Happy New Year-Free Story
I’ve decided that I should send an ebook or PDF version of my short story “Noam Chomsky and the Timebox” (published in Interzone magazine earlier this year) to anyone who wants to bring in 2012 by reading a strange story about Terence McKenna’s one encounter with the great anarchist Chomsky.
So send me an email with your request if you’d like a complimentary copy of the story. Here’s the Email Button
Here’s what the Rhetor and Philosopher Daniel Coffeen had to say about the story.
Daniel Coffeen’s comments on Timebox
Diet Soap Podcast #129: How to Understand Portal 2
There is no guest this week, but rather this week’s episode is a sound collage that aims at understanding the video game Portal 2. After talking with my son Ben, after I tried to convince him that Portal 2 is best understood as a Symptom of the Late Capitalist crisis we’re in, I edited this together. Here I make the case that the video game was best understood if seen through the lens of the Lacanian philosophy of Slavoj Zizek.
It’s Wednesday, December 28th, 2011, and this will be the last Diet Soap podcast before the new year. I want to thank everyone who has been contacting me about the podcast through Facebook, and I want to mention that somebody asked me a very good question about the difference between social democracy and state socialism, but I lost track of the Facebook message. Could you resend that? Also I want to encourage everyone to get ahold of my novella “Wave of Mutilation” through Amazon, and also point that you’ll hear an audio clip from that book at the end of this episode.
I also want to mention that a new collection of essays is up on Thought Catalog on the subject of Enjoyment. In fact Thought Catalog published letters I wrote to the Rhetor and playful philosopher Daniel Coffeen, and Mister Coffeen will be the first guest in the New Year. And Diet Soap will be back to a regular weekly schedule in 2012.
Diet Soap Podcast #128: An Unidentified Reality?
This is a conversation with the mystic, film critic, and existential detective Jason Horsley on the subject of UFOs. Horsley and I had been unfruitfully arguing on an abstract level for about twenty minutes when I decided to shift ground and talk in concrete terms about the phenomena. So the conversation you’ll hear in this episode starts with this shift to the concrete or mundane, and I want to point out that I am a skeptic of the UFO phenomena. That is, I don’t believe any of the literature or explanations for the phenomena. That said I find the subject endlessly fascinating. As a science fiction nerd, a surrealist wannabe, and a the kind of oddball who likes to puzzle over the metaphysical and ontological riddles that seem so prominent in this Late Capitalist age, the UFO subject is pleasing to me.
By the way, it’s Friday, December 9th, 2011, and I’m Douglas Lain the host of this podcast. You might have noticed that podcast has slipped into an irregular schedule. I’ve been working two jobs for the past two months and have found keeping up with interviews and editing to be pretty much impossible. However, starting next week I’ll only be working one job (as the seasonal job ends) and I should be able to get back on schedule. I have some big plans for 2012, which as you all know will be the last year of history, and the podcast is a big part of those plans.
I also want to point out that my latest short story “Erasing the Concept of Sex from the Photobooth” is available in this month’s Interzone magazine. Interzone is England’s leading science fiction magazine and I’m glad to have my work appear there again. So if you’re in the UK you might look for the current issue at your local Newsstand, and I’ll provide an online link in the show notes for this episode. Also, everyone should consider purchasing my novella Wave of Mutilation. I’ll pick up providing audio excerpts to that in the next week probably, and I hope to start making the rounds on various podcasts and maybe even radio to promote the book. I’m proud of it and I want a lot of people to read it.
What’s the Matter with Bishop Berkeley? pt. 1
Most people who dismiss Bishop Berkeley do so because he held the crazy idea that the world was not physical. That is, the notion that the world is made up of perceptions is so counterintuitive that it just seems wrong on its face. At best Berkeley can be said to be an ally to the silly mystics. Somebody who can only be believed when you’re stoned or during some sort of psychotic break. However, when I was an undergrad and reading the Bishop my problem with Berkeley wasn’t that he believed that the world existed in perception alone, but rather that he was ultimately unable to believe this.
This is all fine and good, and yet the problem of consistency of thought, of the continuity remains. If we accept Berkeley’s immaterialism one trouble remains: How can we find that the universe coheres, that the world of perception is not our own subjective mess, that we aren’t trapped in solipsistic bubble of our own making? And Berkeley’s solution to this trouble is wholly unsatisfying. He posits a God who exists as the ultimate perceiver. But this God is merely a stand-in for matter. God, like matter, has not perceptible qualities. This is no solution at all.
So the problem became how does one solve this second problem. How can the world be said to cohere now that we’ve eliminated both matter AND God too? This is, as I see it, the project of the phenomenalists.
[more to come]





