, in press).
The present paper was submitted 12 vii 98 and accepted 14 x 98;
the final version reached the Editor’s office 23 x 98.
1. I would like to thank Katrin Gratz, Beatrix Hauser, and Georg
Stöber as well as the anonymous referees for critically reading an
earlier version of the paper. The paper was much improved by their
suggestions. For many discussions of the topic I am grateful to
Beate Reinhold. The text is an outcome of reflection about field
research in Norther ...
One of the most influential literary critical movements of the 20th century. Speaking very generally, Russian Formalism as a critical movement was interested in identifying the specific quality of language use that separated the literary text from the non-literary text. Their approach was scientific inasmuch as they thought it was possible to establish what it is precisely that distinguishes ordinary usages of language from the poetic. Unlike the later post-structuralists, the Russian Formalists treated poetry as an autonomous form of discourse that was distinct from all other forms of discourse. They referred to this difference in qualitative terms as literaturnost (literariness) and sought to quantify (i.e. formalize) it by means of their theory of ostranenie (estrangement), which simply put is the process of making the already familiar seem unfamiliar or strange, thereby awakening in us a heightened state of perception.
IV. Wiener Konferenz für Mediation 2006
"CULTURE MEETS CULTURE II"
Das »neue« Unbehagen in der Kultur
Termin: Freitag, 05.Mai 2006, 11.15-12.05
Univ. Prof. Franz Martin Wimmer (A), Univ. Prof. und Lektor im Fach Philosophie an den Universitäten Salzburg, Klagenfurt, Innsbruck und Wien
Video unter:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQFQTNPEb7g&feature=share&list=PLp7y0fn6UN_hh3wv3Vhw4B6l99kR4jLfs&index=3
Angela L. Cotten and Christa Davis Acampora, eds. Cultural Sites of Critical Insight: Philosophy, Aesthetics, and African American and Native American Women’s Writings. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2007.
EAS 209 Second Response Paper Topic Assignment Due .docxjoellemurphey
EAS 209
Second Response Paper Topic
>>>Assignment Due Date: Friday, October 12, 2018<<<
Write 350 words, excluding works cited and references, on the following topic:
Dipesh Chakrabarty cites John Stuart Mill to show one dimension of historicist
consciousness: “a recommendation to the colonized to wait.” What does Chakrabarty
mean by this phrase? Consider, e.g. why, according to Mill, “Indians, Africans, and other
‘rude’ nations” had to be consigned to what Chakrabarty called “an imaginary waiting
room of history.”
To respond to this question, you might find it helpful to consider Chakrabarty’s discussion
on historicism or “stagist theory of history.”
▪ Submit a hard copy in your Tutorial Section on Friday, October 12.
▪ Papers must be type-written, double-spaced, appearing in 12 points Times New Roman font or
its equivalent with 1” margins. Do not exceed 400 words. You are responsible for keeping an
extra copy of your own paper.
▪ The assignment does not ask you to conduct additional research. Papers that do not respond
to the given topic or do not follow the specific instructions described above will receive no
marks. No resubmission allowed.
▪ You need to present your argument logically and clearly, fully demonstrate the precise
understanding of Chakrabarty’s argument and substantiate your argument convincingly and
with details.
▪ Observe the Chicago Manual of Style referencing practice and properly cite the passages you
quote (i.e. author, title, page number, etc.). Works cited or references should not be counted
toward the 350 word limit.
▪ Any ideas or expressions that are not your own must be placed in quotation marks and
referenced with page number. Academic misconduct will not be tolerated. See:
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/osai/The-rules/what-is-academic-misconduct
▪ You may share notes and discuss your ideas with others for preparation. But the paper you
submit must be exclusively written by you alone and in your own words clearly distinguishable
from others’. Papers that plagiarize, replicate others, or contain identical or near-identical
passages that appear in other papers will not be accepted or credited.
▪ You must proof-read before submission. Sentences that are incomplete or unintelligible will
not be read or credited.
▪ Late submission and papers submitted via e-mail will not be accepted or credited unless
under extraordinary circumstances. ABSOLUTELY NO EXCPETION!
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/osai/The-rules/what-is-academic-misconduct
I N T R O D U C T I O N
The Idea of Provincializing Europe
Europe . . . since 1914 has become provincialized, . . .
only the natural sciences are able to call forth a
quick international echo.
(Hans-Georg Gadamer, 1977)
The West is a name for a subject which gathers itself in
discourse but is also an object constituted discursively;
it is, evidently, a name always associating itself with
those regions, communities, and peoples.
English 1C Critical Thinking Essay (6 - 6 12 pages, MLA 12pt font .docxLinaCovington707
English 1C: Critical Thinking Essay (6 - 6 1/2 pages, MLA 12pt font times new roman)
Due Date: (8/2/17)
Assignment: Consider one of the topics: I choose to propose my own topic. (received teacher's approval)
Requirements: Use 1-2 in class philosophical texts (I have them in the attachment) and 3-4 academic sources (requires research) to analyze, explore, and make connections to each other. Needs to have at least one quote in each body paragraph.
