Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Hmm ...

... Does Evolution Favor Religion? (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Might the selfish account of evolution itself be a misfiring of Darwin’s theory? And if so, could evolutionary theory lead not to opposition, but to a renewed interest in religion—perhaps even respect for it? It’s a possibility suggested by the work of David Sloan Wilson, the champion of a different account of morality. The selfish story, he says, is a product of the “age of individualism” in evolutionary theory, an age that is both aberrant and, he believes, will prove to be short-lived.


This sounds much like what Peter Kropotkin proposed in Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution.

Quite a tale

The first three people who ask for a copy of the book can have one, I am told by the publisher. Just send me your name and address at presterfrank@gmail.com.

Instead of sheep ...

... Counting the ‘Blessings’ of Insomnia. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Well, I had a bout of it last night that I could have done without.

Thought for the day ...

Solitude is the profoundest fact of the human condition. Man is the only being who knows he is alone.
- Octavio Paz, born on this date in 1914

Deep vs. shallow ...

... Theodore Dalrymple on Self-Esteem vs. Self-Respect.

The small matter of cleaning one's shoes, for example, is not one of vanity alone, though of course it can be carried on to the point of vanity and even obsession and fetish. It is, rather, a discipline and a small sign that one is prepared to go to some trouble for the good opinion and satisfaction of others. It is a recognition that one lives in a social world. That is why total informality of dress is a sign of advancing egotism.


I wonder if the realization that one is a sinner is prophylactic against a preoccupation with self-esteem.

Thought for the day ...

But I always think that the best way to know God is to love many things.
- Vincent Van Gogh, born on this date in 1853

Thought for the day ...

Every man and woman alive is gifted by God in some special way. People who have a self-image of worth are going to see value in what they do. This is the attitude that motivates them to be and to do their best. It's a drive that comes from within people.
- William Walton, born on this date in 1902

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Bellow and Baumbach

Did you see Noah Baumbach's new movie, Greenberg? Given its preoccupation with the delivery of letters, I'm wondering whether the film pays homage (in some odd way) to Saul Bellow's Herzog, a work equally concerned with the written articulation of frustration and angst...

Not so fast ...

... The New Philistinism. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Dawkins assures us that Aquinas gives “absolutely no reason” to think that a First Cause of the universe would have to be all-powerful, all-good, all-knowing, etc.; in reality, Aquinas devoted hundreds of pages, across many works, to showing just this. Dawkins says that the fifth of Aquinas’s famous Five Ways is essentially the same as the “divine watchmaker” argument made famous by William Paley. In fact the arguments couldn’t be more different, and followers of Aquinas typically—and again, rather famously (at least for people who actually know something about these things)—reject Paley’s argument with as much scorn as evolutionists like Dawkins do.

Thought for the day ...

No matter how ephemeral it is, a novel is something, while despair is nothing.
- Mario Vargas Llosa, born on this date in 1936

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Maybe ...

... Ralph Nader, incorruptible. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

It is perhaps worth mentioning that Robespierre's nickname was "the incorruptible." Persons to whom the term may be thought to apply are also often humorless, rigid and narrow.

Hmm ...

... Is the Supernatural Only Natural? (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I think confusion arises from this terms natural and supernatural. Strictly speaking, on God is supernatural. Nature consists of what he has created - all of it, including heaven and hell, is such there be. We may be able to access only a part of nature.

A vintage review ...

... Evelyn Waugh on Garry Wills's Chesterton: Man and Mask. (Hat tip, Paul Davis.)


Humility is not a virtue propitious to the artist It is often pride, emulation, avarice, malice — all the odious qualities — which drive a man to complete, elaborate, refine, destroy, renew, his work until he has made something that gratifies his pride and envy and greed. And in doing so he enriches the world more than the generous and good, though he may lose his own soul in the process. That is the paradox of artistic achievement.

Thought for the day ...

I think, then, that man, after having satisfied his first longing for facts, wanted something fuller - some grouping, some adaptation to his capacity and experience, of the links of this vast chain of events which his sight could not take in.
- Alfred de Vigny, born on this date in 1797

Flash mobs (cont'd.) ....

