2018年7月28日 星期六

Steven Pinker:Enlightenment Now;Henry Kissinger: ‘We are in a very, very grave period’


Steven Pinker

https://stevenpinker.com/
Web site for Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University and author of books on language, mind, & human nature.



https://www.ted.com/talks/steven_pinker_is_the_world_getting_better_or_worse_a_look_at_the_numbers



*Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress*

"One aspect of the book unlike anything that came out of the Enlightenment is the use of data as a basic component of the argumentation. It’s not that I think Enlightenment figures would have found this mode of argument alien. On the contrary, the use of graphs to visualize data was itself an Enlightenment innovation."
BLOG.LAREVIEWOFBOOKS.ORG
Andy Fitch interviews Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology at Harvard and author of "Enlightenment Now."







https://www.ft.com/content/926a66b0-8b49-11e8-bf9e-8771d5404543

Henry Kissinger: ‘We are in a very, very grave period’ The grand consigliere of American diplomacy talks about Putin, the new world order — and the meaning of Trump Share on Twitter (opens new window) Share on Facebook (opens new window) Share on LinkedIn (opens new window) Save Save to myFT Edward Luce JULY 20, 2018 Print this page725 It was not hard to entice Henry Kissinger to meet for lunch. Though he is 95, and moves very slowly, the grand consigliere of American diplomacy is keen to talk. He hops on and off planes to see the likes of Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping with as much zeal as when he played the global chess game as Richard Nixon’s diplomatic maestro. He loves to be in the thick of things. Persuading him to say what he actually thinks is another matter. Kissinger is to geopolitical clarity what Alan Greenspan was to monetary communication — an oracle whose insight is matched only by his indecipherability. It is my mission to push him out of his comfort zone. I want to know what he really thinks of Donald Trump. The timing is perfect. We are having lunch the day after Trump met Putin in Helsinki — a summit that America’s foreign-policy establishment believes will go down as a low point in US diplomacy. Trump had done the unthinkable by endorsing Putin’s protestations of innocence of electoral sabotage over the word of America’s intelligence agencies. Later today Trump will unconvincingly try to undo what he said in Helsinki by insisting he meant “wouldn’t” instead of “would”. But it is too late for that. The New York Daily News has the screaming headline: “Open Treason” next to a cartoon of Trump shooting Uncle Sam in the head while holding Putin’s hand. There could be no better moment to jolt Kissinger off his Delphic perch. I arrive with a minute or two to spare. Kissinger is already seated. He cuts a gnomish figure at a corner table in a half-empty dining room. A large walking cane is propped against the side wall. (He tore a ligament a few years ago.) “Forgive me if I don’t get up,” says Kissinger in his gravelly German accent. We are at the Jubilee, a cosy French restaurant just around the corner from Kissinger’s Midtown Manhattan apartment. It is only a few blocks from Kissinger Associates, the geopolitical consultancy that charges clients princely sums to hear what I assume are his unvarnished thoughts. My only inducement is a nice lunch. When we order, Kissinger checks whether he is my guest. “Ah yes,” he says, chortling after I insist he is. “Otherwise that would be corruption.” He eats here often. “I had dinner here just last night with my daughter,” he says. On two or three occasions, someone comes over to shake his hand. “I am the Ukrainian ambassador to the UN,” says one. “Who?” says Kissinger. “Ukraine,” the diplomat replies. “We think very highly of you.” Kissinger’s face lights up. “Ah Ukraine,” he says. “I am a strong supporter.” Geopolitics weighs heavily on Kissinger. As the co-architect of the cold war rapprochement with China and détente with the Soviet Union, Kissinger now surveys a world in which China and Russia are both challenging the US world order, often in concert with each other. But the doyen of cold war diplomacy is as interested in the future as he is in the past. This year Kissinger wrote a terrifying piece on artificial intelligence for The Atlantic Monthly, in which he compared humanity today to the Incas before the arrival of smallpox and the Spanish. He urged the creation of a presidential commission on AI. “If we do not start this effort soon, before long we shall discover that we started too late,” he concluded. This summer Kissinger is working from home on a book about great statesmen and women (there is a chapter on Margaret Thatcher). He has just finished a section on Nixon, the president whom he served — uniquely — both as secretary of state and national security adviser. It is 25,000 words long and Kissinger is toying whether to publish it separately as a short book. He worries it will backfire. “It might bring all the contestants out of their foxholes again,” he says. Do you mean that it could provoke comparisons between Watergate and Trump’s Russia investigation, I ask. “That is my fear,” he replies. Before I have a chance to follow up, Kissinger switches to Thatcher. “She was a magnificent partner,” he says. “I am a believer in the special relationship because I think America needs a psychological balance and this is a natural one based on history — not just on contributions.” Our starters arrive. Kissinger has a plate of chicken liver pâté, which he consumes with gusto. He has tucked his napkin bib-style into his upper shirt. I want to talk about Trump. Kissinger is keen to stay on Britain. I ask him about Lord Carrington, the former British foreign secretary, who resigned in 1982 to carry responsibility for failing to stop Argentina’s invasion of the Falkland Islands, and who died, aged 99, this month. On the day of Carrington’s death, Boris Johnson, the most recent British foreign secretary, quit with very different motives. You could say the first resigned with honour and the second with dishonour. “I loved Lord Carrington,” says Kissinger with feeling. “I never went to England without seeing him.” In all their years of friendship, Carrington did not once complain about having to resign, says Kissinger. “He said to me: ‘What is the point of assuming responsibility if you then whisper to your friends that you are not really responsible?’ I don’t think we have that quality any more because for that you need a tradition that you take for granted and we no longer can.” Johnson certainly doesn’t embody it, I suggest. “I don’t think Carrington thought much of Johnson,” Kissinger replies. What did Kissinger make of the Helsinki summit? His answer is halting. I think Trump may be one of those figures in history who appears from time to time to mark the end of an era and to force it to give up its old pretences “It was a meeting that had to take place. I have advocated it for several years. It has been submerged by American domestic issues. It is certainly a missed opportunity. But I think one has to come back to something. Look at Syria and Ukraine. It’s a unique characteristic of Russia that upheaval in almost any part of the world affects it, gives it an opportunity and is also perceived by it as a threat. Those upheavals will continue. I fear they will accelerate.” Kissinger embarks on a disquisition about Russia’s “almost mystical” tolerance for suffering. His key point is that the west wrongly assumed in the years before Putin annexed Crimea that Russia would adopt the west’s rules-based order. Nato misread Russia’s deep-seated craving for respect. “The mistake Nato has made is to think that there is a sort of historic evolution that will march across Eurasia and not to understand that somewhere on that march it will encounter something very different to a Westphalian [western idea of a state] entity. And for Russia this is a challenge to its identity.” Do