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The Posture of Things
You're shopping for a chair. As you browse the aisles, you note the variety — from backless computer chairs to high bar stools to plush ...
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It's a luxury to read great books, films, works of art. You get to jump in, kick around, then stand back and think while the thing s...
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"Make no mistake. It's not revenge he's after. It's a reckoning." In Tombstone , Wyatt Earp and his brother...
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Arkady Plotnitsky who taught me Derrida in Philadelphia in 1989. When I was in college, I took a class on Derrida taught by the impecca...
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A thing is one thing that is many things. It is an assemblage point — a gathering together of diverse elements in a particular way. A rock ...
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The set up is familiar: good girls flirt with bad, get in over their heads, learn a lesson — with some boobs and teen exploitation along ...
4 comments:
when i began to listen, when you spoke of the time, i thought to the few pages i read of bergson.
he begins reasoning from an opposite point of vue than his conclusions: at the begining of his book, he says that time is a succession of intervals. At the end he says what u say, that time is not a succesion of instants, but the instant itself.
the nice point is how a philosopher encompasses, to finally reach a particular thesis, all the possibilities of analysis, especially the wrong intuition.
the other funny point is about the style of his writing. he is a very meticulous reasonning guy. but conclusions of his step by step, are supporting the "ineffable" irrationality. (which is by the way a particullary religious notion, especially roman catholic).
regards,
It took me a while to get Bergson's style. And then, one day, I hit his stride. And I love this meticulous approach to the fuzzy, his focused conclusion of intuition. And I love the fact that this is not a tension per se but is in fact a key aspect of his claim: namely, that intuition is the most precise, exacting method.
"that intuition is the most precise, exacting method"
Wow do I love that quote! Thank you thank you thank you!
I constantly come to forks. In roads, and in my own tongue. I genuinely don't know which one I will take until I get to it. The road less traveled has not always been my choice, but it has been MY choice and THAT has made all the difference in the world for me.
For a fun yet kinda serious look about everything in motion watch JD and Nadine discuss time, space and lemonade. http://www.youtube.com/user/JDandNadine#p/a/u/1/WlKkWtoEQko
JD: The reckoning of the fork is what fascinates me, relentlessly. How do we make our decisions? They are such an exquisite amalgamation of factors and moments, visible and invisible.
Things, I believe, beckon to each other across time and space — like a magnetic pull. Like craving lemonade and then finding it smack dab in the middle of nowhere. (I love your video.)
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