from "A Confederacy of Dunces" we get no memorable quotes, only memorable characters, and one dead author. No history of New Orleans, thanks be to God, but talk about extremes! This is not a novel for the faint of ear, nor of the hypersensitive olfactory apparatus. But if you would like a thoroughgoing layman's review of the disorders of the personal pyloric valve, this book is for you! ("say no more, say no more, nudge,nudge,wink wink.") This is how I spent my Thanksgiving vacation. Alas.
Please note my reply to Dennis Hall under the comments section, with thanks. And with gratitude to the Bathroom Readers Institute, from whence will come some of my future quotes--but consider the primary source, and correct as needed. I liked this one, to kick off my series on History Channeling:
"History is mostly guessing; the rest is prejudice."--Will and Ariel Durant
or
"Historian: an unsuccessful novelist." GB Shaw (I think)(what happens to unsuccessful historians? Any guesses? Anyone? ANYONE?)
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Monday, November 23, 2009
Dead Tired on Arrival, but Mobil-ized
After 20 days of intensive scientific endeavor and modestly successful experiments (nobody died) here are some more fragments unearthed from my sideline of pale-ontology, so named because it is beyond the pale, yea even the wider shade of pale....
Human Dinosaurship--Terrible Lizardry Indeed! Nothing worse than being old, so I am told! So we are postponing that living fossil gambit, and we are living vicariously through our new granddaughter, Alathea(first "a" long, last one short) whose name is Greek for "Truth". "Veritas" perhaps was too formal and rather overused and abused in some venues, I suppose. Alathea Joy Schuler had to be born in Mississippi rather than in Mobile because midwifery at home is still illegal in AL; yet one more reason for me to avoid the AMA. Her birthday, then, would be 11/20/o9, for those of you who are keeping track.
Here then, in her honor, are Two Terrible Truths for our Times:
From Cupid, Inc.,quoted in World Magazine--"The shortest messages get almost the best absolute response rate, and the reply rate actually goes down as messages approach extreme length." And what is "extreme length", pray tell? "Apparently, after about 360 words...you start scaring people off. A message like that is the online equivalent of a face tattoo. Of your life story."
Uh-oh. Good thing I kissed dating goodbye! Pleeeeez ,Mr.( Neil) Postman! Have you got a letter, a letter fo' me???
My old scientific friend, Pascal, knew how to abbreviate hard truths. The following indicates one of the foundational goals of this blog:
"I do not admire the extreme of one virtue unless you show me at the same time the extreme of the opposite virtue. One shows one's greatness not by being at an extremity but by being simultaneously at two extremities and filling all the space in between."
More Post-men later. Rest your eyes and I will too.
Human Dinosaurship--Terrible Lizardry Indeed! Nothing worse than being old, so I am told! So we are postponing that living fossil gambit, and we are living vicariously through our new granddaughter, Alathea(first "a" long, last one short) whose name is Greek for "Truth". "Veritas" perhaps was too formal and rather overused and abused in some venues, I suppose. Alathea Joy Schuler had to be born in Mississippi rather than in Mobile because midwifery at home is still illegal in AL; yet one more reason for me to avoid the AMA. Her birthday, then, would be 11/20/o9, for those of you who are keeping track.
Here then, in her honor, are Two Terrible Truths for our Times:
From Cupid, Inc.,quoted in World Magazine--"The shortest messages get almost the best absolute response rate, and the reply rate actually goes down as messages approach extreme length." And what is "extreme length", pray tell? "Apparently, after about 360 words...you start scaring people off. A message like that is the online equivalent of a face tattoo. Of your life story."
Uh-oh. Good thing I kissed dating goodbye! Pleeeeez ,Mr.( Neil) Postman! Have you got a letter, a letter fo' me???
