Delight Springs

Friday, May 30, 2025

Old birds, and young

AUDIO at Substack

Thirty-two years ago today, guests at our wedding were gifted a small but meaningful take-home token of our nuptials: a scrolled passage from Wallace Stegner's 1976 prize-winning "story of a long marriage"-The Spectator Bird. 

*
The passage continues:

It is something — it can be everything — to have found a fellow bird with whom you can sit among the rafters while the drinking and boasting and reciting and fighting go on below; a fellow bird whom you can look after and find bugs and seeds for; one who will patch your bruises and straighten your ruffled feathers and mourn over your hurts when you accidentally fly into something you can’t handle.

I've mentioned this more than a few times, over the years (partly from guilt, I've always regretted that our wedding planner-or whoever printed the scrolls-omitted the citation). But at thirty-two and counting I think we're finally qualified to speak as protagonists in our own story of a long marriage, and to corroborate the claim: it has been "everything"... 

And this anniversary year is special, too, because in a few months Younger Daughter and her own fellow bird will formalize their avian association. 

And so the story expands. The stories continue.

 
==
*And who was the Venerable Bede?

Go ask Alice...
 




 



Thursday, May 29, 2025

Cosmic spirit, down to earth

This is what WJ meant by philosophy resuming its rights with respect to "the earth of things"…

Kieran Fox wrote this in his spare time—in med school!

"A respect for the spiritual dimension of human existence is not a license for superstition or sloppy thinking, any more than a respect for the rules of physical reality allows us to claim that atoms and energy are somehow more real than our own subjective experiences. 

If anything, Einstein's teaching holds both science and spirituality to a higher standard than ever. Science has to humbly accept how far it still has to go, and admit that its conception of the cosmos will be incomplete until it can embrace consciousness. Spirituality has to come down from the ethereal realms where it's most comfortable, and commit to effecting actual change here on Earth."

— I Am a Part of Infinity: The Spiritual Journey of Albert Einstein by Kieran Fox
https://a.co/cM0nHE1

Reading Schopenhauer

"Reading is merely a surrogate for thinking for yourself; it means letting someone else direct your thoughts. Many books, moreover, serve merely to show how many ways there are of being wrong, and how far astray you yourself would go if you followed their guidance."
— Arthur Schopenhauer, Counsels and Maxims

My response to the old dead solitary metaphysician: 

Mindless reading can be that. Engaged reading is more like conversation in the Socratic vein, and  a virtual form of travel through time, space, and subjectivity. Thinking for yourself is not the same as thinking BY yourself, something the solitary philosopher is too prone to do.



Monday, May 26, 2025

The Bourgeois Morality of ‘The Ethicist’

A strong, if cherry-picked, polemic I found in my texts this morning (thanks, Andy).


But I remember when The Ethicist was a non -philosopher, more like the etiquette expert or Dear Abby. Appiah is so much better. 


Still, this scores major points. 


"Somehow Times ethical theory has brought us to the conclusion that the right thing to do is to help destroy the world… Problems that have large structural causes (homelessness, drug use, etc.) are reduced to personal matters between individuals—what does a writer owe this particularhomeless man or person with a drug problem? Questions of social ethics are excluded from consideration…"


https://www.currentaffairs.org/news/2024/04/the-bourgeois-morality-of-the-ethicist

Sunday, May 25, 2025

“collective effervescence”

The idea that robust physical health enables strength in other arenas of your life dates to the ancients: Seneca and other Stoic philosophers wrote about the interconnectedness of sound body and mind. The physical work of building muscle can give you a feeling of flourishing and of agency. Today the same idea drives the scientific literature behind weight lifting as an effective intervention for post-traumatic stress. In an age when virtual technology and society conspire to divorce mind from body and silo us from others, simply moving together in the same space can remind us of our shared humanity — what the psychologist Dacher Keltner, building on Émile Durkheim, likes to call "collective effervescence." As humans, we're built to move; as social creatures, it means something to move together."

