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Taking It Easy


I'm too worn out today to write anything original. So, I think I'll just send you to some I've been reading that I found linkworthy.

There's an interesting post over at Transterrestrial Musings about a lecture Simberg attended at Cal Tech. The speaker was Dan Dennett. Go read the the whole thing.

A snippet: "Dennett is kicking the ladder out from under this philosophical balancing act by saying that while humans are special, and they do have a "soul" in some sense, that they are only somewhat more special than their non-human ancestors, who also possessed the same property--just to a lesser degree.

That doesn't grate in any way on those of us who are provisional transcendental materialistic reductionists, but for those who believe that man is unique among all animals, it is not just unsettling--it is indeed heresy and unreconciliable with the foundation of their beliefs, because it doesn't draw a bright line between man and ape. Or aardvark."

I was saying something similar a while back, discussing, of all things, my Mercedes, Otto. "...despite my distaste for most things of a "spiritual" nature, I'm fairly anthromorphic about some things, particularly cars and computers. I always give them a name, and truly think of them as partaking in that quality that we call "life" to a greater or lesser degree.

In fact, I believe everything around us, from dirt to dahlias to Dells to dolphins to Dubya, is alive, in varying degrees, (with the possible exception of dogmatic yellow-dog Democrats :-) and that between the quick and the dead there lies not a dichotomy, but a spectrum.

I don't know how often y'all ever go hit the link over there on the right, under "obligatory blogrolling" but I do every day. You should too. I don't put a link there just cause someone else has linked to me, etc., but because I enjoy their writing. I even link to a freaking liberal, for Pete's sake.

As an example, go read this by Bill Whittle, the most recent edition to my blogroll

From a girl that won't dance, to Saturn, to the Evil Empire and back again, all in the comfort of your chair. Really.

Finally, I just finished taking a test online that looks at unconscious racial bias. You can find it here. This isn't one of those goofy tests that litter the internet like trashy talk shows do the local TV listings, but a serious study conducted by the folks at Yale.

I ended up in that small minority of folks, (12%) that showed no significant bias. Who'd a thunk it, me living in Texas and all?

I wonder if that's why I think that brown people in 2003 (i.e. Iraqis) are as deserving of our efforts to free them as if they were, say, Frenchmen in 1944.


 

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Ender's Game


Funny, no sooner do I go out on a limb and list "Ender's Game" as one of the 100 Best Novels of all time, than I see that it's going to be made into a major movie, if the Hollywood Gods don't have a change of heart.

Life is Good.


 

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The 100 Greatest Novels


I got this email today from a list I'm on, and there's this bookstore pimping their list of the novels every adult should own. (or at least read, one presumes) It's here.

Needless to say, there are a few selections with which I have to disagree.

They got some things right. There are the Classics - The Oedipus Trilogy, the Iliad and the Odyssey, Canterbury Tales, etc. Given my tastes, no problemo. But I don't know that if I had to pick one Shakespeare, that it'd be Lear. And I'm not sure Candide would make my cut.

Moby Dick and Huck Finn, the two novels that vy, in my mind, at least, for the title of Greatest American Novel, along with all the other Greatest Hits, the novels that you learned to hate in high school, Great Expectations, The Scarlet Letter, Pride And Prejudice, yatta-yatta...

But there are some selections there that I don't understand at all. It may be my elitist classical leanings or just plain ignorance of most of the stuff written after WWII, but c'mon...

The Wapshot Chronicle? July's People? If Not Now, When? A Lesson From Aloes? The Moviegoer? The Scarlet Mandala? Their Eyes Were Watching God? Things Fall Apart?

These may be fine works, but are any of them more important than oh, say, The Grapes of Wrath, or 1984?

Seems to me that a work needs to have aged a few decades before it gets to be called one of the best of all time, but again, my tastes are obvious and my ignorance considerable. It looks to me like the list has as a hidden agenda the need to move some slow moving titles out of a warehouse somewhere, or as if the publisher is underwriting this. Some of the selections positively reek of PC affirmative action, but that's a whole 'nother issue.