My proposed topic:
In class, my teacher he talks about a scenario where people from different cultures tend to have different views and values, but people who were raised in both cultures can have an internal conflict between their cultures, causing to choose one over the other, have a mix of both (as in a hybrid form of culture), or identify themselves to another culture that lies somewhere in between, or maybe even reject both cultures.
In Nietzsche's essay "On Truth and Lying in an Extra-Moral Sense", he says "for between two absolutely different spheres such as subject and object, there can be no expression, but as most an aesthetic stance, I mean an allusive transference, a stammering translation into a completely foreign medium. For this, however, in any case a freely fictionalizing and freely inventive middle sphere and middle faculty is necessary." In connection to people who have lived in two different cultures this inventive "middle ground” and “aesthetic stance” is essential for them to embrace their own set of values and beliefs.
For the research part of the essay, I wanted to explore people who have immigrated to another country from their own home country since a young age, for their development is heavily influenced by the struggles of living in multiple cultures. (I’m one of them myself). In sociology, Ruben Rumbaut was the first to coin the term “1.5 generation immigrant”, which means the people who have arrived in another country before their adolescence. Based on the age in which they immigrated, some of these immigrants might feel a stronger connection to a particular culture where some might feel they belong right in the middle, being unable to identify themselves to either of their ethnicities. (Just providing possible examples)
Optional (If there isn’t enough topics): Also for immigrants who might choose one culture over another. It can possibly relate to another philosophical text. In Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave,” Aristotle argues that there are two mediums of knowledge that exists: the physical/sensory world(cave), where people(prisoners) are living happily in an illusion, and the intelligible world, where people can achieve a perfect form of knowledge through learning philosophy. For people, who have acquired the “perfect knowledge” of philosophy, when they go back to the sensory world, they will have a better and clearer perception of the world than those in the sensory world. They also have developed a responsibility of “quietly ruling” the people in the sensor.
In post colonial studies some of the Indian theorists has contributed very well. In this presentation I gave short information about them and their work.
Current Anthropology Volume 40, Number 4, August–October 1999OllieShoresna
Current Anthropology Volume 40, Number 4, August–October 1999
1999 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved 0011-3204/99/4004-0001$2.50
Debating Self,
Identity, and Culture
in Anthropology1
by Martin Sökefeld
This paper explores relations between ‘‘identity’’ and ‘‘self’’—con-
cepts that tend to be approached separately in anthropological
discourse. In the conceptualization of the self, the ‘‘Western’’
self, characterized as autonomous and egocentric, is generally
taken as a point of departure. Non-Western (concepts of) selves—
the selves of the people anthropology traditionally studies—are
defined by the negation of these qualities. Similar to anthropolog-
ical conceptualizations of identity, this understanding of non-
Western selves points exclusively to elements shared with others
and not to individual features. Consequently, anthropological dis-
course diverts attention from actual individuals and selves. A dif-
ferent approach is exemplified by a case from northern Pakistan
in a social setting characterized by a plurality of contradictory
identities. It is argued that an analysis of how a particular indi-
vidual acts in situations involving contradictory identities re-
quires a concept of a self as it emerges from the actions of indi-
viduals that is capable managing the respectively shared
identities. Besides any culture-specific attributes, this self is en-
dowed with reflexivity and agency. This concept of self is a nec-
essary supplement to the concept of culture in anthropology and
should be regarded as a human universal.
martin sökefeld teaches at the Institute of Social Anthropol-
ogy of the University of Hamburg (his address: Kamerstücken 28,
22589 Hamburg, Germany [[email protected]]). Born in
1964, he received his M.A. from the University of Cologne in
1990 and his Ph.D. from the University of Tübingen in 1997. He
has done fieldwork in Gilgit, Pakistan (1991–92, 1992–93), and
has published Ein Labyrinth von Identitäten in Nordpakistan:
Zwischen Landbesitz, Religion und Kaschmir-Konflikt (Köln:
Köppe, 1997), ‘‘ ‘The People Who Really Belong to Gilgit’: Theo-
retical and Ethnographic Perspectives on Identity and Conflict,’’
in Transformation of Social and Economic Relationships in
Northern Pakistan, edited by Irmtraud Stellrecht and Hans-Georg
Bohle (Köln: Köppe, 1998), and ‘‘On the Concept ‘Ethnic
Group,’ ’’ in Karakorum-Hindukush-Himalaya: Dynamics of
Change, edited by Irmtraud Stellrecht (Köln: Köppe, in press).
The present paper was submitted 12 vii 98 and accepted 14 x 98;
the final version reached the Editor’s office 23 x 98.
1. I would like to thank Katrin Gratz, Beatrix Hauser, and Georg
Stöber as well as the anonymous referees for critically reading an
earlier version of the paper. The paper was much improved by their
suggestions. For many discussions of the topic I am grateful to
Beate Reinhold. The text is an outcome of reflection about field
research in Norther ...
One of the most influential literary critical movements of the 20th century. Speaking very generally, Russian Formalism as a critical movement was interested in identifying the specific quality of language use that separated the literary text from the non-literary text. Their approach was scientific inasmuch as they thought it was possible to establish what it is precisely that distinguishes ordinary usages of language from the poetic. Unlike the later post-structuralists, the Russian Formalists treated poetry as an autonomous form of discourse that was distinct from all other forms of discourse. They referred to this difference in qualitative terms as literaturnost (literariness) and sought to quantify (i.e. formalize) it by means of their theory of ostranenie (estrangement), which simply put is the process of making the already familiar seem unfamiliar or strange, thereby awakening in us a heightened state of perception.
