A Welcome and Introduction To Camels With Hammers From Daniel Fincke

Welcome to Camels With Hammers!  For an overview of the ideas I argue for on this site with links to the vast majority of my original posts, please go read Camels With Hammers Philosophy. For an introduction to me and to my goals with Camels With Hammers keep reading below the picture.

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About Camels With Hammers:

The main foci of Camels With Hammers are contemporary ethical paradigms, normative theories, moral psychology, secularism, Nietzsche interpretation, general philosophical education for non-specialists, commentary on politics and other current affairs from philosophical perspectives.  Additionally, the blog is concerned with being part of the project of creating a constructive atheism which can be a force philosophically, culturally, and, where appropriate, politically.  The blog also occasionally reviews and promotes independent film and music.  Occasionally more mainstream music and films are of interest—but usually that’s when Tom Petty, Batman, or Spider-Man are involved in said music or films.

About me:
My name is Daniel Fincke.  I was raised a devout Evangelical Christian in a low church denomination (the Church of Christ) and I went to one of the most conservative Christian colleges in the country (Grove City College) for my undergraduate education.  There I majored in philosophy, minored in religion, and left the faith in my senior year.  That was ten years ago now and in the intervening time I have become a specialist on Friedrich Nietzsche and contemporary moral philosophy.  This fall I will defend my dissertation in philosophy at Fordham University under the direction of Professor John Davenport.
Teaching:
Since January of 2003 I have taught philosophy at the college level first as a teaching fellow and then as a teaching associate and an adjunct professor.  I have taught philosophy at Fordham University Rose Hill, Fordham University Lincoln Center, Fordham University College of Liberal Studies in Westchester, William Paterson University, and St. John’s University.  Subjects I have taught include Philosophical Ethics, Business Ethics, Philosophy of the Person, Philosophy of Human Nature, and Introduction to Philosophy.  In 2005 I won the “Teaching Associate of the Year” award from Fordham University’s  Graduate Students Association based on nominations from my students.
Dissertation:
The title of my dissertation is “On Deriving and Defending an Axiology of the Will to Power” and it first explores a systematic reading of Nietzsche’s texts which yields a coherent reading of his overall philosophy and then in the final chapters, it features my updated and critically reevaluated account of Nietzschean moral criticism and constructive insights within terms of contemporary moral psychology and normative theory. In my future work, I want to continue to develop a  post-Christian descriptive and normative account of ethics which actively participates in contemporary discussions in moral philosophy.
Invitation To Philosophy Non-Specialists:
—I encourage non-specialists in philosophy to use this blog as a place to try their hand at serious philosophical debate, to seek clarification of obscure philosophical terms or concepts that are stumbling block to their participation, and all around to use this blog as a place to learn philosophy.  Please read more of how I view the educational potential of the blog in this post I wrote on the subject.
Invitation To Fellow Academics:
—I hope other academics from all fields and points of view will help me sharpen my ideas through their criticisms and suggestions in replies to my posts and to those of their fellow commenters.  I believe that blogs can be a strong medium for members of the academic community to improve each other’s thought through providing unusual opportunities for cross-disciplinary interaction and a convenient forum for testing and correcting ideas which are not yet ready for publication.  I look forward to both sharpening my best arguments and abandoning my worst ones as a result of fellow philosophers’ contributions and those of other academics and astute laymen.
Invitation To Dissenters And Questioners:
—I welcome philosophical questions, challenges, and topic suggestions from all manner of readers and am excited to base my blog entries on these whenever it will serve the blog best.
Invitation To Philosophers, Scientists, And Social Scientists Who Would Like To Contribute:
—I invite you to become a camel with a hammer yourself.  Apply to be a guest contributor to the blog, especially if you have complementary specialties to my own and/or general philosophical affinities to this blog’s.  If you have an idea for either a single post or a recurring contribution to the blog, please write me with your ideas and your CV.
—I also welcome thinkers who disagree with the general views expressed on the blog to suggest planned debates with me to be featured on the blog on either one occassion or in a semi-regularly recurring feature.
Follow Camels With Hammers:
I can be found on twitter under the name camelshammers, sign up to follow us so you don’t miss any news about the site, and so that you can peer deeper into my mind.  You may also invite me to be your friend on Facebook and receive updates there every time the blog updates.
Contact Me:
Dave (our webmaster) and I want your feedback on what we do well and what we can improve to meet your blog reading needs better.  Contact us at camelswithhammers@gmail.com if you have something to say privately to us!
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6 Comments

