Saturday, September 30, 2023

Blogging note …

 My wife is in the hospital. She had a bad fall in the middle of the night and her aide took her to an urgent care center. She was then transported to the hospital. I am hoping they keep her overnight for observation, since head injuries to someone who is 82 can have serious consequences. Blogging is not much on my mind right now. Maybe later.

Something to think on …

… Anyone who ever gave you confidence, you owe them a lot.
— Truman Capote, born on this date in 1924

You have been warned …

… Here’s the Climate Dissent You’re Not Hearing About Because It’s Muffled by Society’s Top Institutions.

… the radical transformation of entire societies is marching forth without a full debate, based on dubious scientific claims amplified by knee-jerk journalism.

Philip Roth

 


It's probably the case at this point that I've read more novels by Philip Roth than by any other author. And having just finished The Human Stain, I was reminded why: Roth was a writer of tremendous talent -- both stylistically as well as in his ability -- his seemingly innate ability -- to develop complex, breathing, vivacious characters. The Human Stain is full of these: war veterans, drinkers, university administrators, the list goes on. This is a novel that packs a serious punch, but not only because of the interactions between its characters. There's a racial consciousness to The Human Stain and Roth goes further here, I think, to probe race relations than he does in others of his books. Coleman Silk is everything: Black, Jewish, white, intellectual; and yet, he is these things because he's made them his own; he's cast them, bent them to his will. Perhaps my favorite line from the novel is: "Every day you woke up to be what you had made yourself." Let this be a motivation, and reminder, to all of us.

Something to think on …

Cure yourself of the affliction of caring how you appear to others. Concern yourself only with how you appear before God, concern yourself only with the idea that God may have of you. 
— Miguel de Unamuno, born on this date in 1864 

The former newspaper of record

… Is This The Worst Fact Check From the GOP Debate?

This what happens when you stop reporting and start taking sides.

Blogging note …

 I am dealing today with all sorts of problems (which I will not go into). So blogging’s going to be minimal tipoday.

Something to think on …

When I see a paragraph shrinking under my eyes like a strip of bacon in a skillet, I know I'm on the right track.
— Peter de Vries, who died on this date in 1993

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Hmm …

… Norms in Nature? - by William F. Vallicella.

For this cradle Catholic, the Eucharist is what Jesus said it was — “This is my body, which will be given up for you.” The Eucharist is the body and blood of Jesus. 

Something to think on …

 As it is impossible to be outside God, the best is consciously to dwell in Him.

— Henri-Frédéric Amiel, born on this date in1821

Something to think on …

If we really want to pray we must first learn to listen, for in the silence of the heart God speaks.
— T. S. Eliot, born on this date in 1888

Something to think on …

To live anywhere in the world today and be against equality because of race or color is like living in Alaska and being against snow.
— William Faulkner, born on this date in 1897

Appreciation …

… The Story Behind the Historian. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Then there was the question of whether the last word hadn’t already been said about it 200 years earlier—the word of Edward Gibbon, the very title of whose imperishable History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776) suggested that late antiquity, which saw the rise of Christianity and the fall of Rome, was an altogether downward proposition. For Brown something close to the reverse of this was the case. When he came to write The World of Late Antiquity (1971), casting aside Gibbon’s scornful view of the age, he set out to show that "late antiquity marked not the end of civilization but its transformation into new and adventurous forms, which would directly influence all subsequent centuries."

Something to think on …

To be kind is more important than to be right. Many times, what people need is not a brilliant mind that speaks but a special heart that listens.
— F. Scott Fitzgerald, born on this date in 1896


Blogging note …

 I just got word that my wife’s brother passed away. I have broken the news to her. Blogging will not resume until this afternoon.

Something to think on …

What did the earth teach the trees?
 How to speak to the sky.
— Pablo Neruda, who died on this date in in 1973

As Whitman said ….

… “ Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself, (I am large, I contain multitudes.)” —

Democrat Gubernatorial Candidate Slams Private Planes and Then Flies in One

This is really worrisome …

 The Attacks Just Keep Coming.