My old scientific friend, Pascal, knew how to abbreviate hard truths. The following indicates one of the foundational goals of this blog:
"I do not admire the extreme of one virtue unless you show me at the same time the extreme of the opposite virtue. One shows one's greatness not by being at an extremity but by being simultaneously at two extremities and filling all the space in between."
More Post-men later. Rest your eyes and I will too.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
THE WORMWOOD! THE GALL!
"Take a look at this, Hobbes. Wouldn't you say this is a great drawing?
I mean, can you BELIEVE my teacher didn't like it?! She said it wasn't "serious"!
By golly, if this isn't serious art, then nothing is! Who set up Miss Wormwood up as an artbiter of aesthetics, anyway?
This is a beautiful work of power and depth!"
Tiger: "It's a stegosaurus in a rocket ship, right?"
Calvin: See? YOU understood it!
Et tu (the tiger's goal, by the way) dear reader?
I mean, can you BELIEVE my teacher didn't like it?! She said it wasn't "serious"!
By golly, if this isn't serious art, then nothing is! Who set up Miss Wormwood up as an artbiter of aesthetics, anyway?
This is a beautiful work of power and depth!"
Tiger: "It's a stegosaurus in a rocket ship, right?"
Calvin: See? YOU understood it!
Et tu (the tiger's goal, by the way) dear reader?
Saturday, November 7, 2009
ACHTUNG,BABY!!!
Since there may come new readers to bassocontinuosch, I might encourage newbys to scroll back to the first posts for some background. I expect this blog to build on certain foundations, and a certain sequence may be necessary to follow. Stories can be taken up in midstream (c.f."Pilgrim at Tinker's Creek" by Annie Dillard) but narratives may become tiresome and pointless especially if,"The foundations be destroyed."
Two suggestions to prepare for the future:
Google these! "The Four Levels of Happpiness" of Robert Spitzer and a list of Freud's ego defense mechanisms--the first site I found was Psychology 101 which is nicely succinct.
"No one expects the Jesuit Inquisition!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Two suggestions to prepare for the future:
Google these! "The Four Levels of Happpiness" of Robert Spitzer and a list of Freud's ego defense mechanisms--the first site I found was Psychology 101 which is nicely succinct.
"No one expects the Jesuit Inquisition!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US
Time for a Walt Kelly tribute, I believe.
The quote noted above is hopefully familiar to almost everyone. However I doubt that too many young readers have any familiarity with the comic strip "Pogo." Walt Kelly was a staple amongst college students just as much as Calvin and Hobbes was 10 years ago but with much more imaginative use of language especially a type of Southern glossolalia. T.S. Eliot was said to have all the Pogo cartoon books sent to England as soon as they were published. Neologisms abounded and I at times find myself floating into this dialect when I am talking to patients. Not good.
I suppose the things that struck me and many others was Walt Kelly's gentleness in poking fun at politics and religion, and his attempts to be as fair as possible, noting the foibles of both sides of contention. As such, it failed as a political cartoon, and, like its predecessor, Krazy Kat, which was also a favorite of Bill Watterson's,it never gained much more than a small but dedicated audience but it
was certainly popular with most of the contemporary journalists. While he poked fun at religious hypocrites like Deacon Mushrat, one got the sense that Kelly really loved these weak characters who would finally join the group for "mo' pie." He would also go after some famous characters on the left, such as the cowbirds who were supposed to be Communists. The characters he was more serious about tended to be on the side of the Jack Acid Society but the members of this august asylum were really just mean-spirited opportunists who wanted nothing more than to shoot up the place and fill the swamp with doom, gloom and paranoia as purblind Molester Mole seemed to both seek and prophesy. And yet...........
My favorite character was probably Porkypine, whose pessimism went far beyond my own and yet, like most porcupines, he was able to stand firm without resorting to dogmatism--or idealism, either one. On Christmas Eve he and Pogo would gather up presents, go to the members of the Jack Acid Society while they were asleep, yell "Merry Christmas!" And run home like mad. At one point PorkyPine humphs,, ".... a highly embellished gesture. Think it'll do anybody any good?" to which Pogo replies, "oh maybe 'jes only us." (There's that enemy again!)
