The Internet Defense League

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Resources and Entertainment for Philosophers


             Most people already involved in philosophy are going to be familiar with many of these sites and other resources, but this list might be useful for undergraduates and laymen interested in getting a look at either the academic side of the subject from the analytic perspective, or the popular resources and entertainment related to philosophy.
            Rankings of philosophy departments, and other current information on academic
            philosophy:
                        *Philosophy Gourmet: http://www.philosophicalgourmet.com/default.asp
                        *Leiter Reports: http://leiterreports.typepad.com/blog/
                          Both of these sites are run by Brian Leiter at the University of Chicago
           Online Encyclopedias:
                        *Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP): http://plato.stanford.edu/
                        *Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP): http://www.iep.utm.edu/
                        *Wikipedia, Philosophy portal: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:

                          Philosophy 
                          Wikipedia is not as technical and precise as the SEP or IEP.

           Research Websites:
                        *PhilPapers: http://philpapers.org/
                        *EpistemeLinks: http://www.epistemelinks.com/
                        *Noesis: http://noesis.evansville.edu/
            Popular Websites
                        *The Browser, 'Writing Worth Reading': http://thebrowser.com/sections
                          /philosophy-religion/philosophy.
                          Their interviews are particularly good.
                        *Brain Pickings philosophy articles: http://www.brainpickings.org/?s=
                          philosophy
            Popular Books:
                        *The Problems of Philosophy, Bertrand Russell
                        *The Story of Philosophy, Will Durant
                        *Sophie’s World, Jostein Gaarder
            Graphic Novels and Illustrated Books About Philosophy:
                        *Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth, written by Apostolos Doxiadis and
                          Christos H. Papadimitriou, illustrated by Alecos Papadatos and Annie Di 

                          Donna
                        *Action Philosophers!, by Fred Van Lente, and Ryan Dunlavey*
                        *Epicurus the Sage, written by William Messner-Loebs, art by Sam Kieth
                        *Supergatari History of World Philosophy, Michael Gertelman*             
                        *Philographics, Genis Carreras*
             Movies related to philosophy or which may appeal to philosophers (search
             ‘philosophical films’ for many others):
                         *Waking Life
                         *Mindwalk
                         *My Dinner with Andre
                         *Agora
                           Starring Rachel Weisz.
                         *The Razor’s Edge
                           Starring Bill Murray. It's not a comedy, but it is beautiful.
                         *Vanilla Sky
                           It stars Tom Cruise, but no film is perfect.
                         *Stalker (Tarkovsky)
                           Very slow, with highly variable film quality, but strangely intriguing.
                         *Solaris (Tarkovsky)
          Videos
                         *Animated Thought Experiments by the Open University:
                           http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2011/10/19/open-university-

                           thought-experiments/*
          Products
                         *The Unemployed Philosophers Guild: http://www.philosophersguild.com
                           They are very amusing. Although many of their products are not related

                           to philosophy, their sense of humor is likely to appeal to those interested 
                           in the subject.

            Those suggestions with an asterisk at the end were found through articles at Brainpickings, especially the following: http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2014/01/09/supergatari-history-of-philosophy/.
            If you have anything to add, please suggest it in the comment section.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

In Favor of a Constructive Foreign Policy: War or Aid?



 http://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/315792_388629991218096_936793397_n.jpg

This meme is a little simplistic, but it is a good reminder that war is not exactly the moral high ground. Political legitimacy is not the same thing as ethical legitimacy.

Here are two ad hoc definitions: Terrorism is the creation of fear by means of violence for purposes of drawing attention to one's cause or ideology. War is the attempt to bring about tangible political or economic results by means of violence (e.g., an initially offensive war), or to to protect one's group or nation by violently crushing the military forces of a clearly-defined enemy (e.g., an initially defensive war).

The distinction between offensive and defensive is not always clear, as crushing an aggressor often means going into their own territory. For instance, the South began the Civil War with an act of aggression against the North (Fort Sumter), but the North did not remain on defense; we had Sherman's brutal 'March to the Sea' to Atlanta. Conversely, the aggressor may end up on the defensive, as was the case with Germany in both WWI and WWII.