Just ask the J6 protesters who peacefully walked through the Capitol. The feds are still hunting them down and arresting them. And ask the Catholic father who was arrested in a heavily armed FBI raid on his home for the crime of trying to save unborn lives. And ask the father who demanded to know why no action was taken at the school where his daughter was raped why he was treated like a terrorist.

Methinks the FBI may have outlived its usefulness. By the way, guys, I have journalist credentials. Bear that in mind (presuming you have such).

 

Something to think on …

If there is no God, nothing matters. If there is a God, nothing else matters.
— H. G. Wells, born on this date in 1866

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

I’ll be joining …

… so should you:St. Therese Novena - Pray More Novenas - Novena Prayers & Catholic Devotion.

I’m very attached to the Little Flowerr. Her authobiigraphy, The Story of a Soul is a masterwork.

Something to think on …

An hour's conversation on literature between two ardent minds with a common devotion to a neglected poet is a miraculous road to intimacy.
— Charles Williams, born on this date in 1886

No lie there …

 It's normal for parents to object to graphic sex in kids' books.

Via Nellie Bowles on The Free Press, who adds: "If you can't read the sexy kids' book in Congress without grossing people out and having them tell you to please stop, Dad, maybe children shouldn’t read it."

Begging to differ …

… Finally incoherent? | Helen Vendler on Dickinson’s Poem 243.  (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I kept asking myself: Pier? Granite? Bell? Face of Steel? A nail or drill? Where might all these things be found? On a 19th century locomotive passing through Concord! That’s where. (And Concord was a railroad town.) 

Hmm …

… Squires: CNN thinks black conservatives who don’t support abortion and ‘Pride’ are race traitors.

Planned Parenthood may now be an abortion factory, but that is not what its founder Margaret Sanger intended. Here is what she had to say on the matter:
When you ask me the question "How can I bring myself around; I am pregnant two months," you are asking for abortion. Please understand that Birth Control, as I understand it, is never abortion. I do not approve of abortion, nor can I give the address of anyone who will perform this operation... The object of this movement is to help women avoid abortion and the dangers attending it.
You can read more here.

Something to think on …

My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder
— William Golding, born on this date in 1911

Ouch …

I’ve Been Thinking by Daniel C Dennett review: a masterclass in vanity. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… perhaps the most wince-inducing moment was his meeting with “a charming and beautiful young philosopher” in Prague. “I later learned that Roger Scruton . . . was extremely irritated by the fact that on his next visit to Prague, all she could talk about was Dan Dennett! A small ignoble pleasure for me.”

Something to think on …

Kindness is in our power, even when fondness is not.
— Samuel Johnson, born on this date in 1709

Just so you know …

… Consensus Doesn't Equal Science | Newsmax.com.

“Historically, the claim of consensus has been the first refuge of scoundrels; it is a way to avoid debate by claiming that the matter is already settled …  “Let’s be clear: the work of science has nothing whatever to do with consensus. Consensus is the business of politics. Science, on the contrary, requires only one investigator who happens to be right, which means that he or she has results that are verifiable by reference to the real world. In science, consensus is irrelevant. … The greatest scientists in history are great precisely because they broke with the consensus. There is no such thing as consensus science. If it’s consensus, it isn’t science. If it’s science, it isn’t consensus. Period.”

Q&A …

… Paris Review - The Art of Theater No. 14.

In 1968, during the Black Power movement, when black Americans were, as one sociologist put it, “seeking ways to alter their relationship to the society and the shared expectations of themselves as a community of people.” As a twenty-three-year-old poet concerned about the world and struggling to find a place in it, I felt it a duty and an honor to participate in that search. With my good friend Rob Penny, I founded the Black Horizons Theater in Pittsburgh with the idea of using the theater to politicize the community or, as we said in those days, to raise the consciousness of the people. 

Something to think on …

The need for mystery is greater than the need for an answer.
— Ken Kesey, born on this date in 1935

Something to think on …

Language is by its very nature a communal thing; that is, it expresses never the exact thing but a compromise - that which is common to you, me, and everybody.
— T. E. Hulme, born on this date in 1884

Something to think on …

Defining and analyzing humor is a pastime of humorless people.
— Robert Benchley, born on this date in 1889

The creative imagination …

… In the Personal Library of Vladimir Nabokov Are Clues to the Esoteric Obsessions of the Supreme Esthete. | Observer. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… perhaps the single most thrilling object in the collection, one of the single most thrilling graven images I’ve encountered, the one book in the collection that most seemed to speak from beyond the grave and the graven realms, was a unique Nabokov book, one he created himself by hand, one never before seen by the world, and one that I believe discloses an important secret about his esoteric passion.

A true master …

… Review of Radical Wolfe | City Journal

Wolfe was politically deft. He championed conservative notions of patriotism and morality, but avoided partisan politics, which he considered a boring backwater. (His editor at the Washington Post was amazed that, unlike the other reporters, he had no ambition to cover the White House and Capitol Hill.) In footage from “Firing Line,” when William F. Buckley Jr. asked him to describe his political views, Wolfe quoted Balzac’s description of the politics in his novels: “I belong to the party of the opposition.

I had the privilege of meeting him once — at the White House. Laura Bush had invited him and me to an event D. C. schoolkids. Classy guy. 

Sad and true …

… Whatever Happened to Culture? - Joseph Epstein, Commentary Magazine. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Today, party politics is of all-consuming interest. A new class has emerged, the punditocracy, members of which, also known as public intellectuals, who are without any notable culture of their own, are defined chiefly by their politics, and sport their political opinions on endless panels on cable television.

I must say, though, that when I stood in front of Jackson Pollock’s Blue Poles, I was very impressed. But I’m from an earlier generation. And I once managed an art gallery.

Something to think on …

Ours is the age of substitutes: Instead of language we have jargon; instead of principles, slogans; and instead of genuine ideas, bright suggestions.
— Eric Bentley, born on this date in 1916

Blogging note …

 I have much to do this morning. Blogging will resume this afternoon.

Something to think on …

The more we elaborate our means of communication, the less we communicate.
— J. B. Priestley, born on this date in 1894

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Good news …

… Earth’s atmosphere can clean itself, breakthrough study finds.

“OH is a key player in the story of atmospheric chemistry. It initiates the reactions that break down airborne pollutants and helps to remove noxious chemicals such as sulfur dioxide and nitric oxide, which are poisonous gases, from the atmosphere.”


Something to think on …

After all is said and done, a hell lot of a lot more is said than done.
— H. L. Mencken, born on this date in 1880

Monday, September 11, 2023

Fyodor Dostoevsky

 


I know it borders on blasphemous, but I'll say it anyway: Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground is an inconsistent, unbalanced work. I know, I know: it's celebrated, and acclaimed, and serves as a starting point of sorts for existentialism. But for me, the novella didn't hold together. At least part of this might be attributed to its structure: the first third of the book, which proceeds as a monologue, introduces a set of philosophies. These, in turn, are explored in the remainder of the novella, which functions as a more traditional work of fiction: with character, dialogue, and narrative arc. I will say that while the first portion of the novella frustrated me, the second section delivered a blow: a number of the concepts explored here are evocative not only of existentialism, but also of the fractured modernism which emerged around the First World War. Ideas of suffering, spite, and intellectualism dominate the final portion of Notes, and they read as an existentialist tract might: without action we are nothing and cannot generate meaning; and yet, with infinite freedom comes an inability to act. There are a number of powerful aphorisms from the latter stages of the book, and they will remain with me. But all told, I am not sure that this experiment hangs together entirely: without the first portion -- focused, rather heavy handedly on philosophy -- the novella still might have succeeded, and it would have done so without the scripted quality introduced during the first section. All of that said, it would be hard to beat a line like this: "You took your cowardice for prudence, and thus found consolation in self-deception." 

