Why do some people have a strange desire to do weird things for no (good) reason? There's something fascinating about kids who eat laundry soap as part of a “challenge,” or people who deliberately... Read more
Blog Archive
Making a better world would be a great thing—but do we need philosophers to help us do that? Famously (or infamously), not all philosophers have been such great people. So are they the folks we... Read more
In her time—the 4th century CE—Hypatia was one of the most famous philosophers in Alexandria, and indeed in the ancient world. She studied and taught mathematics,... Read more
Mexican philosophy is full of fascinating ideas, from Mexica ("Aztec") and Mayan thought to Sor Juana’s feminism and Emilio Uranga’s existentialism... Read more
Your friendly neighborhood Senior Prodcuer here, once again stepping out from behind the mixing board to bring you some bonus content from this week's 17th (!) annual Summer Reading special.... Read more
Gender is a controversial topic these days. To some, gender is an oppressive system designed to keep women down: people go around saying "girls are made of sugar and spice and boys are made of... Read more
Fascism is on the rise, new infectious diseases keep cropping up, and we’re on the verge of environmental collapse: how on earth could art possibly save us? The arts are may be nice distraction,... Read more
Some say the world is full of contradictions, like “parting is such sweet sorrow.” Parting is sweet, but parting is also sad; and sweetness and sadness are opposites. But logicians would say that... Read more
Our minds are amazing prediction machines—and sometimes they can even make their predictions come true!
Does reading that strike you as something out of The Secret—like if you... Read more
Derek Parfit was a really interesting thinker when it came to identity and the self. He had a particularly cool thought experiment involving tele-transportation.
Suppose you’re on your... Read more
When philosophers talk about perception, they tend to focus on what we see and hear, and rarely on what we smell. But olfaction is a strange sense that deserves greater philosophical scrutiny. For... Read more
A caller in this week's episode nominated "Women Talking" for a Dionysus Award. Guest co-host Jeremy Sabol takes that as a springboard to blog about movies and... Read more
This week we’re thinking about Cancel Culture, which some consider a real problem: people losing their jobs, being harassed online, their home addresses being shared—all because they said... Read more
This week we’re asking why we should trust science—which may sound like a weird question. After all, why would we doubt the method that helps us build bridges and skyscrapers, formulate life... Read more
Following up on last year's not-so-new experiment, here's a little behind-the-scenes look into the brief audio montages (produced... Read more
This week we’re asking what it’s... Read more
This essay also appears at the website of Oxford University Press, publisher of Josh's new book,
"The World According to Proust."
... Read more
This week we’re thinking about how to create a world in which our leaders are not just effective legislators, but also good people.
Some might think there are not enough leaders like that... Read more
This week we're thinking about the British Liberal tradition and its relationship to colonialism and self-government. Classical Liberal thinkers, like John Locke and John Stuart Mill, held that... Read more
This week we’re thinking about Collective Action and Climate Change. With floods and fires getting more frequent and intense, and with the summer just ended shattering heat records around the... Read more
This week we’re thinking about cultural appropriation and asking who owns culture—which may be a weird way of thinking about it. It's easy to see how somebody can own the rights to a song they... Read more
This week we’re questioning Effective Altruism. That’s Peter Singer’s idea that you should do the most good you can, and you should figure out what that is by doing your homework and choosing the... Read more
This week we're asking what Political Inequality is. Sounds easy to define, right? That’s when some people don’t get an equal voice in society, because they’re not represented in government, or... Read more
This week we're asking whether it's rational to be optimistic—which seems like bit of a crazy question if you've been reading the news lately. After all, what could possibly justify the belief... Read more
This week we're thinking about the Changing Face of Antisemitism—a program recorded last month at the Stanford Humanities Center for our first live, in-person event in 2-1/2 years.
