Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Review: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson

Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Paglia looks back at the Nietzsche view of a world dichotomy of Apollonian and Dionysian halves to enlarge the Dionysian part to admit a feminine side; mysterious, murky, and moist. This feels like a valid advancement on Nietzsche and even makes old Friedrich seem sexist or at least narrow-minded in retrospect. This also sexualizes Paglia's arguments to extremes that I can't always follow, such as "The beautiful boy is homosexuality’s greatest contribution to western culture" and other sweeping generalizations. While this work came out in 199o it seems rooted in the 18th Century of English literature: Oscar Wilde, Coleridge, Emily Dickinson, etc. While Paglia is obvious aware of popular culture: she mentions The Rolling Stones a few times. This includes with her excitement and extreme adjectives:

Rock music is normally a darkly daemonic mode. The Rolling Stones, the greatest rock band, are heirs of stormy Coleridge.


However, stuck a century ago she misses opportunities to explain girlish hair bands and Mad Max reflecting society's mass fascination with homosexuality.

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Monday, December 30, 2019

Review: Stealing Buddha's Dinner

Stealing Buddha's Dinner Stealing Buddha's Dinner by Bich Minh Nguyen
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Insightful yet even poetic metaphor and memory pervades this memoir from a shining light of a debut book. The author's recollection of life in America following feeling Vietnam features references to copious reading and it seems to have improved the author's prose powers. Aside from the writing quality the life itself is fascinating: the difficulties of individuating toward adulthood under a distant stepmom, cruel schoolmates, and the confusing temptations of American consumerism. Nguyen struggles with understanding herself and putting together an identity from her heritage and her home while unknowingly moving toward an unexpected reunion.

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Friday, December 27, 2019

Review: Christ in Relation to Lucifer and Ahriman

Christ in Relation to Lucifer and Ahriman Christ in Relation to Lucifer and Ahriman by Rudolf Steiner
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Steiner's Christian mysticism bringing Ahriman from antiquity into a relationship with Christ seems a stunning and bold suggestion for today. I believe his ideas are presented in this sculpture. It seems like has a connection to a remote past and draws upon legends and myths more than The Bible. This suggests a fatalistic need for Europe and Asia (Russia, etc.) to meet in predestined struggle. Perhaps at the time, this helped make sense of WW I.

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Monday, December 23, 2019

Review: The Portable Nietzsche

The Portable Nietzsche The Portable Nietzsche by Friedrich Nietzsche
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is the third time I have read this anthology. That last time was around 1990. It is worth reading again. But now the cover is gone, and the first pages have drifted away. Over the years I have, of course, I have read other Nietzsche in other editions, but nothing has ever risen to the level of translator and editor Kaufmann’s insights, notes, and arrangement. Even this could be improved by me. I would like more help as I read and Nietzsche refers to contemporary events and personages like David Strauss, etc. Also, this particular collection is Thus Spoke Zarathustra with assorted other works. I think that 1883 could have been trimmed down in the excerpt and a few more letters and aphorisms thrown in and that would be better. Speaking of the “aphoristic” (learned that adjective from Kaufmann) over the years I have been moving away from the radical provocations of Thus Spoke Zarathustra and The Antichrist to these insightful, witty aphorisms that I see as a middle period. Those two works I see in the third act with the curtain opening on the Wagner love and the Greek scholar’s dichotomy of the Apollonian and Dionysian.

They are a bit more clearly aimed, while the latter works are not exactly Nostradamus in perplexing obscurity. All that hallucinogenic metaphor probably explains how Nazi theorists and other anti-Semite thinkers believe there is some basis for their worldview here. Kaufmann points out some spots that are quicksand for the deluded despite Nietzsche being overtly anti-anti-Semite (he actually respects Jews for Spinoza and more), anti-party, and anti-nationalistic as in this note:

Being nationalistic in the sense in which it is now demanded by public opinion would, it seems to me, be for us who are more spiritual not mere insipidity but dishonesty, a deliberate deadening of our better will and conscience.

Of course, if his sister had predeceased him, maybe none of that association would have come about:

LETTER TO HIS SISTER
Christmas 1887

…You have committed one of the greatest stupidities- for yourself and for me! Your association with an anti-Semitic chief expresses a foreignness to my whole way of life which fills me again and again with ire or melancholy… It is a matter of honor with me to be absolutely clean and unequivocal in relation to AntiSemitism, namely, opposed to it, as I am in my writings. I have recently been persecuted with letters and AntiSemitic Correspondence Sheets. My disgust with this party (which would like the benefit of my name only too well!) is as pronounced as possible…

I am unable to do anything against it, that the name of Zarathustra is used in every Anti-Semitic Correspondence Sheet, has almost made me sick several times…


Essentially, Nietzsche is furiously individual with warnings for all that fear the individual:

The eulogists of work. Behind the glorification of "work" and the tireless talk of the "blessings of work" I find the same thought as behind the praise of impersonal activity for the public benefit: the fear of everything individual. At bottom, one now feels when confronted with work-and what is invariably meant is relentless industry from early till late-that such work is the best police, that it keeps everybody in harness and powerfully obstructs the development of reason, of covetousness, of the desire for independence. For it uses up a tremendous amount of nervous energy and takes it away from reflection, brooding, dreaming, worry, love, and hatred; it always sets a small goal before one's eyes and permits easy and regular satisfactions. In that way a society in which the members continually work hard will have more security: and security is now adored as the supreme goddess. And now horrors! it is precisely the "worker" who has become dangerous. "Dangerous individuals are swarming all around. And behind them, the danger of dangers: the individual.

- The Dawn (1881)


Or, put more succinctly:

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- The Dawn (1881)


Really eternal recurrence and even ressentiment I find more interesting than profound. The whole beyond good and evil idea I find more worth mulling on, as is alluded to here:

Of all evil I deem you capable: therefore I want the good from you. Verily, I have often laughed at the weaklings who thought themselves good because they had no claws.

- Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883)


and

What is done out of love always occurs beyond good and evil.

- Beyond Good and Evil (1886)


Then we go onto this meat to chew on:

My demand upon the philosopher is known, that he take his stand beyond good and evil and leave the illusion of moral judgment beneath himself. This demand follows from an insight which I was the first to formulate: that there are altogether no moral facts. Moral judgments agree with religious ones in believing in realities which are no realities. Morality is merely an interpretation of certain phenomena-more precisely, a misinterpretation. Moral judgments, like religious ones, belong to a stage of ignorance at which the very concept of the real and the distinction between what is real and imaginary, are still lacking; thus "truth," at this stage, designates all sorts of things which we today call "imaginings." Moral judgments are therefore never to be taken literally: so understood, they always contain mere absurdity. Semeiotically, however, they remain invaluable: they reveal, at least for those who know, the most valuable realities of cultures and inwardnesses which did not know enough to "understand" themselves. Morality is mere sign language, mere symptomatology: one must know what it is all about to be able to profit from it.

- Twilight of the Idols (1888)


And then this which intrigues me as Buddhism has since I was a teen:

That the strong races of northern Europe did not reject the Christian God certainly does no credit to their religious genius-not to speak of their taste. There is no excuse whatever for their failure to dispose of such a sickly and senile product of decadence. But a curse lies upon them for this failure: they have absorbed sickness, old age, and contradiction into all their instincts and since then they have not created another god. Almost two thousand years-and not a single new god! But still, as if his existence were justified, as if he represented the ultimate and the maximum of the god-creating power, of the creator spiritus in man, this pitiful god of Christian monotono-theism! …

I hope that my condemnation of Christianity has not involved me in any injustice to a related religion with an even larger number of adherents: Buddhism. Both belong together as nihilistic religions-they are religions of decadence-but they differ most remarkably. For being in a position now to compare them, the critic of Christianity is profoundly grateful to the students of India.

Buddhism is a hundred times more realistic than Christianity: posing problems objectively and coolly is part of its inheritance, for Buddhism comes after a philosophic movement which spanned centuries. The concept of "God" had long been disposed of when it arrived. Buddhism is the only genuinely positivistic religion in history. This applies even to its theory of knowledge (a strict phenomenalism): it no longer says "struggle against sin" but, duly respectful of reality. "struggle against suffering." Buddhism is profoundly distinguished from Christianity by the fact that the self-deception of the moral concepts lies far behind it. In my terms, it stands beyond good and evil.