Finding words for The Word …

… A Work of Biblical Proportions. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… Barton declares his summary position early: "While there can be translations that are simply wrong, there cannot be one that is uniquely right." Rather, The Word is a thorough mapping (to use the author’s cartographic image) of the translators’ terrain. And that complex landscape is, to simplify, defined by two promontories.

Something to think on …

Those that go searching for love only make manifest their own lovelessness, and the loveless never find love, only the loving find love, and they never have to seek for it.
— D. H. Lawrence, born on this date in 1885

Words and the Word …

… Reading as a Spiritual Practice | The Russell Kirk Center(Hat tip, Dave Lull.)


What is so bad about spending all this time on computer screens? More interestingly, do people read less because they spend time on a computer? After all, right this moment, you are looking at a screen and reading a review of a book about reading. Wilson’s book is available on Kindle and those lectures I encouraged for viewing are on a screen. Yet, Wilson empathically says, “[W]e have to be aggressive in turning off the screens… After you remove the time wasted on technology, you may find more time available for reading. You can bring a book with you wherever you go.”

Books these days tend to have small type. I am an old man with cataracts that have yet to ripen. So I use my Kindle a lot.

Appalling …

 MSNBC columnist demands Trump 'must die in prison' to protect democracy | Fox News..

Who the hell designated this asshole as judge and jury. He needs to be fired and henceforth shunned

Do no harm …

 … The trans kids madness needs to stop. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.

Gotta hand it to these doctors: “gender-affirming care” is genius branding. Usefully, “gender” has become a nonsense word. What could possibly be wrong with “affirming?” Why, the adjective exudes niceness, solace and esteem. And no physician or parent could oppose “care.” Yet the euphemism translates to “sex-denying medical experimentation.”

Something to think on …

Religion is the everlasting dialogue between humanity and God. Art is its soliloquy.
— Franz Werfel, born on this date in 1890

Wokeness at its most ludicrous …

… Actor Dylan Postl Slams 'Snow White' Remake for Replacing Dwarfs | Newsmax.com: 

“The 'magical creatures' are a mixture of races and genders, and we all applaud that," he added. "But they're sacrificing the careers of short people to achieve diversity. And that does not sit right with me. The studio doesn't seem to be aware that dwarfs are also born in all races and genders."

Something to think on …

The more we live by our intellect, the less we understand the meaning of life.
— Leo Tolstoy, born on this date in 1828

Friday, September 08, 2023

I quite understand

… Why I’d Rather Consume Good Writing Than Porn.

Many years ago, when Deep Throat was the first porn movie to make it to regular theaters, a friend of mine and I went to see it. Dave was a clinical psychologist. I was a freelance writer.
It didn’t take long to figure out that it going to be be all blow jobs for the next couple of hours.
I turned to Dave to ask him if he wanted to see any more. He was sound asleep. We left and had a drink.
The scene in Zorba the Greek when the beautiful Irene Pappas drops her gown in front of Alan Bates is wondrously erotic. 

Faith and doubt …

 … Joseph Epstein: Opinion | Pious Agnosticism as a Form of Judaism. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

After all the worst has been said against religion, one can’t deny the comfort it has brought. I had a neighbor, a woman 10 or so years older than I, unmarried, a former schoolteacher, a serious Catholic, who told me she wasn’t in the least afraid of death. She wished to avoid a painful or sloppy end, but death itself held no fears for her, for she had a good sense of where she was going. As she told me this, I can recall feeling a stab of what I can only call faith envy. 

Something to think on …

God is the shortest distance from zero to infinity
— Alfred Jarry,, born on this date in 1873

Very important …

… I Left Out the Full Truth to Get My Climate Change Paper Published | The Free Press.

You might be wondering at this point if I’m disowning my own paper. I’m not. On the contrary, I think it advances our understanding of climate change’s role in day-to-day wildfire behavior. It’s just that the process of customizing the research for an eminent journal caused it to be less useful than it could have been. 

Something to think on …

An old earthen pipe like myself is dry and thirsty and so a most voracious drinker of life at its source; I'm no more to be split by the vital stream than if I were stone or steel.
— Elinor Wylie, born on this date in 1885