Certainly turning the other cheek like this is highly atypical,not instinctual, and almost impossible to do without outside help, and I suspect that Kelly had more than he realized, at the very least some long-standing and well known if rarely practiced ideas about charity and loving your enemies. I think however that centering on one's own responsibility without casting aspersions on the rest of the world, and "considering others better than yourself," is something also found in books like Walker Percy's, "Lost in the Cosmos". Percy makes the point that we can easily and instantly size up other people and even other planets but have almost no insight into ourselves. I believe that people are designed to be complementary rather than primarily competitive, at least by the time we grow up. It is certainly obvious that liberals and conservatives need each other almost as much as life itself, if for no other reason than each provides an enemy for the other.I even suspect that neither one could exist without the other. Kelly tried to rise above the fray and I think he would be appalled at the Descent of Man that has accompanied our prosperity and material progress. Wisdom today is far less evident and can be taken far less for granted in our current Red Blue incarnation.(Emphasis on the Carnation part--Instant Judgement)
For the sake of clarity, and in the spirit of the above, and without casting stones at those who readily take sides or even demonize designated enemies/targets, I would like to say a little bit more about what I meant by not using this blog to get mired down in politics/religion. I combine these two words because my observations of the last 40 or so years suggest to me that these two phenomena are "joined at the hip." Religion does not require even a taste of the Divine. Atheism is not anti-religion it is simply one of many religions. In my brother's hometown there is a "Freedom from Religion Foundation". Many individuals have also expressed the desire for a "Freedom from Politics Foundation", which probably would often express itself in the terms: "Throw the rascals out!" (I notice that they never include themselves as rascals, so I would presume that they want them selves thrown, "in.")
It has been my opinion for several decades that politics/religion are fairly good but somewhat feeble tools under the right circumstances and depending on the motives of the individual or group, for ordering society and culture. Sometimes it is more politics and sometimes more religion, but both of these tools are what I would call not only competitively-based but "works-righteous," and necessarily include an elaborate meritocracy and what George Orwell called, "groupthink." I love the sequence in Monty Python's "Life of Brian," in which Brian the captive and very unwilling messiah shouts to the crowd gathered around him, "You've got to think for yourselves! You are all individuals!"
And with delicious irony, the crowd shouts back in unison, "Yes! We are all individuals!" After which a still small voice pipes up, "I'm not."
Lest someone believes I am simply advocating some type of blind or vague spirituality, that really is not the point. The universe is full of Content and does operate by laws, some obvious, some not. Nor am I advocating some type of mythological or hypothetical objectivity, something Walt Kelly certainly would not have claimed for himself. Nor will it do to retreat into Scientism with all of its premature conclusions and virtual absolutes. No, really I am re-attempting a type of agnosticism, which the devotional writer Oswald Chambers said was a kind of a necessity for the brains of people who know far too little--which would include all of us. One most obvious applications is a-Gnosticism, something Dan Brown needs desperately, not to mention a good ghostwriter, no pun intended -- these wordythings just happen!
Religion and politics are certainly based on certain aspects of human need, emotion,rationalizing, and the obvious need of the male intellect in particular to "rise and conquer!" The "testosterone wash" which little boys experience in the first trimester and which differentiates their brain also significantly limits their brains and for the most part men can only listen to one conversation at a time and only use one side of their brain at a time. Women can process up to seven conversations at a time and have a much larger corpus callosum, that is much more white matter, from before birth. In other words, men making rules and regulations is not going to go away. We men esp. spend more time arguing about the rules than actually playing a game of anything. However to ask the ladys' Peggy Lee question, "Is that all there is?" , which probably originated under her Christmas tree as it did in our house 50 or more years ago, simply begs the next set of questions which so far are mostly unanswered and possibly unanswerable. Certainly for science esp. mathematics and physics to be consistent in the face of new-(?)-information, they and we cannot with any assurance at any point say, "That's All Folks!" However that doesn't prevent us from asserting otherwise in order to win the day and defeat the turkeys. Or "cockroaches," according to many of the Hutu persuasion.
