philosophy José Ortega y Gasset on "Intellectual Effort" We, however, must deal with those who say things like "math isn't real" and believe in ESP because they watched a YouTube video once.
poetry Seamus Heaney, "Lightenings viii" It's exciting to declare you're exploring Plato, stumbling upon problems few have seen or will see. It's tempting to believe there must be wisdom in such a rarified activity.
politics On Political Yearning I don't think it's possible to properly inform future generations how committed we are to "just blurting things out."
blogging A Young Person's Guide to Creating Written Blog Content Rule 1: You're creating because you want to create.
poetry Rae Armantrout, "Influence" I do not believe the classics will be lost, unread and thrown aside, because things I don't like are popular.
poetry Kobayashi Issa, "[the snow is melting]" I should say, the first time I read this poem, I thought Issa was in "grouchy old man" mode, bemoaning the noisy, shouty kids disturbing his peace.
poetry Alfred, Lord Tennyson, "The Eagle" Alfred, Lord Tennyson's "The Eagle" is, as the kids say, "metal."
poetry Emily Dickinson, "This is my letter to the World" (J 441, F 519) Vendler allows this lyric to resonate with moral force, and I have no doubt some will commit this poem to memory because of her interpretation.
poetry Donald Hall, "The Sea" Some readers want to see how others live, how they process their experience, and how they wrestle with a changing sense of importance.
poetry Kyla Houbolt, "bad idea" That the Colosseum can be humane, peaceful, and fun for us may be a fitting tribute, though far more fitting if all colonial and imperial endeavors ceased.
poetry Matsuo Bashō, "The temple bell stops..." ...I spend considerable time trying to explain my relevance, even when talking about my own life.
poetry Yosa Buson, "The morning breeze..." Clarity, then, is seeing things stand distinct. It’s the knowledge something, someone, can be whole and independent.
poetry Kay Ryan, "Things That Have Stayed In Position" Should a writer be toxic? Raising the stakes, erasing the past, undoing social bonds?
poetry Tom Snarsky, "Opera" Feeling unloved, one could say, isn’t having a free mind. Strictly speaking, it’s having a mind that “doesn’t feel like anything.”
poetry Rainer Maria Rilke, "Closing-piece" I am consistently impressed by Rilke’s ability to build with profundity, not just to profundity
poetry Ezra Pound, "In a Station of the Metro" I am scared to talk about the years in which I had all the awareness of a really useless rock.
art Ben Nicholson, "March 17 1950 (still life);" Giorgio Morandi, "Still Life" A simple interior, rather, is composed of shapes an imagination explodes with liveliness, just as dining with a little wine and fruit can be most pleasurable.
poetry William Butler Yeats, "When Helen Lived" “Beauty that we have won / From bitterest hours” threatens to give war a glamour it should not be given.
philosophy Immanuel Kant: "the possession of power inevitably corrupts reason's free judgment" With the little power I've had, it's the mistakes I imagine I've made which recur in my thoughts.
poetry Paul Celan, "You may" The simultaneity of horror and happiness emerges in Celan's lyric through the semblance of gesture.
poetry Emily Dickinson, "In the name of the Bee" (J 18, F 23) What seems to be at stake for Dickinson is as much as a bee, a butterfly, and a breeze. Why can’t she just have her say and be left alone?
poetry Wendy Videlock, "Bane" Things mean things. Getting older is frustration that it’s hard to convey that meaning.
philosophy Kant and Jefferson on Enlightenment Today I want to talk about a little bit of the rhetoric Kant and Jefferson use to advance Enlightenment ideals. Some scholars assume that because ideals of universal education and technological progress won out years ago, we have an assessment of their legacy ready at hand.