IV. Wiener Konferenz für Mediation 2006
"CULTURE MEETS CULTURE II"
Das »neue« Unbehagen in der Kultur
Termin: Freitag, 05.Mai 2006, 11.15-12.05
Univ. Prof. Franz Martin Wimmer (A), Univ. Prof. und Lektor im Fach Philosophie an den Universitäten Salzburg, Klagenfurt, Innsbruck und Wien
Video unter:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQFQTNPEb7g&feature=share&list=PLp7y0fn6UN_hh3wv3Vhw4B6l99kR4jLfs&index=3
Angela L. Cotten and Christa Davis Acampora, eds. Cultural Sites of Critical Insight: Philosophy, Aesthetics, and African American and Native American Women’s Writings. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2007.
Honest Reviews of Tim Han LMA Course Program.pptxtimhan337
Personal development courses are widely available today, with each one promising life-changing outcomes. Tim Han’s Life Mastery Achievers (LMA) Course has drawn a lot of interest. In addition to offering my frank assessment of Success Insider’s LMA Course, this piece examines the course’s effects via a variety of Tim Han LMA course reviews and Success Insider comments.
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
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The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
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found in her essay’s closing metaphor. It is modification of Ludwig
Wittgenstein’s metaphor for philosophy as therapy, namely philoso-
phy as a means to “help the fly to escape from the bottle.” Reacting to
Wittgenstein’s quote, Cordova notes that an Indigenous person who
lives in the contemporary U.S., insofar as they are functionally a mem-
ber of two distinct worlds, is a fly trapped in not one, but two, bottles.
Thus, their challenge becomes—not how to escape from one bottle—
but how to travel successfully between two.3
The Indigenous person,
writes Cordova, “has become expert, in order to survive, at flying in and
out of two bottles” (30). While in Wittgenstein’s original metaphor, the
bottle is a system of philosophy, in Cordova’s revision it is a philosoph-
ically-structured world. The exact relationship between the two bottles
is unclear; perhaps they are united at their open ends, or perhaps the
Indigenous bottle is currently nested inside the Western bottle. In any
event, the Indigenous philosopher-fly is what María Lugones calls a
“world-traveler” among worlds.
Compared to Indigenous persons in general, Indigenous philoso-
phers are, as a result of their extensive Western education, particularly
problematic beings, as they cannot sustain themselves in any static and
permanent way due to the cognitive dissonance created by the two
incommensurable worldviews. While this is true for everyone to some
degree, for Indigenous philosophers it is true to a much greater degree,
because the philosophical systems of their formal education are those
of the same colonizers who marginalized and almost eradicated them,
along with their Indigenous philosophies. This in turn necessitates the
constant shifting/relocating motion poetically rendered as the fly fly-
ing in and out of two bottles. In other words, the impossibility of the
Native American philosopher (and thereby of Native American philos-
ophy) necessitates a constant spatial and poetic redistribution.
Overall, Cordova’s essay can be understood as a preface to
Indigenous philosophy which demonstrates (or creates) the impossi-
bility of Indigenous philosophy, and thus suggests that only a process
of prefacing of philosophy is possible, at least for anyone in the posi-
tion of the Indigenous philosopher. Put differently, Indigenous phi-
losophy can be described as prefacing, the poetic motion of always
“approaching” but never fulling arriving at Western philosophy, and
vice versa. In short, all philosophy, for Cordova, is pre-philosophy, all
philosophy is a prefacing—a prefacing of the secular by the religious,
of the Platonic by the Homeric, of the philosophical by the poetic.
Put in terms of the bottle metaphor, one can only play glassblower
while standing inside another glass, creating transparent art within
an encompassing transparency (though the latter is invisible to those
born into the outermost bottle). One can only begin to philosophize
within a given philosophy, itself shaped in part by the religion and
poetry of its own origins.
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2 With this in mind, I now turn to five essays that discuss philosophy,
metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and aesthetics, respectively. In each
case, my focus will be on the role of poetry.
I. Deloria on Poetic Indigenous Philosophy
As noted by Robert J. Conley, in his The Cherokee Nation: A History,
“Vine Deloria, Jr., a Sioux from the Standing Rock Reservation in
South Dakota, published Custer Died for Your Sins: an Indian Manifesto
in 1969 and became an instant celebrity” (216).4
And by the end of
his long career, he had become for the last 100 years, in the words of
Charles F. Wilkinson, “the most important person in Indian affairs,
period.”5
Deloria’s chapter is structured around a “Them v. Us” dichot-
omy, in which the “Us” is Westerners, the “Them” is Indigenous per-
sons, and the “v” (of “versus”) is a conflict perpetrated by the West.
Deloria first identifies the origin of this dichotomy, then explores why
it is still in force, and concludes by delineating the content of the
Indigenous “Them” paradigm.
