Pymander's ghost
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Pymander's ghost
@pymandersghost
relic seeker.




Today’s view from Delphi. “Looking therefore at God, we should make use of him as the most beautiful mirror, and among human concerns we should look at the virtue of the soul; and thus, by so doing, shall we not especially see and know our very selves?” (1 Alc. 133c)


It's difficult not to see it as a kind of dystopia. What's truly remarkable is how reflexively people defend it by saying, 'but you have to make a living,' as though that somehow ends the discussion. At some point, quietly and without much debate, 'making a living' came to mean little more than submitting to corporate authority for most of one's waking hours. The really strange part is how completely we've been persuaded this arrangement is simply common sense.






I used to read several books at once (add to this PDF documents, essays, poems, etc.); my desk was always strewn with volumes, it still is, to be frank. I could never quite resist the temptation to begin another before finishing the last. Something was always beckoning from the corner of the table, another voice waiting to be heard. Yet I began to notice my attention slipping, my thoughts straying toward the next book, leaving me elsewhere, faintly restless. Lately, I've tried to limit myself to just a few books at a time and have found that this narrowing fosters a steadier attention and, with it, a deeper and more enduring imaginative pleasure in the act of reading.













