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gesang

gesang@book.itinerariummentis.org

Joined 6 months, 1 week ago

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finished reading 日常生活颂歌 by Tzvetan Todorov (轻与重)

Tzvetan Todorov, 曹丹红: 日常生活颂歌 (2012, 华东师范大学出版社) No rating

原 Eloge du quotidien: Essai sur la peinture hollandaise du XVIIe siècle.

17世纪的荷兰绘画作为西方重要的历史文化遗产,历来受到包括黑格尔在内的西方学者的关注。托多罗夫在《日常生活颂歌》里评述了荷兰风俗画所产生的独特的历史背景,探讨了有关17世纪荷兰绘画的几种主要阐释模式,并分析了其文化与伦理的内涵。

不到十万字(但整整开出了200页)的小论文,比较老派的艺术史。排版由于开本过小行距过宽字体过大很糟糕把本来可以放到对应文字旁边的图都挤到了很麻烦的地方。我想作者本人的写作应该不是这样矫揉造作的,但译者明显是当代法国哲学读太多了。 第三章的观察是精确的,而且是一个有无限深度的话题,可以通过更深地剖析与当时荷兰的宗教精神背景以及(现存的)科学史等结合起来给出对从方济各会的运动开始的地面事物的圣化过程的这一环节的更完整的描绘,可作者显然并不像深入进去,如同法国人(以及日本人)的写作风格般蜻蜓点水。 结尾把这一过程看作是摩尼教影响消退的过程我持怀疑态度。

Trevor Wishart, Simon Emmerson: On Sonic Art (1996, Taylor & Francis Group) 3 stars

In this newly revised book On Sonic Art, Trevor Wishart takes a wide-ranging look at …

An irrelevant speculation

3 stars

The point I disagree the most with Wishart is that I don't consider sound per se as interesting, and I don't quite understand why Wishart values perceptual reality this much. There's a burning desire in me to "hear", say, Pontragin duality - and that has nothing to do with any perceptual reality. Let's think about the history of mathematics. Before around the time of Riemann, mathematics was really just about properties of numbers, about finding roots of certain equations, etc. This for me is profoundly boring so that I wasn't interested in mathematics at all when I hadn't learn abstract algebra and didn't know what topology is. Now we more or less know that mathematics is a general science of structure and mechanism, the most general science of abstract synthesis. It now seemingly has nothing to do with number at all - though factually in the deeper levels they're still …

Roger E. Olson: The Story of Christian Theology (1999) No rating

History is made up of stories--narratives that recount the events, movements, ideas and lives that …

Read it when I was a college junior. The author is a baptist and is in a relatively strongly evangelical tradition so the perspective taken is sufficiently suffocating, focusing on dumb protestant theologians. In fact he wrote a book on 20th-century theology which was as bad as possible. Overall it's not a bad "beginners book", but compared with, say Tillich's book, it's a piece of junk. It's always like that: Catholic = maybe too hard, Lutheran and some non-evangelical Reformed = good but with many absurd claims, Evangelical = dumb.

David Graeber, David Wengrow: The Dawn of Everything (French language, 2021, Farrar, Straus and Giroux) 1 star

A trailblazing account of human history, challenging our most fundamental assumptions about social evolution--from the …

Another propaganda

1 star

There are several flaws in this book. We already know this. The theory Graeber and Wengrow put forward has been in vogue for nearly half a century. It's not new and it even is cliched. No one really thinks the analytic constructs of the theories of the State correspond to actual historical truth, not even the original theorizers thought like that. Its influence is another thing. Speaking of influence, the authors again try to conjure up a false categorical connection between how a certain concept emerged, and whether this concept is really in the object that those made heavy use of it. This, coupled with a complete overlooking of medieval history and scholastic developments in the field of jurisprudence, led them to devise a totalizing narrative that while reducing the principle underlying the status quo to contingency, and simultaneously totalize the so-called freedom of the native Americans (ironically just like …