Deloria opens his essay by remarking that philosophy, “this last bas-
tion of white male supremacy does not admit members easily and the
roadblocks ahead are of such magnitude that it is doubtful that very
much will be accomplished” (3). He then adds that the Indigenous
people who have been essentially excluded from the bastion of phi-
losophy are part of a larger group (i.e., all non-Westerners) that makes
the bastion possible. For example, the Africana enslaved peoples have
been banned from the very same ivory tower that only their forced
labor could have constructed—or, in the larger context of the “West,”
the European Ivory Tower was made possible and remains sustained
by colonialism, having been facilitated before that by the labor of serfs
during medieval scholasticism, from its origins in Greek and Roman
slavery.6
In Deloria’s words, “the stereotype of primitive peoples anchors
the whole edifice of Western social thought” (3).
Deloria then notes the considerable lack of consensus as to what an
“American Indian Philosophy” should even look like:
When we speak of American Indian philosophy today, we are proba-
bly talking about several generations of Indian people who have pop-
ular notions of what Indian philosophy might have been or might
become within the Western philosophical enterprise. (4)
Though there are significant differences among the various Native
American philosophies, they nevertheless share important family resem-
blances vis-à-vis the dominant traditions of European philosophy.
Moreover, many of those differences have been effaced and lost as a
result of European conquest and genocide. Returning to the “Us vs.
Them” dichotomy, Deloria argues that there are reasons that explain
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this dichotomy on a theoretical level. First, the “doctrinal exclusion of
certain kinds of phenomena by the West has no basis except the supersti-
tion that certain things cannot exist” (7). The West is not nearly as open,
for Deloria, as Indigenous cultures are: “Tribal peoples include all forms
of life in their body of evidence from the very beginning, so their con-
cepts must be more precise and involve considerably more evidence” (8).
The remainder of Deloria’s essay is devoted to explicating ele-
ments of Indigenous philosophy that differentiate it from its Western
counterpart. Briefly put, the West poetically (creatively, strategi-
cally, deceptively) produces a fictitious “savage Indian”—keeping in
mind that, based on Deloria’s explicit philosophical commitment to
contextualism, the philosophy of the West is for him inextricable
from its conquest and genocide of Indigenous peoples, along with
the continuing aftermath—and uses that fiction to justify a false
dichotomy between the West and the “Indians,” which dichotomy
the Indigenous peoples nevertheless validate in their (thus far) inef-
fectual counterattack against it, insofar as they utilize the philosoph-
ical weapons of the West, while simultaneously rejecting experienced
Western allies.
Put differently, the West poetically creates the West-Native distinc-
tion, but Indigenous poeticity problematizes its own attempts to be
more Westernly philosophical, not recognizing that it can best contrib-
ute to Western philosophy by loudly proclaiming its own (Indigenous)
poetry. In this way, the sound of the poetry in Indigenous philosophy
can help Western philosophers hear the poetry that is often hushed or
drowned out within Western philosophy. To use a different metaphor,
Indigenous philosophy’s poetic colors can draw the Western eye to its
own spectrum, subdued though the latter has become in its poetry-
denying history.
II. Verney on Poetic Indigenous Metaphysics
Marilyn Notah Verney defines Indigenous philosophy as, simply, “the
beliefs and teachings of my people” (133). (Note the use of the first
person in making an academic claim.) She then defines Indigenous
metaphysics as “the metaphysics of respect (interdependency)” which
sustains “our fundamental relations with Mother Earth,” adding that
these are “relations of equality” (135).
More specifically, Indigenous metaphysics, for Verney, consists of
the following three elements: (1) Respect, (2) Interdependency, and
(3) Equality. If these were principles of an ethics, they would make
an uncontroversial addition to a Western system of ethics. But in a
Western metaphysical system, they would be entirely out of place. This
incompatibility results principally from the fact that a worldview in
which the principles of ethics can be appropriately extended to meta-
physics is a worldview that regards all of reality as having the structure
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2 of personhood, whereas the West does not tend to view reality, the
universe, the cosmos as a person.
For Indigenous philosophy, the entire universe has the kind of being
which makes it a fitting recipient of our respect, and an equal partner
in our mutual interdependency. In this view, reality is a multiplicity, the
parts of which relate to each other as ethical beings, treating each other
with respect, depending on each other, and relating to each other as
equals. Therefore, although Indigenous metaphysics offers an ethics of
considerable depth, attributing personhood to all aspects of reality, as
a metaphysical “system” it remains on the surface of reality, refusing to
descend to the depths of matter, mind, first principles, etc., which are
so highly regarded in traditional Western metaphysics.
TosummarizeVerney’schapter,Indigenousmetaphysicsisnot“deep”
philosophy, but “shallow” communal beliefs and teachings. It might be
characterized, therefore, as a poetically anti-metaphysical metaphysics,
staying on the level of interdependency and respect among equals. Put
differently, Indigenous metaphysics is a two-dimensional metaphysics,
a poetic horizontality. In short, it is a “surface” or “horizontal” meta-
physics, the structure of which problematizes the alleged “depth” of
Western metaphysics.