you mean that we provoked Putin, I ask. “I do not think Putin is a character like Hitler,” Kissinger replies. “He comes out of Dostoyevsky.” Our main courses arrive. Kissinger has ordered branzino on a bed of green vegetables. He barely touches the dish. “No, but it was very good,” he says later when the waitress offers to pack it into a box. By contrast, I eat most of my Dover sole and Brussels sprouts. We are both drinking Badoit sparkling water, which Kissinger has specifically requested. I sense I am losing my battle to get him on to Trump — or failing to detect his hidden message. Is he saying we are underestimating Trump — that, in fact, Trump may be doing us the unacknowledged service of calming the Russian bear? Again, there is a pause before Kissinger answers. “I don’t want to talk too much about Trump because at some point I should do it in a more coherent way than this,” Kissinger replies. But you are being coherent, I protest. Please don’t stop. There is another pregnant silence. “I think Trump may be one of those figures in history who appears from time to time to mark the end of an era and to force it to give up its old pretences. It doesn’t necessarily mean that he knows this, or that he is considering any great alternative. It could just be an accident.” By now Kissinger has abandoned his halfhearted stabs at the fish. I know he has briefed Trump. He has also met Putin on 17 occasions. He reports the contents of those meetings to Washington, he tells me. I try a different tack. To whom does Trump compare in history, I ask. This also fails to do the trick. Kissinger goes off on a tour d’horizon of the health of European diplomacy. He can find no leader who excites him, with the possible exception of France’s Emmanuel Macron. “I can’t yet say he’s effective because he’s just started but I like his style,” says Kissinger. “Among other European statesmen, Angela Merkel is very local. I like her personally and I respect her but she’s not a transcendent figure.” Which diplomatic brain would he compare in today’s US establishment to himself, say, or the late Zbigniew Brzezinski — his former sparring partner, who also served as national security adviser? The mention of Brzezinski triggers something. “When Zbig died, which was a great surprise, I wrote to his wife that no death has moved me quite as much as his,” Kissinger says, again with evident feeling. “Zbig was almost unique in my generation. We both considered ideas about the world order to be the key problem of our time. How could we create it? We had somewhat different ideas. But for both of us, we were above all concerned to raise diplomacy to that level of influence.” Who is asking those questions today, I ask. “There is no debate today,” Kissinger replies. “It is something we need to have.” I cannot shake the feeling that Kissinger is trying to tell me something but that I am too literal to interpret it. Like a blindfolded darts player, I try a number of different throws. What would Germany become if Trump pulled America out of Nato? Kissinger likes that question but declines to give odds as to its likelihood. “In the 1940s, the European leaders had a clear sense of direction,” he says. “Right now they mostly just want to avoid trouble.” They are not doing a very good job of it, I interrupt. “That’s true,” says Kissinger with a cryptic smile. “One eminent German recently told me that he always used to translate tension with America as a way to move away from America but now he finds himself more afraid of a world without America.” So could Trump be shocking the rest of the west to stand on its own feet, I ask. “It would be ironic if that emerged out of the Trump era,” Kissinger replies. “But it is not impossible.” The alternative, Kissinger adds, is not appealing. A divided Atlantic would turn Europe into “an appendage of Eurasia”, which would be at the mercy of a China that wants to restore its historic role as the Middle Kingdom and be “the principal adviser to all humanity”. It sounds as though Kissinger believes China is on track to achieve its goal. America, meanwhile, would become a geopolitical island, flanked by two giant oceans and without a rules-based order to uphold. Such an America would have to imitate Victorian Britain but without the habit of mind to keep the rest of the world divided — as Britain did with the European continent. Kissinger is more circumspect on AI — a subject, he concedes, with which he is still grappling. But he is troubled by the unknown consequences of autonomous warfare — a world in which machines are required to take ethical decisions. “All I can do in the few years left of me is to raise these issues,” he says. “I don’t pretend to have the answers.” JUBILEE 948 1st Avenue, New York Pâté $13.50 Pea soup $11.00 Branzini $31.50 Dover sole $57.00 Bottle of sparkling water $8.50 Tea $4.50 Double espresso $9.00 Total (inc tax & tip) $176.00 I have little idea how Kissinger will take my next question. Is power an aphrodisiac? “What was the word?” Kissinger asks. “Aphrodisiac,” I repeat. I am quoting the famous Kissinger line that he made in the heyday of his career when he was still a single man. In the late 1960s and early 1970s he was as much known for his racy dating calendar as for affairs of state. “I would certainly say that being able to make decisions has a dimension that you don’t have in ordinary life,” Kissinger replies with the hint of a smile. That was a subtle answer, I tell him. “I did say that,” he replies. “But when I say these things they’re more intended to establish your cleverness than your life’s purpose. And it’s true to some extent. It is based on observation.” By now we are on to the coffee. Mine is a double espresso. Kissinger has mint tea. I decide to take a final stab at the bullseye. We have been talking for almost two hours. If there is one recurring criticism of Kissinger, I tell him, it is that he goes to great lengths to preserve access to people in power at the expense of not speaking plainly in public. Isn’t now — of all moments — the right one to burn a bridge or two? Kissinger looks crestfallen. “I take that seriously and a lot of people, good friends of mine, have been urging this on me,” he says eventually. “It could happen at some point in time.” There is no time like the present, I say with a nervous laugh. “It is clear the direction I am going in,” he replies. “Is it clear to you?” Sort of, I reply. You are worried about the future. However, you believe there is a non-trivial chance that Trump could accidentally scare us into reinventing the rules-based order that we used to take for granted. Is that a fair summary? “I think we are in a very, very grave period for the world,” Kissinger replies. “I have conducted innumerable summit meetings, so they didn’t learn this one [Helsinki] from me.” It is clear he will not elaborate further. I ask him which period he would liken to today. Kissinger talks about his experience as a freshly minted citizen in US uniform serving in the second world war. He also reminisces about what brought the young German refugee to these shores in the first place. After Germany marched into Austria in 1938, Jews in Kissinger’s home town were told to stay indoors. His parents left for America when they could. “There was a curfew and German soldiers everywhere,” he says. “It was a traumatic experience that has never left me.” His reminiscence is carefully chosen. Something like a biblical storm has descended since we sat down. One umbrella literally flew past the window. I help Kissinger through the soaking whiplash to his car. The driver takes his other arm. He is unsteady. I realise that I have been ungraciously interrogating a man almost twice my age. “Dr Kissinger has been looking forward to this lunch for days,” says the server after I return to borrow an umbrella. That is nice, I think — though I fear my Trump questions may have depressed his appetite. Edward Luce is the FT’s US national editor and author of ‘The Retreat of Western Liberalism’

