
Martin Scorsese and The Band at their absolute finest. This work encapsulates American music with numerous famous guests. This is the best movie concert because of its crafty filming focusing on The Band's emotions while playing, then cutting to off stage interviews.
A concert that encapsulates American music in 1976.
About the Creator
Innovation; The Unknown Alliance Between Business and Government
Milton Friedman’s view in Capitalism And Freedom proposes the idea that government should exist in the market solely to maximize unconstrained economic freedom. Government intervention into the marketplace that limits or forces consumer decision-making cannot be justified. Friedman’s argument for market fundamentalism is seemingly at odds with the historical reality of the role of government in the United States. From state police powers, to Progressive Era reforms, through the New Deal government whether being state or federal has always shaped the contours of capitalism through political, social, and cultural change. Friedmans point of view differs from the consumer health and environmental protections era (1964-1977) and the rise of the idea of the developmental state. Friedman’s philosophy has guided the idea of market fundamentalism within the false notions of the invisible hand driving innovation instead of a combination of public and private sectors. This idea is negligent to the fact that government presence in the innovation economy acts as the only entity that can invest in certain sectors. The notion that the government shouldn’t pick winners is supplanted by the idea of the government supporting large, medium, and small firms to compete for the best technology.
By SchmalzExclusive • 3 years ago
The Road by Cormac McCarthy:
"If he is not the word of God, God never spoke." It's a line spoken by The Man, unnamed, early on in the 2007 Pulitzer Prize winning novel, "The Road" by Cormac McCarthy. It's this line, elegiac and moving, infused with despair and hope, that informs you, you're not reading something you'll easily forget.
By Adam Diehl11 days ago in Critique
VEDAS, UPANISHADS AND WESTERN PHILOSOPHY - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS
The Encounter of East and West as a Philosophical Problem The encounter between Indian and Western philosophy is one of the most fascinating yet most perilous undertakings in the history of philosophy. Fascinating because the two traditions — independently developed in different historical and cultural contexts — display surprising convergences that cannot be interpreted as accidental: they seem to touch something common in the deeper structure of human thought and experience. Perilous because superficial similarity can mislead: different concepts bearing similar names, different practices aimed at analogous ends, different world-views articulated through comparable conceptual schemas. Alexis Karpouzos stands in this encounter in a particular way: he neither seeks synthesis nor establishes opposition — he moves diagonally, drawing from both traditions without belonging exclusively to either, recognising in each a fragmentary wholeness of the Wandering Truth. The analysis that follows is not a historical-philosophical survey — it is an analysis in tension: each tradition is placed in full dialogue with the other two, and the convergences and divergences reveal different aspects of the same foundational philosophical question.
By alexis karpouzos5 days ago in Critique


Comments (2)
Oooo, I don't know them but this was an excellent review!
Thought about after Robbie's passing. Thank you for this!