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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4 Feb '14 10:41:53 PM

Zak Smith artist's notebook

4 Feb '14 12:30:43 AM

'… the inheritor of divisions, divisions which it in turn complicates and extends.'

3 Feb '14 03:46:36 PM

'It considers itself a we, a space of trends…'

2 Feb '14 07:09:37 AM

(A special problem, coincidental thematics.)

1 Feb '14 07:47:55 PM

There is a 'we' spoken in agreement, a 'we' used in seeking agreement, a 'we' used to define with whom and in what agreement shall consist. And there is a use of 'we' to declare that one is with someone else: what Goffman calls being part of 'a with'. But how do (and can) two people alone together say 'we'? (And how is that like, or unlike, a solitary's use of 'I'? Or saying 'I' to oneself? Why do they say 'we' and not just 'you' and 'I'? Do they?)

1 Feb '14 07:30:51 PM

A counterpart for 5.62's 'language which alone I understand': 'that language which we alone understand'.

1 Feb '14 07:27:42 PM

'… to speak about the will in so far as it is the subject of ethical attributes': so, to really communicate the purest joys, the most personal sufferings (the most personal dimension of them), in their heights or depths?

1 Feb '14 06:32:20 PM

'… the feeling of owning a publication…'

1 Feb '14 06:21:16 PM

Good Samaritan Nones