A man may say too much even upon the best subjects.
Michel de Montaigne
A commonplace book: an old-fashioned literary diary for recording interesting items from reading you've done. I use mine to record snippets from reading, conversation and life in general. (The early 2003 entries are from a period some years ago -- before the blog age -- when I tried an online commonplace book as a straight web page.)
Wednesday, December 06, 2017
Monday, December 04, 2017
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
The disdain that so many people feel [millennials] reflects an unease about the forces of deregulation, globalization, and technological acceleration that are transforming everyone’s lives. (It does not seem coincidental that young people would be criticized for being entitled at a time when people are being stripped of their entitlements.) Millennials, in other words, have adjusted too well to the world they grew up in; their perfect synchronization with economic and cultural disruption has been mistaken for the source of the disruption itself.
Jia Tolentino, "Where Millennials Come From" (The New Yorker, December 4, 2017)
Jia Tolentino, "Where Millennials Come From" (The New Yorker, December 4, 2017)
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Now is now! There is never more to experience than this single "now", which recurs at an interval exactly one second in length.
Jack Vance, Tales of the Dying Earth
See also: http://everythingrum.blogspot.com/2013/09/moments-in-time-and-consciousness.html
Jack Vance, Tales of the Dying Earth
See also: http://everythingrum.blogspot.com/2013/09/moments-in-time-and-consciousness.html
Thursday, November 16, 2017
Monday, November 13, 2017
What shall we do tomorrow? What shall we ever do?...
Phlebas the Phoenician, a fortnight dead,
T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land
Forgot the cry of gulls, and the deep sea swell
And the profit and loss.
A current under sea
Picked his bones in whispers. As he rose and fell
He passed the stages of his age and youth
Entering the whirlpool.
Gentile or Jew
O you who turn the wheel and look to windward,
Consider Phlebas, who was once handsome and tall as you.T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land
Sunday, November 05, 2017
Weber was wrong: the modern world is not
disenchanted (even if secularists pretend otherwise) but a continuation
of Christianity by other means. Whether liberal, communist, fascist, or
authoritarian, every polity relies to one degree or another on the
persistence of charismatic authority and the (usually disguised)
theological legitimation of political power.
Benjamin Nathans on Yuri Slezkine'd The House of Government: A Saga of the Russian Revolution
in the New York Review of November 23, 2017
See also Freud and Plato - The Politics of the Soul (Pt 1)
Benjamin Nathans on Yuri Slezkine'd The House of Government: A Saga of the Russian Revolution
See also Freud and Plato - The Politics of the Soul (Pt 1)
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
About Filling A Commonplace Book?
I go here and there, culling out of several books the sentences that best please me, not to keep them (for I have no memory to retain them in), but to transplant them into this; where, to say the truth, they are no more mine than in their first places.
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
Tuesday, October 24, 2017
Even in our counsels and deliberations there must, certainly, be something of chance and good-luck mixed with human prudence; for all that our wisdom can do alone is no great matter; the more piercing, quick, and apprehensive it is, the weaker it finds itself, and is by so much more apt to mistrust itself.... [Given] the shortsightedness of human wisdom...the surest way, in my opinion, did no other consideration invite us to it, is to pitch upon that wherein is the greatest appearance of honesty and justice; and not, being certain of the shortest, to keep the straightest and most direct way.
Michel de Montaigne
Michel de Montaigne
Sunday, October 22, 2017
We are, as we have always been, dangerous creatures, the enemies of our
own happiness. But the only help we have ever found for this, the only
melioration, is in mutual reverence. God’s grace comes to us unmerited,
the theologians say. But the grace we could extend to one another we
consider it best to withhold in very many cases, presumptively, or in
the absence of what we consider true or sufficient merit (we being more
particular than God), or because few gracious acts, if they really
deserve the name, would stand up to a cost-benefit analysis. This is not
the consequence of a new atheism, or a systemic materialism that
afflicts our age more than others. It is good old human meanness, which
finds its terms and pretexts in every age. The best argument against
human grandeur is the meagerness of our response to it, paradoxically
enough.
Marilynne Robinson, New York Review (November , 2017)
Marilynne Robinson, New York Review (November , 2017)
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