This business of flash mobs in Philly, first mentioned here in this post, is evidently more serious than I thought. I walked to and from Center City Wednesday night and last night. Last night Debbie and I walked home together from Bainbridge Street (just below South), a good eight or nine blocks. Before that we had two others with us. I have walked all over the city throughout my life, both day and night, often - especially in my wilder years - in some of the dicier parts. Still, these incidents have occurred, and would be difficult to deal with. I am no longer as young as I once was, and one person wielding a walking stick is no match for a mob. I was not joking when I suggested I might take advantage of our conceal and carry law. If the municipal government is too busy interfering with the spice shop up the street (I am serious) to maintain public safety, one must think about doing it on one's own. I am the son of a policeman and am not sweetly disposed to violent crime. Nor am I impressed by the city's current mayor, who seems mostly talk. I'm not sure yet about the police commissioner. He seemed serious when I saw him recently at the local precinct, but that was before any of this started, and this stuff is happening on his watch.

Thought for the day ...

When we quit thinking primarily about ourselves and our own self-preservation, we undergo a truly heroic transformation of consciousness.
- Joseph Campbell, born on this date in 1904

This week's batch ...

... of TLS Letters: The Jewish ‘natio’, Rossetti’s letters, Cool, and more!

You're asking me?

... What is happening in Philadelphia and elsewhere?

Last night, I walked up to Center City to meet my friend and former colleague Pat Banks for dinner. She and I then went to the Union League to watch Nelson Shanks paint Michael Smerconish. On the way, I ran into a neighbor who warned me about these flash mobs. I'm in better shape and a good deal tougher than most, but as Muhammad Ali put it once, "I ain't no damn fool, either." Brought the matter up with Pat, and she was concerned, too. I figured my street smarts would make me alert enough to trouble to be able to dodge it and, as it happened, nothing happened. Guess I'll have to start packing heat.

And the winners are ...

... Announcing Results of the 3rd Annual Axiom Business Book Awards.

I did a lot of writing in my time that had nothing to do with "literature." It's just as hard to do well as any other writing.

Thought for the day ...

All my stories are about the action of grace on a character who is not very willing to support it, but most people think of these stories as hard, hopeless and brutal.
- Flannery O'Connor, born on this date in 1925

A guest posting ...

Going Back to the Basics:
Three Universities and the Great Books Curriculum


At the center of recent nationwide student protests decrying state university budget cuts, is the question of what, exactly, should be cut from higher education curricula when faced with financial constraints. The trend among many institutions is to do away with humanities courses; these institutions have justified their cuts by explaining that humanities are simply no longer as relevant in a world that demands technological and scientific prowess. In fact, Michael Parker, the strategic planner of CSU Fullerton, where students “occupied” a humanities building in protest, called humanities and arts studies “socially irrelevant,” “non-essential,” and—get this—“esoteric.” That these words are coming from a university administration—the supposed guardians of learning—is absolutely baffling.

The biggest problem with Parker’s argument is that it completely dismisses the purpose of an education in the first place. Of course, nowadays it seems that the only reason one should receive an education is to acquire “relevant” job skills. What happened to the idea that learning promotes personal development that a comprehensive education asks bigger, more critically abiding questions than simply what we’ll be doing at the office during our first jobs?
Thankfully, this version of higher education hasn’t been completely eradicated. The following is a short list of universities that place a particular emphasis on timeless texts—in what the modern discourse of classical education calls the “Great Books” curriculum—which trace the intellectual development of our species.

1. St. John’s College. This four-year liberal arts college epitomizes learning for its own sake. Its curriculum is based wholly on classic books—no textbooks at this school—starting from Plato, Thomas Aquinas, and the Bible and progressing over four years to more contemporary works like Virginia Woolf’s To the Light House. The university’s “Who We Are” webpage posits, “Through sustained engagement with the works of great thinkers and through genuine discussion with peers, students at St. John’s College cultivate habits of mind that will last a lifetime: a deepened capacity for reflective thought, an appreciation of the persisting questions of human existence, an abiding love of serious conversation, and a lasting love of inquiry.”

2. Shimer College. Similar to St. John’s College, Shimer College, an institution once affiliated with the University of Chicago, focuses on the Great Books. Classes are capped at twelve students and are largely discussion-based. In recent years, Shimer has updated its curriculum to include more women and minority writers and thinkers.

3. Thomas Aquinas College . Following in the rich intellectual tradition of Catholicism, Thomas Aquinas College also bases its study on the “Great Books” but places a greater emphasis on theological works. Like students attending St. John’s and Shimer, Thomas Aquinas undergraduates don’t just read philosophy and literature. Instead of studying largely watered down textbooks on mathematics and science, students read the originals—Euclid’s Elements, Archimedes’ Quadrature of the Parabola, and Einstein’s Relativity: The Special and General Theory, among others.