  1. Lowrack
    Posted September 23, 2009 at 7:12 am | Permalink

    Hello Daniel,

    I’m a relatively new reader, but I find your commentary very insightful. I was wondering if you might be able to comment on the following for me(providing you have the time and impetus to do so):
    “A little common sense would help here. Attacking the perverts of religion, which are the exception not the norm, or inventing imaginary reasons the imaginary religious right doesn’t support our future bankruptcy by health care, is not going to do anything constructive to cause more people to become atheists. What is woefully lacking in atheism is any real leaders who can construct a social framework that works as well as the social frameworks produced by religious people along with anyone who can intelligently communicate that framework to the culture. Any idiot can make fun of religious people or find inconsistencies in peoples lives, which doesn’t disprove religion as much as it proves peoples need for it. Idiots can destroy, it takes genius to create. When atheism produces people who are committed to constructing an atheistic paradigm to live by with the kinds of values, norms, taboos, etc. that have governed our current culture for millennia, then it will be able to compete for peoples devotion. Right now it is both profitable and safe to criticize religion. That’s because the freedom that provides both is based on a religious value system. When men are willing to lose their freedom, their money, their families, their homes, their honor, their careers, and their lives for atheism, then they will change and shape the world the way religious men have. Until then they’ll just sit comfortably on the fringes of culture involving themselves in their rhetorical masturbation sessions, tell jokes that only their cronies laugh at and make criticisms of religious people that even their own advocates acknowledge and resent. Quit borrowing from the bank of cultural theism and start producing what you pretend to so desperately want. Try living like a true atheist for a week and you’ll learn why your not an atheist as much as you are an anti-theist. In the words of that great atheistic philosopher, the Joker, “Introduce a little anarchy”. See how much you appreciate a religious culture that provides you the freedom to leach off of it’s values.”
    Thanks a lot!
    Lowrack

    • Daniel Fincke
      Posted September 23, 2009 at 9:40 am | Permalink

      Hey, thanks Lowrack for the provocative remark, I already know a few things I want to say about it as soon as I get the chance. I’m a little confused as to whether it comes from you or from someone else, given that you put it in quotes. I have a long busy day of teaching today so will not be able to type out an adequate reply until tomorrow or so, but when I do who should I cite, you or someone else when quoting what you wrote?

      thanks!

  2. Lowrack
    Posted September 27, 2009 at 5:56 pm | Permalink

    Hey, sorry about that. I neglected to give credit there. The author was AgentChaos and his comments were quoted from a thread at American Atheists titled “Nones are growing, but Atheists stagnant”. Here’s the link if you’d like to get some context for the discussion:
    http://atheists.org/blog/2009/09/22/nones-are-growing-but-atheists-stagnant
    Thanks, and I look forward to your response!
    Lowrack

  3. Posted September 27, 2009 at 9:22 pm | Permalink

    Hi Daniel

    thanks for adding your blog to A World Beyond Belief – have now added the feed and a short intro.

    http://aworldbeyondbelief.blogspot.com/2009/09/camels-with-hammers.html

    After 25 years I still re-read Nietzsche. As he said, the world revolves around the philosopher, except that once ideas become accepted the originating philosophers are often forgotten.

    Good work!

  4. Sean
    Posted December 14, 2009 at 8:08 pm | Permalink

    Daniel,

    Imagine my surprise when, as an undergraduate student about to embark on Theology and Philosophy concentrations, I discovered that you are a teacher at my very own Fordham University!

    I’m at Rose Hill, and I wonder if you are still teaching here, and if our scholastic/philosophical paths will ever cross.

  5. John Semenowicz
    Posted January 10, 2010 at 12:33 pm | Permalink

    The purpose of life is to have as many enjoyable experiences and sensations as possible before we die. There is nothing else we need to know.
    morals? what is right and what is wrong? Do we really need anyone (especially theologians) to tell us?


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