The Sublime & Beautiful vs. Reality

This blog is a record of one man's struggle to search for scientific, philosophical, and religious truth in the face of the limitations imposed on him by economics, psychology, and social conditioning; it is the philosophical outworking of everyday life in contrast to ideals and how it could have been.


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The chief aim of all investigations of the external world should be to discover the rational order and harmony which has been imposed on it by God
and which He revealed to us in the language of mathematics.
--Johannes Kepler

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Saturday, May 30, 2009

ORP: LeGuin's The Dispossessed & misc. observations about writing

In her book, Ursula uses the following few short paragraphs to describe the arrival of the main character, Dr. Shevek, as he steps foot on Urras:

...Now he and all the strangers around him were going down a covered ramp, all the voices very loud, words echoing off the walls. The clatter of voices thinned. A strange air touched his face.

He looked up, and as he stepped off the ramp onto the level ground he stumbled and nearly fell. He thought of death, in that gap between the beginning of a step and its completion, and at the end of the step he stood on a new earth.

A broad, grey evening was around him. Blue lights, mist blurred, burned far away across a foggy field. The air on his face and hands, in his nostrils and throat and lungs, was cool, damp, many-scented, mild. It was not strange. It was the air of the world from which his race had come, it was the air of home.


Not only does our author give good visual descriptions, but she also does not forget to utilize the other senses. The prose is rather unremarkable, but somehow in those few words above, we still get the moment, the impact of what it must be like to return to the planet of your ancestry, when you were born and raised on another.

Now that we have completed the first chapter, in chapter two, the author begins to flashback to earlier times in the life of the main protagonist. It's been awhile since I've read this novel (30yrs), so I have forgotten enough of the details of the story to be able to enjoy it again as if it were a new story. So far, I am still recommending this novel.

We, in our Literary Group have completed an unabridged edition of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables. It was work to get through the epic, but we are all better for our experience. May you all find truth in your reading experience, because if one has eyes to see, one can catch those glimpses of the sublime.

Novo Visum
Neue Ansicht.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

PING

Subspace transmission: stardate 2295 message reads:

I am a Decentralizationist, Techno-libertarian.

Stop.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Monday, May 18, 2009

Technos: Kindle DX


Now we're talkin', check it out:
Kindle DX

I would like to have one of these, but it's more important to get those debts paid off first. (But I so want one.)

Saturday, May 16, 2009

ORP: Ursula K. LeGuin's "The Dispossessed"

I first read Ursula's book, The Dispossessed, back in the mid to late 1970's. On the surface the story is about a physicist who discovers the Grand Unified Field Theory linking gravity, electromagnetism, and weak & strong nuclear force into one comprehensive theory. This scientist comes from a planet settled by a utopianist group and travels to the main planet that this planet orbits to visit other scientists etc. One does expect there to be some socio-political ideas explored in this book, but I was surprised at how philosophical and deep the novel gets right from the beginning of the story. The planet the scientist is from has as it's governmental form an Anarcho-syndicalist construct. Anarchism, in its theoretical form, is a very close cousin to Libertarianism and now that I am reading this novel to my son, Sam, I am re-reading the story for myself and I am finding the concepts in this novel resonating with my views on a number of topics.

Here is a great summary of this novel from another blogger.

Here is how the story opens (emphasis mine):

There was a wall. It did not look important. It was built of uncut rocks roughly mortared. An adult could look right over it, and even a child could climb it. Where it crossed the roadway, instead of having a gate it degenerated into mere geometry, a line, an idea of boundary. But the idea was real. It was important. For seven generations there had been nothing in the world more important than that wall.
Like all walls it was ambiguous, two-faced. What was inside it and what was outside it depended upon which side of it you were on.
Looked at from one side, the wall enclosed a barren sixty-acre field called the Port of Anarres. On the field there were...


Thus begins the novel. Perhaps all the concepts in the book are obvious to some, but I think that everyone should read the story as a springboard for meaningful discussion about the many ideas represented in the novel.

Novo Visum,
Neue Ansicht.

Saturday, May 02, 2009

W: FW: TASion: Snapshots of the first mission at Earth0

Our warp drive rebuild being tested at our observation station on the third planet is here represented by the station manager giving the engage command to a warp drive static test.

W: FW: TASion

In the barn of this remote homestead is the hiding place for our landing craft.


In a few hours I have the opportunity to enjoy my great books literature group. This constitutes the second to last meeting before we have completed the Unabridged Les Misérables (1450-some-odd pages). I have slowed down in my other reading projects, but I have been developing details for a Traveller Campaign; to this end, I have created a blog just for the game.