There are a few glaring holes (no Hemingway?) and a complete lack of any sci-fi or fantasy - not even a Fahrenheit 451 or The Hobbitt to appease fans of the genre.

I know Kipling is out of favor these days for being an imperialist racist pig, but how do you leave out Kim, or the Jungle Books? (unless you are considering the latter to be kid's fiction)

Anyway, the polls are open. Now taking nominees for the 100 Greatest Works of Fiction...

I'm thinking of this as the list I'd hand to my kid and tell her this is what she needs to have read before she leaves home for college. Other than Shakespeare and Sophocles (and the rest of the ancient Greek playwrights), I'm leaving all dramatic works aside, maybe for their own list.

I'll get started by listing some classics that I think will be consensus picks. In no particular order:

  1. Shakespeare - Complete Works (cheating, I know, but this is my poll)
  2. Homer - Iliad & Odyssey
  3. Dante - Divine Comedy
  4. Chaucer - Canterbury Tales
  5. Sophocles - The Oedipus Cycle
  6. Cervantes - Don Quixote
  7. Twain - Huck Finn
  8. Melville - Moby Dick

And my personal selections, again in no real order, and limited to books that I've actually read. There are lots of books that would be consensus entries, as an example, Pride And Prejudice, that I've left off for the latter reason. Another would be that I didn't really like them, which is why I've not put obvious works such as The Great Gatsby (soap opera) and The Catcher In The Rye (I wanted to shoot that whiny twerp Holden Caulfield by the fifth page) on the list. I'm going to let someone else do that - they're not getting my Seal of Approval. :-)

  1. Twain - Connecticut Yankee
  2. Huxley - Brave New World
  3. Conrad - Heart of Darkness
  4. Conrad - Lord Jim
  5. Vergil - The Aeneid (I know, Roman GeekFreak tastes showing)
  6. Orwell - 1984
  7. Orwell - Animal Farm
  8. Rand - The Fountainhead
  9. Hemingway - A Farewell To Arms
  10. Remarque - All Quiet On The Western Front
  11. Steinbeck - The Grapes Of Wrath
  12. Steinbeck - Of Mice And Men
  13. Burgess - A Clockwork Orange
  14. Bradbury - Fahrenheit 451
  15. Card - Ender's Game (with the sequels)
  16. Steakley - Armor
  17. Heinlein - Starship Troopers
  18. Heinlein - Job
  19. Heinlein - The Number Of The Beast
  20. Heinlein - Just about everything else he wrote...
  21. Frank - Alas, Babylon
  22. Dickey - Deliverance
  23. Wilder - The Bridge Of San Luis Rey
  24. Vonnegut - Slaughterhouse V
  25. Graves - I, Claudius
  26. Heller - Catch-22
  27. Joyce - Ulysses (man, I hate to do that to her, but...)
  28. Dickens - Great Expectations
  29. Nabokov - Lolita
  30. Lawrence - Lady Chatterley's Lover
  31. Golding - Lord Of The Flies
  32. Adams - Watership Down
  33. Tolkien - The Hobbit & the LOTR trilogy
  34. Adams - Hichhiker's Guide and sequels
  35. Twain - Letters From Earth
  36. Pressfield - Gates of Fire (a sleeper, I know)
  37. McMurty - Lonesome Dove
  38. Burroughs - Tarzan Of The Apes
  39. Defoe - Robinson Crusoe
  40. Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird
  41. Baum - The Wizard Of Oz
  42. Twain - Tom Sawyer
  43. Rice - Interview With A Vampire
  44. Wells - The Time Machine
  45. Sinclair - The Jungle
  46. Swift - Gulliver's Travels
  47. Ovid - Metamorphoses
  48. Boccaccio - Decameron
  49. Unknown - The Epic of Gilgamesh
  50. Rabelais - Gargantua And Pantagruel
  51. Kazantzakis - Zorba The Greek
  52. Various - The Bible (it is fiction, you know)
  53. All the extant tragedies of ancient Greece

Well, that makes up almost half the list - I suppose I need to leave room for the rest of you. :-)


 

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