從陳耀昌醫師(3)的故事,接著談些中研院院士:2,3,4,5位


杏林怪傑 陳耀昌



*****

我原本也要談些我所知道的今年台大的院士 (5位),看來讓給更適當的人。

2,3,4,5位指的是,某學長通知我東海畢業的院士;查教授 (詳下)至少3位。東海"園丁"通知我們,有4位........


陳耀昌今晨(2018.7.6)起來,看到新榜中硏院院士名單,心中浮起一件陳年往事。我還是醫學生的時候,初到精神科實習。某日門診,來一初診,是名校女生,雖發病中猶高雅秀麗絕倫,心中一震。那是我見到的第一位catatonic schizophrenia, 其病因自是少女情懷,不幸遇挫。她幽幽訴其情史,而該情人姓名,我竟然數十年不忘。孰料多年之後,再度見遇其名。嘆女大生真的慧眼識英雄,惜天不假緣。不知女大生後來無恙否?為之三嘆。
人生,是命。生死有命,富貴在天。這是我最常向病人說的話。
而姻緣情緣,也是天定。


查時傑 這屆新科院士,起碼有三位畢業於東海大學,杜维明、于君芳、錢嘉陵。錢兄與我建中1960級同屆同學,杜維明兄也是建中校友,他屆次更高。他受聘為台大歴史系客座教授時,有幸與他同研究室,可惜見面討教機會不多。



近2周前,鄧、袁學長及理學院院長、2位物理系老師等一行訪問歸國的錢學長,相談甚歡。我不忘提醒鄧學長兩件事:9月2日要來寒舍領服務獎,更重要的,你的校友影音紀錄要記得多錄女性校友---原先建議至少男女比率7比3......不見得要找"傑出校友"啦,你剛認識的1975級不是有很多"天之驕女"嗎.....





hc:
還有一位是東海的:工程科學組:何德仲 1971畢業-13屆化工系。錢嘉陵院士多年是物理的評議委員?,所以.....他2015年受我們"訪談",才知道他也是彈琴高手,總之,不愧是建中人。于君芳院士的中文講學,YouTube上可找到。杜維明院士今年才上的故事,很多人都曉得;有點擔心他的學生先選上;他的交際廣闊,可能少見:在前資生堂老董的回憶錄上,記載在瑞士相遇,後來請他到日本演講、當顧問。好日子,說些故事賀學長......





🎉第32屆中研院院士選舉結果揭曉🎉
歷時四天院士會議的審慎評選,本院於7月5日選出21位第32屆新科院士,包括數理科學組5名、工程科學組5名、生命科學組6名、人文及社會科學組5名。
廖俊智院長表示,中研院士為榮譽職,選舉過程審慎嚴謹 ,歷經多次審查及討論後,才能獲此殊榮。
中研院院士職權包括選舉院士及名譽院士、籌議國家學術研究方針、受政府及有關單位之委託,辦理學術設計、調查、審查及研究事項。
 新科院士底加 https://www.sinica.edu.tw/ch/news/5897
--
2018 Academicians Announced🎉
Academia Sinica held its biennial Convocation of Academicians from July 2 to July 5 culminating in the announcement of the 2018 list of Academicians on July 5, 2018. This year, total of 21 new Academicians were elected.