III. Burkhart on Poetic Indigenous Epistemology
Brian Yazzie Burkhart’s chapter in the anthology begins by enumer-
ating four principles of Indigenous epistemology: (1) the principle
of relatedness, (2) the principle of the limits of questioning, (3) the
meaning-shaping principle of action, and (4) the moral universal
principle. Burkhart then dramatizes all four using the Southwestern
Trickster figure, Coyote, who is described as a philosopher in many
American Indian stories. The reasons for this, Burkhart elaborates, is
“because Coyote wonders about things, about how they really work.
Often in doing so, however, he forgets his place in the world; he does
not remember how he is related” (15). Two things are worthy of note
for my purposes. First, as with Aristotle, for Burkhart Indigenous phi-
losophy begins in wonder. And second, Coyote’s comical predicaments
poetically show us the critical importance of relatedness. Burkhart clar-
ifies the latter point with reference to the first named Greek philoso-
pher, Thales, who allegedly fell into a well while gazing thoughtfully
heavenward. Coyote, “like Thales,” Burkhart writes, “is made fun of
for his actions, actions that arise from his dislocation vis-à-vis the world
around him” (15).
This point is buttressed by analyses drawing on other Native
American tribes. As J. T. Garrett notes,
The rabbit in early Cherokee stories is like the coyote of some West
and Southwest tribes. He is always getting himself into trouble but
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he always seems to get out of things all right. Ironically, the rabbit
always surprises himself that he manages to get himself free of his
own bolstering and tricks...The rabbit always got caught in his lies
and deception. (78 [quoting an Elder])7
Like Aristotle, the trickster rabbit is admired for his intelligence.
But like Thales, the rabbit is also mocked for his (at least sometimes)
self-undermining ways of being in the world.
Returning to Burkhart’s analysis of Coyote, this figure “also shows
us that the questions we choose to ask are more important than any
truths we might hope to discover in asking such questions” (16). In
this light, Burkhart defines the second principle, “the limits of ques-
tioning principle,” as follows: “The way in which we ask questions
(the way in which we act toward our relations) guides us then, to
the right answers, rather than the other way around wherein what is
true directs the method of questioning and the question itself” (16).
As is the case with the philosophical method of phenomenology,
the subject of the inquiry guides us to its truth, not the truth to the
right subject. Unlike much of phenomenology, however, the sub-
ject matter guiding the questioning in Indigenous philosophy is not
an isolated object, but rather an embodied, enmeshed network of
relations.
In regard to this second principle, Burkart further observes that
questions are often seen as symptomatic of self-created problems (rather
than as neutral vehicles for seeking truth):
American Indian philosophy has a very different relationship to ques-
tions and question-formation than does its Western counterpart. It
is generally thought by Native philosophers that questions are most
often a sign of confusion and misunderstanding. The answer to a
question often lies in the question itself rather than in some solution
outside of the question. (17)
This “limits-of-questioning” principles also includes what I will
term “poetic agnosticism,” defined as the claim that there is a proper
boundary to our knowledge, not merely in terms of our ability to
know, but also in terms of what it is right, appropriate, beneficial
to know. “From the American Indian perspective,” Burkhart writes,
“our knowledge is not limited since we have as much as we should”
(18). Put in terms of Hume’s is/ought distinction, “ought” rather than
“is” determines the boundaries of human knowledge—or, more pre-
cisely, the “ought” makes what Western philosophy would call episte-
mological “limits” unnecessary or unreal. To illustrate this point with
a non-epistemological example, the inability to fly is not a limitation
of our human powers; on the contrary, it is simply not part of what it
is to be human.
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2 The third principle, “the meaning-making principle of action,”
Burkhart defines as follows: “We participate in the meaning-making
of our world. . .what we do, how we act, is as important as any truth
and any fact” (16–17). Note the prioritization, central to the Western
tradition of American pragmatism, of praxis. Meanings and truths
are not static, objective, and permanent; they are dynamic, temporal,
and sociocultural creations, bound up with traditions which can also
fail.
Finally, Burkhart fleshes out his fourth principle, which holds that
everything in the universe has an ethical, or moral dimension. “Facts,
truth, meaning, even our existence,” he writes, “are normative” (17).
There are, for Indigenous epistemology, no value-free “observation sen-
tences” or “eternal sentences” of science. Rather, “all investigation is
moral investigation. The guiding question for the entire philosophical
enterprise is consequently: what is the right road for humans to walk?”
(17). With Levinas, then, the Indigenous philosopher affirms that
“Ethics is indeed first philosophy.” This fourth principle also resonates
strongly with American pragmatism, particularly Dewey’s views on the
inseparability of facts and values.
In all of this it is Coyote’s misbehavior, and the sticky ramifications
thereof, that are most relevant. “[W]e are supposed to learn,” Burkhart
writes, “from Coyote’s mistake, which is not letting what is right...guide
his actions, but rather acting solely on the basis of his own wants and
desires (16). What is crucial is that Coyote’s immoral (amoral) self-
interest is fundamentally at odds with our pervasively moral cosmos.
That is why his schemes fail, not to punish him, but because that’s how
the cosmos works—morally.