The question of what constitutes a defensive war becomes more complicated when the offensive force is not a single entity, but a hodge-podge of individuals and groups. Not only have our so-called wars on terror involved far more foreign deployments of manpower and material (putting the lie to the Orwellian title 'Department of Defense') than domestic ones, they also have no end-game in sight. How do you know when you have won a war when you don't know who your enemy is until they have already acted?

We would do far better as a nation, both economically and politically, if we invested a fraction of what we spend on the military for reaching out to other nations in ways that are constructive, rather than destructive.

In Vietnam, 'hearts and minds' became a key slogan, because we were losing whatever sympathy and trust the Vietnamese people may have felt for American troops and American ideals, by the way in which we were waging the war. In all times, foreign policy is at its best when both the politicians and the people (rather than exclusively the former, which leads to long-term resentment) of the nation with which we are dealing feel this sympathy and trust towards us. But, surely, all wars, even those waged more honorably than Vietnam, tend to alienate a substantial percentage of both groups.

I think we would further our interests more effectively, at far less cost, by winning the peaceful cooperation of other peoples, rather than their violent and often fragmentary competition and opposition. Resentment is a precursor to malice; if it continues unchecked, growing upon itself, it always leads to evil, sooner or later. It is best to avoid provoking it in the first place. I think of terrorists as splinter-groups from nations, who often represent widespread resentments among their peoples, albeit in an extreme and counterproductive form.

The level of pure calculation is one I deplore, and it is the only one the U.S. government seems to be moved by. In all fairness, this is true of most governments, but I think the extent of Machiavellian tendencies increases with the extent of power, whether national or personal. On this level alone, much less that of the humanitarian, interacting with other nations in a democratic manner- taking account of what their peoples think of our proposals, and not influencing their politicians to act in ways that are virulently opposed by potentially violent groups within them, even if they are a tiny minority numerically- is desirable. Resentment only needs a few hearts, and it will end up finding many hands.

One of the key lessons of Nassim Taleb's work The Black Swan was that you do better to invest considerably in avoiding the unlikely chance that would ruin you, if it comes about, than to invest the same amount, little by little, in avoiding comparatively likely things that can easily be borne. You do well to avoid predicating your entire worldview on an assumption that may be false; we cannot avoid having assumptions, but we can avoid investing ourselves in them so totally. Is it unlikely that a given individual pissed off by our foreign policy will go on to kill thousands of Americans? Probably. But it is certainly desirable for most of our society (perhaps not for the military industrial complex, whose funding requires excuses for periodic wars) to keep the number of people pissed off at us enough to attempt that as small as possible.

How do avoid producing this lethal resentment? Well, not killing someone's family members- particularly someone's civilians, females, or children- is a great place to start. There is no resentment quite like revenge. Perhaps we'd be more inclined to oppose actions that lead to civilian deaths if we were honest enough with ourselves- if the media was direct enough with this mass of atomized individuals, of alienated sheep- to stop calling them casualties or collateral. Such terms are disgusting euphemisms that keep us from fully acknowledging the fact that we are talking about dead human beings- they are ways of lying to ourselves, and of subtly dehumanizing the victims of our actions.

Regardless of how earnestly we may seek to exclusively kill enemy combatants (soldiers, insurgents, terrorists), killing those who are not fighting us is most easily avoided by not fighting at all. I think war is arguably a necessary response to direct invasion of one's domestic territory, but not justified otherwise. Limiting ourselves to just wars, which are thankfully rare- and avoiding going to war for spurious (such as dubious CIA intelligence), corporate, or reactionary reasons- would help.

Interacting with other nations in a consensual manner, rather than one that is coercive, is also good strategy. Whether we cooperate with politicians who will coerce our designs upon their populations, or coerce the politicians too, we are winning concessions but losing friends.

What of winning hearts and minds, rather than merely trying to avoid losing them? Well, spending that fraction of our military spending which I mentioned earlier on bolstering the infrastructure- physical (such as running water and roads) and human (education, institutions conducive to domestic stability, healthcare, family planning- another euphemism, of course, but one which stands for something I support)- of poorer countries could end up being a public relations coup. A nonviolent coup, always the best kind. Admittedly, poor countries often remain stay poor in part because of governments that do not effectively prevent their members from taking bribes and stealing public funds. Yet, even if we could trust that only half the money we gave would be spent in the ways we intended, that aid money would still be 50% constructive; spending money on the military, beyond the extent needed to keep it ready and able to protect one's borders, is 100% constructive. In other words, I think we- and the domestic population- would both come out ahead, and there would be a lot less fear to go around.