Speaking of Rwanda, it is currently one of the few nations in Africa that is actually making economic progress because its president has been insisting on an organized program of, yes, forgiveness both between individuals and groups. The New Yorker ran a piece on this recently but of course doubts that it will work. I love the New Yorker, however it does make a habit of damning by faint praise when it comes to people doing things unfamiliar to their inner circles. As a response to which,I think of T.S. Eliot's "The Cocktail Party." A drama which I can recommend to almost any thinking individual.
So when I talk of not getting bogged down on the blog with the usual political/religious go round, I am certainly not talking about disengaging myself from philosophy nor do I want to neglect to address the most basic assumptions we all must make. Presuppositional thinking is either done or neglected but it cannot be removed. Just sitting in your chair requires a large measure of faith; just try to visualize how much empty space there is between even the larger particles! If a proton was the size of a basketball, the nearest electron would be the size of a hardball -- 2 miles away! That would be the densest possible configuration, by the way. Under these circumstances, most of what is lacking in me/us would be the Will--a la Kierkegaard-- to peek under our various rocks that we throw at one another. No vows of perfection on my part and I would certainly invite correction when I get off on what I call, musically speaking, "The Rude Rabbit Rondo, "something that is quite the rage these days and makes quite a bit of money for Wal-Mart as well. On that Note: "So Long until tomorrow! To Infinity--and Beyond!"
The quote noted above is hopefully familiar to almost everyone. However I doubt that too many young readers have any familiarity with the comic strip "Pogo." Walt Kelly was a staple amongst college students just as much as Calvin and Hobbes was 10 years ago but with much more imaginative use of language especially a type of Southern glossolalia. T.S. Eliot was said to have all the Pogo cartoon books sent to England as soon as they were published. Neologisms abounded and I at times find myself floating into this dialect when I am talking to patients. Not good.
I suppose the things that struck me and many others was Walt Kelly's gentleness in poking fun at politics and religion, and his attempts to be as fair as possible, noting the foibles of both sides of contention. As such, it failed as a political cartoon, and, like its predecessor, Krazy Kat, which was also a favorite of Bill Watterson's,it never gained much more than a small but dedicated audience but it
was certainly popular with most of the contemporary journalists. While he poked fun at religious hypocrites like Deacon Mushrat, one got the sense that Kelly really loved these weak characters who would finally join the group for "mo' pie." He would also go after some famous characters on the left, such as the cowbirds who were supposed to be Communists. The characters he was more serious about tended to be on the side of the Jack Acid Society but the members of this august asylum were really just mean-spirited opportunists who wanted nothing more than to shoot up the place and fill the swamp with doom, gloom and paranoia as purblind Molester Mole seemed to both seek and prophesy. And yet...........
My favorite character was probably Porkypine, whose pessimism went far beyond my own and yet, like most porcupines, he was able to stand firm without resorting to dogmatism--or idealism, either one. On Christmas Eve he and Pogo would gather up presents, go to the members of the Jack Acid Society while they were asleep, yell "Merry Christmas!" And run home like mad. At one point PorkyPine humphs,, ".... a highly embellished gesture. Think it'll do anybody any good?" to which Pogo replies, "oh maybe 'jes only us." (There's that enemy again!)
Certainly turning the other cheek like this is highly atypical,not instinctual, and almost impossible to do without outside help, and I suspect that Kelly had more than he realized, at the very least some long-standing and well known if rarely practiced ideas about charity and loving your enemies. I think however that centering on one's own responsibility without casting aspersions on the rest of the world, and "considering others better than yourself," is something also found in books like Walker Percy's, "Lost in the Cosmos". Percy makes the point that we can easily and instantly size up other people and even other planets but have almost no insight into ourselves. I believe that people are designed to be complementary rather than primarily competitive, at least by the time we grow up. It is certainly obvious that liberals and conservatives need each other almost as much as life itself, if for no other reason than each provides an enemy for the other.I even suspect that neither one could exist without the other. Kelly tried to rise above the fray and I think he would be appalled at the Descent of Man that has accompanied our prosperity and material progress. Wisdom today is far less evident and can be taken far less for granted in our current Red Blue incarnation.(Emphasis on the Carnation part--Instant Judgement)
For the sake of clarity, and in the spirit of the above, and without casting stones at those who readily take sides or even demonize designated enemies/targets, I would like to say a little bit more about what I meant by not using this blog to get mired down in politics/religion. I combine these two words because my observations of the last 40 or so years suggest to me that these two phenomena are "joined at the hip." Religion does not require even a taste of the Divine. Atheism is not anti-religion it is simply one of many religions. In my brother's hometown there is a "Freedom from Religion Foundation". Many individuals have also expressed the desire for a "Freedom from Politics Foundation", which probably would often express itself in the terms: "Throw the rascals out!" (I notice that they never include themselves as rascals, so I would presume that they want them selves thrown, "in.")
It has been my opinion for several decades that politics/religion are fairly good but somewhat feeble tools under the right circumstances and depending on the motives of the individual or group, for ordering society and culture. Sometimes it is more politics and sometimes more religion, but both of these tools are what I would call not only competitively-based but "works-righteous," and necessarily include an elaborate meritocracy and what George Orwell called, "groupthink." I love the sequence in Monty Python's "Life of Brian," in which Brian the captive and very unwilling messiah shouts to the crowd gathered around him, "You've got to think for yourselves! You are all individuals!"
And with delicious irony, the crowd shouts back in unison, "Yes! We are all individuals!" After which a still small voice pipes up, "I'm not."
Lest someone believes I am simply advocating some type of blind or vague spirituality, that really is not the point. The universe is full of Content and does operate by laws, some obvious, some not. Nor am I advocating some type of mythological or hypothetical objectivity, something Walt Kelly certainly would not have claimed for himself. Nor will it do to retreat into Scientism with all of its premature conclusions and virtual absolutes. No, really I am re-attempting a type of agnosticism, which the devotional writer Oswald Chambers said was a kind of a necessity for the brains of people who know far too little--which would include all of us. One most obvious applications is a-Gnosticism, something Dan Brown needs desperately, not to mention a good ghostwriter, no pun intended -- these wordythings just happen!
Religion and politics are certainly based on certain aspects of human need, emotion,rationalizing, and the obvious need of the male intellect in particular to "rise and conquer!" The "testosterone wash" which little boys experience in the first trimester and which differentiates their brain also significantly limits their brains and for the most part men can only listen to one conversation at a time and only use one side of their brain at a time. Women can process up to seven conversations at a time and have a much larger corpus callosum, that is much more white matter, from before birth. In other words, men making rules and regulations is not going to go away. We men esp. spend more time arguing about the rules than actually playing a game of anything. However to ask the ladys' Peggy Lee question, "Is that all there is?" , which probably originated under her Christmas tree as it did in our house 50 or more years ago, simply begs the next set of questions which so far are mostly unanswered and possibly unanswerable. Certainly for science esp. mathematics and physics to be consistent in the face of new-(?)-information, they and we cannot with any assurance at any point say, "That's All Folks!" However that doesn't prevent us from asserting otherwise in order to win the day and defeat the turkeys. Or "cockroaches," according to many of the Hutu persuasion.