The rest of Burkhart’s essay is devoted to the nature of knowledge,
the consequences that follow from it, and the relationship of this view
of the nature of knowledge to the Western tradition of phenomenol-
ogy. The four primary characteristics of the nature of knowledge for
Indigenous philosophies are that it is (1) lacking in principles, (2)
non-propositional, (3) experiential, and (4) embodied. Skipping over
Burkhart’s elaboration of these four points, I note the most relevant
consequences that he derives therefrom. To wit, in Indigenous philos-
ophy, the distinction between philosophy and poetry shows itself to
be fundamentally arbitrary and unnecessary. “And just as American
Indian medicine is best described in Western terms as magic, philos-
ophy is, perhaps, best described as poetry” (23). The magic native to
medicine is restored, and the poetry that lies hidden at the heart of
language emerges. As a result, the boundaries between specific Western
disciplines and broader discursive worlds also become significantly
blurred. “Because philosophy, literature, science, and religion are one in
American Indian thought,” writes Burkhart, “we cannot truly separate
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the medicine from the magic nor the philosophy from the poem” (23).
Put differently, in a lived, embodied, practical, evolving relationship of
inquiry with the world, and with no political reasons to introduce arbi-
trary divisions of labor between disciplines, such divisions never even
appear in the first place.
In the final section of his chapter, Burkhart observes that,
“American Indian philosophy finds a camaraderie with the tradition
of phenomenology” (23). Specifically, for Burkhart, Indigenous phi-
losophy resonates with the work of Edmund Husserl, and especially
his conception of the lifeworld. “According to Husserl,” Burkhart
explains, and contra static scientific materialism, “all science and
knowledge come first from the lifeworld and must always return to
it” (24). This forgetting by Western philosophy of the lifeworld, of
the very ground of philosophy, Husserl labels a “crisis,” and “In many
ways, this very crisis that Husserl describes also facilitates a loss of
American Indian philosophy.” With the departure of the lifeworld,
with the forgetting and denying of it, goes also the possibility for
Western philosophy to recognize and valorize Indigenous philoso-
phies. But with the historical emergence of phenomenology, such a
possibility reopens.
In summary, for Burkhart Indigenous epistemology is a phenome-
nological enterprise that affirms Husserl’s lifeworld and the natural atti-
tude (which affirmation is affirmed from within the phenomenological
attitude), resists Descartes’ individualistic bias (according to the claims
of the individual author), does not stop for theories or questions, and
yet somehow generates the four principles of relatedness (poetic contex-
tuality), limits of questioning (poetic agnosticism), meaning-shaping
of action (poetic praxis), and moral universe (poetic holism), despite
claiming that there are no principles in Indigenous epistemology. In
short, Indigenous epistemology views knowledge as being of/in/by a
poetically bound and integrated world.
IV. DuFour on Poetic Indigenous Ethics
John DuFour’s chapter begins with a clear and simple affirmation. “The
central philosophical issue, as I understand it,” he writes, “concerns
what morally responsible believing involves” (33). DuFour then intro-
duces a distinction which he elaborates for the remainder of his text,
namely that
between a truth-relevant merit that the content of a belief (or under-
standing) may have and an ethical merit that the state of believing (or
understanding) may have. Let us name the first kind of merit content
merit and the second state merit. (35, emphasis original)
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State merit, for the purposes of this essay, concerns the ethical accept-
ability of the way one came to understand or believe, the basis upon
which one formed a belief, or the process by which one came to
believe something and by which one claims that understanding has
been furthered. In short, “state merit” will refer to the ethical accept-
ability of how one came to understand, know, or believe something
and “content merit” will refer to the epistemic acceptability of the
content. (36)
The critical point, from an Indigenous perspective, is that one can
be right for the wrong reason, or right through the wrong chan-
nels. In other words, to be “Indigenously right” is a broader concept
than its Western equivalent, in the sense of being more demanding
than the latter. To be Indigenously right, one must have both the
epistemologically appropriate belief content and a content that was
acquired in an ethically appropriate manner. Put in terms of Plato’s
classical distinction between true belief and justified true belief,
Indigenous true belief is true belief that is justified ethically as well
as epistemologically.
One vital aspect of “the appropriate manner” is the social context in
which the belief was formed. DuFour explains that “state merit can be
systematically associated with certain social practices that embody an
amalgamation of ethical and epistemic concerns” (36). The proper state
in which to form a belief is usually a certain social practice, especially
a ceremony or ritual. “The sort of social practice embodying ethical
and epistemic concerns,” DuFour elaborates, “and which is the basis
for determining state merit of beliefs or understanding, is what I call a
‘belief practice’” (36). There are three distinct “dimensions” to DuFour’s
concept of a “belief practice”:
(1) an understanding of what acts belong to the practice and how to
perform and respond to those acts themselves; (2) explicit principles,
rules, customs, considerations, or instructions; and (3) particular
goals, projects, tasks, or appropriate emotions, feelings, and dispo-
sitions. (36–7)
In other words, every element of a ceremony or ritual—such as what
costume to wear when performing a specific dance, what moves to make,
when to make one’s entrance, etc.—is involved in the belief practice. To
be ethical is for one’s beliefs to have both content and state merit, and
ethical state merit must be constituted by a perfectly informed experi-
ence of a given belief practice.
To summarize DuFour’s ethical analysis, the acquisition state
of beliefs, the poetic how behind the prose what is central, and
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found in social practices. Ethics is more how than what, and more
social (especially ritual) practice than individual position. In short,
Indigenous ethics consists of hows that are rooted in a poetics of
social practice.
