LISTEN. 16.
One more clinches the wildcard, but more importantly the streak has already clinched Grantland Rice's point about living: winning (as Nuke LaLoosh learned) is more fun than losing, but winning and losing matters less than playing the right way. Playing with confidence and style and mutual support and a spirit of fair play will look great on the last scorecard, whether you get to fly the W or not.
But my team does, today. Again. Hey Chicago, what do you say? I say I want to play life the way Harrision Bader plays centerfield.
This was a good weekend all around for me, with the sun shining brightly I finally got back on the bicycle for some lovely extended rides, not just short class-to-class campus commutes.
And I thoroughly enjoyed Richard Powers's new novel
Bewilderment, which takes its title straight from Plato's cave: "the bewilderments of the eyes are of two kinds, and arise from two causes, either from coming out of the light or from going into the light." That's just what we were talking about at the end of Happiness
class last time, as we ambled back to the Naked Eye observatory. The crack of light between two eternities of darkness, the bird that flies into the lighted chamber. We're lucky to have found the light, however briefly. We should
open our eyes.
Next in
CoPhi we turn to Berkeley, Voltaire & Leibniz, Hume, & Rousseau. To be is not merely to be perceived, but the absence of acute perception afflicting so many is definitely a deficient state of being. I still think Voltaire and James were right about Leibniz's (and Pope's) thundering incarnation of superficiality in metaphysics. Everything's not right with the world, yet. Not even when you're winning.
Leibniz's best biographer (or most entertaining, at least) is
Matthew Stewart. I don't suppose he's related to Jon (not the comic but the philosopher who's about to publish a
fresh look at Hegel). I look forward to seeing if he can render the philosopher who inspired James to inhale
nitrous oxide in search of Hegelian clarity (was there ever a squarer circle?) any less superficial. (
Some Subjective Effects...)
I'm enjoying
Julian Baggini's new book on Hume, which takes us "to the places that inspired Hume the most, from his family estate near the Scottish border to Paris, where, as an older man, he was warmly embraced by French society" and "includes 145 Humean maxims for living well, on topics ranging from the meaning of success and the value of travel to friendship, facing death, identity, and the importance of leisure."
g'r...
g'b
The importance of leisure, indeed. Go Cards go. Go on reminding us how important it is to play well with others, and to care. Leave the great scorer out of it, if you like. What still matters is how you play the game.
==
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