- The Antichrist (1888)


The miscellany of Notes and Letters are intriguing insights into Nietzsche the individual. For one thing, while he did eventually go instance, he comes across “off stage” much more collected than his later zany published works. I would like more of this type of insight, as his reading habits:

LETIER TO OVERBECK
Nizza, February 23, 1887

…I did not even know the name of Dostoevsky just a few weeks ago-uneducated person that I am, not reading any journals. An accidental reach of the arm in a bookstore brought to my attention L' esprit souterrain, a work just translated into French. (It was a similar accident with Schopenhauer in my 21st year and with Stendhal in my 35th.) The instinct of kinship (or how should I name it?) spoke up immediately; my joy was extraordinary…


In a lot of this, I couldn’t help but think of Nietzsche alive today as a cable news pundit and with a Twitter account (first three from Twilight of the Idols, 1888):

The sick man is a parasite of society. In a certain state it is indecent to live longer. To go on vegetating in cowardly dependence on physicians and machinations, after the meaning of life, the right to life, has been lost, that ought to prompt a profound contempt in society. The physicians, in turn, would have to be the mediators of this contempt-not prescriptions, but every day a new dose of nausea with their patients. To create a new responsibility, that of the physician, for all cases in which the highest interest of life, of ascending life, demands the most inconsiderate pushing down and aside of degenerating life-for example, for the right of procreation, for the right to be born, for the right to live. To die proudly when it is no longer possible to live proudly. Death freely chosen, death at the right time, brightly and cheerfully accomplished…


and

The value of a thing sometimes does not lie in that which one attains by it, but in what one pays for it-what it costs us. I shall give an example. Liberal institutions cease to be liberal as soon as they are attained: later on, there are no worse and no more thorough injurers of freedom than liberal institutions. Their effects are known well enough: they undermine the will to power; they level mountain and valley, and call that morality; they make men small, cowardly, and hedonistic-every time it is the herd animal that triumphs with them. Liberalism: in other words, herd-animalization.


and

Our institutions are no good any more: on that there is universal agreement. However, it is not their fault but ours. Once we have lost all the instincts out of which institutions grow, we lose institutions altogether because we are no longer good for them. Democracy has ever been the form of decline in organizing power…


And, boy oh boy:

One need only read any Christian agitator, St. Augustine, for example, to comprehend, to smell, what an unclean lot had thus come to the top. One would deceive oneself utterly if one presupposed any lack of intelligence among the leaders of the Christian movement: oh, they are clever, clever to the point of holiness, these good church fathers! What they lack is something quite different. Nature has neglected them-she forgot to give them a modest dowry of respectable, of decent, of clean instincts. Among ourselves, they are not even men. Islam is a thousand times right in despising Christianity: Islam presupposes men.

Christianity has cheated us out of the harvest of ancient culture; later it cheated us again, out of the harvest of the culture of Islam. The wonderful world of the Moorish culture of Spain, really more closely related to us, more congenial to our senses and tastes than Rome and Greece, was trampled down (I do not say by what kind of feet). Why? Because it owed its origin to noble, to male instincts, because it said Yes to life even with the rare and refined luxuries of Moorish life.

- The Antichrist (1888)


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Review: Nothing's Sacred

Nothing's Sacred Nothing's Sacred by Lewis Black
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The "bonus material added" is largely a play written by Black at the start of his career. I think he is a better comedian than playwright, as I am sure he would agree. This is basically a memoir of growing up in the turbulent '60s, becoming disillusioned with government, college, drama, and well ... becoming Lewis Black as we know him. We basically know him for trademark, sputtering apoplectic fits of incoherent rage at the inanities of life and society. Here tapping away on the tour bus he is calmer and more collected and we have greater insight into this unique view and what made him.

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Thursday, December 19, 2019

Review: The Medieval Reader

The Medieval Reader The Medieval Reader by Norman F. Cantor
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These selections are arranged topically and not in an overtly chronological fashion. At first, I found this off-putting. However, the march from antiquity to the verge of modernity as we know it is well-laid out in the organized building blocks. The perceptive yet not overly verbose introductions to each section and piece are together an education on key evolution of philosophy, politics, theology, etc. over the time covered. I especially liked the most microscopically focused documents: letters, contracts, diaries, etc.

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Friday, December 13, 2019

Review: Earth at Night

Earth at Night Earth at Night by NASA
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a fascinating ebook from NASA: educational while easy to follow and with stunning satellite imagery of Earth. It is hard not to think there is implicit commentary in these images, say for the burgeoning Flat Earthers:

A thin yellow-brown band tracing Earth’s curvature at image top is airglow.


And much on the environmental/climate change front that is very subtly stated:


Scientists watched the Arctic with particular interest in the summer of 2012 when the areal
extent of Arctic sea ice set a new record low. The behavior of sea ice following such a low extent
also interests scientists...