... Read more
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Blog Archive
Why do some people have a strange desire to do weird things for no (good) reason? There's something fascinating about kids who eat laundry soap as part of a “challenge,” or people who deliberately... Read more
Making a better world would be a great thing—but do we need philosophers to help us do that? Famously (or infamously), not all philosophers have been such great people. So are they the folks we... Read more
In her time—the 4th century CE—Hypatia was one of the most famous philosophers in Alexandria, and indeed in the ancient world. She studied and taught mathematics,... Read more
Mexican philosophy is full of fascinating ideas, from Mexica ("Aztec") and Mayan thought to Sor Juana’s feminism and Emilio Uranga’s existentialism... Read more
Your friendly neighborhood Senior Prodcuer here, once again stepping out from behind the mixing board to bring you some bonus content from this week's 17th (!) annual Summer Reading special.... Read more
Gender is a controversial topic these days. To some, gender is an oppressive system designed to keep women down: people go around saying "girls are made of sugar and spice and boys are made of... Read more
Fascism is on the rise, new infectious diseases keep cropping up, and we’re on the verge of environmental collapse: how on earth could art possibly save us? The arts are may be nice distraction,... Read more
Some say the world is full of contradictions, like “parting is such sweet sorrow.” Parting is sweet, but parting is also sad; and sweetness and sadness are opposites. But logicians would say that... Read more
Our minds are amazing prediction machines—and sometimes they can even make their predictions come true!
Does reading that strike you as something out of The Secret—like if you... Read more
Derek Parfit was a really interesting thinker when it came to identity and the self. He had a particularly cool thought experiment involving tele-transportation.
Suppose you’re on your... Read more
When philosophers talk about perception, they tend to focus on what we see and hear, and rarely on what we smell. But olfaction is a strange sense that deserves greater philosophical scrutiny. For... Read more
A caller in this week's episode nominated "Women Talking" for a Dionysus Award. Guest co-host Jeremy Sabol takes that as a springboard to blog about movies and... Read more
This week we’re thinking about Cancel Culture, which some consider a real problem: people losing their jobs, being harassed online, their home addresses being shared—all because they said... Read more
This week we’re asking why we should trust science—which may sound like a weird question. After all, why would we doubt the method that helps us build bridges and skyscrapers, formulate life... Read more
Following up on last year's not-so-new experiment, here's a little behind-the-scenes look into the brief audio montages (produced... Read more
This week we’re asking what it’s... Read more
This essay also appears at the website of Oxford University Press, publisher of Josh's new book,
"The World According to Proust."
... Read more
This week we’re thinking about how to create a world in which our leaders are not just effective legislators, but also good people.
Some might think there are not enough leaders like that... Read more
This week we're thinking about the British Liberal tradition and its relationship to colonialism and self-government. Classical Liberal thinkers, like John Locke and John Stuart Mill, held that... Read more
This week we’re thinking about Collective Action and Climate Change. With floods and fires getting more frequent and intense, and with the summer just ended shattering heat records around the... Read more
This week we’re thinking about cultural appropriation and asking who owns culture—which may be a weird way of thinking about it. It's easy to see how somebody can own the rights to a song they... Read more
This week we’re questioning Effective Altruism. That’s Peter Singer’s idea that you should do the most good you can, and you should figure out what that is by doing your homework and choosing the... Read more
This week we're asking what Political Inequality is. Sounds easy to define, right? That’s when some people don’t get an equal voice in society, because they’re not represented in government, or... Read more
This week we're asking whether it's rational to be optimistic—which seems like bit of a crazy question if you've been reading the news lately. After all, what could possibly justify the belief... Read more
This week we're thinking about the Changing Face of Antisemitism—a program recorded last month at the Stanford Humanities Center for our first live, in-person event in 2-1/2 years.
... Read more
Comments (2)
MJA
Friday, June 13, 2014 -- 5:00 PM
Human is a immeasurableHuman is an immeasurable division of the truly indivisible. =
Guest
Wednesday, July 16, 2014 -- 5:00 PM
Nobody brings up Marty TurcoNobody brings up Marty Turco's identify any longer in conversations about the NHL's very best goalie.
No real shock there. That's what transpires when you start off obtaining up there in many years and your numbers have headed south in the most recent of them.
Marty Turco has earned 262 job wins in nine seasons with the Dallas Stars.
(Getty Pictures)
But not so prolonged in the past, say back around the time he was named to the Group Canada roster for the Olympic Games at Torino and was amongst the league's highest-paid netminders, the newest member of the Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks was element of the discussion. Turco's athleticism and his uncommon puck-managing capacity have been key factors a normally reduced-scoring Dallas Stars group tended to hover about the a hundred-stage mark yearly after he grew to become the starter in 2002-03, and it earned him recognition even if his talents assisted lift the team past the first round only when Jonathan Toews Authentic Jersey.
