The influence of gaslight or electric light on the growth of paraheliotropic trees

bonebrushing the edges of the res interna (upper transcend)

Month: February, 2009

Post-

We are the latter sons of history. We are all Benjamins.

We are the children of the postwar, postboom, postmodern. The world was already here when we got here.

Naturally, we trend conservative, though a conservatism that incorporates some of the victories our parents fought in the culture wars when the world still seemed new —

Now, newness itself is old. Now, we are postnew. We are that which comes after.

History is written looking forward from the past. Our age is the age of exhaustion — where we do not seem up to the challenges that face us. Weimar, someone whispers. Berlin, 1932. Post. Post. s

Art doubles back on itself. Baudrillard’s map becomes the focus. We watch movies to learn how to live. Our lives are rom-coms and then sitcoms and then tearjerkers like The Bucket List. We die in hospitals. We are buried with formaldehyde (new car smell). Post. Post. Post.

A thirty minute drive takes us out of our suburbs and cities and into the last few fragments of wilderness that still persist in this postanarchy — rips in the fabric, chaos theory blooming admist our local stands against entropy.

We know the age of the sun, and our calculations tell us when it will die. The universe too — looks now like it will burn out like a coal and sink into coldness. The scientists call it Heat Death. The Heat Death of the Universe. We are alive. We still live. Obama calls for hope on the lawn of the nation in Washington, two hundred and a score years later but we question. The future is in flux — postcertainty. Postsafety. Sound the alarms. It’s getting hot in here. People are banging at the door. The children don’t read. Postoptimism, postliberalism. Post. After. Next? Post. Postnext, posttomorrow, posthope. Post.

Project: Analysis of the character of Falstaff though examination of his utterances

Project: A systematic and organized analysis of Shakespeare’s character of Falstaff (Lokian, the Hanging Man, the Old Fool) though an examination of his utterances and interactions, first in Henry IV, pt. 1, and then in other of Shakespeare’s plays, for the purpose of showing a) how action (of which utterance is a species) reveals, presents, and creates character and b) how what is said can denote what is there.

Why Falstaff? Because he’s fun, strange, weak, etc.. Mostly because he appears to be fully-realized, as one says, and Shakespeare is the master of such fully-realized characters.

Things I’d like to learn and try

1. The growth of things in the ground
2. A strange and foreign language
3. Simple, nonstrenous, daily exercise.
4. Better cooking and nutrition
5. Waking up early and greeting the new days.
6. The simple Zen filled life

Colorless green ideas sleep furiously

It can only be the thought of verdure to come, which prompts us in the autumn to buy these dormant white lumps of vegetable matter covered by a brown papery skin, and lovingly to plant them and care for them. It is a marvel to me that under this cover they are labouring unseen at such a rate within to give us the sudden awesome beauty of spring flowering bulbs. While winter reigns the earth reposes but these colourless green ideas sleep furiously.  — C.M. Street

Article: On Denoting, by Bertrand Russel

http://www.hs-augsburg.de/~harsch/anglica/Chronology/20thC/Russell/rus_deno.html

Book Review: To the Finland Station by Edmund Wilson

Marx without Marxism. The historical pageant of the 19th century, one as horrific and as tumultous as my own 20th — though with the restrospective historical backwards glance, we see that 19th century horrors were merely dress rehearsals for the true breakdown and resynthesis of the strange 20th.

Nevertheless, the Marxist paradise has still not come. (Unless it is here, in America, where the classes contend peacefully against each other, workers of all economic classes striving for solidarity and the good).

1st Thoughts: The utter strangeness of the American and French Revolution to the peoples of Europe — democracy is not better or worse than monarchy, but it might be quicker — allowing a change of government in one’s own lifetime, affording a peaceful means for a society to change course. Absent this mechanism, one gets, not surprisingly, revolution. If that is the measure, how many peaceful revolutions has the United States undergone since our first? France knows this story even better, having had five republics, two empires, and a monarchy since King Louis lost his head.

2nd Thoughts: The new teleo-secular view of history that begins to express itself after the great Rational Revolutions of Washington and Robespierre. (Right and Left? Perhaps — read Burke next.) The Church is mightily dethroned by these developments, both here and in Europe.