'No Child Left Behind': Background and Consequences

The following is by no means comprehensive, but it is intended to give a sense of some of the influences on NCLB (decades of national concern with the quality of education in the U.S., the supposed miracle in the schools of Texas in the 1990s), and some of its effects. I do not go into depth on the specifics of its implementation.

National Policy Climate

No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is a 2002 reauthorization of a 1965 piece of legislation called the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. Though NCLB was such a shock to the national education system that it was more like a revolution than a reauthorization, it nevertheless drew on concerns that had existed for decades. The difference was not the aim, but the implementation.

The Elementary and Secondary Education Act, in its original form, was motivated by the recognition of an achievement gap in poor schools. Federal money, under Title I, was used to supplement state funding for schools. When a school was identified as having both high poverty and low achievement, a calculation would be done to determine how much Title I money would be given to that school (9/4/12 lecture notes, on an education class at Ohio University).

By 1980, there was plenty of evidence that the achievement gap was not closing, and was in some areas getting worse. The 1983 report A Nation at Risk led to increased concerns among teachers, politicians, and the public about the state of public schooling in the U.S. (Toppo, 2008). A desire to find top-down, evidence-based solution to academic woes has only mounted since. In other words, NCLB did not come out of the blue; it addressed long-standing concerns in predictably technocratic, quantification-oriented ways.

"Where all the children are above average" (Garrison Keillor)

NCLB expects that all students- literally, 100%- score 'proficient' (average) or higher on standardized tests by 2014. This suggests a basic misunderstanding of what an average is. Mandating that everyone be at or above average is statistically impossible, and that cannot be changed by any tweaking of the means or time allotted for achieving this goal. When there is a range of performance levels, the average of those performance levels will be higher than some, and lower than others. You cannot always bring desired outcomes into existence by demanding that they occur, particularly when the desired outcome is impossible by definition.

A Miracle in Texas?

Many people may not be aware that NCLB was based on "The Texas Miracle" and the schools of Houston in particular. That the nation's schools came to be modeled on those of Houston was unsurprising, given that the superintendent of Houston's schools, Rod Paige, was named secretary of education by George W. Bush. "Paige... had instituted a policy of holding principals accountable for how their students did. Principals worked under one-year contracts, and each year, the school district set strict goals in areas like dropout rates and test scores. Principals who met the goals got cash bonuses of up to $5,000, and other perks. Those who fell short were transferred, demoted or forced out." (Leung, 2009). Investigative reporting by 60 Minutes found that the impressive statistics of high test scores and low drop out rates were, in effect, falsified (Leung, 2009). Later, similar concerns about honesty on the part of administrators and teachers would come to light with NCLB as well.

A common complaint about NCLB is the tendency of teachers to teach to standardized accountability tests. According to Walt Haney of Boston College, who spent over two years on an extraordinarily comprehensive article about this supposed miracle, the same tendency was found in Texas after the introduction between 1990 and 1991 of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS). "In the opinion of educators in Texas, schools are devoting a huge amount of time and energy preparing students specifically for TAAS, and emphasis on TAAS is hurting more than helping teaching and learning in Texas schools, particularly with at-risk students, and TAAS contributes to retention in grade and dropping out" (Haney, from the abstract). There is also evidence of negative effects of educational policies used in Texas on minorities (higher rates of failure, repeating the same grade, dropping out). Further, TAAS may be neither reliable or valid, and increases in TAAS scores have actually coincided with decreases in scores on a college readiness test. "Between 1994 and 1997, TAAS results showed a 20% increase in the percentage of students passing all three exit level TAAS tests (reading, writing and math), but TASP (a college readiness test) results showed a sharp decrease (from 65.2% to 43.3%) in the percentage of students passing all three parts (reading, math, and writing)" (Haney, abstract).