V. Cordova on Poetic Indigenous Aesthetics
Consider the following chant from Cordova’s essay, entitled “Ethics:
From an Artist’s Point of View”:
In beauty (happily) I walk
With beauty before me I walk
With beauty behind me I walk
With beauty below me I walk
With beauty above me I walk
It is finished (again) in beauty
It is finished in beauty (254)8
Cordova interprets the above chant (or poem) for the reader, in regard
to what she calls its “dual purpose.” Its first purpose is that “it reminds
one that the world is a place of beauty” (254). And its second purpose is
the reminder that the world is not merely beautiful, but also an ordered
whole. This duality has important consequences for the place and role
of the artist in Indigenous societies: “The artist as scientist, even as
healer,” she writes, “is the Native American artist; he it is that occupies
the ordered and measured universe” (252). The Indigenous artist is thus
not primarily, as is their Western counterpart, a rebel, critic, outcast, or
reformer—but a scientist and a healer. “In Native America,” Cordova
writes, “the artist is a scientist showing what others have not previously
seen. The artist is a healer—bringing us into harmony when we might
have fallen away” (254–255).
Further departing from Western artist stereotypes, for Indigenous
cultures, according to Cordova, “the talented individual is not seen as
a ‘self-made’ person. The talents are more likely the result of genetic
chance” (253). Thus, if the artist is special, it is not in way that can
be attributed to the person—the artist is not an independent hero.
Cordova notes that, “‘Being’ as an artist is not a matter of learning a
few techniques—it is a way of being” (253). Thus, an artist is not what
they are able to do, but how they are.
Cordova then complicates this straightforward picture of the cosmos:
The Native American world is a world in constant transition—the
world, in other words, is not a thing made once and finished. It is
always in the process of being. “Being,” for the Native American, is
not a static state but one of motion and change. (253)
Thus, the world’s order is a dynamic order, an order dominated by
change and motion.
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2 This brings the reader to the second purpose of the chant that opens
Cordova’s chapter: to remind us “also to add to that beauty” (254).
Since the world is always changing and in motion, the artist also cre-
ates new beauty. “The artist, in bringing forth new creations,” Cordova
writes, “in effect is assisting in the creation of the world” (253). This is
because, she explains, in the Indigenous view, “What is said is brought
into being” (254). Here again one finds an affinity with the Western
philosophical school of pragmatism, in this case in regard to the pro-
cess metaphysics at pragmatism’s heart, which affirms the world to be
dynamic and changing, ever creating and created.
Also consonant with pragmatism, in Indigenous philosophy neither
this creative power in general nor the human imagination in particu-
lar is completely wild or boundless. “In the Native American view,”
Cordova writes, “imagination is also subject to discipline” (254).
Unlike the dominant Western view, the artist is not some free radical,
but a controlled and responsible element of the evolving structured
whole of the cosmos.
Then, just as this picture seems to resolve itself, Cordova makes an
intriguingly different claim. “There is no distinction made in Native
American societies,” she writes, “between those who are called artists
and those who are not” (253). In this light, it is difficult to say what
the reader should make of Cordova’s preceding commentary on the
role and nature of the artist. Perhaps the most feasible interpretation
would be that those commentaries are applicable to all persons, in a
kind of early-Marxian, pan-artistic view of human nature (with the
caveat that, as Cordova reminds the reader, “Many Native American
groups do not consider children under the age of 5 as ‘real persons’)”
(252). If so, then for Indigenous philosophy, all persons are scientists,
healers, have a certain way of being, and are genetically gifted with
certain talents.
Support for this interpretation can be found in another surprising
claim from Cordova, appearing shortly after the preceding quote. “For
the Native American,” she writes, “there is not, nor can there be, a
distinction between esthetics and ethics” (254). In terms of my pan-
artistic interpretation, given the standard assumption that ethics’ scope
is universal to all human beings, and given that Cordova is affirming
ethics as coextensive with aesthetics, perhaps it makes more sense for
all humans to be artists, too. In further support of this interpretation
is Cordova’s closing of her chapter, with the following intriguing, per-
sonal metaphor:
My father described life as like constantly shifting sand. On that
shifting sand I lay down a barrel and on that barrel I place a board.
My duty is to stand astride that plank and maintain my balance as
the sand shifts. (254)
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One is tempted to apply this metaphor to Cordova’s entire chapter as
well, seeing it as a text of shifting sand, with a barrel of inherited lan-
guages, underneath a plank of concepts, on which Cordova, as eth-
ical artist, dances. From this perspective, our duty as readers would
be to maintain our interpretive balance, and to listen to our bodies
as we struggle in our own responsive dances to remain astride. What
we would seem to learn would be that boundaries between differ-
ent concepts—Western/Indigenous, artist/scientist, artist/non-artist,
aesthetics/ethics—are constantly being transgressed within Indigenous
philosophy. All the while, the necessary scaffolding of order is main-
tained, albeit primarily by the flow of words rather than their rigid
conceptual denotations.