I, of course, have heard of melting polar ice, but the Arctic polluting effects of Dakotan drilling was new to me:


Connection Between Gas Flaring and Arctic Pollution—North Dakota

Previous research has suggested that gas flares from oil and natural gas extraction in the Northern Hemisphere could be a key source of black carbon pollution in the Arctic. But since international inventories of industrial emissions have gaps in observations and reporting, they often over- or underestimate the amount of pollutants. Gas flares are an often-overlooked subset in that incomplete dataset. Data from the VIIRS DNB on the Suomi NPP satellite were used to examine gas flare signals from nightlights and the nitrogen dioxide retrievals for four regions around the planet; only the Bakken Formation in North Dakota is shown here. Levels of atmospheric nitrogen dioxide were found to rise about 1.5 percent per year at Bakken. This means the concentration of black carbon produced by those flares was also likely on the rise. Such local or regional nightlight data as are described here clearly show the potential for global consequences.


We can recall the tragedy of mishandled disasters and see its vivid evidence:


Lights Out—Puerto Rico

Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico with devastating force in September 2017. Flooding, downed trees, and toppled power lines made many roads impassable. Most of the electricity grid and telecommunications network were knocked offline, leaving 1.5 million people without power. For many locations power wasn’t restored for weeks and even for up to 11 months in some locations. The long power outages, in part, led to the historic property, economic, and life losses in the storm’s aftermath. While 64 people died from direct storm impacts (i.e., via structural collapse, flying debris, floods, and drownings), an estimated 700 to 8400 excess deaths were associated with long-duration disruptions to essential services.


..and the effect of war:


Conflict in the Middle East—Syria

Six years of war in Syria have had a devastating effect on millions of its people. One of the most catastrophic impacts has been on the country’s electricity network. The left and middle images (below) were created using two separate nightlight datasets from the VIIRS DNB on the Suomi NPP satellite for 2012 and 2016...


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Review: The Residents: Freak Show

The Residents: Freak Show The Residents: Freak Show by Brian Bolland
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A whole gallery of graphic artists present vignettes of Residents' imagined "freaks" separated out into chapter through an introducing ringmaster. These are gritty, earthy tales with backstories and tragedy. The comic came packaged in a Freak Show Special Edition.

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Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Review: Untamed Alaska

Untamed Alaska Untamed Alaska by Steve Kaufman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A beautiful book of mostly images by Kaufman. These landscape and wildlife full-color photos generally take up a whole page or two and are a feast for the eye. Text is by long-time Fairbanks resident Margaret Murie with wistful recollection of a quaint city and awe-inspiring environment. Maybe ten pages of text with the rest photography.

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Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Review: Map of the World: An Introduction to Mathematical Geodesy

Map of the World: An Introduction to Mathematical Geodesy Map of the World: An Introduction to Mathematical Geodesy by Martin Vermeer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

...Finland often gets special attention in this work based on a 2014 Finnish edition which has a good translation.
Leaving the bounds of this world, significant content stretches to the astronomic: “Precession, nutation, and the torques exerted by the Sun and Moon on the Earth’s equatorial bulge.” This includes sidereal time and an entire chapter on “The orbital motion of satellites”

[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]



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Review: The Discogs Guide To Record Collecting

The Discogs Guide To Record Collecting The Discogs Guide To Record Collecting by Discogs
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



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Review: Patti Smith at the Minetta Lane

Patti Smith at the Minetta Lane Patti Smith at the Minetta Lane by Patti Smith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a warm and comfortable audio record of Smith entertaining an audience with readings, music, and remembrances from her life (particularly with Fred "Sonic" Smith and Mapplethorpe). Punctuating the history are performances and song.

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Sunday, December 8, 2019

Review: Creative Quest

Creative Quest Creative Quest by Questlove
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I don't honestly know if I have heard any of Questlove's music, however I have seen positive things about this book to the extent that I felt compelled to read it. It is an excellent, approachable, and insightful consideration of creativity of value to all: not just any form of artist, but any one. F. Scott Fitzgerald said:

"...let me make a general observation– the test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.

One should, for example, be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise. This philosophy fitted on to my early adult life, when I saw the improbable, the implausible, often the "impossible," come true.”