Speaking of Rwanda, it is currently one of the few nations in Africa that is actually making economic progress because its president has been insisting on an organized program of, yes, forgiveness both between individuals and groups. The New Yorker ran a piece on this recently but of course doubts that it will work. I love the New Yorker, however it does make a habit of damning by faint praise when it comes to people doing things unfamiliar to their inner circles. As a response to which,I think of T.S. Eliot's "The Cocktail Party." A drama which I can recommend to almost any thinking individual.
So when I talk of not getting bogged down on the blog with the usual political/religious go round, I am certainly not talking about disengaging myself from philosophy nor do I want to neglect to address the most basic assumptions we all must make. Presuppositional thinking is either done or neglected but it cannot be removed. Just sitting in your chair requires a large measure of faith; just try to visualize how much empty space there is between even the larger particles! If a proton was the size of a basketball, the nearest electron would be the size of a hardball -- 2 miles away! That would be the densest possible configuration, by the way. Under these circumstances, most of what is lacking in me/us would be the Will--a la Kierkegaard-- to peek under our various rocks that we throw at one another. No vows of perfection on my part and I would certainly invite correction when I get off on what I call, musically speaking, "The Rude Rabbit Rondo, "something that is quite the rage these days and makes quite a bit of money for Wal-Mart as well. On that Note: "So Long until tomorrow! To Infinity--and Beyond!"
Friday, October 23, 2009
On! On! Pozzo saith
I thought about starting this blog with a bibliography but it got to be much too long. Nonetheless it should be said that there were numerous inspirations for me to start writing online. For my 60th birthday I received the gift of many books, very appropriately for a bibliophile who has a book under his arm almost always. Anyway, I would like to knowledge and recommend without reservation the following list:
Theater and Identity in Imperial Russia, by Catherine A. Schuler better-known as my sister. This is somewhat of a sequel to her first book, Women in Russian Theater. Although these are academic books, I have found many parallels to our own culture in the times to which she refers. She teaches at University of Maryland.
Making the Good Life Last, by Michael A. Schuler, also known as my brother, which is somewhat like an extended essay on various aspects of sustainability. He is the senior pastor at First Unitarian-Universalist in Madison Wisconsin, a very large congregation. He has also directed a large addition to the Frank Lloyd Wright original building, meticulously designed to be very green but also blend into the original design. Well done!
My parents, CW Schuler and Nancy Schuler have also contributed, once again, to my reading list. My father sent me "Armageddon", by Max Hastings which is a detailed recounting of the last year of World War II, in which he actually participated in eastern Germany and Czechoslovakia. He has also written, "Winner Take All,"a novel about this era and this location, in a true existentialist style. My mother sent me something, "and now for something completely different," from a more female perspective which is a new and excellent biography of Flannery O'Connor, entitled, simply, "Flannery". I have read all of Flannery's stories and whatever letters in prose I could find and the reader will probably see various references" pertaining to her works in future posts
My Wonderful Wife, Flo, got me, at the suggestion of my wonderful daughter-in-law, Grace, a book which Grace read under the tutelage of a Kierkegaard scholar; this would be . "Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing" (I must add that Dragonspeak really did not want to do this title. Go figure!)The title pretty much says it all however I am finding this to be a good book to read along with "The Sickness unto Death" by the same author. More about Kierkegaard as we go along but this is an author that I found incomprehensible in college.
I would be remiss to fail to mention the work of another family member, Daniel William Schuler who self published, by hand, with artwork, a collection of his poetry from college days, "Out of the Mouths of Dragons" you will not find this on Google or Amazon.com but it certainly is available by request!
Still another family member has a thesis on Augustine and his influence on W.H. Auden. This would be Stephen Schuler and he is currently seeking a publisher. Hopefully that will become available in the near future. I will also be making references to this work or at least the concepts therein. The frequent references to various kinds of dualisms is probably going to be an emerging theme of bassocontinuo.
