JEFFERSON'S ASHES, PASCAL'S BONES & WITTGENSTEIN'S HOWL ![]() And pick up a copy of le génie français' Pensées in preparation for a voyage into the depths of intrigue ... You may find a copy here (in French) or here (in English). In the latter case there is a search engine. Try the word "bones" in the search engine ... We guarantee results. Bone appetit! IN PRAISE OF PASCAL ![]() We have found, in our ongoing investigations of Pascal, a thread that runs throughout endless speculations on the Sublime; i.e., a fascination with the infinite nature of the universe that has long undermined theories of language and rhetoric; that is, for at least 2000 years. Longinus' On the Sublime, written in the 3rd century A.D., is the putative first text, in a long line of texts, tackling this formidable subject, albeit in the context of rhetoric. The following points and insights have been extracted, for your sublime pleasure, from the magisterial essay by Louis Marin, "On the Sublime, Infinity, Je Ne Sais Quoi", in A New History of French Literature, edited by Denis Hollier (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989). Rhetorical formalities aside, let us proceed ... ![]() Meanwhile, a parallel investigation is underway, by way of structural linguistics, in the form of the serial essay Sublime Potential ... LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN'S HOBBY-HORSE ![]() PS - Having never gotten around to reporting back on the Tractatus, may we offer you as consolation prize the following, 'definitive' bibliography of LW's major writings and an essay on topological thought (thought itself). For the latter, cliquez ici ... LANGUAGE GAMES - Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (1889-1951) - Definitive editions - The Blue and Brown Books [written 1933-35] (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1961) - Out of Print / Tractatus logico-philosophicus [written 1922] (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1961) - 2001 edition: Paper, 144 pages, ISBN 0-415-25408-6 / Philosophical Grammar [written 1931-1934], Rush Rhees (ed.), trans. Anthony Kenny (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1980) - Paper, ISBN 0-631-11891-8 / Philosophical Investigations [written 1929-1949], G. H. von Wright, R. Rhees, G. E. M. Anscombe (eds.), trans. G. E. M. Anscombe (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 2001) - Paper, 260 pages, German/English text, ISBN 0-631-23159-5 (Cloth 0-631-23127-7) APROPOS RIEN - We found this, and include it here without comment: "The score of 'The Rite [of Spring]' survived, but the ballet, after nine performances in 1913, was never given again. People remembered it almost with fear. Jacques Rivière wrote that it analyzed human beings down to 'germ layers, zones, circles, placentas.' (Nijinsky said the same thing: 'It is the life of the stones and the trees. There are no human beings in it.') It was hideous, Rivière said, and stupendous: it 'alters the very source of all our aesthetic judgments.'" --Joan Acocella, The New Yorker (May 7, 2001), pp. 94-97 The Editors ![]() ![]() |
/S/O(MA) - 2001/2004