Rorschach Test
29 Tuesday Dec 2020
Posted Trips
in29 Tuesday Dec 2020
Posted Trips
in28 Monday Dec 2020
Posted Poetry
inTags
You made me a hybrid face
Half flower half roots
Loosen the cracks
And dislocate my sephirot.
The shir hashirim of your chest
Draw a path
Smashes the jaws
Punctures the ground.
Your mouth tears the universe apart
Your hand is rooted in my thoughts
And gushes like a spring.
This is how I see you
With a bird that grows in your left hip
Your auto genesis being born indefinitely
24 Thursday Dec 2020
Posted Memory
inTags
19 Saturday Dec 2020
Posted Memory, Uncategorized
inChissà, forse il fascino del viaggiare sta in quest’incanto, in questa paradossale nostalgia del futuro. E’ la forza che ci fa immaginare – o illudere – di fare un viaggio e trovare, in una stazione sconosciuta, qualcosa che potrebbe cambiare la nostra vita.Marcello Mastroianni (28 settembre 1924, Fontana Liri – 19 dicembre 1996, Parigi)
13 Sunday Dec 2020
I met you a long time ago
It was already so, from the first day
The space swivelled accelerating
The enormous masses were born in an instant
The gaping sun, the shadowy friends lavished
How many years now?
Since then I have shortened my days
I have dispersed the time of the origin
The elongated shadows occupied my night
I still let the mists graze the future with my back turned
What I have read heard seen merge, move away a little more
I was indifferent to catastrophes, I smiled at nothing
I drew portraits of the smell of corridors without a door
You did tear off my second skin under a transparent hood
To see the multitude faces of me
Asking:
Be the holder of wings
13 Sunday Dec 2020
The face is the most human of things. Man has a face and not simply a muzzle or a front, because he dwells in openness, because in his face he exposes himself and communicates. This is why the face is the place of politics. Our unpolitical time does not want to see its own face, it keeps it at a distance, masks and covers it. There must be no more faces, but only numbers and figures. The tyrant, too, is faceless…[…]For us, alone, there can be no salvation: there is salvation because there are others. Giorgio Agamben
11 Friday Dec 2020
Posted Shabbes, Uncategorized
in10 Thursday Dec 2020
Posted BIG DATA
inTags
Robots now have our voice. Tomorrow, as a precaution, they will speak a language that will be untranslatable to us. From up there, access to information is total, instantaneous, flawless, where everyone, like a small cartographer, is the target. Categories and properties, likes, contacts, finances, identity. Transparency and confidentiality – for a world of law where privacy becomes an anomaly. Ignore your past, enter here, your future; the rest of the time reduced to one unique model. The sidereal space no longer needs the eyes, advancing in the light nothing can ever happen again.
09 Wednesday Dec 2020
Posted Equal
inTags
Eliza M. Butler, Friedrich Kreutzer, Heidegger, Plato, Protagoras, Thomas Sowell, William F. Buckley
A distinction must be made between the characteristics of any hegemonic culture, and the Western culture. Since the colonial era, Western culture is now ubiquitous, and therefore transparent to our eyes; We look out of it, and see it as a standard for all. Protagoras was quoted by Plato: “Man is the standard for all”; This is the motto of Western humanism. But in fact, for a long time Western humanism has meant to say: “Western humanism is the standard for all.” The reason for this seems to be that the tradition of the West, the one that began in Greece, is the winning tradition, and is now the hegemonic culture. For a long time now we can no longer look at Western people through the gaze of the Monogolean Khan when he met Marco Polo and his men, and saw in them pale-skinned people wearing strange clothes. As European peoples became the dominant force on earth in the modern age, and largely suppressed any significant force that developed another thought tradition, modernity and Westernity are now intertwined.
We usually do not refer to Westernity as one spiritual tradition of many kinds. At most, Christianity (especially Catholicism) is treated as a spiritual tradition – but it is relatively easy. A more complicated challenge is to treat secularism, humanism and the Enlightenment as a tradition – just as Native American religions are treated. It seems to me that this is how Western metaphysics is exposed to Heidegger when he examines it in “Overcoming Metaphysics”:
המטאפיזיקה, בכל דמויותיה ובכל שלביה ההיסטוריים, היא גזירת גורל יחידה במינה, אם גם אולי הכרחית למערב. והיא התנאי המוקדם לשלטונו הפלנטרי.
