Join 📚Jof’S Book Highlights

A batch of the best highlights from what Jophin's read, .

Management traditionally had two major ways of thinking about antagonism: social conflict within business and competition in the market. Internal tension with subordinates, external competition with rivals. With the eruption of an activism targeting multinationals, a third case, strange and unexpected, was now presenting itself: an external social conflict, against which traditional tactics proved inadequate.

The Ungovernable Society

Grégoire Chamayou

In politics “It would be good if … (e.g., the tsar were overthrown)” means someone has decided that it would be desirable or advisable if this were to take place, or at any rate has entertained the possibility that this might be done. “Who is that?” is always a pertinent question. It also means that someone is in principle willing to try to implement “the good” that has been determined, even if the form that attempt at implementation takes is a series of weak and ineffectual actions that amount to no more than some seditious conversations, or committing to memory a subversive poem.

Philosophy and Real Politics

Raymond Geuss

There are no major global challenges that do not have critical educational dimensions. Many key challenges are primarily educational in nature. This is just another way of saying that __changing the trajectory of the world-system requires changing how people think and act, which can only be done by finding ways to affect valued and needed transformations of human capabilities.__ Human development and education are often the elephant in the room when it comes to calls for system-level change.

Education in a Time Between Worlds

Zachary Stein

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