Delight Springs

Monday, June 8, 2020

A Chocorua of the mind

I was cheered last night when I saw John Kaag's tribute to Mount and Lake Chocorua, William James's New Hampshire getaway from academia and the stresses of daily life in Cambridge (MA) over a century ago. The James Society's centenary gathering there in 2010 was for me the Platonically-perfect paradigm of a professional scholarly symposium.
I revisit this image often, a Chocorua of the mind is a good place for moral holidays. (And if anyone ever wants to organize another conference there...) https://t.co/0Ecel4CNnd — Phil Oliver (@OSOPHER) June 8, 2020 
Those environs were deeply consoling to James, and redolent of a mental freedom he could not find in the thrust and parry of philosophical polemic. He particularly doted on the architectural expansiveness of the lakeside summer house, and its near-dozen doors "all opening out."

That's a lovely simile for his own personal sensibility and sociability, so plural and so "co-" in its eagerness to make significant connection with others beyond the borders of his own personal experience.

He was of course, as we all are to an extent, a trapped specimen of his time and its limitations. But I'd like to think his friendship with W.E.B. Dubois and his contempt for jingoistic American imperialism imply the strong likelihood of his revulsion at the endemic racism in American life that continues to torment us.

That's what I was thinking when we tuned in to 60 Minutes and saw the bravura performance of NAACP Legal Defense Fund chief Sherrilyn Ifill. She made so many sound and insightful points about the wages of denial and indifference, points so constructively instigating of an irresistible impulse to stand and do something, if only (at first) to join a march for justice.

That's the kind of instigation that made James want to spend time in Chocorua, readying for the good fight that's required for a truly righteous and justice-seeking life. Moral holidays -- "we have a right ever and anon to take a moral holiday, to let the world wag in its own way" --  aren't simply an escape from the grind and its responsibilities, they're an essential refueling stop. It's beginning to look like that's what the pandemic quarantine has been for many of us, a period of fortifying sequestration before the change that has to come. And suddenly, finally, it's coming fast. Police forces are being deconstructed. Even Mitt's joined the parade.*

LISTEN

*Postscript. Why Romney Marched

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