In its defense of the Great Books curriculum, Thomas Aquinas’ website states, “Another reason why the Great Books are preferred to textbooks is that the latter, almost without exception, are "secondary sources"-that is, they are two steps removed from reality. They are, as it were, thoughts about thoughts. The Great Books, by contrast, are much closer to common experience in its fullness; they raise questions and pursue inquiries which arise directly from a wonder about things themselves. On this account, they are of the greatest importance to beginners, for they begin where thought itself must begin if it is to bear any fruit.”

Although these schools may not appeal to everyone, their dedication to exploring the roots of intellectual inquiry provides curious students with a rigorous curriculum. What’s more, graduates of Great Books schools don’t go on to become unemployed philosophers. An astounding percentage of Great Books students attend law schools and medical schools, become professors, and pursue other challenging, “relevant” careers.

For a comprehensive list of universities offering some form of the Great Books curriculum, see the Association of Core Texts and Courses’ College Program list.

For more information about the Great Books list and its development, read Interleaves’ Great Books list FAQ.

Thought for the day ...

Every happening, great and small, is a parable whereby God speaks to us, and the art of life is to get the message.
- Malcolm Muggeridge, born on this date in 1903

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

RIP ...

... Ai. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)

After the sucker punch ...

... James Wood on DFW. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I think this is a really well-crafted piece.

This brings back memories ...

... `I Am Willing to Omit the Gun'.

One summer, when I was a kid, a flicker came by our house every day and pounded away on our H-shaped TV antenna, lopping off one leg at a time. Loud as hell, too.

Hmm ...

... Love music, hold the criticism. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

This may have more bearing on pop music than on classical music. Listening to music is indeed a collaborative endeavor, but so is reading. And reviewing anything should involve a good deal more than "scribbling witty insults in my reporter’s notebook."

Not so great, after all ...

... A Passage to Forster.

Forster acted the part of the guru all his life. No mention is made in Aspects of the Novel of the element of preaching in novels, but Forster preached relentlessly in his fiction.

I said some similar things about Forster last year: Only connect! But to what?

Too clever by half ...

... Oh, the Irony. (Hat ti, Dave Lull.)


... McEwan told the man in the audience that if he didn’t think as a mathematician at all times then he couldn’t be a very good one (not a polite response, but then the mathematician had just, in so many words, told McEwan he wasn’t a very good novelist); that he, McEwan, always thought like a novelist, whatever he was doing.
It was an odd thing to say – as if being a good mathematician or a good novelist mainly depended on how much time you spent thinking like one – but many of McEwan’s novels seem to be underpinned by that sort of assumption.

It is odd also because it not only defines people by what they do, but confines then to what they do.

Thought for the day ...

Movie directors, or should I say people who create things, are very greedy and they can never be satisfied... That's why they can keep on working. I've been able to work for so long because I think next time, I'll make something good.
- Akira Kurasawa, born on this date in 1910

Monday, March 22, 2010

Oh well ...

... good luck: Times Online about to preview its paywall content.

Since I already subscribe to one Rupert Murdoch publication, I think I ought to be offered a deal.

Theme setters ...

... or markers, or ... On Epigraphs. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Thought for the day ...

For one who reads, there is no limit to the number of lives that may be lived, for fiction, biography, and history offer an inexhaustible number of lives in many parts of the world, in all periods of time.
- Louis L'Amour, born on this date in 1908

As if we needed more ...

... More Compelling Clichés.

I am sure I have committed a few in my time. In the race between deadline and originality, the former usually wins. One I definitely now avoid is "magisterial."

Also born on this date ...

... Johann Sebastian Bach and Arthur Grumiaux.

Thought for the day ...

God is an unutterable sigh, planted in the depths of the soul.
- Jean Paul, born on this date in 1763

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Comeback trail ...

I am feeling much better today. But it is a beautiful day and I plan on spending most of it in the garden. I also have a lot of catching up to do. Blogging will gradually return to normal (whatever that is).

Interesting list ...

... Gallery of my Favorite Modern Literary Books -Nassim N Taleb. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Interesting that among them is Le grand Meaulnes.

Not so simple ...

... Why everything you've been told about evolution is wrong.