John Milbank: The Suspended Middle (Paperback, 2005, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company) 3 stars

French Jesuit Henri de Lubac (1896-1991) was arguably the most revolutionary theologian of the twentieth …

Insightful, but fundamentally flawed

3 stars

Milbank's position seems to me an absurd mixture of insightful, sane observation and bizarre and unintelligible hostility toward a tradition that he calls "Scotist". This largely is due to his inability to engage with serious, or even technical, philosophy as a theologian with a cultural bias. When he invokes phrases like "participatory" and "analogia entis" and stresses their essential character, it is never intelligible since these catchwords are merely invoked rather than used in any precise manner: there's no inherent connection that assures only by means of participation can the natural yearning for the supernatural be made possible, and analogia entis has literally nothing to do with the problems under investigation.

And seriously I can't take these theologians who find a fault in the 13th century and condemn a whole 800 years of civilization as fundamentally went astray seriously. Not because I'm a progressive, but solely because historicity cannot be …

Loren Graham, Jean-Michel Kantor: Naming Infinity (2009, Harvard University Press) No rating

In 1913, Russian imperial marines stormed an Orthodox monastery at Mt. Athos, Greece, to haul …

Not really worth reading. Largely a narrative that centers around the personalities involved, without actually getting into anything. Also several mistakes, for example it was Dedekind who defined infinity, not Cantor. But all this judgement might be due to my own familiarity with the works of these mathematicians.

Wolfgang Rautenberg: A Concise Introduction to Mathematical Logic (2010, Springer) No rating

Traditional logic as a part of philosophy is one of the oldest scientific disciplines and …

Demanding one. Highlight: full proof of the second incompleteness theorem along with provability logic. The formal system chosen is not that good, though; really strange that sequent calculus and natural deduction can be presented in such a chaotic hybrid manner.

James Bradley, Sean J. McGrath: Collected Essays in Speculative Philosophy (2023, Edinburgh University Press) No rating

This collection of essays by James Bradley showcases his unique vision: a speculative cosmology of …

Just... Stunning. James Bradley wrote some greatest philosophical works since Whitehead. And finally someone who read Brouwer, Peirce, Whitehead, Scotus, who was a radical voluntarist regarding the Firstness, and who saw no necessity of distinguishing between the real and the constructive.

reviewed Human, All Too Human by Friedrich Nietzsche (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy)

Friedrich Nietzsche, R.J. Hollingdale, Richard Schacht: Human, All Too Human (1996, Cambridge University Press) 5 stars

This volume presents Nietzsche's remarkable collection of almost 1400 aphorisms in R. J. Hollingdale's distinguished …

Nietzsche's Best

5 stars

This, together with The Gay Science, and maybe Daybreak, are the best of Nietzsche's works. Intense, complex, subtle, but never heavy, and it is always to the point. Later he would be doing aggressive non-nuanced attacks that doesn't lead the reader to think; he seemingly wrote many of the passages only for the sake of provoking. Zarathustra has some majestic passages but it is hysterical, theatrical, and moreover a work of dubious quality.

Henri de Lubac: The Drama of Atheist Humanism (1995, Ignatius Press) 5 stars

De Lubac traces the origin of 19th century attempts to construct a humanism apart from …

Insightful

5 stars

In general, great theologians, while may not be creative and novel in comparison to philosophers (if philosophers are really, genuinely creative), are far more insightful than philosophers when it is about human soul, perhaps due to their genuine engagement with the world. They're often priests who need to do pastoral works, and this requires deep human understanding. In the case of Catholicism they're often prohibited by their authority to write and teach, which leads them to try to comprehend why themselves are prohibited and genuinely reflect. Further, they need to take responsibility for their actions and their thoughts, unlike intellectuals. Finally, they need to learn to be patient towards stupidity manifested by atheists which is virtually everywhere, in particular from those utterly dogmatic philosophy students who cannot tolerate a simple word "God" but can be so unreasonable that it's nearly torturing. These four factors may prevent theologians from doing …