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會談參考筆記 約2015.7.17
諸位同學:

我受的企業訓練,要求我寫些會談的紀錄。今晚非常感謝大家,尤其是錢學長夫婦的寶貴時間。如有許多疏失,就請大家原諒。所幸這是鄧學長錄影的補充資料。





會議( 5點~6點半):錢嘉陵教授 (參加完中研院物理所評議委員會會議)、袁祝平、鄧益裕;楊定亞(理)院長、張晃暐副教授(與錢嘉陵教授在美國一起參加會議)、某教授 (名字待鄧學長補)、鍾漢清晚餐( 7點~8點半,袁學長請客:福華會館B1的風尚咖啡):以上人員加上錢夫人



人事:袁祝平、鄧益裕同屆錢嘉圓 (錢嘉陵妹妹)現在長駐昆明。錢嘉陵母親燕京大學肄業,美國某大學畢業,其燕京大學英文教授後來任教東海大學。錢母從小就教錢嘉陵鋼琴,所以錢嘉陵在大學時可為陳同學伴奏。錢嘉陵謙稱自己音樂才華有限,所以轉行物理。

教學哲學:錢學長取得CMU博士之後,就到美國約翰霍甫金斯大學 (The Johns Hopkins University (commonly referred to as Johns Hopkins, JHU, or simply Hopkins... As of 2011, there have been 37 Nobel Laureates who either attended the university as undergraduate or graduate students, or were faculty members.[164] / https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johns_Hopkins_University)任教至今。他說美國大學無退休年齡規定,不過有授課要求,譬如說開一門課。錢學長的教學基本思想研究以興趣為主,要熱愛工作;質重於量。所以,他跟精選出的數位研究生可每日切磋;也不必多為研究生的grants 申請太花行政方面的心思。他強調美國專業同儕( Peer)之間的認可和制衡力量的重要。



美國私立大學的vision和研究、行政業務,以校長團隊的作為為主。董事會的主要任務是找好校長,委以治校全責;籌組募款 (約每十年會有一次大募款,目標約數十億美元。校友 Bloomberg約捐20億,校友IBM公司前董事長也捐錢,各位看一下他退休之後:In May 2013 Bloomberg LP appointed Palmisano as an independent advisor for the company's privacy and data standards.[17] )


錢學長跟某校學生演講過類似"成功的因素分析:以科學家的見解,現在可以知道許多成功的必備因素,可惜它們多半是個人無法改變的。個人能"貢獻"的,可能只是努力。 (以上是我猜測的)。同樣的,大學要成功,非有財力;好老師;好學生等不可。譬如說,沙烏地阿拉伯的某大學重金設立,不過其環境缺研究共同體和基本建設 (這些正是加州Silicon Valley),所以有缺點;類似的情形是中國的某些有錢的大學。錢學長談到該校主管要求負責招聘的人解釋為何新晉人員會比招聘者更優秀......(袁學長附和齊錫生學長寫香港科技大學的崛起

之經驗談,引用的書待補。)
"My experience at Tunghai, during its golden era,  was precious, unique, and memorable.  That Tunghai will stay with me forever.  But that Tunghai was long gone and will never return." 







Yu, Chun-fang (著)=于君方

于君方,美國哥倫比亞大學宗教學博士,專攻漢傳佛教研究。1972-2004年問任教于羅格斯大學宗教學系,現任哥倫比亞大學宗教學系、東亞語言文化學系,以及“聖嚴漢傳佛學講座”教授,致力于指導漢傳佛教的博士研究生。

她的第一本著作《中國的佛教復興︰株宏與晚期的宗教融合》,是研究唐代以後佛教最早的英文著作之一,另合編有《中國的香客和聖地》。《觀音》一書的英文版于2001年由哥倫比亞大學出版社出版。




觀音:菩薩中國化的演變中文書 , 于君方 陳懷宇、姚崇新、林佩瑩 , 法鼓 , 出版日期: 2009-07-01
優惠價: 9 折, 792 元

觀音菩薩是佛教中慈悲的化身,在印度、東南亞與西藏,亦是象徵神聖王權的男性神祇,然而在中國,「他」卻變成了「她」,成為循聲救苦的「慈悲女神」,並擁有截然不同的歷史與身世,深刻地影響了國人的生活與信仰。 于君方教授投注十多年的心血,以結合...... more

求法與弘法:漢傳佛教的跨文化交流國際研討會論文集中文書 , 于君方 , 法鼓 , 出版日期: 2015-10-01
優惠價: 9 折, 585 元

文化交流過程中,宗教是最重要的載體之一。漢傳佛教以漢譯佛典為根本,其影響之深遠,至今不減;教理教義固不在話下,種種儀軌、文藝,乃至日常生活以及節慶文化,莫不如是。 本論文集收錄了專題演講兩篇、研究... more

觀音︰菩薩中國畫的演變簡體書 , 于君方 , 商務印書館 , 出版日期: 2012-08-01
優惠價: 372 元

于君方,美國哥倫比亞大學宗教學博士,專攻漢傳佛教研究。1972-2004年問任教于羅格斯大學宗教學系,現任哥倫比亞大學宗教學系、東亞語言文化學系,以及“聖嚴漢傳佛學講座”教授,致力于指導漢傳佛教的博士研究生。 她的第一本著作《中國的佛教...... more



于君方簡介




1 民國二十七年生,河北人。 美國哥倫比亞大學哲學博士, 現任教於新澤西( New Jersey )州立羅格斯( Rutgers )大學宗教系,教授佛教與亞洲宗教等課程。一九九九年被選為美國中國宗教學會副會長。
2 早期興趣偏重宋、明佛教史,寫過蓮池大師的生平及著作,另有多篇有關禪宗清規與公案方面的論文。近十年作有關觀音信仰的研究,所著《中國的觀音信仰》( Kuan-Yin: The Chinese Transformation of Avalokiteshvara ), 即將由美國哥倫比亞大學出版社出版。


