Sunday, April 14, 2013
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Is there wisdom?
I'm posting a post made by Pete on our blog. I thought it was really interesting to read... my comments follow his original post...
Why do I seek to
silently justify my antisocial tendencies by thinking of Thoreau and his
'deliberate' marrow-sucking of life? Was he wiser than others, was he wiser
than I? Or was he just, like me, a natural recluse with a distaste for large
groups and a self-loathing streak that happened to throw down some of his rantings
on paper?
Perhaps there is no wisdom, but only men regurgitating various
combinations of limitation, potential, dreams, delusions and ideologies, each
man with his own terrifically lonely experience, his own style of perceiving,
interpreting, assimilating, analyzing, and elaborating on what he believes is
truth for all but ultimately applies only to his own mind. The world is, in a
sense, actually solipsistic; each man lives irreducibly in his own head; our
heroes, masters and shepherds are merely those who had the charisma to make
their own particular learning, personality and communication styles (often
fraught with psychoses and emotional derangements) accessible to masses with
similar ones to their own; perhaps this be wisdom for some---the insight of one's
life might make another of his specific makeup say "gee, that might be
useful for my own life" and it may well actually be---but there it ends.
May we hold Thoreau, Emerson, Trungpa, Rilke, Lao Tzu, the sages, the saints,
the gurus, the poets, the philosophers, the artists as peers: like
us, struggling, flawed, often deluded, mistaken and self-centered, and perhaps
only occasionally and coincidentally helpful to what is otherwise our own
lonely and fantastic condition.
"Believe nothing, no matter where you read it, or who said
it, no matter if I have said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and your
own commonsense."-- Some Guy*
(*Buddha)
(p)
One of the things I was thinking about as I read this was
that wisdom is often couched in words; a sentence, a paragraph, a book - when
we read or hear something inspirational or revealing, we value it as
"wise" and which we call "wisdom." Interesting though (and
this next thought popped into my head as I read "...who had the charisma
to make their own particular learning, personality and communication styles
[...] accessible to masses with similar ones to their own), that what we are
reading is merely a way of describing the world; we act as if our minds and
reality (i.e., the world) is as palpable as words. I like how you say "but
there it ends." And it's true to a sense, as if once we've consumed our
sentence, we continue reading for more, as if we are hoping that wisdom must be
discovered only by reading, rather than reflection.
h
h
More thoughts to come. This is good to think about for a
while.
h
h
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Being-time
"Much of our difficulty in understanding time is due to the unwise use of
spatial metaphors--in fact, the objectification of time requires such
spatial metaphors--but in this case a spatial comparison is helpful. We
normally understand objects such as cups to be 'in' space, which implies
that in themselves they must have a self-existence distinct from space.
However, not much reflection is necessary to realize that the cup
itself is irremediably spatial. All its parts must have some thickness,
and without the various spatial relations among the bottom, sides, and
handle, the cup would not be a cup. One way to express this is to say
that the cup is not "in" space but itself is space: the cup is 'what space is doing in that place,' so to speak. The same is true for
the temporality of the cup. The cup is not a nontemporal self-existing
object that just happens to be 'in' time, for its being is irremediably
temporal. The point of this is to destroy the thought-constructed
dualism between things and time. When we wish to express this, we must describe one one in terms of the other, by saying either that
objects are temporal (in which case they are not objects as we usually
conceive of them) or, conversely, that time is objects--that is, that
time manifests itself in the appearances we call objects. We find
beautiful expressions of this in Dōgen. 'The time we call spring blossoms directly as an existence called flowers. The flowers, in turn, express the time called spring. This is not existence within time; existence itself is time.' This is the meaning of his term 'being-time' (uji):
This whole discussion is fascinating--I particularly like the Dōgen stuff.
'Being-time' means that time is being; i.e., 'Time is existence, existence is time.' The shape of a Buddha-statue is time. . . . Every thing, every being in this entire world is time. . . . Do not think of time as merely flying by; do not only study the fleeting aspect of time. If time is really flying away, there would be a separation between time and ourselves. If you think that time is just a passing phenomenon, you will never understand being-time."From David Loy's Nonduality: A Study in Comparative Philosophy (1998)
This whole discussion is fascinating--I particularly like the Dōgen stuff.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Calasso
Interviewer: What is happiness for you, as a writer and creator?
Roberto Calasso: Happiness? I try not to speak of it. I feel it should belong
subterraneously to life. It doesn't want to be talked about too much,
I think.
(Paris Review, Fall 2012)
Roberto Calasso: Happiness? I try not to speak of it. I feel it should belong
subterraneously to life. It doesn't want to be talked about too much,
I think.
(Paris Review, Fall 2012)
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Nothing noths
"Nozick’s own hypotheses were certainly strange. One was that the primal
nothingness might have been so annihilating that it annihilated itself,
thus producing being. This echoes a much-mocked line of Heidegger’s:
“nothing noths” (“Das Nichts nichtet”)."
'Why Does the World Exist?' by Jim Holt; New York Times, August 2, 2012.
'Why Does the World Exist?' by Jim Holt; New York Times, August 2, 2012.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Pain
"The fear of pain is the greatest inhibitor of growth."
--Fritz Perls, Gestalt Therapy Verbatim (1969)
--Fritz Perls, Gestalt Therapy Verbatim (1969)
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