As the comments indicate, this sort of article is simply beyond the pale. I'm sure my linking it to it will be thought the same. I do think it would have been nice to have cited what Dennett's reasons are for thinking as he does about Fodor's book, presuming Dennett offered any.

Thought for the day ...

A flow of words is a sure sign of duplicity.
- Honoré de Balzac, born on this date in 1799

Tony Judt....

....bestrides the generations in his NYRB blog.

It's that day again ...

Not only do I still feel under par, but today is the day we meet with our tax accountant. So blogging will once again take a back seat. I also am behind in work I have to do, so it's going to be spotty for the next few days.

Thought for the day ...

Always think of what is useful and not what is beautiful. Beauty will come of its own accord.
- Nikolai Gogol, born on this date in 1809

Thursday, March 18, 2010

This week's batch ...

... of TLS Letters: Latin Aristotelians, Vegetarianism, Missing Wharton, and more!

Gee ...

... Book Review vs. Criticism. (Hat tip, Ed Champion.)

I always thought the difference between reviewing and criticism was that the critic can presume that his reader is familiar with the text or texts he is writing about, whereas the reviewer must presume the opposite. But why quibble? Carlin lives!

PS22

Have you all heard the kid-chorus of PS22 do renditions of songs by Bjork, the Cure, and Alicia Keys? You WILL tear up.

John Berger

I've posted several short pieces about John Berger on this blog before. But as I've recently finished another of his collections - this time, The Shape of a Pocket - I felt compelled to again sing his praises. Here is a writer - one of the last true intellectuals, I fear - who gets it. Plain and simple. With a style uniquely his own, Berger crafts insightful, engaging essays - essays which reveal a keen intellect, a powerful way of seeing. I can't say enough for the importance of Berger's reflections, and I leave the last word, therefore, to him:

"Silence, you know, is something that can't be censored. And there are circumstances in which silence becomes subversive. That's why they fill it with noise all the while." (The Shape of a Pocket, 258)

This is excellent ...

... Bernadette and why I read crime fiction. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

So, ultimately I gave up and now I read mainly crime fiction – which is ghettoised by many opinion-formers as “crime fiction” but I always experience, and see, it as “traditional story telling” which has its roots in Greek drama, other classical drama to and including Shakespeare and beyond, and the great Victorian and other period novels. The books I loved as a child and young woman were by Dickens, George Elliot, Arnold Bennett, the Brontes, Wilkie Collins, Emile Zola and so on, and before that Conan Doyle, Lancelyn Green, Stevenson, Rosemary Sutcliffe, C. S. Lewis et al. - to me, crime fiction is a natural extension of those.

Thought for the day ...

The pure work implies the disappearance of the poet as speaker, who hands over to the words.
- Stéphane Mallarmé, born on this date in 1842

Hmm ...

... Queen invented phone, pupils say.

Boy, and people say American kids are ignorant. The competition's getting tough.

Indeed ...

... This lunacy about Latin makes me want to weep with rage. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Maybe Ed Balls agrees with The Da Vinci Code's Lea Teabing that English is the European language with the fewest words of Latin origin.

Thought for the day ...

All I know for certain is that reading is of the most intense importance to me; if I were not able to read, to revisit old favorites and experiment with names new to me, I would be starved - probably too starved to go on writing myself.
- Penelope Lively, born on this date in 1933

Sick bay alert ..

... I'm feeling better than yesterday, but still not all that great, especially now at the end of the day. Blogging continues sporadically.

Pecking orders ...

... Are Vettriano, Lloyd Webber and Dan Brown really so naff? (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I don't know where I would fit in all this. I've been hanging with painters and sculptors and composers and writers since my college days, and I once managed an art gallery, and I've worked for publishers. Lott says:
The people who are squeezed in this equation are not the elites or the plebs but the culturally aspirant. People like me, I suppose, who grew up without books or art or theatre, and do not find a middle-class lifestyle sufficient compensation for a inherited lack of cultural information. We live always in the knowledge that our choices may be the "wrong" ones.

The best way to develop your artistic taste is to go often to museums and galleries, see what you like, and then try to figure out why you like it (in terms of the work itself, that is). Once you're satisfied that you have sound reasons for feeling as you do, go your way in confidence. Eschew headphones: It is a visual art. At classical concerts, skip the program notes. Just listen to the music. And if you find a book boring and are not being paid to finish it, find something else to read. Life is short.

More than "troubling" ...