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好消息!!!
東海大學新增4位中研院院士

新科東海院士
數理科學組:
錢嘉陵 1965畢業-7屆物理系

工程科學組:
何德仲 1971畢業-13屆化工系

人文及社會科學組:
于君方 1959畢業-1屆外文系
杜維明1961畢業-3屆中文系
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《自由時報》2018-07-05 18:08
中研院從本週一開始舉行連續4天的院士會議,今天來到最後一天,也是最受矚
目的新科院士票選日。21位新科院士平均年齡65.57歲,其中工程科學組55
的張世富最年輕,最年長則是人文及社會科學組80歲的于君方。
新科院士包括數理科學組:錢嘉陵、王寶貫、鄭建鴻、李定國、蔡安邦。
工程科學組:梁錦榮、何德仲、張世富、盧志遠和王中林。
生命科學組:郭沛恩、汪育理、傅嫈惠、葉錫東、陳列平和鍾邦柱。
人文及社會科學組:鄭毓瑜、于君方、孫天心、高彥頤和杜維明。




🎉恭賀本校中文系鄭毓瑜教授獲選中研院第32屆新科院士🎉
新任院士名單:
數理科學組的錢嘉陵、王寶貫(地理學系、1971)、鄭建鴻、李定國、蔡安邦;
工程科學組的梁錦榮、何德仲、張世富(電機系、1985)、盧志遠(物理系、1972)、王中林;
生命科學組的郭沛恩、汪育理(物理系、1973)、傅嫈惠、葉錫東、陳列平、鍾邦柱(化學系、1974);
人文及社會科學組的杜維明、高彥頤、孫天心、于君方、鄭毓瑜(中文系1981、碩士1984、博士1990)

2018年7月23日 星期一

許志永:關四年出監 《遠方的四年》、浦志強和他的兒子,獨立中文筆會:陳子明,譚作人,阮春義,高瑜,姚監複, 張先玲

專訪許志永:承擔“忠於良心”的代價

許志永是中國知名公民維權人士,2013年因推動“新公民運動”被捕,隨後被判入獄四年。日前,在出獄一年之際,許志永發表文章《遠方的四年》,詳細記述牢獄的生活及心路歷程。文章發表後,得到大量轉載和評論,不少人欽佩許志永的勇氣和承擔,但同時也引發一些批評。德國之聲就此專訪許志永。
德國之聲:寫《遠方的四年》這篇文章前是否預料到會有這樣的迴響?
許志永:我沒想那麼多。說實在的,我除了看自己推特上朋友的評論之外,別的反響我還真的不太了解。
德國之聲:您文章中記述的細節之一是:一名審訊者對您辱罵恐嚇一個多小時,您最後認真地問他"表演完了麼?"對方"一下子崩潰了",連連表示歉意。有批評意見認為,您藉此表達"體制內的善",是不負責任的做法,並且對此情節的真實性提出質疑。您對此有何回應?
許志永:我只是如實記述而已。可能有的人看問題的視角比較極端吧。但我還是認為人都是有良心的。
德國之聲:就本文的發表時間而言,有什麼特殊考慮嗎?
許志永:主要是寫完了。然後也考慮到出獄一周年了,就把文章發出來。就這麼考慮的。
德國之聲:您在文章中曾提到在獄中寫作一本著作,現在完成情況如何?
許志永:還在修改中,其實出獄後一直在寫。內容主要是哲學問題,關於世界的本原,關於生命的本質,關於如何有美好的社會。其實是一個系統的哲學思考,或者是對自由、公義、愛的深層闡釋。
德國之聲:這四年牢獄之災,對您就以上問題的思考是否產生影響和改變?
許志永:沒有根本的改變,但是在那樣的環境裡會把一些問題想得更加清晰更加系統。
德國之聲:《遠方的四年》這篇文章發表後,中國官方是否與您有過接觸?
許志永:他們沒有找我。有表現出來的就是在網上刪帖刪的很厲害。
德國之聲:您現在是否處於自由狀態下?出行生活是否完全自由?
許志永:是自由狀態。可能暗中監控有,明確的(監控)沒有。
德國之聲:您經歷了四年牢獄之災,現在出獄一年了。今後有何打算?
許志永:會繼續推動公民社會,繼續推動中國民主憲政進程。
德國之聲:您不擔心那四年的經歷會再來一次?
許志永:有可能。但是,只要自己忠於自己的良心,理性平和地推動社會進步,該承擔的代價就承擔。
http://rfi.my/1Qh4.f

中国维权人士,新公民运动创始人许志永今天坐满4年牢狱刑期获释回家。许志永监禁的北京监狱官网发布消息,指许志永受到家人在监狱出口处迎接。许志永出狱是否受到监控情况不明。

