Delight Springs

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Glorious good luck

LISTEN. It's Cousin Mary's birthday. Poet Mary Oliver is one of my favorite dawn role-models. She said "If anybody has a job and starts at 9, there’s no reason why they can’t get up at 4:30 or five and write for a couple of hours, and give their employers their second-best effort of the day — which is what I did.” Her best efforts were marvelous. I mentioned Ursula Goodenough's Sacred Depths of Nature in Environmental Ethics yesterday, that was her great theme: sacred nature, precious and fragile and finite. "...the world offers itself to your imagination, calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting—over and over announcing your place in the family of things."

And she loved dogs too. If only we could be as happy as they seem, always ready to be transfixed and transported by the simple sights, sounds, and especially scents of "the heaven of earth."

The Almanac also reports that it's Stephen Jay Gould's birthday. “Homo sapiens [are] a tiny twig on an improbable branch of a contingent limb on a fortunate tree.” In other words, we're darned lucky. I'm grateful for our good luck. It's important to remember, especially lately, that we're the lucky ones

I felt lucky the other day when I turned on YouTube and the top of my recommendations featured Gould, Dennett, Sacks, Dyson, and others in that Glorious Accident Dutch banquet that so captivated my imagination when I first encountered it on public television in the '90s. "Six smart guys sitting around talking," even six middle-aged white guys, can be surprisingly thrilling. Just like class, when we're lucky. 


But as Dennett suggests, echoing Branch Rickey, our best good luck is not a total accident. There's no master Plan, but there's planning.

"One thing that does make us unique as a species is that for the last five or ten thousand years we have been the beneficiaries of conscious planning by our parents and their parents and the cultures in which we've resided. Today we are actively concerning ourselves with what the world is going to be like in the future. We have strong beliefs about this. They play a role in what Homo sapiens is going to be like a thousand years from now." Springs

They will, if we're lucky.

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