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Friday, December 31, 2010
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Learning to swim
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When we study Buddhism, we learn about the view and the meditation as supports for encouraging us to let go of ego and just be with things as they are. ...
These supports are often likened to a raft. You need the raft to cross the river, to get to the other side; when you get over there, you leave the raft behind. That’s an interesting image, but in experience it’s more like the raft gives out on you in the middle of the river and you never really get to solid ground. This is what is meant by becoming a child of illusion.
Pema Chödrön, Start Where Your Are:
A Guide to Compassionate Living (Boston: Shambhala, 2003 [1994]), 33-34
A Guide to Compassionate Living (Boston: Shambhala, 2003 [1994]), 33-34
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Brief mission
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Monday, December 27, 2010
(Meanwhile, back in Brooklyn,
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Uprooted
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Sunday, December 26, 2010
Family resemblances
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Friday, December 24, 2010
The kids are all right
I hope this video goes viral! (If Blogger won't show you the whole frame, just click the video title "The Christmas Story (HD version)" below, and it'll take you to the Youtube page where you can watch it full-screen.)
It's the work of the Anglican congregation of St. Paul's in Auckland, NZ. For a holiday story closer to home, check out this charming tale about some married folk in Chelsea. It's beginning to feel a lot like Christmas!
It's the work of the Anglican congregation of St. Paul's in Auckland, NZ. For a holiday story closer to home, check out this charming tale about some married folk in Chelsea. It's beginning to feel a lot like Christmas!
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Weather!
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Tuesday, December 21, 2010
New tricks for old dogs
You might have noticed the article in Friday's Times, part of a series on the digitalization of the humanities, on a new Google-sponsored project to chart the frequency of the use of words in 500 billion words of scanned texts. The assorted scientists and mathematicians involved in the project think a whole new kind of knowledge will be yielded by this data. But is it data? (You may remember the lampooning field day I had when Google let us do word frequencies in all recent internet posts;
I think I was on to something beautiful.) Perhaps because of the civilizing effect of my mathematician friend J, I've tried this time to be more collegial. Could one learn something here? Imagine a new kind of humanistic knowledge gleaned digitally from old tomes? (But don't call it culturomics.) The rise and fall of modish words and idioms, at least... I recalled one of my students' recent (mis)use of a perhaps pertinent proverb: "you can always teach an old dog new tricks," he said. You can?
Since when?! One could certainly imagine someone inverting for effect. And maybe to someone born in 1992, the retrainability of old dogs is old hat (thank goodness if so!). So perhaps, I thought, the proverb has flipped in meaning?! I used the new google utility, somewhat hampered by a five-word phrase limit. The results (American rather more than British) are suggestive. Sort of. If only in the US, the teachability of old dogs would seem to have been an open question since the 1950s. Resilient culture-forming Baby Boomers may be behind the proverb flip.
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Monday, December 20, 2010
Rain in southern California
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