To summarize Cordova’s chapter, the world is ordered, and the art-
ist is a scientific healer maintaining that order, but the world is also a
dynamic process, and thus the artist also co-creates the world. But the
creative imagination of the artist is also ordered, but there is no artist
(as opposed to non-artists), and there is no distinction between aesthet-
ics and ethics. Therefore, we are left with a metaphor of poetic order
(chaotic cosmos), dancingly balancing on a board balanced on a barrel
shifting in the disordered sand. Put differently, the world, the artist, the
individual, and aesthetics are all caught up in a poetic transgression of
boundaries. In short, Indigenous aesthetics is constituted by a spectrum
of artist-to-worldwide poetic boundary-transgression.
VI. Conclusion: Indigenous Absence
To unify the above analysis, I offer a new term, “indigenous absence.”
Developed in my larger project on Cherokee philosophical history,
“indigenous absence” means that, just as the indigenous Cherokee peo-
ple (and many other Native American tribes) are the slandered, dis-
enfranchised, suppressed and covered-over Indigenous peoples of the
North American continent, poetry writ large (including Indigenous phi-
losophy) is the slandered, disenfranchised, suppressed and covered-over
arche of Western philosophy. That is, both Indigenous philosophy and
culture, and poetry in general (by Westerners and the Indigenous), are
indigenously absent. Put differently, just as there is an absence today in
North America of most of the people indigenous to this continent, so
there is an absence today in philosophy of most of the poetry that is
indigenous to it; both are based on what was there first and yet contin-
ued to be denied.
To elaborate on the latter point, formality is indigenously absent
from Indigenous philosophy vis-à-vis traditional Western philosophy.
Indigenous philosophy, as represented within American Indian Thought,
essentially lacks a set of abstract, purely formal principles that operate
independently of embodied beings, concrete human practices, and the
richness of nested contexts. Indigenous philosophy is therefore both
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2 non-formal, and also informal, being closer to practical wisdom and
concrete practices, and resisting the hierarchy and insulation that have
marked academic philosophy at least since medieval scholasticism, and
which dominates its current incarnation as a purportedly secular aca-
demic discipline.
In other words, ever since the Platonic Theory of Forms, there has
been a tendency in (politically dominant forms of) Western philosophy
to privilege form over content, and to assume that any sufficiently per-
fected form can be used to organize any content whatsoever, even when
that organization takes the top-down form of the conquest of novel
content by a colonizing form (such as the religious beliefs of Native
American peoples by Western colonizers). Whereas in Indigenous phi-
losophy there is a tendency to see forms and contents as inherently
related, and to affirm a bottom-up method whereby a given content
dynamically organizes itself in creative and singular ways. This is not
to say, however, that there are not marginalized traditions in Western
philosophy that resonate with Amerindian thought, including phenom-
enology and American pragmatism, drawing on pre-Platonic concep-
tions of physis and post-Platonic theorists of the hyle that (in Aristotle’s
memorable phrase) “yearns for and stretches out toward form.”9
To summarize, that which is indigenous is essentially somewhere.
Perhaps it has been there forever. It has, at the very least, been there
for as long as anyone who is talking about the subject can remember.
That which is absent is always already fixed in relation to a lost pres-
ence. That which is absent can never be a simple lack or without-ness.
Frogs lack wings, but their wings are not absent. A woman does not
merely lack her spouse one evening; her spouse is absent from their
home. That which is indigenously absent has a place to which it is
essential that it belongs, but from which place it is also essential that
it has been absent for as long as anyone who is talking about it can
remember, and perhaps for forever. From the perspective of the con-
temporary West, the Indigenous peoples of this continent, in rela-
tion to this continent (though many remain here)—and poetry, in
relation to philosophy (though much of it remains here)—remain
indigenously absent.
Joshua Hall
William Paterson University
hallj38@wpunj.edu
NOTES
1. See also Donald Grind’s enthusiastic and positive review in Transactions of
the Charles S. Peirce Society 41(4): 2005, 863–864.
2. Bruce Wilshire, The Primal Roots of American Pragmatism: Phenomenology,
and Native American Thought (University Park: PA, Penn State University Press,
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2000); Scott Pratt, Native Pragmatism: Rethinking the Roots of American Philosophy
(Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2002).
3. María Lugones, “Playfulness, ‘World’-Traveling, and Loving Perception,”
Pilgrimages/Peregrinajes: Theorizing Coalition against Multiple Oppressions
(Baltimore, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003).
4. Robert J. Conley, The Cherokee Nation: A History (Albuquerque: University
of New Mexico Press, 2008).
5. Quoted in Kirk Johnson’s “Vine Deloria Jr., Champion of Indian Rights,
Dies at 72,” obituary in The New York Times (November 15, 2005).
6. See John Dewey, “Changing human nature,” Human Nature and Conduct:
An Introduction to Social Psychology (New York: Modern Library, 1922), 119.
7. J. T. Garrett, The Cherokee Full Circle: A Practical Guide to Sacred Ceremonies
and Traditions (Rochester, VT: Bear & Company, 2002).
8. Washington Matthews, translated form The Night Chant [circa 1900s],
quoted by Ruth M. Underhill in The Navajos. Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma Press,
1956, 212.
9. See Joe Sachs, “Introduction,” Aristotle’s Physics: A Guided Study (New
Brunswick: Rutgers, 2004), 21.