josh blog

Ordinary language is all right.

One could divide humanity into two classes:
those who master a metaphor, and those who hold by a formula.
Those with a bent for both are too few, they do not comprise a class.

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10 Feb '13 03:04:15 AM

'I have had, you see, to resort more and more to very small, almost invisible pleasures, little extras… You've no idea how great one becomes with these little details, it's incredible how one grows.'

9 Feb '13 10:44:10 PM

You can get past it, rise above it, set it aside, forget about it, brush it off. The question is, when?

9 Feb '13 09:59:48 PM

Lend a hand, that's an ethic.

9 Feb '13 06:44:50 AM

'In particular, Nietzsche would have been very aware that inconsistencies can be explained away. Intellectuals are very good at this, partly because they're often trained in it; so when you try to insist on inconsistencies in their system of values, you get, not acknowledgement, but theologizing, and centuries of it.'

8 Feb '13 11:56:00 AM

'It is a joke—and yet the voice that carries it remains something new in rock 'n' roll, which is to say something new in postwar popular culture: a voice that denied all social facts, and in that denial affirmed that everything was possible.'

8 Feb '13 03:02:29 AM

Woman, late forties, at the counter of a Taco Bell: 'I've never been inside one of these before'.

6 Feb '13 11:46:34 PM

Who wouldn't like to be lighthearted?

5 Feb '13 10:27:19 PM

What it means depends.

5 Feb '13 08:08:25 AM

Some posts from 2012 related to my ongoing thinking about journal-keeping as part of philosophical practice:

Beginning

Buying a blank notebook. Meaning to keep a journal. Keeping a journal about keeping journals. Thoreau begins his journal. His multiple notebooks.

Some uses for journals

Recording everything (Robert Shields), new thoughts (Emerson), getting down the present day's work (Bugbee), practicing the waste-book method (Lichtenberg), grounding oneself (Sontag), preparatory studies (Musil), poet's 'biography' (Thoreau), writing an emerging self (Rilke's Malte Laurids Brigge), a record of joy (Thoreau), journal as an other (Thoreau), journal for the other (Dorothy Wordsworth), cultivating the life via the eye (Thoreau). A 'limited philosophical journal' (Cavell).

Technique and form

Sharon Cameron on questions, pictures, and illustrations in Thoreau's journal. Literariness of Thoreau's journal. Interest and occasion, occasion and context. Spiritual exercises. A journal-keeper's review. Returning as someone else. Bugbee on empty word-shells. 'Says I to myself' and remoteness. Thoughts allied to life. Barbara Packer on the blank spaces between Emerson's journal entries. Time and place in Thoreau's journal ('the year is a circle'). A journal's unknown plot. Its form liberates but exposes. Brecht on small works.

Journal-keepers' selves

A non-isolate self in Muir's Sierra. The Goncourts starting together, carrying on alone. The personal in Bugbee. Cameron on the self in Thoreau's journal. Buell on spirituality in Transcendentalist journals.

Hadot and Foucault

Why do Hadot and Foucault deny that self-writing is journal-keeping? Foucault on letters and notebooks (their addressees). Hadot reads Marcus Aurelius as addressing a universal audience. Where they disagree about the role of writing in practices of the self. Hadot and the finality of writing.