Owl & Ibis, Meet Fox & Hedgehog!
Image: ChaptGPT I stumbled onto the writings of Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997) a few years ago. His ideas about the fact of global cultural pluralism and the logical necessity for a certain level of tolerance of others made sense. Not long before, I had read the major works of Martin Buber (1878-1965), especially his I and Thou (1937) giving attention to his insistence that understanding people required considering and accounting for their relations with each other. At that time, I was writing my two-volume book Cultural Evolution: Caught in the Devil's Bargain . It took five years of exhileration and exhaustion, and at times disgust but I published it, in places unpolished, in late 2024. I spent the early part of 2025 decompressing. I have since been restlessly adrift searching for my next mind project, but nevertheless reading and archiving many books, articles, essays that strike my fancy. Then, a few months ago, I read Berlin's 1953 book The Hedgehog and the Fox: ...