I could not have said

    Posted by carpru on 15th of Apr 2011 at 07:20 pm

    I could not have said it any better and I totally agree with you!

    What amuses me the most

    Posted by john9o9 on 16th of Apr 2011 at 08:12 am

    What amuses me the most is watching the left and right duke it out while the puppet masters sit back and soak up all the riches!  The best is for the most part the masses don't have a clue what is going on nor do they have a hint who the people that pull the strings really are!

    What I find most amusing,

    Posted by algyros on 16th of Apr 2011 at 09:51 am

    What I find most amusing, and moving in a sad way, is the universal and eternal need for people to find comfort in the idea that someone is in charge.  It could be the illuminati, the "puppet masters," the new world order, or any of a series of divinities, but the motivation is the same:  to escape the messiness of human life by positing a transcendent, or at least very powerful, logic or order in the world, an order that is hidden to all but the enlightened few (who are, sadly, the most deluded).

    You sound pretty enlightened as

    Posted by sanrafael on 16th of Apr 2011 at 11:13 am

    You sound pretty enlightened as well!

    Order or chaos or perhaps

    Posted by john9o9 on 16th of Apr 2011 at 10:09 am

    Order or chaos or perhaps a blend of the two?? 

    Chaos in the modern sense

    Posted by algyros on 16th of Apr 2011 at 02:39 pm

    Chaos in the modern sense of nonlinear dynamics.

    Algyros

    Posted by sanrafael on 16th of Apr 2011 at 03:00 pm
    Title: This is MY truth

    Nonlinear dynamics isn't about chaos

    Posted by algyros on 16th of Apr 2011 at 03:11 pm

    Nonlinear dynamics isn't about chaos in the usual sense of the word.  It's a about all kinds of order hidden in what appears to be random.  

    And, btw, people don't usually try to escape from the messiness of life though recourse to relativism.  They usually find comfort in some eternal, metaphysical truth (political ideology, religion, Platonism, etc.).  

    But my point is that nonlinear dynamics is neither randomness nor determinism.  It is, like life, the delicate and beautiful intersection of the two.  

    Algyros

    Posted by sanrafael on 16th of Apr 2011 at 03:31 pm
    Title: Fair enough

    Excellent, true observations, Algyros...

    Posted by lessarda on 17th of Apr 2011 at 09:36 pm

    Following the great conversation among the poets, philosophers and theologians from the ancients through to the moderns is the essence of liberal education -- something only a few schools do any more.

    Yes, it would be great

    Posted by algyros on 17th of Apr 2011 at 09:48 pm

    Yes, it would be great if we could reinstitute "great books" courses that were required of all students, in both high school and college.  But, we seem to be moving in the direction of McCollege.  Perhaps that's the price of democracy.  Perhaps the price of a free market system.  I don't know.  But I do know that it makes me sad that in many circles to be called an "intellectual" is an insult.  Can you imagine what Plato, Aquinas, Nietzsche, etc. would have thought of a culture that sees the cultivation of the mind as a negative thing.

Newsletter

Subscribe to our email list for regular free market updates
as well as a chance to get coupons!