(תרגום: אדם טננבאום)
“Metaphysics, in all its figures and in all its historical stages, is a one-of-a-kind fate, though perhaps necessary for the West. And is the precondition for his planetary rule.” (Adam Tennenbaum).
The story told in the cave parable gives a look at what is actually happening, now and in the future, in the history of human existence in which the Western seal is imprinted: man thinks in the spirit of the essence of truth as the correctness of the image of everything.
In the end, there is no choice but to return to the Greeks; But you have to read them like the Germans. The Germans, argued Eliza M. Butler of England, imitated the Greeks “as enslaved slaves,” and the degree of Greek influence on them was greater than on any other European nation. But German Greece is not Greece of law and geometry, but Greece of orgies and phallic rites. The philologist Friedrich Kreutzer succeeded in proving that Greece is an offshoot of the Orient, and all its myths originate in the East. Hence the core of Westernity is Oriental. From this position, the German tradition competed for the definition of Westernity, mostly from an inferior position, which led to wild outbursts of violence.
Hence, a comment is requested regarding the same “German tradition”. If the German tradition in understanding Western culture, as described here, does exist, contemporary German culture is not the most convenient site to expose it. Germany is very German, and yet alienates its Germanism. Germany, one might say, is afraid of its own shadow, that is, afraid of that shady German side facing the Enlightenment project. Most of the young Germans I knew did not want to hear the names of Heidegger, Junger, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, Schegel and Herder – all those thinkers identified with the “reactionary tradition of German romance.” In the language lessons of the Goethe Institute they will not be taught, their names will not be mentioned. In fact, even Goethe’s name is barely mentioned in the Goethe Institute: it’s much better to talk about football, business and the European Union.
Needless to say, it is no wonder that the “German tradition” is being treated with suspicion. In the demonstrations of the left in Germany, the slogan: “Torture-Murder-Deportation – Das ist deutsche Tradition!” (What can be translated as: “Torture-murder-mass exile – this is a German tradition!) While the French tradition of the Enlightenment came to a dead end, what I called here” German tradition “ended in catastrophe. Which developed within the framework of the German tradition, were largely eliminated after the defeat, this is because many of the last generation who had faith in this tradition dipped their hands to the elbows in Nazi politics.
And yet, there is nothing in the German tradition that is necessarily Nazi. Very little connection between the romantic poet Novalis and Adolf Eichmann, or between Caspar David Friedrich and Auschwitz. Hannah Arendt, followed by Zygmunt Bauman, have been good at showing that the extermination industry was a product of modernity and rationalism, far more than they scored from the mists of the German psyche.
In contrast, the German tradition is very creative and useful, and is especially necessary at the present moment. But its treasures are buried under the greatest disgrace in history. And the stain will not soon be erased.
09 Wednesday Dec 2020
Posted Uncategorized
in“The vanity of attributing to philosophy, and to the words of intellectuals, effects as immense as they are immediate seems to me to constitute the perfect example of what Schopenhauer called ‘the pedantic comic’, meaning by that the ridiculousness that we incur when we perform an action that is not included in its concept, such as horse in a theatre that would make dung. But if there are things that our philosophers, “modern” or “post-modern”, have in common beyond the conflicts between them, it is this overconfidence in the powers of discourse. A typical illusion of the reader, who can regard academic commentary as a political act or criticism of texts as a fact of resistance, and experience revolutions in the order of words like revolutions in the order of things. ” Pierre Bourdieu.
« La vanité d’attribuer à la philosophie, et aux propos des intellectuels, des effets aussi immenses qu’immédiats me paraît constituer l’exemple par excellence de ce que Schopenhauer appelait « le comique pédant », entendant par là le ridicule que l’on encourt lorsqu’on accomplit une action qui n’est pas comprise dans son concept, tel que le cheval de théâtre qui ferait du crottin. Or s’il y a des choses que nos philosophes, « modernes » ou « post-modernes », ont en commun par-delà les conflits qui les opposent, c’est cet excès de confiance dans les pouvoirs du discours. Illusion typique du lecteur, qui peut tenir le commentaire académique pour un acte politique ou la critique des textes pour un fait de résistance, et vivre les révolutions dans l’ordre des mots comme des révolutions dans l’ordre des choses. »
Pierre Bourdieu. Méditations Pascaliennes, Paris, Le Seuil, coll. Liber, 1997, p.10
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