Textbooks, Tests, and Motivation

One of the first expectations of good research about even a subject of insignificance is that the student use multiple sources. No single source should have a monopoly on discourse- it is fundamentally contrary to intellectual integrity. Yet, whole subjects, taught for the 180 days of a school year, apparently do not merit the same extent of concern for variety of perspectives as a five-page research paper completed in a couple hours. In many classrooms, teachers can tell their students 'open your books' or 'turn to the text,' and know that they will understand what they are talking; this suggests that everyone in that classroom takes for granted that only one book will be used there. Why is this? According to many teachers, it is because the textbook they use includes everything the students will be tested on.

It is no wonder that there are concerns about NCLB narrowing curriculum, and diminishing the enthusiasm of teachers. Has anyone who has truly enjoyed thinking about things and learning things ever been motivated by wanting to prove themselves on an impersonal Scantron? I think motivation to learn is found in our curiosity about the material, and our connections to our teachers. If this is the case, then it is surely a poor indicator for the future of education that testing regimes encourage a view of education more preoccupied with tests than either interesting information, ideas, or discussion. NCLB is an impoverishment of education, rather than an enriching of it.

Reliance on textbooks is also problematic because it presents a unified, rather than a contested, view of the realities discussed. Do teachers who rely on textbooks care about non-hegemonic perspectives (e.g., perspectives that are not Eurocentric, patriarchal, classist, racist, and so on)? Some of them do, of course. Yet, they trust the authors of the textbooks they use to provide a neat cross-section of these views- a neatness which is often reductionist and marginalizing, and communicates none of the passion that is in them- and expect that this will suffice. This is naive, and a poor example to those they teach; not only are textbook authors fallible human beings, but reality is not so neatly pinned down. No one has a monopoly on reality, so why give someone a monopoly on the parameters of discourse within your classroom?

Unintended Consequences

One of the most basic, but undervalued, aspects of good decision-making is the regard for unintended consequences. Because it is hard to know the full ramifications of any course of action until some time has passed, it is wise to wait and see before attempting to make a would-be objective statement about whether or not that course of action is desirable; and, because it takes time for consequences to unfold, it is best to institute changes slowly and steadily, rather than all at once. (Perhaps human social structures, like human bodies, can undergo 'shock,' and the associated unpleasant and disorienting affects- certainly, many individual teachers felt shocked by NCLB!) Such prudence was not shown either in waiting to deem the educational reforms in Texas miraculous, nor in deciding to scale them up to the nation as a whole. Now that time has passed, it is clear that many of the concerns had about NCLB- for instance, the propensity to motivate dishonest behaviors by some teachers and administrators (for instance, see http://fairtest.org/nclb-boosts-temptation-cheat)- were evident, first, in the Houston schools on which it was based.

Citations

Leung, R. (2009, February 11). The 'texas miracle'. CBS News. Retrieved from http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/01/06/60ii/main591676.shtml
Toppo, G. (2008, August 1). 'Nation at risk': The best thing or the worst thing for education?. USA Today. Retrieved from http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/education/2008-04-22-nation-at-risk_N.htm
Walt, H. (2000). The Myth of the Texas Miracle in Education. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 41

Thursday, September 6, 2012

On Quality: In Our Things, and In Our Lives


     My can opener broke, and because the ones sold at the stores (like the one presently in my trash) are crap, I looked online, and found people rhapsodizing about the merits of an apparently quality can opener. What are they doing with their lives? Well, I'm writing about looking for one, so probably the same thing as me. I am not sure whether it is a remark on our consumerism, or on the old love of good quality and design- the human fetish for things that endure, even if it is just a household object. 
     Ironically, planned obsolescence of consumerism makes good quality and design more rare for common products, rather than less. Consumerism is not the democratization of design, but about the elitism of quality- in which quality is not just pricey (it has probably always been), but a price we are trained to be unwilling to pay. Why are we trained this way? Because paying for quality means paying more, at least in the short-term.
     It is that way with food, too; the average American household spent considerably more money on food (with the appropriate conversions for inflation, and such), as recently as the 1950s and 1960s, than is the case today. They were getting better-quality food, and there was less obesity; now, we take for granted that good-quality food is for the rich, and have a trained aversion to eating right as something that is snooty, tedious, pretentious. Yet, look at our healthcare costs- everything has consequences. There may or may not be a free lunch, but there is certainly no such thing as a cheap Big Mac.
     There is an elitism of quality, in material things- and a leveling of taste and lowering of expectations among everyone who is not willing to stand out, and claim the elite status of healthy living or durable goods as their own. To do so, our society implies, is to nominate ourselves as 'better' than other people, rather than merely sensible, and enlightened in self-interest. This is strange; isn't self-interest the motivation that supposedly drives our decisions in those reductionist economic models? Isn't it a good thing, and supposed to be the exception rather than the rule? 
     Only if you're blind, deaf, and dumb. Advertising, egoism, and impulse-buying work contrary to our individual best interests on a daily basis, and keep our economy afloat on a sea of people made insecure and shallow, systematically, by the 24-7 psychological artillery barrage of the media- liquefying the human will into pourable form. Even people who can afford better have been trained not to choose better, both with individual goods, and with their lives is general. 
     Is it that we love things so much that we have to make them as low-quality as possible- so we have an excuse to buy them again, or buy more of them? No, I think most of us are systematically trained to buy the cheapest things in the name of 'good deals,' so we can be sold the same can opener three times- and trained to buy the cheapest food, so we can be sold more of it, with an angioplasty on the side. So often, good quality ends where good deals begin; so often, self-reliance and contentment are ruined by our learned acquiescence to a society with a systematically impaired approach to the relation of ourselves to each other, and ourselves to our things. Can we unlearn that? Yes, if we want to.