Just an additional thought: the basso continuo line often makes very little sense and is not always pleasing to the ear, by itself. Practicing this line, for instance a bass or tenor line on the recorder, is always more difficult and less satisfying than playing the melody. The song is ended but the melody goes on; but the basso continuo does not continue on, it just ends, and very few people can remember it except for possibly professional musicians. I would say that if this blog seems discordant please recall that there is a melody, which I can hear, but others may not. If you like, provide your own melody line! There are endless possibilities. At times I might sound like Pascal and at other times like Bozo the clown but once again, Patience! Patience is one of the four cardinal virtues of sustainability, according to my brother's book. The other three are, practicing prudence, paying attention, and staying put. I certainly am in favor of all four! These basso continuo lines, however, do not play well in the cinema etc. but then again, entertainment is or should be a smaller part of our life than some of these "boring" matters which should be of critical interest/crucial concern. More on all of this to follow, of course. Thank you for reading this and your input is solicited.
Theater and Identity in Imperial Russia, by Catherine A. Schuler better-known as my sister. This is somewhat of a sequel to her first book, Women in Russian Theater. Although these are academic books, I have found many parallels to our own culture in the times to which she refers. She teaches at University of Maryland.
Making the Good Life Last, by Michael A. Schuler, also known as my brother, which is somewhat like an extended essay on various aspects of sustainability. He is the senior pastor at First Unitarian-Universalist in Madison Wisconsin, a very large congregation. He has also directed a large addition to the Frank Lloyd Wright original building, meticulously designed to be very green but also blend into the original design. Well done!
My parents, CW Schuler and Nancy Schuler have also contributed, once again, to my reading list. My father sent me "Armageddon", by Max Hastings which is a detailed recounting of the last year of World War II, in which he actually participated in eastern Germany and Czechoslovakia. He has also written, "Winner Take All,"a novel about this era and this location, in a true existentialist style. My mother sent me something, "and now for something completely different," from a more female perspective which is a new and excellent biography of Flannery O'Connor, entitled, simply, "Flannery". I have read all of Flannery's stories and whatever letters in prose I could find and the reader will probably see various references" pertaining to her works in future posts
My Wonderful Wife, Flo, got me, at the suggestion of my wonderful daughter-in-law, Grace, a book which Grace read under the tutelage of a Kierkegaard scholar; this would be . "Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing" (I must add that Dragonspeak really did not want to do this title. Go figure!)The title pretty much says it all however I am finding this to be a good book to read along with "The Sickness unto Death" by the same author. More about Kierkegaard as we go along but this is an author that I found incomprehensible in college.
I would be remiss to fail to mention the work of another family member, Daniel William Schuler who self published, by hand, with artwork, a collection of his poetry from college days, "Out of the Mouths of Dragons" you will not find this on Google or Amazon.com but it certainly is available by request!
Still another family member has a thesis on Augustine and his influence on W.H. Auden. This would be Stephen Schuler and he is currently seeking a publisher. Hopefully that will become available in the near future. I will also be making references to this work or at least the concepts therein. The frequent references to various kinds of dualisms is probably going to be an emerging theme of bassocontinuo.
Just an additional thought: the basso continuo line often makes very little sense and is not always pleasing to the ear, by itself. Practicing this line, for instance a bass or tenor line on the recorder, is always more difficult and less satisfying than playing the melody. The song is ended but the melody goes on; but the basso continuo does not continue on, it just ends, and very few people can remember it except for possibly professional musicians. I would say that if this blog seems discordant please recall that there is a melody, which I can hear, but others may not. If you like, provide your own melody line! There are endless possibilities. At times I might sound like Pascal and at other times like Bozo the clown but once again, Patience! Patience is one of the four cardinal virtues of sustainability, according to my brother's book. The other three are, practicing prudence, paying attention, and staying put. I certainly am in favor of all four! These basso continuo lines, however, do not play well in the cinema etc. but then again, entertainment is or should be a smaller part of our life than some of these "boring" matters which should be of critical interest/crucial concern. More on all of this to follow, of course. Thank you for reading this and your input is solicited.
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