See also the star of the previous post in . . .
Sunday, February 19, 2023
Hoarding Space
Saturday, February 18, 2023
Wednesday, February 15, 2023
Categorization Theory
"And then there’s the ultimate unknown known:
the 'enlightenment' (satori, kensho) of Zen practice.
If my sense of it from accounts I have read is accurate,
it involves seeing the world and realizing that you always
knew its true nature, but you just didn’t know you knew…
because you were too busy putting it into boxes and
matrices and categories and words. Which reminds us
again that while logical deductions and categorizations
can lead us to discoveries, they can also lead us away
from them."
— James Harbeck on Groundhog Day, 2023
This post was suggested by a Log24 image from All Saints' Day, 2018 —
Related verbiage: Unthought Known.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Out of What Chaos
Mathematics and Narrative, continued…
Out of What Chaos, a novel by Lee Oser—
"This book is more or less what one would expect if Walker Percy wrote about a cynical rock musician who converts to Catholicism, and then Nabokov added some of his verbal pyrotechnics, and then Buster Keaton and the Marquis de Sade and Lionel Trilling inserted a few extra passages. It is a loving and yet appalled description of the underground music scene in the Pacific Northwest. And it is a convincing representation of someone very, very smart."
"If Evelyn Waugh had lived amid the American Northwest rock music scene, he might have written a book like this."
–Anonymous Amazon.com reviewer
A possible source for Oser's title–
"…Lytton Strachey described Pope's theme as 'civilization illumined by animosity; such was the passionate and complicated material from which he wove his patterns of balanced precision and polished clarity.' But out of what chaos did that clarity and precision come!"
—Authors at Work, by Herman W. Liebert and Robert H. Taylor, New York, Grolier Club, 1957, p. 16
Related material:
and the
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Wednesday September 30, 2009
Midnight in the Garden, Autumn 2009
Review:
|
From this journal on the following day, Sept. 21:
Happy birthday, Stephen King.
Today's previous entry is based on a song, "Unthought Known,"
from the above album; the cover of the album uses the 3×3 grid
shown in Sept. 20's midnight review. For related material
on the unconscious, see June 13-15, 2005.
I know more than Apollo,
For oft when he lies sleeping
I see the stars at mortal wars
In the wounded welkin weeping.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Thursday September 24, 2009
Who Knows
What Evil Lurks…
The brain-in-a-jar on the cover of the new Pearl Jam album "Backspacer" (previous two entries) is apparently there because of a song on the album, "Unthought Known"–
"All the thoughts you never see
You are always thinking
Brain is wide, the brain is deep
Oh, are you sinking?"
The song title is from a book, The Shadow of the Object (Columbia U. Press, 1987), by psychoanalyst Christopher Bollas.
The "unthought known" phrase has been quoted widely by second-rate psychologizers and by some not so second-rate. Their lucubrations suggest that sinking brain-worshippers should seek a…
at London's White Cube gallery.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Sunday September 20, 2009
The Appearances
scheinen
German verb:
1. to shine; to gleam
2. to seem; to appear….
Quine, Pursuit of Truth,
Harvard U. Press, 1990, epigraphs:
Google search:
Owen Barfield,
Saving the Appearances:
George S. Lensing,
Wallace Stevens and the Seasons:
"Poetry is often a revelation
of the elements of appearance."