Bonnie Tsui
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/24/opinion/muscles-bodies-fathers-daughters.html?smid=threads-nytopinion

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Superman with a Plan

Deists' vision of a god who's left the building was decidedly not Einstein's god...

"...pantheism is often confused with more traditional creeds that accept some kind of Creator. The easiest mistake to make is to conflate pantheism with Deism. Deism rose to prominence during the Age of Enlightenment as a kind of comforting compromise that made Christian faith compatible with the more critical modern mentality. Easily mocked ideas like miracles, divine revelation, and the literal truth of the Bible were dismissed in deference to the discoveries of science. But the basic belief persisted that a Creator God fashioned our universe with a purpose and a plan. From the Deist perspective, the orderly laws of physical existence and the miraculous organization of living beings provided incontrovertible evidence for God’s existence and His goodness.134 You don’t hear the word Deism much these days, but the idea lives on among its intellectual descendants: creationism and intelligent design.

Although Einstein was often accused of atheism, it doesn’t seem like anyone thought of him as a Deist during his own lifetime. But over the last couple of decades, this has become the dominant narrative defining his spirituality. One biographer has suggested that Einstein “settled into a deism” in later life and embraced a “middle-age deistic faith.”135 Time magazine, celebrating Einstein as its “Person of the Century,” hailed him as “a philosopher with faith both in science and in the beauty of God’s handiwork.”136 And Einstein has even been (mis)quoted as saying, “I believe in God; I have a very deep faith.… There’s a spirit manifest in the laws of the universe… and to me that explains my faith in a Creator and a faith in God.”"

"I Am a Part of Infinity: The Spiritual Journey of Albert Einstein" by Kieran Fox: https://a.co/0l7smwE

Friday, May 23, 2025

Alasdair MacIntyre (1929-2025)

MacIntyre was proud never to have earned a PhD: "I won't go so far as to say that you have a deformed mind if you have a PhD, but you will have to work extra hard to remain educated."


https://www.wordonfire.org/articles/remembering-alasdair-macintyre-1929-2025/

He understood WJ's 🐙 

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Enjoy the scenery on the detours

You will do well to cultivate the resources in yourself that bring you happiness outside of success or failure. The truth is, most of us discover where we are headed when we arrive. At that time, we turn around and say, yes, this is obviously where I was going all along. It's a good idea to try to enjoy the scenery on the detours, because you'll probably take a few.
Bill Watterson

https://www.themarginalian.org/2013/05/20/bill-watterson-1990-kenyon-speech/

Monday, May 19, 2025

Best-case scenario?

Really, Gen Z?

"Category III jobs: idealistic, but not all that ambitious

And then there's a third category, made up of people who're idealistic, but not that ambitious. It's a combination often seen in Gen Z—people born since 1996.

One survey after another shows that today's teenagers and twentysomethings make up the most progressive generation yet. 22 That's wonderful news. Most young people are far more idealistic than their parents and are focused on a number of the big challenges of our day, whether that's climate change or racism, sexual harassment or inequality.

But something seems to be missing. You see it in young people's take on their careers: with no interest in joining the capitalist rat race, many want work they're passionate about—and then preferably part-time. 23

Sometimes it seems "ambition" has become a dirty word, incompatible with an idealistic lifestyle. Many people are more preoccupied with the kind of work they do than with the impact that work has. As long as it feels good. "Small is beautiful," you'll then hear. Or "think global, act local"—as if achieving little is somehow a virtue.

In some circles, you'd think the highest good is not to have any impact at all. A good life is then primarily defined by what you don't do. Don't fly. Don't eat meat. Don't have kids. And whatever you do, don't even think about using a plastic straw. Reduce! Reduce! Reduce! The aim is to have the smallest footprint possible, with your little vegetable garden and your tiny house. Best-case scenario? Your impact on the planet is so negligible, you could just as well not have existed."

