The Downside of “Professional Competence”: Adam Gopnik

While it’s a throwaway comment within his new essay, “Life Studies: What I Learned When I Learned to Draw,” I paused for a while over this observation from Adam Gopnik: Whatever sense of professional competence we feel in adult life is less the sum of accomplishment than the absence of impossibility: it’s really our relief…

Later Wittgenstein on Philosophy

Dipping into Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations yet again, I was reminded of this little barb about philosophy. It’s a typical Wittgensteinian aphorism, koan-like, that has to sink in a bit, particularly since the analogy is an inversion of precisely the sorts of philosophical assumptions Wittgenstein is calling into question: “When we do philosophy we are like…

Word Guild Awards 2011

I was honored (sorry: “honoured”) to learn that my book, Thinking in Tongues: Pentecostal Contributions to Christian Philosophy, has received the 2011 Word Guild Award in the Academic category. (The Word Guild hosts the annual Canadian Christian Writing Awards.) I was quite surprised since the other finalists in this category–Deborah C. Bowen’s Stories of the…