That was in the course of the 2008 playoffs when Turco and the Stars took the Detroit Red Wings to a sixth game in the Western Conference finals, a run that right now is effortless to label a final hurrah for the goalie.
Lifestyle became tumultuous for the next couple of years in Dallas, each for the organization, which was put up for sale simply because of the owner's fiscal hardships, and for Turco http://www.blackhawksicestore.com/Blackhawks_Marian_Hossa_Jerseys, who did not distinguish himself behind a weakened group that failed to make the playoffs in both one.
It was ample for the Stars to look for what was described as a "new direction." And it left the 35-yr-old Turco as an unrestricted free of charge agent at a minute when his capacity to be an effect goalie was in question. A lot more importantly, it happened when the require for a single was getting debated around the league.
Humorous factor is that the debate has been sparked largely because of in which Turco has ended up -- fortuitously some might say since of the exclusive capacity Chicago gives him to silence the naysayers. Get in touch with it the normal aftermath of the Blackhawks winning the Stanley Cup with an in essence minimum-wage 26-year-previous Finnish rookie goalie named Antti Niemi, by beating the Philadelphia Flyers who had their own playoff run sparked by longtime journeyman Michael Leighton.
Each netminders had their doubters all through the postseason, but Niemi was arbitration eligible and won a hefty raise the cap-stretched Blackhawks didn't deem him worthy of. Chicago let Niemi stroll as a result, turning to Turco, who rejected ? million in excess of 3 seasons from the Flyers (they later re-signed Leighton) simply because Blackhawks GM Stan Bowman contacted him early in the summer season and mentioned there was a chance to for him to join the Blackhawks.
"I advised them I was not going to know anything at all about Antti for a even though and that it could perform out all the way to the finish of July Blackhawks Store, which it did," Bowman stated. "This is where he wished to be, and obviously he had hope it would perform out."
Clearly.
"That is a feeling I'll in no way forget simply because I felt like that was 1 door that had closed, that get in touch with was large," Turco stated. "Even if it did not sound promising, it was 1 I welcomed with open arms. Realizing that I'd have a chance to come here with guys who'd be hungry to do it again was well worth the wait."
And the pay reduce apparently. Turco will make ?.3 million on a one particular-12 months deal this season with Chicago, soon after averaging ?.4 million in the final four with Dallas. His disappointing numbers above the last handful of seasons ensured he would not be producing as much with this 1, but Turco mentioned that at this stage of his profession, his legacy or the salary is not his major concern.
"It really is not about existence after hockey or how I judge my job, it truly is all about what I can do in the now as a teammate http://www.blackhawksicestore.com/Blackhawks_Stan_Mikita_Jerseys," he explained. "I have been lucky sufficient to perform in a fantastic era of hockey exactly where we made a little bit of funds http://www.blackhawksicestore.com/Blackhawks_Corey_Crawford_Jerseys, so possibly the choice was simpler.
"Not that Philadelphia was a poor circumstance, but it goes to present how committed I am to playing for the Blackhawks. This is the one crew that will aid me get a Stanley Cup."
And following the Blackhawks summer of discontent, possibly vice versa.
Chicago will be with out seven members of their Game 6 clinching lineup since of income concerns, and could quite nicely be dealing with the infamous Stanley Cup hangover following a short summer time. But in Turco they are getting a veteran who is a well-regarded teammate, and likely to be extremely motivated not only to perform behind a talented group, but to prove the final couple of seasons had been much less about him than the circumstances.
At least that's the way one particular of Turco's idols, fellow Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario native and Hall of Fame goalie Tony Esposito sees it.
"He's healthier and he's not that previous, and with the encounter, you are to manage the pressure that a staff like this will have greater," this is his prime, the up coming three, four or five many years," mentioned Esposito, now a Blackhawks ambassador. "This is his prime, the subsequent 3, four or 5 years and he took the 1 year since he's assured in his potential.
"He knows he can perform and perform nicely and knows that will parlay into potential years."
And perhaps even get him back into the discussion.
http://gordiehowejersey.blogcheapster.com/2014/07/1711_second_period_bur...