The above Livingstone obituary is dated January 29, 2024.
See as well that date in this journal, and some remarks
by Bernd Witte on Walter Benjamin, science, language, and religion.
Sunday, March 17, 2024
The Livingstone Dies Natalis
Sunday, October 8, 2023
Work and Play
"All work and no play . . ."
Sunday, November 15, 2015
|
See as well "Livingstone" in this journal.
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Princeton Symmetry
From this journal nine years ago today, on the
anniversary of Stanley finding Livingstone —
Click on the image for the Princeton connection.
Related art — Search Log24 for Time + Eternity.
See as well the theater producer pictured in last night's post
and a Princeton-related* review of one of his productions.
Footnote of November 11, 2015:
* Related, that is, only by the "Princeton connection" mentioned above.
For another Princeton connection of interest, see a symposium at
Princeton University on May Day, 2015 —
THE PEDAGOGY OF IMAGES:
DEPICTING COMMUNISM FOR CHILDREN
A sample symposium participant:
Monday, April 12, 2010
Weaveworld
"Fact and fiction weave in and out of novels
like a shell game." –R. B. Kitaj
as quoted by Marco Livingstone
Related material: Prime Designer,
Shell Game, and Evil Daemon.
See also remarks by root@matrix.net.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Out of Inland
Epigraphs at
Peter Cameron’s home page:
See also the epigraphs in Cameron’s
Parallelisms of Complete Designs,
entries on this date three years ago,
Russell Hoban in this journal,
and
The Hawkline Monster in this journal.
Friday, November 10, 2006
Friday November 10, 2006
numbers:
Today is the day that
Stanley found Livingstone.
"Stone 588,
I presume?"
Related material:
This afternoon's entry
on color symmetry
and
See, too, the following from
a Log24 entry of last Monday–
was never really a material cup,
but a jewel like the
jewel in the lotus,
a symbol of enlightenment,
of something intangible
and always beyond reach."
— Arcadian Functor
— in this context:
something a name
on Monday
and have it respond
to that name
on Friday…."
— Bernard Holland in
The New York Times
Monday, May 20, 1996
Friday November 10, 2006
Livingstone
On this date:
In 1871, journalist-explorer Henry M. Stanley found Scottish missionary David Livingstone, who had not been heard from for years, near Lake Tanganyika in central Africa.
— AP “Today in History,” Nov. 10
The history
of Princeton’s
Witherspoon Street
Presbyterian Church
1 Peter 2, on the
“living stone.”
— NIV Bible
Paul Robeson in |
See also Wednesday’s
Grave Matters.