Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Try using these in casual conversation!

Some great new words from the book I was reading. If you really care, look the definitions up yourself. Some of them are not very nice!

neurasthenic
onanist
etiolated
pyorrhea
agitprop
scrofulous

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Intellectuals


Having nothing better to do yesterday, I picked up a book my dad had left lying on the coffee table. The book is titled Intellectuals by Paul Johnson. It is a series of character sketches and mini-biographies of men such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Karl Marx, Percy Shelley, Leo Tolstoy, Ernest Hemmingway, etc.

I expected to be bored witless and instead was fascinated.

These men have been labeled the greatest thinkers, writers and philosophers in past three centuries. Their works are read aross the world in schools and universities. These intellectuals, who are revered for their contributions to mankind, share an amazingly similar pattern of egocentricity, selfishness, self-deception, dishonesty, adultery, alcoholism, infidelity, greed, debt, hate, lying, and violence. Faithfulness in marriage, friendship, and money was not only beyond them, they truly did not recognize the need for it or even care. They used the people, especially the women, around them as objects. They claimed to love Mankind, but showed little or no love to the individual men around them. They and their ideas were the center of the universe.

Does this somehow devalue their great works, Hemmingway's A Farewell to Arms, Tolstoy's War and Peace, Shelley's poetry, Rousseau's philosophy, etc.? My answer is a resounding, YES! Men who lived their personal lives with such dishonor and outright wickedness do not deserve recognition no matter how genius their works. The complete disjunction between their ideas/ideals and their actions calls into question the value of everything they ever said or wrote. Their ideas, words, and philosophies came out of the same diseased minds that tainted everything and everyone around them.

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Lost and Hume


Lost was fantastic! I am always amazed by the depth of the show. The episode last night centered around the character of Desmond Hume, who not so coincidentally shares the last name of David Hume, an 18th century Scottish naturalist philosopher. Hume the philosopher is probably best known for posing the problem of induction. Induction is a process of reasoning by which we predict future expectations based on past experiences, (i.e. the sun will rise in the east tomorrow). The problem lies in the fact that the only way we can justify such reasoning is by basing our argument on the success of induction in the past, which is circular reasoning.

Hume the character seems to have been caught in some "time warp" and ends up with the ability to predict the future based on what he has seen in the past. A coincidence? My past experience tells me such a coincidence is not very likely, but I have no justification to say so.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Wonderful World of Technology

I had been trying to add pictures to my blog using Safari, which is my default browser. The picture would not upload. I just tried again using Mozilla, and it worked fine. I am sure there is some deep programming code reason that I did not grasp, but qui curat? It works now.

Monday, February 12, 2007

The Fighting Duck

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/writers/michael_farber/02/05/ducks0212/index.html

My favorite quote from the article: "In our bottom six forwards, we look for the requisite level of pugnacity, truculence, belligerence, hostility and testosterone."-Brian Burke, Ducks GM in SI

Hockey's great, eh?

Top 10 reasons to study Latin

Since I am always called upon to justify my major and career to the legions of illiterate and uninformed, I wanted to start off my blogging adventures with this list:

1) Latin provides a structure for thinking that can be transferred to other disciplines;
2) Latin teaches in-depth analysis;
3) Latin allows students to understand the heritage of Western culture and society;
4) Latin improves English vocabulary;
5) Latin improves English grammar and linguistc competency;
6) Latin makes learning a third language easier;
7) Latin crosses the boundaries to teach art, philosophy, literature, and history as well as language;
8) Latin offers the challenge of a new abstract symbolic system;
9) Latin encourages higher-order thinking through comparing Roman and Greek thought to modern life (Stoicism and Epicureanism).
10) Latin is cool!!