     A good quality can opener is a good thing, but there are far greater goods than the goods sold in stores, and far greater quality than quality in design; the greatest of all quality is in ourselves, and in our capacity, but it is not a default. We can make it daily, there is no other way to make it. We make it by our efforts and our discipline, by our selective gaze, by the care of our choices. A good life does not happen by accident or by accessories. It happens by approaching our lives as stewards, rather than as owners; as gardeners, rather than as rabbits rummaging for what we can get. Let us focus on a good life over good things, and review our choices more than we review our products. More than we wonder what else we need materially, let us wonder how we can realize great things in daily life. It is that which we need; more self-reliance, spiritually, and more simplicity, materially. These things can be chosen and embraced, and what higher quality is there than such a choice, such an embrace? 
     To riff on Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: The real can you are trying to open is yourself. How can you use yourself to open yourself? You are not both at the same time, but you are one and then the other. Be whole and entire, moment by moment; know that the person you work on today is furnished by who you were yesterday. As William James would have it, introspection is immediate retrospection; we do not observe ourselves directly, but in hindsight, through the memories of the states of mind that came before.
     Know that you are only one and whole a moment at a time, and you will find more peace if you can only remain in the moment more often. Make habits that will help you prepare for the future without having to consider them. Do the right things without a second thought, and you will make the future a good one, with less worry. Until they are habit, mindfulness and openness are a daily effort; and when they are part of your daily life, may they endure and grow. These qualities- endurance and growth- are the greatest marks of worth. Do not only maintain the good, but change it into a greater good. Adapt constructively, and take the next good step. 
     Contrary to this flexible and adaptive approach to reality, we find ideology; a rigidity so great that life in any fresh or vibrant sense is absent. In particular, I think a reactionary, stultifying form of conservatism fossilizes the good. Not only does it fail to preserve the most enduring aspects of the past in any living sense, it also kills what is left with its mindless clinging to the recent past, and sometimes to what is worst in it. No, do not be a keeper of the letter, long after the spirit has fled; do not guard a torch that was put out centuries ago, unless you are going to relight it. Dare you relight it? Do not be a conservative in the usual sense, but do not be a liberal in the usual sense either. Critique the structures of power, but live what you feel the world should be. Live in the moment, not without structure, but with habits and attitudes you established in days when you were not in the moment, with your head full of history and memory; and make decisions about how to live, in part, on the basis of prospective futures, and what you think is sustainable for yourself, your society, and the world as a whole.
     Most days, you live it out, rather than second-guessing it- ideology recognizes this, but its habits of thought and action are not chosen by you, to fit your life, but chosen by default of your familiarity with them. Live in the moment, so you are there to pay attention to other people; emphasize compassion and respect in each moment as primary, and other principles as secondary. An ethics that involves sacrificing compassion or respect in the name of principle is not much of an ethics; we see this whenever the ends supersedes the means, however moral those ends may seem. Also, live in the moment so you are there to step into the opportunities you cannot predict, and attentive to each that comes; this way, you will not be taken by surprise. We must be aware of these questions of value and expectation, for they govern our lives.
     Do we base our values in the assumption that values are (a) Inherent qualities (or, perhaps more accurately, the realization that consequences are inextricable from the things whose attributes are necessary for those consequences continuing), or (b) Qualities divorced from things- consequences, without loyalty to the source of those consequences? How we answer this question provides the template for our approach to life and other people. 'a' is associated with consistency, and a sufficiency mindset, acceptance of things as they are; 'b' is associated with the shifting of instrumental reason- always trying to change how things will be, and align the consequences differently.
