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Well, I am late in posting this, as things got a bit hectic this weekend and I failed to ready myself for that by getting this done sooner. This brings me to 2 late posts for the year, I think, out of the five I'll allow myself and still say I've met my boast. At any rate, here's what I think will be the last in my series of posts on Spengler, which pulls together a grab bag of sayings, thoughts, and links to other things I've read. You can read it here.
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Date: 2023-06-06 01:53 pm (UTC)It strikes me that if an organism is a whole made up of parts, we have to observe what "parts" actually make them up. Perhaps some humans are part of bigger-than-human ecosystem organisms, in which the humans participate in that ecosystem organism as only one part of it, through their special strengths (such as, for eg, storytelling, tool-making). And perhaps, what Spengler is studying are the times when some humans breakaway with a specific story and/or a specific toolset, to form a separate organism with only human parts, or with only human stories, human tools and human beings as its component parts.
Perhaps "primitive" is a word Spengler and others use for a human who is still a component of an ecosystem organism, but not of a culturesystem organism. (Obviously I'm using language idiosyncratically here, just to get this speculation across).
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Date: 2023-06-06 04:57 pm (UTC)Is that roughly where you're going?
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Date: 2023-06-06 07:32 pm (UTC)I was also struck by your later note on the idea of "freedom" - and how it is the appeal of the city - the chance to re-invent yourself - in a way that necessitates uprooting yourself from some *place* elsewhere... this one is going to give me a couple of headachy meditation sessions, I guess. Because I value freedom AND I value "plantedness". What can this mean?
I appreciate your reviews. :)
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Date: 2023-06-07 07:31 pm (UTC)And yes! The conflict between "freedom" and "rootedness" is indeed a tough one! Please let me know when you solve it for the rest of us ;)
And thank you much, glad they've been helpful.
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Date: 2023-06-07 08:37 pm (UTC)But, I am finding this series of posts from 2017 rather instructive... https://samzdat.com/the-uruk-series/
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Date: 2023-06-07 10:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-06-09 01:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2023-06-09 09:41 pm (UTC)