— Moral Ambition: Stop Wasting Your Talent and Start Making a Difference by Rutger Bregman

The best in us

Born on this day in 1872, Bertrand Russell lived nearly a century, through two world wars, and won the Nobel Prize for his timeless writing that champions the best in us: our kindness, our critical thinking, our freedom of being. His immortal wisdom on how to grow old and what makes a fulfilling life:

https://www.themarginalian.org/2018/07/03/how-to-grow-old-bertrand-russell/

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Dog @dawn

Dog meets Dawn again… a happy form of Sisyphean repetition, a Nietzschean recurrence to affirm. My dream retirement scenario, as my dogs 💤 on, may not be theirs.

  https://www.threads.com/@marc_with_a_sea_photos/post/DJn3CBqMhMK?xmt=AQF0dYSyyNC6zaMzPBaLJQzkuUuE5Eb7QtuwMVL908iFfw

Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
👣Solvitur ambulando
💭Sapere aude

The only “island of meaning”?

Humbling, clarifying… but, "terrifying"? Perhaps in the same way being responsible for your children's well-being can be terrifying: an awesome responsibility, but profoundly meaningful and purpose-giving.

Brian Cox shares some Sagan-esque cosmic philosophy with Colbert:

@profbriancox explores the wonder of human life set against the vast backdrop of galaxies captured by the James Webb Space Telescope.

https://www.threads.com/@colbertlateshow/post/DJnhTd_vT00?xmt=AQF0YikHmhrFtU5gnzj__Zawf3E4XgjDImP6h-wyz7D59w

Sunday, May 11, 2025

“no other life but this”

"However mean your life is, meet it and live it; do not shun it and call it hard names. It is not so bad as you think. It looks poorest when you are richest. The fault-finder will find faults even in paradise. Love your life, difficult as it is...
You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in each moment. Fools stand on their island of opportunities and look toward another land. There is no other land; there is no other life but this." - Henry Thoreau

Thursday, May 8, 2025

But… is that all there is? 🎶

Happiness is made up of two ingredients: meaning and purpose. The problem is that most people believe they are the same thing. Here's why that's wrong—and how to use both to finally feel fulfillment.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-regret-free-life/202502/the-difference-between-meaning-and-purpose

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

The right to question ideas

The internet's "History Alice" has a new book.

Many of our students are unfamiliar with their Constitution and its enumerated rights, never mind this one. And never mind their president.

"The rise of the teenager in Britain largely stemmed from American culture. In 1945, The New York Times marked this growing group with an article entitled ‘A teen-age bill of rights’. This was a ‘ten-point charter framed to meet the problems of growing youth’, which included ‘the right to a “say” about his own life’, ‘the right to question ideas’ and ‘the right to make mistakes, to find out for himself’."

"Eighteen: A History of Britain in 18 Young Lives" by Alice Loxton: https://a.co/4tH27BC

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

A mirror of the Infinite

[Recording at Substack]

This is not Richard Rorty's "mirror of nature" but is more like a great radio telescope, intercepting cosmic radiance but not being intellectually arrested by it. A cosmic leap of faith, or a leap of cosmic faith. 

But not faith, as conventionally understood. Cosmic connection
It’s one of the varieties of religious experience.

"It's so easy to believe that there's nothing more to us than our fragile little egos, enduring for only a moment in endless time. Cynicism, skepticism, and simplemindedness all conspire to convince us that this is the case. But the core conviction of the cosmic religion, and all the analogous systems that came before, is that consciousness can become far more comprehensive. The human mind can be molded into a mighty instrument, a mirror of the Infinite. "There comes a point where the mind takes a leap," Einstein once said, "and comes out upon a higher plane of knowledge.""

— I Am a Part of Infinity: The Spiritual Journey of Albert Einstein by Kieran Fox

Scopes centenary

100 years ago today, Dayton, Tennessee high school teacher John Scopes was arrested for teaching evolution.

It had gone exactly according to plan: Scopes and a group of local businessmen had decided to provoke the indictment in order to challenge a new Tennessee law making it a crime to teach evolution in public schools.

https://to.pbs.org/45nhlsy

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Our Idea of Happiness Has Gotten Shallow. Here’s How to Deepen It.