端傳媒
【許志永刑滿出獄,我們回看了他的遭遇】http://bit.ly/2pHGcHa
許志永,北京大學法學博士,新公民運動倡導者,與滕彪等人創立公盟,就孙志刚案向全国人民代表大会常务委员会提出收容遣送制度违宪审查的公民建议。
許致力於推動國民平等接受教育的權利,要求官員公佈財產,並懲治腐敗。2014年1月26日,許志永被以「聚眾擾亂公共場所秩序罪」為名,判處有期徒刑四年。
2014年1月22日,許志永在法庭上呼籲:為了自由 ‧ 公義 ‧ 愛。以下摘要許的部分講詞:
「你們指控我在推動教育平權,隨遷子女就地高考和呼籲官員財產公示的行動中擾亂公共秩序,表面看這是一個公民言論自由與公共場所秩序的邊界問題,實際上,這是你們是否把公民的憲法權利當真的問題。而更深層次的問題是,你們心中深深的恐懼。恐懼公開審理,公民自由旁聽,恐懼我的名字出現在互聯網上,恐懼一個正在到來的自由社會。你們試圖打壓新公民運動,阻礙中國和平改良的民主憲政之路。雖然你們在庭審中沒有提及新公民運動,但是,案件材料中大量涉及,我想,沒有必要回避這個問題,敞開來談,對中國社會進步是有意義的。
新公民運動宣導每個中國人堂堂正正做公民,把公民的身份當真,我們是公民,是國家的主人,不是臣民,順民,草民,暴民;把公民的權利當真,那些寫在《世界人權宣言》和中國憲法裡的選舉權、言論自由、信仰自由等神聖的權利不能永遠是一張白條;把公民的責任當真,中國是我們每個人的中國,良心正義的底線在我們每個人的腳下,需要我們每個人去堅守;新公民運動宣導自由、公義、愛的新公民精神。個人自由,無拘無束真實快樂的自我是國家和社會的永恆目的;公義是個人自由的邊界,是此世間的公平正義,是恒久的道義良心;愛,是友善,是寬容,是同情,是奉獻,是人世間最美好的情感,是幸福的源泉。」
【推薦閱讀】
《鼠疫裏的異鄉人》http://bit.ly/2pHGcHa
//許志永來家裏,我用一個小時胡亂做出四五個菜。他吃得挺投入,興高采烈給我們講他的「新公民運動」。2013年,他因為這件事再次進入監獄,這一次他被判了四年。//
圖:曾立宇 / 端傳媒設計部
▍為了活下去,我們正在集資。 ▍
用你選擇的媒體,決定你看見的世界 ➤ https://backme.tw/ref/fUPSg/



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(難忘的一幕,浦志強和他的兒子)
浦志強案與中國司法不可承受之重:
https://theinitium.com/…/20151209-opinion-puzhiqiang-rule-…/

2015.5.16
中國著名維權律師浦志強被當局拘留超過一年,今日大陸檢察部門以微博宣佈,正式起訴浦志強「煽動民族仇恨」、「尋釁滋事」兩罪,案情指浦煽動民族仇恨的方式是發微博等。「煽動民族仇恨」最高刑罰是10年監禁、「尋釁滋事」最高刑罰為5年。
檢察方公佈稱浦的罪行是「多次發佈微博…情節嚴重」及「公然辱罵他人,情節惡劣破壞社會秩序」,網民紛紛質疑為何發微博及公然罵人也要控以刑事罪行。
內地公安機關早前建議起訴浦志強4罪,包括「煽動分裂國家」及「非法獲取公民個人訊息」、「煽動民族仇恨」、「尋釁滋事」,但最少兩度因證據不足被檢察機關退回再調查;今日檢察部門僅起訴浦後兩項罪名。

人權律師浦志強被提起公訴

美國國務院日前呼籲釋放浦志強,美國國務卿克里周六也將到訪北京參加會晤。但在中國由黨控制的司法體制下,在針對像對浦志強這樣的政治爭議人物的案件里,起訴很少會被撤回,對其的訴訟也很可能會以定罪及監禁告終。
北京市人民檢察院第二分院在一份網絡告示中稱浦志強因其一系列網絡言論涉嫌「煽動民族仇恨罪」、「尋釁滋事罪」被提起公訴。
檢方在告示中稱,浦志強「公然辱罵他人,情節惡劣,破壞社會秩序,依法應當追究其刑事責任。」
浦志強及其支持者們一直稱浦案是無實無據且有政治動機的打壓行為,針對的是一直以來因在法庭及網絡上挑戰權威,激怒官員的浦志強。浦志強律師表示浦堅決否認這些罪名。
「當然了,他會堅稱自己是無辜的,而且會繼續為自己辯護。」浦志強的兩名辯護律師之一尚寶軍接受電話採訪時說。
檢方的文告沒有給出浦志強案開庭的日期,但法院會在過後宣布。尚寶軍稱開庭可能要在兩到三個月之後,他會在下周拿到起訴書後與浦志強會面。
在習近平治下,中國共產黨已經開始試圖踩滅任何可能的政治反抗源頭,數百名人權活動人士、記者、民間組織帶頭人以及怨憤民眾相繼被逮捕,部分還會被起訴並判處監禁。
但他們之中少有像浦志強這麼知名的。留着平頭、身材魁梧的浦志強今年50歲,他聲音洪亮,言談中帶着戲謔的幽默。他的目無權威可能也是其身陷囹圄的原因。
檢方沒有在其文告中給出浦志強案的具體證據,但浦的律師此前已經證實該案將主要圍繞浦志強曾在微博上發表的一系列尖銳言論。(浦志強稱自己已經不記得發表了這些言論。)微博是類似Twitter的中國平台。
這些言論包括對政府維吾爾族政策的批評。維吾爾族是生活在新疆的少數民族,位於中國西部的新疆一直被緊張局勢及暴力活動牽絆。浦志強律師稱那些批評言論應該就是起訴其煽動民族仇恨的主要根據。
浦志強在2014年5月時曾寫道,「說新疆是中國的,就別把它當殖民地,別當征服者和掠奪者,先發制人後發制人都為制人,都是把對方當敵人。」
浦志強在去年五月在參與一個紀念1989年「六四」事件遇難者的小型聚會後被拘捕。「六四」的遇難者在當時武裝部隊進入北京天安門鎮壓親民主抗議活動時遇害的。1989年的時候浦志強還是一名支持抗議活動的大學生。
浦志強的另一名律師莫少平在電話採訪中稱,針對浦志強的罪名中任何一項都可能讓其面臨最高達10年的有期徒刑,不過法院不太可能會判處如此之長的刑期。尚寶軍則說如果浦志強罪名成立,這兩項罪名可能會讓他被判處八年及以下監禁。
儲百亮(Chris Buckley)是《紐約時報》記者。





