June 2004

Monthly Archive

Aperture Wide Open; Enter the Light

Posted by phil on 09 Jun 2004 | Tagged as: Uncategorized

Lem’s got a blog now too.

He’s cool. Or so I hear.

All hail the muse

Posted by phil on 09 Jun 2004 | Tagged as: Uncategorized

Note to self: visitors stop coming when updates stop.

Check it out: www.mountparnassus.net. Almost ready to go live; it just needs forums. Joel Watson may be helping me out with that. We’ll see. It’ll be interesting to see how well it is recieved by the Torrey blogging community.

Oh, and in closing, Bulgogi is t3h best.

I hate Chesterton

Posted by phil on 03 Jun 2004 | Tagged as: Uncategorized

I don’t actually hate Chesterton, but I thought it would be very Chestertonian to say that after just saying that I love him. I realized as I was reading his book on St. Thomas Aquinas that his style is such that he seems incapable of saying anything without a contradiction, a contrast, or a paradox. “On the one hand X does Y to Z, but perhaps in actuality Z does Y to X.” Sentences like that are inextricable from Chesterton’s writing; not a paragraph can finish without one. It is a delightfully entertaining style. The question is that of how instructive it can be for those subjects that are fairly orderly or straightforward and do not lend themselves easily to paradox.

This works out really well in his fiction: for one he is undeniably a master of paradoxes, and in fiction you can put in paradoxes where ever you wish if you are capable (as he is) of working them out to great wonderment. It also works like a charm when he is talking about such paradoxical things as the life of St. Francis.

I’m not sure it is so well suited to the life of St. Thomas though. Chesterton himself admits as he contrasts Thomas and Hegel: “For St. Thomas it is impossible that contradictories should exist together, and again reality and intelligibility correspond […]” (p. 146) Thomisim is a philosophy of common sense, and in Thomism everything is above all orderly. But Chesterton thrives on apparent contradiction; every paragraph of the book is full of what seems at first glance to be chaotic nonsense. (Needless to say, it turns out not to be so.)

I suppose what I’m trying to say is that Chesterton’s approach is not the best way to approach the Church’s great doctor. However, it is delightful and meshes naturally with most of his subjects. It’s nearly impossible not to like Chesterton. (Especially after what he has to say about Luther and Calvin. Good jolly chap.)

I love Chesterton

Posted by phil on 01 Jun 2004 | Tagged as: Uncategorized

They begin to see that, as the eighteenth century thought itself the age of reason, and the nineteenth century thought itself the age of common sense, the twentieth century cannot as yet even manage to think itself anything but the age of uncommon nonsense.

—G.K. Chesterton, The Dumb Ox

Sweet, sweet books

Posted by phil on 01 Jun 2004 | Tagged as: Uncategorized

  • Penguin Dictionary of Saints: $3.00
  • Count Zero: $1.50
  • Neuromancer: $2.00
  • Stranger in a Strange Land: $3.50
  • Sagas of the Icelanders: $6.00
  • Weaving the Web: $10.00
  • The Mabinogion: $1.80
  • Jerusalem Bible: $6.00
  • Apocrypha: $3.00
  • Going to Moe’s: priceless

« Previous Page