... Exaggeration nation: Indecorous.

I would suggest that Roberts was deliberately understating his case - hence the meandering sentence - and that "troubling" was meant euphemistically. That said, I completely agree with Neil's point: He should have said what he meant in no uncertain terms.

Equal time ...

... for the other side (via Maxine via Dave):

... Judith Curry and Michael Mann speak out. (This is very much worth reading, by the way. )

... We climate scientists are not ecofanatics.

In the first piece, Mann observes that "there’s the largest disconnect that has ever existed between the confidence that we have scientifically and where the public is, at least in the United States." Judging by the preponderance of comments appended to the second piece objecting to its point, the "disconnect" does not seem confined to the U.S.

Apart from the fact that I think talk of "a dangerous mood of scepticism" is itself worrisome, some perspective may be gleaned from a look at this 1995 interview Sir John gave to the Sunday Telegraph. (BTW, please note: We link, you decide.)

Thought for the day ...

In my soul rages a battle without victor. Between faith without proof and reason without charm.
- René Sully-Prudhomme, born on this date in 1839 (the first winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature).

Monday, March 15, 2010

Take a walk ...

... Down Memory Lane with Nige.

Just last night, I was telling our friend David Tothero that, around the corner from where we lived in North Philly in the 1940s, there was a farrier. Not only was milk delivered door-to-door; it was delivered by horse and wagon. And there were still lamplighters then.

This old man ...

... has been brought down by a cold - thanks to traipsing around town in the rain all day Friday, I guess - and will blog only sparsely today.

The swamp effect ...

... Re-evaluating Updike a year after his death. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Link is fixed.

The swamp effect is the phrase a friend of mine, the late composer John Davison, said happened to most American artists after their deaths: They and their reputations sank into the swamp, only to rise up some time later. It has happened to Samuel Barber - the rising up, that is. So Updike may sink, but I am sure he will rise again, as I hope John will also. He wrote some wonderful music.

Thought for the day ...


Cowards die many times before their actual deaths.
- Julius Caesar, assassinated on this date in 44 B.C.

Loosening up ...

... Selmanovic, radical evangelical. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Born in the former Yugoslavia, he was alert to the danger Muslims in Manhattan faced after 9/11. He organised public meetings to help defuse fears about the terrorist attacks.

One trusts he was alert to the danger posed by certain radical Muslims as well.

... conservative evangelicalism has made a mistake, he continues. Its desire to share and spread the good news has led it to treat non-Christians as objects: "We have it, they have to receive it" – "it" being the message of Christ. But what kind of good news is it, Selmanovic asks, when only an elect few have it? What kind of control freakery is inherent in the perception that you alone have a message from God and cannot receive any good news from others?

Well, I subscribe to Karl Rahner's latitudinarian interpretation of the doctrine of baptism of desire: Those who wish to be with God, and strive to be, will be.

Thought for the day ...

What passes for optimism is most often the effect of an intellectual error.
- Raymond Aron, born on this date in 1905

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Unsurprising ...

... Climategate Was an Academic Disaster Waiting to Happen. (This is a link to the full article, via the intrepid Dave Lull.)

There are no easy fixes to this state of affairs. Worse, our universities don't recognize they have a problem. Instead, professors and university administrators are inclined to indignantly dismiss concerns about the curriculum, peer review, and hiring, promotion and tenure decisions as cynically calling into question their good character. But these concerns are actually rooted in the democratic conviction that professors and university administrators are not cut from finer cloth than their fellow citizens.

Good-natured pessimism ...

... or, Humor in Hopelessness. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Svevo was at first stimulated by the ideas he found in reading Freud, and "Zeno's Conscience" is the way he put these ideas to the test. In the end, they all fail, for Freudianism is at least as useless in answering the riddle of life as any other philosophy or guide.

Thought for the day ...

For poetry there exists neither large countries nor small. Its domain is in the heart of all men.
- Giorgos Seferis, born on this date in 1900

Local Irish Poetry Reading

If you're in the neighborhood:
Father John McNamee Poetry reading
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
7:00 p.m.
Free

Rosemont College
Main Building
1400 Montgomery Ave.
Rosemont, PA

A man of Irish wit and humor with a gift of poetry, parish priest, Father McNamee will read selections from Donegal Suite and poems not yet published. Perhaps best known for his efforts on behalf of the poor, Father McNamee is a pastor emeritus of Saint Malachy Church (Philadelphia, PA) and the author of several books of prose and poetry which champion the cause of the poor. His best known book, Diary of a City Priest, was made into a movie and appeared at numerous film festivals with distribution rights on public television.