問:雖然存在失憶現象,但是對有些人而言,天安門仍然象徵著一個覺醒的時刻,他們從中看到了社會存在變革可能性。中國當今的年輕人可能不是這個情況了,但你會不會認為,這些人將來可能會被視作有影響力的少數人——就像1848年的革命對幾代歐洲人造成的影響。
答:毫無疑問,那個北京的春天,是充滿令人陶醉的希望與可能性的七個星期,似乎有那麼一個瞬間,政府看上去可能會接受中國公民的改革呼籲。當時,記者還能自由報道他們在街上的所見所聞,然後所有可能性突然消失。這讓隨之而來的殘暴鎮壓更具有毀滅性。
但是,我的確認為,1989年發生的事激活了一些仍在繼續的願望。很多如今已經聞名遐邇的維權和活動人士,當時都參加了遊行,其中包括因為試圖紀念六四而被捕入獄的浦志強。


浦志强- 维基百科,自由的百科全书

zh.wikipedia.org/zh-tw/浦志强Translate this page
浦志強(1965年1月17日-),中华人民共和国河北唐山市灤縣人,北京著名維權律師,也是六四事件廣場絕食活动的參與者之一,現為北京市華一律師事務所律師、 ...
生平 - ‎获奖 - ‎评价 - ‎參見

  1. 世界日報 ‎- 6 days ago
    助採訪浦志強日媒助理遭拘- 一名為日本媒體工作的中國女性新聞助理已被北京警方以「尋釁滋事」的罪名刑事拘留。據悉,這位名叫辛健的助理曾 ...


頒獎典禮上的“缺席”和“失聯”在不久前舉行的獨立中文筆會頒獎典禮上,三位獲得大會主要獎項的作家均未能到場領獎。另外兩名會員也進入了“失聯”狀態。同時,在遠隔數千公里的北京,一場同樣不受當局歡迎的研討會也悄悄的召開。
(德國之聲中文網)獨立中文筆會(Independent Chinese PEN Center)是全世界用中文寫作、編輯、翻譯、研究和出版文學作品之人士自由結合的非政府、非營利、非政黨的跨國界組織。媒體報導稱,在此次一年一度的筆會頒獎典禮上,三個獎項的四名得主都因健康、被囚禁、受阻等原因未能親自到場領獎。他們分別是自由寫作獎得主陳子明,林昭紀念獎得主許志永,寫作勇氣獎得主譚作人和越南作家阮春義。持不同政見者陳子明曾積極參加中國多次民主運動。六四事件過後,中國政府以"反革命煽動、陰謀顛覆政府罪"判處陳子明有期徒刑13年。 2002年刑滿獲釋後,仍被監視居住。因患癌症晚期,陳子明在中國當局的允許下於2014年初赴美接受治療。China Bürgerrechtler Xu Zhiyong許志永是中國新公民運動的主要倡導者及標誌性人物法律學者許志永是中國新公民運動的主要創始人及標誌性人物。曾經擔任人大代表的他呼籲政府賦予公民平等接受教育的權利,並要求公佈官員財產,懲治腐敗。 2014年1月26日,北京市第一中級人民法院以"聚眾擾亂公共場所秩序罪"為名,判處許志永有期徒刑四年。 4月11日,北京市高級人民法院駁回許志永的上訴,維持原判。作家、維權人士譚作人曾被中國當局以公開發表關於六四事件文章的罪名拘捕,並於2010年2月被四川市中級人民法院以"煽動顛覆國家政權罪"判處譚作人有期徒刑5年。 2014年3月27日譚作人刑滿釋放。筆會成員"失聯"據境外中文媒體報導,本年度獨立中文筆會的頒獎禮原計劃在香港城市大學舉行,因故轉移至尖沙咀1908書店。來自中國及境外的數十名筆會成員參與了會議。與往常一樣,也有多名成員不能前往香港參加會議。包括前中共總書記趙紫陽的智囊姚監復以及中國大陸記者高瑜。相關報導顯示,有消息聲稱姚監複本來已經於大會召開當天抵達香港。但在會議點名時,卻不見其踪影。直至會議結束也未現身。主辦方當時表示,沒有掌握關於姚監復下落的任何消息。Cinesche Journalistin Gao Yu高瑜仍在“失聯”狀態從2011年起,高瑜擔任德國之聲《北京觀察》欄目特約撰稿人,提供了大量涉及中國政治,經濟及社會動向的分析文章。 4月27日起,中國網絡社交平台有人發出針對女記者高瑜的尋人啟事,稱諸多友人從4月24日開始就無法同高瑜及其家人取得聯繫。高瑜長年從事記者工作,曾先後供職於中國新聞社及北京出版的《經濟學周刊》,並擔任該周刊的副總編輯。 1989年六四事件後高瑜兩度被捕繫獄。高瑜打算在5月初赴香港參加此次獨立中文筆會的年會和頒獎活動,有分析認為她的失踪與當局要阻止她赴港有關。截至發稿前,仍沒有關於高瑜下落的進一步消息。在北京紀念六四幾乎是與此同時,一場同樣不受中國當局歡迎的研討會在北京舉行。六四事件25週年日即將來臨之際,多名中國公民舉行"六四紀念研討會"。目的是探討後果及影響,並呼籲當局調查六四真相,合理解決遺留問題。境外中文媒體報導稱,參加現場討論的中國公民有崔衛平、郭於華、郝建、胡石根、黎學文、梁曉燕、劉荻、浦志強、秦暉、王東成、吳偉、徐友漁及野夫等。因事未能到場的書面發言者有:陳子明、賀衛方、慕容雪村、王小山。"天安門母親"張先玲到場發言,在六四事件中喪子的她表示,兒子王楠只為追求心中的一個樸素而天真的理想,即用相機記錄下當時歷史的真實,而並未抱著一種英雄赴死的心態,卻走上一條不歸路。張先玲說,當時很多年輕人都是這樣獻出了生命,他們不想當英雄,但他們是英雄。與獨立中文筆會的遭遇類似,這場在北京舉行的紀念六四活動也感受到了中國當局的壓力。消息人士透露,目前可以確認王小山被傳喚兩小時後獲釋。浦志強、胡石根等參與者失聯。另有傳聞稱浦志強被當局抄家。綜合報導:任琛責編:石濤






