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Philip Diaz-Lewis
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Philip Diaz-Lewis
@nonnullis02
PhD in Classical Studies. Interests: Aristotle, Plato, Aquinas, pre-modern thought in general, French Ancien Regime in particular. Author at Bedrock magazine.
England Tham gia Şubat 2023
204 Đang theo dõi66 Người theo dõi

@InuitKodiak But you did snap. And it looks rather good for being snapped.
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@JoshPhillipsPhD '2 for 1 discount on books with pretty covers, for posting to social media. People will genuinely think you've read them'.
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Some depressing anecdotes in here. Yes, bookstores are booming. But maybe because they are “elite” third spaces (?) Ppl buying books to show status. Buying books w fancy covers. Buying coffee and tote bags.
A Bookstore Boom in a Time of Literacy Decline lithub.com/a-bookstore-bo…
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@James_II_1688 To the point that even WoO, the definitive anti-gallique, wore this court uniform, dictated from Versailles. Isn't that cosmic irony.
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Leaders 300 years ago. Louis XIVs France was the peak of fashion.




Templarpilled@Templarpilled
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@drsjcostello The modern mind has been conditioned by centuries of nominalism and mechanism to disassociate concepts from reality. Many have a big difficulty in understanding how something with intelligibility and universality can exist outside the mind.
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@duncanreyburn Another thought along these lines is that truth, as something objective, will eventually make itself known, if even to a minority. It might take a while, since humans absolutely love their shadow puppet cave, but inevitably someone will escape and see the sun.
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@InuitKodiak IMO lots of these cars are designed to flash money or make the driver feel big, rather than to be practical or look good.
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This thing flatters me too much.

𝘢𝘳𝘳𝘶𝘴@_bonaventurian
Wake up a new theodramatist datamining op dropped:
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Philosophy: Augustine makes human physical imperfection a light for acquiring knowledge, through Christian Platonism. Can Thomas Aquinas do something similar through Aristotle? I argue that he can, through his doctrines of intentionality and abstraction.
cambridge.org/core/services/…
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Historical reception: the thought of Louis XVI, the last ancien regime king of France, remains obscure. Yet his schoolboy notes survive from his tutelage in the 1760s. I argue that reading them, one finds an Augustinian-Platonist current.
tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.10…
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@MDLordBaltimore @invitinghistory You see, this interests me because I always wish to know how people who work with incomplete historical texts manage to piece together their readings. Part of the method of imitating a master until it sticks.
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@nonnullis02 @invitinghistory To a degree, using the documents that survive for the people that surrounded the Calvert’s. One of the best surviving records is the book The Trail of Lord Baltimore, which is the court record from his rape trial… Frederick Calvert kind of soured the title for a while.

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@MDLordBaltimore @invitinghistory That's unfortunate but not uncommon. How have you managed to work around the lack of sources?
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@nonnullis02 @invitinghistory The 6th Baron Baltimore, Frederick Calvert was a scoundrel, and whored around. He had a number of children, but none with his wife, so the title died out. I think the kids that did inherit didn’t feel any duty or responsibility to preserve anything.
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@MDLordBaltimore @invitinghistory Is there any ideological reason for the neglect? Usually when important figures are this neglected, it's because they're inconvenient for one or other historical narrative.
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@nonnullis02 @invitinghistory Frederick revealed to the representative what he had left of the family documents were in a crate in their greenhouse. The state of Maryland had to buy the documents from the family, and what survived are in the archive in Baltimore.
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