McNamee’s presentation is free and open to the public.

Cases of 'Elimination'

An interesting essay on Daniel Goldhagen's new book, Worse Than War...

Whereabouts ...

... I will be off this morning arranging a transfer of books from The Inquirer to the Family Court. I then have an appointment in town. So probably no more blogging until later in the afternoon.

Thought for the day ...

Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and popular opinion.
- Jack Kerouac, born on this date in 1922

Creeping managerialism ...

... and more: The King's College London cuts and related matters.

Insufficient attention is being paid to the dangers posed to art and education bureaucratization.

This week's batch ...

... of TLS Letters: Better on the Continent, The Jewish ‘natio’, Brecht in flight,and more!

Slight but worthy ...

... The early steps of the Dance, or, The young Anthony Powell.

The first book I ever reviewed for The Inquirer - back in 1976, if memory serves - was Hearing Secret Harmonies, the final volume of A Dance to the Music of Time. The problem was, when I took on the assignment, I hadn't read any of the previous 11 volumes. So I sat down and read the whole series. I liked it. I should read it again sometime.

Yugoslav Legacy

For whatever reason, Ivo Andric has been on my radar screen of late. I wondered: what is his reputation today?

Also born on this date ...

... in 1897, was the great Henry Cowell, who should be far better known and more widely played than he is.

Thought for the day ...

To pursue science is not to disparage the things of the spirit. In fact, to pursue science rightly is to furnish the framework on which the spirit may rise.
- Vannevar Bush, born on this date in 1890

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Classical romantic ...

... for Art Durkee (post has been bumped).


Chopin's 'Soul and Heart'.

No word is more important in describing the playing of Chopin's music than rubato. It comes from the Italian word robare, to rob, but in music it means "give and take." If you steal a little time here, you've got to give it back. For example, in playing a melodic phrase, if you go forward in the first two bars, you must pull back in the next two so that the freedom you took does not break the rhythmical pulse. The classic feeling will come from the left hand, which Chopin insisted should be played as evenly as possible. Then the right hand can have its romance and play as freely as the left hand will allow. Every performer will use that freedom differently, and that is the beauty of the "disciplined freedom" that makes Chopin Chopin
.

The 1996 all-Chopin CD that Byron mentions is well worth getting.

Some odd choices ...

... Top 40 Bad Books. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Well, I agree about The Da Vinci Code, but find the mention of Barbara Tuchman's A Distant Mirror odd indeed. That book is among the most depressing I have ever read, but it is, after all, about the collapse of medieval society. Bonnie Wheeler should listen to Guillaume de Machaut's Notre Dame Mass, It gives a nice sense of that period's strangeness. I also agree with the fellow who picked Frederick Seidel's poetry.

From the Chinese ...

River Snow
by Liu Zongyuan

Endless mountains, not one bird.
Endless roads, not one soul's trace.
Wrapped in a bamboo cape
An old man sits in his boat
Fishing in the snow.

Translated by Xiyu Huang






Is there anything it can't explain?

... evolution, that is: On the Origins of Comics: New York Double-take | Brian Boyd.

Who knew that Darwin had arrived at a theory of everything? Certainly Darwin didn't. Of course, that isn't what he was trying to do. And what about that other theory of everything - global warming?

A reminder ...

... Philosophy is Inquiry not Ideology. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

We need to examine the question whether a 'philosopher' who holds fast to his ideology no matter what, and uses the tools of philosophy merely as means for defending himself against what he often mistakenly construes as 'attacks,' is really a philosopher. I would say he isn't. For he is not inquiring into the truth. One who thinks he possesses the truth has no need of inquiry.


This is supposed to true of science also, I believe.

Thought for the day ...

One of two things is usually lacking in the so-called Philosophy of Art: either philosophy or art.
- Friedrich von Schlegel, born on this date in 1772

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Appreciation ...

... “I did not know until this year that Keats spoke with a cockney accent”: Richard Rodriguez’s Prose. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I think much of the beauty of Richard's prose derives from the authenticity of his thought and feeling.

Thought for the day ...

Authority has every reason to fear the skeptic, for authority can rarely survive in the face of doubt.
- Vita Sackville-West, born on this date in 1892

Monday, March 08, 2010