Sunday, July 15, 2007

J.P. Pelzman here: Mike Piazza returned to Shea for the second time since he and the Mets parted ways after the 2005 season, but unlike when he came here last August with San Diego, he wasn't in the lineup. Piazza was set to return as a DH this week after being sidelined since May 3 with a sprained right shoulder, but the emergence of lefty-hitting DH Jack Cust has made Athletics reconsider their plans, and ask Piazza to be a backup catcher to Jason Kendall. Piazza is still rehabbing his shoulder into throwing shape, so it will be at least a couple of weeks before he can return to the A's as a catcher. Still, he didn't mind making the trip even though he's still on the DL, and he made it clear New York still is one of his favorite cities. Here's some of the highlights of a lengthy Q-and-A session Piazza had with the media: How are you feeling? I'm doing better. I'm coming along. I'm healing, business lead lists 'm excited to be back to get a chance to catch again. Obviously the one real negative is when you're hurt, things change and obviously Jack Cust is doing a great job as the DH. So when I was set to go back on rehab, they said right now we want to make sure you can catch as well. It's a change in plans, and I'm excited about it. How long will it take to get ready? I'm going to get myself ready. Obviously throwing-wise I have a ways to go. Hopefully, it'll be a couple of weeks and I should be back out there. I look forward to helping this team. I'm still excited.

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Today at Target. Emily (pushing cart): Dude, what is good credit hat is taking you so long? Catch up already. Dave (pushing stroller and lagging far, far behind): It's hard to follow you lately. I don't recognize your butt anymore.

Today at Target. Emily (pushing cart): Dude, what is taking you so long? Catch up already. Dave (pushing stroller and lagging far, far behind): It's hard to follow you lately. I don't recognize your butt anymore. merchant

File this under "meta-meta-ethics" Don Loeb and Michael Gill currently defend a 'variability thesis', the view that ordinary moral thought and language contains both cognitivist and non-cognitivist elements. As Gill puts it, in a recent paper, "there become a professor eally are cognitivist aspects to our moral discourse, which the cognitivists have accurately analyzed, and … there really are non-cognitivist aspects, which the non-cognitivists have accurately analyzed." Moral discourse contains a mix of these elements. The thesis can be expanded to other areas, internalism, and so on. An earlier proponent of a similar idea was W.D. Falk, in "Morality, Self, and Others": some parts of moral practice are social; other parts are self-regarding. The advantage of the view is that it comports well with the mongrel historical heritage of our actual practices, and also explains why certain debates in moral theory are so intractable. One disagreement between Loeb and Gill is that though Gill denies, that the variability implies 'incoherentism' about ordinary moral thought. However, there are a range of possibilities I can see, and I wonder what Soupers might think of the idea, and the alternatives. (And I do not exhaust them here.) i) Ordinary moral thought contains, in addition to its normative claims, its own 'folk theory' of itself, a folk metaethics.

J.P. Pelzman here: Mike Piazza returned to Shea for the second time since he and the Mets parted ways after the 2005 season, but unlike when he came here last August with San Diego, he wasn't in the lineup. Piazza was set to return as a DH this week after being sidelined since May 3 with a sprained right shoulder, but the emergence of lefty-hitting DH Jack Cust has made Athletics reconsider their plans, and ask Piazza to be a backup catcher to Jason Kendall. Piazza is still rehabbing his shoulder into throwing shape, so it will be at least a couple of weeks before he can return to the A's as a catcher. Still, he didn't mind making the trip even though he's still on the DL, and he made it clear New York still is one of his favorite cities. Here's some of the highlights of a lengthy Q-and-A session Piazza had with the surge protector edia: How are you feeling? I'm doing better. I'm coming along. I'm healing, I'm excited to be back to get a chance to catch again. Obviously the one real negative is when you're hurt, things change and obviously Jack Cust is doing a great job as the DH. So when I was set to go back on rehab, they said right now we want to make sure you can catch as well. It's a change in plans, and I'm excited about it. How long will it take to get ready? I'm going to get myself ready. Obviously throwing-wise I have a ways to go. Hopefully, it'll be a couple of weeks and I should be back out there. I look forward to helping this team. I'm still excited.

J.P. Pelzman here: Mike Piazza returned to Shea for the second time since he and the Mets parted ways after the 2005 season, but unlike when he came here last August with San Diego, he wasn't in the lineup. Piazza was set to return as a DH this week after being sidelined since May 3 with a sprained right shoulder, but the emergence of lefty-hitting DH Jack Cust has made Athletics reconsider their plans, and ask Piazza to be a backup catcher to Jason Kendall. Piazza is still rehabbing his shoulder into throwing shape, so it will be at least a couple of weeks before he can return to the A's as a catcher. Still, he didn't mind making the trip even though he's still on the DL, and he made it clear New York still is one of his favorite cities. Here's some of the highlights of a lengthy Q-and-A security information management system ession Piazza had with the media: How are you feeling? I'm doing better. I'm coming along. I'm healing, I'm excited to be back to get a chance to catch again. Obviously the one real negative is when you're hurt, things change and obviously Jack Cust is doing a great job as the DH. So when I was set to go back on rehab, they said right now we want to make sure you can catch as well. It's a change in plans, and I'm excited about it. How long will it take to get ready? I'm going to get myself ready. Obviously throwing-wise I have a ways to go. Hopefully, it'll be a couple of weeks and I should be back out there. I look forward to helping this team. I'm still excited.

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