Philosophie, Ethik und ReligionswissenschaftEnglischSubstack

Imperfect notes on an imperfect world

Japan-based scholar Christopher Hobson reflects on how we can live and act in conditions that are constantly changing and challenging us. Pursuing open thinking.
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Philosophie, Ethik und ReligionswissenschaftEnglisch
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With the impending anniversary of Japan’s triple disasters, this piece reflects on an important lesson I learnt from the research I did on the Fukushima nuclear accident: some things break. On 11 March 2011, a huge earthquake off the coast of Japan triggered a massive tsunami that struck the Tohoku region.

Philosophie, Ethik und ReligionswissenschaftEnglisch
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This piece was first published in The Japan Times in late January 2021. The year 2020 undoubtedly defied expectations and predictions. Yet as a new year commences, the experience has not deterred many from offering predictions about what is coming next. While it might be tempting to decisively announce that the world after COVID-19 will be fundamentally different, it really is impossible to say.

Philosophie, Ethik und ReligionswissenschaftEnglisch
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This piece was first published on E-IR. An important truism within disaster studies is that all disasters are human-made. What this insight conveys is that how people act – before, during, after – plays a crucial role in shaping how a disaster unfolds, even if the trigger is from nature.

Philosophie, Ethik und ReligionswissenschaftEnglisch
Veröffentlicht

Welcome to ‘Imperfect notes on an imperfect world’, an open-ended experiment sharing my writing on this platform. I am a scholar based in Japan, my research and teaching draw on politics, ethics, sociology and related fields. The title hopefully gives a bit of a sense of the perspective you can expect here, a sketch book of thoughts and reflections on our world. Humans are wonderfully incomplete, constant works in progress.