     Expectations, similarly, become self-fulfilling prophecies- we do not do what we think we cannot. We, today, are the foundations of our tomorrows, and part of who we are is what we think. We must also be aware that expecting things is a way of stepping outside of the moment. Expectations and waiting can erode us, and take away from our lives.
     Stepping out from where you are and examining your assumptions (including your expectations) can help you gain perspective, and evaluate your priorities and habits to see if you wish to change; but, in most of life, it is best to inhabit your own moments from within them, as an actor, rather than as an audience. Live fully from within your skin and state of mind, rather than imagining yourself outside them- that always has something of an artifice to it, and precludes spontaneity. Einstein said that few live with their own eyes and feel with their own hearts. I.e., people take their seeing and feeling second-hand. And, in this case, I am taking the words of someone else; but such borrowing is okay, I think, as long as they fit your experience and are useful to your attentiveness, rather than to your sleep. Insofar as you can, take your own for your own; step into yourself, rather than from yourself, and inhabit your own being.
     Each moment, its actions and its thoughts, is a preparation for something, or a prelude to something we have not considered. What are you preparing for? What am I preparing for? What is in today that is the prelude for our tomorrow?  Let us live our own lives with integrity and self-respect, centered in ourselves; surely that is a preparation for a better future than looking to other people for our cues, when the purposes that justify those cues for them may not match our own. Certainly, the kind of foundation we provide for ourselves is largely learned, and taught by what is common among those around us; yet, this does not mean the people presently around us wholly determine our lives. With the glimmer of a rare or read-about example, sometimes we begin to see differently, and thereby to live differently as well, than the overwhelming majority of people we know. It is still an example, but a minority example; we can choose to live by the example that is different from the rest.
     We teach ourselves to live by learning how to process our experience. We first learn how to process what we experience from other people (e.g., explanatory styles, the mental templates we use to make judgments, etc.), yet we can learn how to live on the basis of conclusions we draw from attentiveness to our experience itself, and paying attention to what is in it. We are never without influence, but we can learn to choose our influences. The process we bring to our seeing may be the same as that of another person, or ten million other people, but our sights are our own; our experiences are similar, but not the same. Let us live our values, expect less, and make better habits of thought and action. When we think without the script of our habitual thoughts, let us think based on what we know, or think we do. Let us live on the basis of a less explicit script, a barer script- a more open-ended way of approaching life in our thoughts and actions- one that has fewer and less specific expectations, but ones that are carefully selected. Expectations of ourselves, first, and expectations of other people, second. Only then do we have the structure in which improvisation and spontaneity is fruitful and possible.
     It seems to me that a mindful life is the highest quality there is- but only when we live it, rather than talk about it. In the meantime, trying to transmute our words into actions, habit is so much of our nature. Of course, I am not saying we are not constrained within a range of possible outcomes by our nature as well, for we are; but we can only test the limits of that range by entertaining the possibility that the envelope of our freedom can always be pushed open a little wider, that we can choose things that enhance our freedom, piece by piece. When we say, 'that is my nature, it is just how I am,' we overestimate the inevitability of that state of affairs or state of mind continuing. And surely, the conviction that something is impossible is the end of possibility.

     When I'm not writing, I sometimes open cans. With the right habits, and the right tool, it is second nature. But life, as we find it in ourselves and our surroundings, is the real can we are trying to open. Mindfulness- a carefully used, incisive awareness, located in the present- is the quality tool we need if we wish to open it. Conveniently enough, we find both life and mindfulness in the same place, and that is precisely where we are. In that sense, they are both durable indeed; they last as long as our present. Our time may seem limited when we step outside the present, but timeless when we step into it. Knowing when to step into it and when to step out of it, so you can check your steps- now, that's quality.