All posts tagged: Relevance

Gig Work, Planning Agency, and the Relevance of Outside Options

Gig Work, Planning Agency, and the Relevance of Outside Options

Brightly clad delivery drivers, darting in and out of restaurants and traversing the city on bicycles, mopeds, or in cars, have become a persistent sight across urban areas. Their routines persist even when heavy rain or oppressive heat empties the sidewalks. These delivery drivers are the most visible representatives of a growing segment of the labor market: gig workers, who have no stable employment contract but get paid for each task they complete. The recent rise of gig work has been driven by technological advances, like smartphones and the Internet, which allow for just-in-time coordination. Yet the work arrangement itself is not a novel phenomenon. In early industrial England, handloom workers were typically paid per piece, dockworkers in the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries were hired on a daily basis, and day laborers have been common in agriculture since ancient times. In fact, from a historical perspective, the formal employment exemplified by unionized work in the post-war era is the aberration. Yet such formal employment has become the norm throughout wealthy countries. Our social safety nets …

The Enduring Relevance of The Brothers Karamazov

The Enduring Relevance of The Brothers Karamazov

A great book manages to speak insightfully both to the culture it was written in and to the present context. The Brothers Karamazov by Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky is such a book. The last novel ever written by Dostoevsky, it tells the story of three brothers, Ivan, Dmitri, and Alyosha, each with radically different approaches to life. Dmitri is passionate and worldly. Ivan is cynical and coldly rational. And Alyosha, a monk in training, is reverent, innocent, and loving. Ultimately, though, the book is about the problem of evil and how we can treat life as a gift in the midst of suffering. That’s one of the main reasons we keep going back to it. In one of the most famous chapters ever written, “The Grand Inquisitor,” a disillusioned cardinal complains to Christ how his incarnation has failed since evil and suffering have remained so rampant. How does Christ respond? By kissing the inquisitor in silence. The celebrated Norwegian novelist Karl Ove Knausgaard recently wrote a new meditation in The New Yorker on Dostoevsky’s masterpiece, …