This approach is a theme in Questlove's approach. Exercises include re-writing a review of your work to say the opposite, believe the opposite of one of your beliefs, etc. This makes me think of The Marshmallow Test. He also has interesting insights into how the Internet Age is making us focus on detail and lose the big picture, etc.

As a general music fan, I appreciate his regard for Clyde Stubblefield, Stevie Wonder, etc.

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Monday, December 2, 2019

Review: The Life of Charlemagne

The Life of Charlemagne The Life of Charlemagne by Einhard
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read an excerpt in The Medieval Reader that so interested me that I sought the full text. Of the ones I found, this was easy to read (well-translated for modern readers) and has over fifty elucidating footnotes. As a math teacher, I often get the "When I am going to use this?" question. My answer is generally around the "When you use your brain" type of response as I believe studying math makes for better thinking. In this recreational reading by an author also called Einhard I came across this observation of the famous Emperor of the Franks:

He was ready and fluent in speaking, and able to express himself with great clearness. He did not confine himself to his native tongue, but took pains to learn foreign languages, acquiring such knowledge of Latin that he could make an address in that language as well as in his own. Greek he could better understand than speak. Indeed, he was so polished in speech that he might have passed for a learned man.

He was an ardent admirer of the liberal arts, and greatly revered their professors, whom he promoted to high honors. In order to learn grammar, he attended the lectures of the aged Peter of Pisa, a deacon; and for other branches he chose as his preceptor Albinus, otherwise called Alcuin, also a deacon, - a Saxon by race, from Britain, the most learned man of the day, with whom the king spent much time in leaving rhetoric and logic, and more especially astronomy. He learned the art of determining the dates upon which the movable festivals of the Church fall, and with deep thought and skill most carefully calculated the courses of the planets. Charles also tried to learn to write, and used to keep his tablets and writing book under the pillow of his couch, that when he had leisure he might practice his hand in forming letters; but he made little progress in this task, too long deferred and begun too late in life.

I think it is interesting that he learned to calculate motions of the planets without ever becoming truly literate we are told. (Footnotes here also doubt complete illiteracy.) Why would he even invest so much time as "with deep thought and skill most carefully calculated the courses of the planets"? I think he felt it improved his mind, if only to impress visitors to court with this acumen. (How else would we know? Did he show of his calculated orbits and periods with pride?)

It is interesting to see the apotheosis of this expansionist and politically astute rule who became a "Holy Roman Emperor" and nearly deified in retrospect even by Otto III who strongly aspired to be the successor of Charlemagne. In 1000, he visited Charlemagne's tomb in Aachen, removing relics from it and basically worshipping the corpse, as detailed in the final footnote here.

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Sunday, December 1, 2019

Review: A Warning

A Warning A Warning by Anonymous
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Library shelves now groan under the weight of insider analysis of who I feel confident future historians will rate as among the worst of U.S. presidents. Nothing here strictly feels new in the specifics or generality of a toxic, dysfunctional workplace at the White House. Much has been said about the considered self-immolation of the core staff by mass resignation to bring attention to Trump's mismanagement. So why not follow through? Such questions would resolve this enigma outlined here:

While it is indeed disturbing that we’ve elevated someone so ill-informed as Trump to the nation’s highest office, what’s depressing is how many people around him and in the Republican Party are remaining quiet when their voices are needed to make the difference between poor policy and good government. They don’t necessarily need to speak out publicly against the president to have an impact. They just need to speak up in his presence, in the meetings that count, or among fellow administration officials. Silent Abettors should realize saying something is in their self-interest because, if they don’t, they’ll be the next ones at a microphone defending an unconscionable decision.


I didn't really understand the Section 4: Vice Presidential–Cabinet declaration constitutional option explained here. (Section 4 is the only part of the Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution that has never been used.)

I don't think concluding material around Trump what-ifs are helpful. There is enough facts than imagining a pro-Al Qaeda stance.

Mentioned here is The Road to Serfdom and the feel is Conservatives Without Conscience and The Authoritarians would also be good complementary reading. I don't know that I was a never-Trumper, yet the documented and exposed Trump behavior is increasingly making me never-GOP. The old cliché has it that "Republicans fall in line,” seems to mean even more so than in Nixon's time that means even falling in line behind an impulsive, megalomaniac, fasticitic wanna-be-autocrat. Aren't we past the warning stage to the action stage? This author hopes Democratic votes will solve the GOP's issue.

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Review: King Lear

King Lear by William Shakespeare My rating: 4 of 5 stars View all my reviews