Happiness was once understood as a communal project tied to justice and shared flourishing, but over time, it evolved into something individual and small. "Now the challenge seems clear: to reclaim a deeper, more demanding vision of what it means to live well in a fractured world — and restore happiness to its proper scale."

Kwame Anthony Appiah
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/03/magazine/happiness-history-living-well.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Saturday, May 3, 2025

How to Survive the Trump Years With Your Spirit Intact

"…the eternal forces of dehumanization are blowing strong right now: concentrated power; authoritarianism; materialism; runaway technology; a presidential administration at war with the arts, universities and sciences; a president who guts Christianity while pretending to govern in its name.

On the other hand, there are millions of humanists — secular and religious — repulsed by what they see. History is often driven by those people who are quietly repulsed for a while and then find their voice. I suspect different kinds of humanists will gather and invent other cultural movements. They will ask the eternal humanistic questions: What does it mean to be human? What is the best way to live? What is the nature of the common humanity that binds us together? 

…"

David Brooks
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/01/opinion/trump-faith-humanism.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Metanoia

My ancient philosophy prof in grad school described it more as an epiphany, or a new conceptual insight. This is better:

Friday, May 2, 2025

“to a certain extent sacred”

I continue to enjoy starting my days with a brief peek at distant ocean sunrises (with dogs) on the Internet, from Ireland and the UK to Virginia Beach. But I need to dial that back, one or two should suffice. 


On the other hand, I might not then find gems like this from my favorite misanthrope:


"Do not shorten the morning by getting up late, or waste it in unworthy occupations or in talk; look upon it as the quintessence of life, as to a certain extent sacred."

— Arthur Schopenhauer, Counsels and Maxims

Thursday, May 1, 2025

How Nearly a Century of Happiness Research Led to One Big Finding

Connect.

"… On a small patio by a very small pool, Waldinger and I talked about the rise of the happiness industry — the countless podcasts, conferences, best-selling books — and his own role in it. He gives considerable thought to maintaining his own happiness in the face of becoming a kind of influencer, someone called on to travel around the world to speak about happiness at conferences, sometimes to crowds of very wealthy people, repeating the same turns of phrase and giving the same advice about deep relationships.

As a Zen priest, someone accustomed to reckoning with his place in the world, Waldinger is acutely aware of the tension between achieving status and doing work that demands humility. Before becoming the steward of the Harvard study, he walked away from a high-profile job as the director of training and education at the Massachusetts Mental Health Center, after deciding that the prestige of the role didn't offset his lack of enthusiasm for the administrative work it demanded. At age 45, he started over, taking a major pay cut to pursue work he found more fulfilling: working under the guidance of Stuart Hauser, a psychiatrist recognized for his work in adolescent development. That professional step, of course, led Waldinger to the Harvard study and the work that has catapulted his visibility far beyond that of his previous career.

He reflected with honesty about how much thought he gives to keeping his newfound fame in perspective. "I grapple with the feeling that it's important," he told me, as we sat over turkey sandwiches his wife had made; ordinarily, the two of them have lunch together, a small moment of connection they started sharing during the pandemic. The work is meaningful, he said; it was the feeling of ego gratification that he struggled with. "It feels important," he said. "But it's really not. I work at a hospital where every water fountain is named after someone who was once maybe famous. But now no one knows who they are." The badges of achievement — that's the least important part of who he is, he tries to remind himself. Because otherwise who would he be when the calls from The New York Times, from Aspen, from TED, stopped coming?

Even knowing that Waldinger was a Buddhist priest, I felt somehow surprised by how quickly our conversation had moved past the discussion of research and deepened into something that felt bracingly and reassuringly honest. When we finally said goodbye after a few hours of talking, mostly in the sun, I left feeling that I had connected with someone who was, just a few hours earlier, a stranger. I noticed, as I got in the car and remembered my concerns about my back, that it was incontrovertible: I felt better."

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/01/magazine/happiness-research-studies-relationships.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare