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NancyB's avatar

A lovely essay I was glad to read. Lear's Radical Hope is on my short shelf of books I hold onto as elegant examples of what the humanities can achieve that other disciplines cannot. He succeeds in the very difficult task of trying to bring the thinking and choices of Plenty Coups, the Chief of the Crow people, into focus in a way that neither romanticizes it nor dismisses it, but credits it as an example of existential knowledge (rather than merely a cultural, i.e. not-quite-true, inheritance) and ethical bravery.

It's not without flaws, but the ethos of the book––brilliant but still marked by intellectual humility––is quite remarkable. If you put it next to the facile, dismissive, arrogant thinking of so many of the "thought leaders" of today, you might feel like crying.

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Patrick Redding's avatar

Thank you so much for sharing this. I've often been referred to Lear's writings, but have found them a little bit elusive and hard to locate the "argument." This helped to see the value of his larger project and makes me want to return to his work with fresh eyes.

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