I think maybe it has to do with two things, at least for me: — csalisbury
I do think, in talking about stuff 'philosophically', the conclusions - or whatever — csalisbury
My father, a man of at least a few peculiarities, kept on a shelf in the basement a large piece of gristle cut from some bone. I cannot pretend to know his entire thought, but he appeared to be fascinated to some degree - that led him to keep the thing — tim wood
That said, as a person living a life who sometimes ends up posting, a large part of me is much more interested in why I'm doing this thing, and what I'm getting out of it. — csalisbury
My father, a man of at least a few peculiarities, kept on a shelf in the basement a large piece of gristle cut from some bone. I cannot pretend to know his entire thought, but he appeared to be fascinated to some degree - that led him to keep the thing - with the sheer potential for chewability that it represented. Because I threw it away after he died, I know a) it never dried out, and b) he never actually tried it.
Two thoughts come to mind. One is about the life of an intelligent young man living in colonial America, more specifically near Boston c. 1750 - no one in particular. His range the books nearby he could borrow and read, how far either his horse or his legs could take him, and the quality of his neighbors. In that place at that time those resources would have been relatively large and great. But what he would have had foremost is his self. and that largely undistracted except by the disciplines that life would have imposed. Which led soon enough to Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, et al.
And the other of course the chewability of philosophy, so-called by the one chewing and not to be gainsaid. All the possibilities in potentia of that somewhat idyllic life present even now, and more and better. But at a risk of distraction. Working the jaws can be immensely satisfying, but for nutrition there must be the right stuff between them. — tim wood
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