Wednesday, September 28, 2011

i do declare

without philosophical bearings
science is like a drunken enraged blindman
like a child with no family
like a poet with no recourse to speak or write

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

yet another way

When some portion of the biosphere
 is rather unpopular with the human race–
a crocodile, a dandelion, a stony valley, a snowstorm,
 an odd-shaped flint–
there are three sorts of human being
who are particularly likely still
to see point in it
and befriend it.
They are poets, scientists and children.
Inside each of us, I suggest,
 representatives of all these groups can be found.

-mary midgely

a profound melody within

“I had a boyfriend who told me I’d never succeed,
never be nominated for a Grammy,
 never have a hit song,
 and that he hoped I’d fail.
I said to him,
(‘)Someday, when we’re not together,
you won’t be able to order a cup of coffee
at the fucking deli without hearing or seeing me.(')”   

-lady gaga

Monday, September 26, 2011

perspective in the mind of the beholder

for all galileo's effort
we still refer to
sunrise
and
sunset

Friday, September 23, 2011

it behooves us to get it right



Principles that are mistakenly high and strict are a trap; they may easily lead in the end directly or indirectly to the justification of monstrous things. Thus if the evangelical counsel about poverty were turned into a precept forbidding property owning, people would pay lip service to it as the ideal, while in practice they went in for swindling. “Absolute honesty!” it would be said: “I can respect that – but of course that means having no property; and while I respect those who follow that course, I have to compromise with the sordid world myself.” If then one must “compromise with evil” by owning property and engaging in trade then the amount of swindling one does will depend on convenience. This imaginary case is paralleled by what is so commonly said: absolute pacifism is an ideal; unable to follow that, and committed to “compromise with evil,” one must go whole hog and wage war a outrance….

[P]acifism teaches people to make no distinction between the shedding of innocent blood and the shedding of any human blood. And in this way pacifism has corrupted enormous numbers of people who will not act according to its tenets. They become convinced that a number of things are wicked which are not; hence, seeing no way of avoiding “wickedness,” they set no limits to it. How endlessly pacifists argue that all war must be a outrance! that those who wage war must go as far as technological advance permits in the destruction of the enemy’s people. As if the Napoleonic wars were perforce fuller of massacres than the French war of Henry V of England. It is not true: the reverse took place… Pacifism and the respect for pacifism is not the only thing that has led to a universal forgetfulness of the law against killing the innocent; but it has had a great share in it.

-G.E.M. Anscombe, War and Murder.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

nothing better to do

"I urge you
 to remain steadfast
in faith,
so that at last
we will all reach heaven
and there rejoice together."

st. andrew kim taegon (martyr)   +1846

Sunday, September 18, 2011

la pan por el pelegrino

What Christ gives us
 is quite explicit
 if his own words
are interpreted
according
 to their Aramaic
 meaning.

The expression
'This is my Body'
  means
this is myself.

- karl rahner

Friday, September 16, 2011

ecstacy in the gut

Moses has experienced pure, wild, cosmic joy, he has known the love that is in everything and the fear and death that is in everything.

 -pinchas sadeh   +1994

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

to know oneself in boredom

Ennui is the echo in us of time tearing itself apart.

 - e.m. cioran

Sunday, September 11, 2011

we all need something

In Europe art has to a large degree taken the place of religion.
In America it seems rather to be science.

   -johan huizinga    +1945

Monday, September 5, 2011

question the theory

The most dangerous tendency of the modern world
is the way in which bogus theories
 are given the force of dogma.

 - jean cardinal danielou  (jesuit, theologian, prelate)