颁奖典礼上的“缺席”和“失联”

在不久前举行的独立中文笔会颁奖典礼上,三位获得大会主要奖项的作家均未能到场领奖。另外两名会员也进入了“失联”状态。同时,在远隔数千公里的北京,一场同样不受当局欢迎的研讨会也悄悄的召开。
(德国之声中文网)独立中文笔会 (Independent Chinese PEN Center)是全世界用中文写作、编辑、翻译、研究和出版文学作品之人士自由结合的非政府、非营利、非政党的跨国界组织。媒体报道称,在此次 一年一度的笔会颁奖典礼上,三个奖项的四名得主都因健康、被囚禁、受阻等原因未能亲自到场领奖。他们分别是自由写作奖得主陈子明,林昭纪念奖得主许志永,写作勇气奖得主谭作人和越南作家阮春义。
持不同政见者陈子明曾积极参加中国多次民主运动。六四事件过后,中国政府以"反革命煽动、阴谋颠覆政府罪"判处陈子明有期徒刑13年。2002年刑满获释后,仍被监视居住。因患癌症晚期,陈子明在中国当局的允许下于2014年初赴美接受治疗。
China Bürgerrechtler Xu Zhiyong 许志永是中国新公民运动的主要倡导者及标志性人物
法律学者许志永是中国新公民运动的主要创始人及标志性人物。曾经担任人大代表的他呼吁政府赋予公民平等接受教育的权利,并要求公布官员 财产,惩治腐败。2014年1月26日,北京市第一中级人民法院以"聚众扰乱公共场所秩序罪"为名,判处许志永有期徒刑四年。4月11日,北京市高级人民 法院驳回许志永的上诉,维持原判。
作家、维权人士谭作人曾被中国当局以公开发表关于六四事件文章的罪名拘捕,并于2010年2月被四川市中级人民法院以"煽动颠覆国家政权罪"判处谭作人有期徒刑5年。2014年3月27日谭作人刑满释放。
笔会成员"失联"
据境外中文媒体报道,本年度独立中文笔会的颁奖礼原计划在香港城市大学举行,因故转移至尖沙咀1908书店。来自中国及境外的数十名笔会成员参与了会议。与往常一样,也有多名成员不能前往香港参加会议。包括前中共总书记赵紫阳的智囊姚监复以及中国大陆记者高瑜。
相关报道显示,有消息声称姚监复本来已经于大会召开当天抵达香港。但在会议点名时,却不见其踪影。直至会议结束也未现身。主办方当时表示,没有掌握关于姚监复下落的任何消息。
Cinesche Journalistin Gao Yu 高瑜仍在“失联”状态
从2011年起,高瑜担任德国之声《北京观察》栏目特约撰稿人,提供了大量涉及中国政治,经济及社会动向的分析文章。4月27日起,中国网络社交平台有人发出针对女记者高瑜的寻人启事,称诸多友人从4月24日开始就 无法同高瑜及其家人取得联系。高 瑜长年从事记者工作,曾先后供职于中国新闻社及北京出版的《经济学周刊》,并担任该周刊的副总编辑。1989年六四事件后高瑜两度被捕系狱。高瑜打算在5 月初赴香港参加此次独立中文笔会的年会和颁奖活动,有分析认为她的失踪与当局要阻止她赴港有关。截至发稿前,仍没有关于高瑜下落的进一步消息。
在北京纪念六四
几乎是与此同时,一场同样不受中国当局欢迎的研讨会在北京举行。 六四事件25周年日即 将来临之际,多名中国公民举行"六四纪念研讨会"。目的是探讨后果及影响,并呼吁当局调查六四真相,合理解决遗留问题。境外中文媒体报道称,参加现场讨论 的中国公民有崔卫平、郭于华、郝建、胡石根、黎学文、梁晓燕、刘荻、浦志强、秦晖、王东成、吴伟、徐友渔及野夫等。因事未能到场的书面发言者有:陈子明、 贺卫方、慕容雪村、王小山。
"天安门母亲"张先玲到场发言,在六四事件中丧子的她表示,儿子王楠只为追求心中的一个朴素而天真的理想,即用相机记录下当时历史的真实,而并未抱着一种英雄赴死的心态,却走上一条不归路。张先玲说,当时很多年轻人都是这样献出了生命,他们不想当英雄,但他们是英雄。
与独立中文笔会的遭遇类似,这场在北京举行的纪念六四活动也感受到了中国当局的压力。消息人士透露,目前可以确认王小山被传唤两小时后获释。浦志强、胡石根等参与者失联。另有传闻称浦志强被当局抄家。
综合报道:任琛
责编:石涛