3rd: The absolute horrors of the industrial revolution, where men not knowing of the obligations they owed each other, subjected the poor and unlettered to the most abject existence imaginable. Marxism (and its little brother, Social Democracy) are the only compassionate responses to these deprivations. Today, there are similar deprivations, as Globalism (like industrialism a process that we cannot fully grasp and understand) has created a new grouping of haves and have-nots that has created a seething deadly hell for so much of the world. Bono preached about it at my graduation from university. What new Marxism will save and lift up those brilliant shining masses? (I say to Dvora, to anyone, there are two passions, the only two passions of mankind, poverty and environmental sustainability. In solving one, we solve both, in losing one, we lose both. Bill Gates knows. Bill Clinton knows. I know.)

4th: The power of action and the Dialectic, the Dialectic being the abstracted emergent function of individuals pushed by the historical conditions they find themselves in into acting out the required roles of historical progress. The Dialectic does not occur spontaenously but through the choosing of action. We must act — but once we do our choices are to some extent determined by the conditions of the historical scene: in other words, there is only so much we can do.

5th: Marx and Engels and others were always waiting for the time to be right of the socialist revolution. Marx also conceded that in America, in a democracy, socialism might come about through the use of the democratic processs.

6th: Lenin and the Russians. Marx didn’t expect it, but not surprising that in Russia, where the contradictions of capitalism and the authoritarianism of the leadership were at its greatest, and where the bourgeouise were at their comparative weakness, a communist revolution could take place. The riddle of the USSR has not yet been resolved in my mind — how did it go wrong — what they were missing in general that they fell into despotism — is Marxism wrong at its core, denying the liberal rights of liberty and pursuit of happiness? Against Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness (Jeffersonian stand-in for the more natural property, but which is of course, denied to some) with Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity — the second recognizing the importance of the Social, the Primacy of the Social over the Individual >> here is where the American model fails — we live in society, and hence all bear the social costs of individual action — that said, elevating Mill’s rule to a Primary Ideal needs to be supported, cannot be axiomatic, since if the social world is the emergent concerns of all others, it is unclear why the Individual should trump All Others.

Read Next: The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas, by Ursula LeGuin.

Theory of Alienation

http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/essence/index.htm

Darwin 200

Charles Darwin was born 200 years ago. Oh Thunderer, Prometheus, who knocked Atlas from his pedestal and we all fell down with it — the secret magic of many many deaths that gave us ours eyes and arms and peacock brains. Happy Birthday, Mr. Darwin, Turtleman, Happy Birthday.

Newspaper Man

Here I dance in this everchanging scene, getting my ideas from the newspaper stand, from the liquid crystal display, from the television screen, from the samizdat, from that oh so good and wonderful feeling — can you feel it, baby, can you feel it? Looking down at the plexiglass floor and the deep industrial abyss below — oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, the vertigo is spinning me around —–

I am productive, I am living, I am — I am — Descartes walks into a bar, the bartender says “have you been here before?’ Descartes says “I don’t think so –” and disappears.

Coffee Coffee Coffee Coffee. Hmm hmm hmm.

Thoughts while Showering, 2/9

1. America as a Counter-experiment to Marx’s View of History in Europe. 2. Writing a great history of the 1700s, 1800s, and 1900s – the course of 3 lives >>> American Revolution, French, Russian >>> how we got there. 3. Why start in 1700? What about the Wars of Religion? What about the Reformation? The Past 500 Years >> Dawn to Decadence >> a Liminal Transition State. 4. We are now entering another Transition State >> 5. Reason I wanted to work for a major law firm was so I could be a part of that creation of history. Now, with recession, that Global Dynamic is in retreat, and specifically, I am barred from entering that world >> answer: think global, act local? Or go global? 6. America in the Great Depression turned inward for a generation; existed at a resting state until a generation passed, people looked around and asked why they were being underutilized? America, in the Wilderness >> Nation of Israel in the Desert >> Jesus in the Desert. 7. My own time in the Wilderness >>> Elsewhere, B21 >>> we live our lives in the wilderness 8. The strange state of Mitdasein