When We Live Constantly In The Abstract - Whether It Be Abstractness Of Thought Or Of Feelings One Has

When we live constantly in the abstract - whether it be abstractness of thought or of feelings one has thought - it soon comes about that contrary to our own feelings and our own will the things in real life, which, according to us, we should feel most deeply turn into phantasms. Living so much on one's imagination actually erodes one's ability to imagine, especially one's ability to imagine the real. Living mentally on what is not and cannot be, we are, in the end, unable even to ponder what might really be.

Fernando Pessoa Book of Disquiet

More Posts from Dclcq and Others

11 years ago
Photo By Tt+ On Flickr.

Photo by tt+ on Flickr.


Tags
11 years ago

In the period between the attack on the World Trade Center towers and the American response, a reporter from the Los Angeles Times called to ask me if the events of the past weeks meant 'the end of relativism.' (I had an immediate vision of a headline - RELATIVISM ENDS: MILLIONS CHEER - and a photograph with the caption, 'At last, I can say what I believe and mean it.')

Stanley Fish


Tags
3 months ago

I've started noticing online how people from countries that don't need national defense really do not understand the nature of mandatory military service and wartime duty.

I had happened to scroll my way into a discussion on some american influencer family, who are all about being wealthy Conservative Christians who homeschool their kids so they won't get exposed to any other kind of values. Anyway one of the daughters married a man from Ukraine because there's no sufficiently white, conservative and christian men left in America I guess.

And originally this girl (who was sheltered, homeschooled, didn't speak any other language than english, and had zero experience of living independently) was supposed to move to Ukraine to live with her new husband, but then shit hit the fan. So they shipped their little family back to the US to live cozy on her parents' money.

So I happened to scroll into discussion about the Ukraine husband and the apparent vitrol happening online among the people who keep tabs on this family out of sheer curiosity. And there was someone, an american I guess from their writing style, who was baffled by the community's attitude towards him dodging the draft in his homeland. Like yeah the guy is a smug homophobic jackass, but isn't it fucked up to demand that he should volunteer to go fucking die??

And I kind of paused right there, having a kind of epiphany about how different worlds we come from, and how I really could not begin to explain this to someone who did not grow up this way. I'm not from Ukraine and I've never personally known war, but coming from Finland, I've got an understanding of how countries with a border and history with Russia are raised to think about war.

War isn't something you volunteer for. It's not something you can opt in or opt out of. It's something that comes to you, inevitably and eventually, and you're just lucky if it doesn't happen during your time. But if it does, that's just the cards that were dealt to you.

From the perspective of an invader, it's easy to equate "volunteering to fight" with "volunteering to die". It's easy to think that if you simply refuse to fight in war, there will be no war. That's not what it's like for those being invaded. When the war is brought to you, your choice is between "get shot in combat" and "get shot in your living room". Death is not voluntary, you only get to choose when and where.

Choosing to shake off that sense of duty doesn't make it disappear, it simply drops the weight on someone else's shoulders. Somone who may be more capable than you or less capable than you. If you were in a room with a button, knowing that there's a chance that you might die if you don't push it, but that there's a stranger in the next room, who has an equal chance of dying if you do push it. You don't know what those odds are, but if you decide to save yourself, you've chosen to rather risk the stranger.

Resenting someone from dodging military duty when their country is being invaded isn't a matter of hating someone for wanting to live. It's about knowing that this person decided: "Someone else's son deserves to die more than I do."


Tags
2 years ago
Christina Olson, 1947. Andrew Wyeth,1917–2009. Tempera On Panel.

Christina Olson, 1947. Andrew Wyeth,1917–2009. Tempera on panel.


Tags
art
10 years ago
Atlas Mountains By Untidy Souls On Flickr.

Atlas Mountains by untidy souls on Flickr.


Tags
11 years ago
Peter Bialobrzeski

Peter Bialobrzeski

2 months ago

hi hello now's a great time to read umberto eco's essay on ur-fascism if you haven't already


Tags
10 years ago

Why are we perfectly willing to ascribe agency to a strand of DNA (however “metaphorically”), but consider it absurd to do the same with an electron, a snowflake, or a coherent electromagnetic field? The answer, it seems, is because it’s pretty much impossible to ascribe self-interest to a snowflake. If we have convinced ourselves that rational explanation of action can consist only of treating action as if there were some sort of self-serving calculation behind it, then by that definition, on all these levels, rational explanations can’t be found. Unlike a DNA molecule, which we can at least pretend is pursuing some gangster-like project of ruthless self-aggrandizement, an electron simply does not have a material interest to pursue, not even survival. It is in no sense competing with other electrons. If an electron is acting freely—if it, as Richard Feynman is supposed to have said, “does anything it likes”—it can only be acting freely as an end in itself. Which would mean that at the very foundations of physical reality, we encounter freedom for its own sake—which also means we encounter the most rudimentary form of play.

David Graeber What's the Point if We Can't Have Fun


Tags
2 years ago
Foggy Memories Of January By @90377

Foggy memories of January by @90377

Instagram | Etsy shop

1 year ago
Ita Ever (1.04.1931 - 9.08.2023).

Ita Ever (1.04.1931 - 9.08.2023).

It has been announced that the legendary Estonian actress Ita Ever has passed. She was 92 years old.

Ita Ever was a staple both on screen and on the stage in Estonia until very recently. Her perhaps most memorable role for the younger generations has always been Metsamoor in Nukitsamees (1981).

Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • 86amaria-blog
    86amaria-blog liked this · 9 years ago
  • bjorkista
    bjorkista liked this · 11 years ago
  • deathtoss
    deathtoss reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • rachelllamber
    rachelllamber liked this · 12 years ago
  • surviveorthrive
    surviveorthrive reblogged this · 12 years ago
  • surviveorthrive
    surviveorthrive liked this · 12 years ago
  • naranzarian
    naranzarian liked this · 12 years ago
  • suresne
    suresne reblogged this · 12 years ago
  • outofthedarkness
    outofthedarkness reblogged this · 12 years ago
  • dclcq
    dclcq reblogged this · 12 years ago
dclcq - dclcq
dclcq

Sentiment.

175 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags