Nothingness
Richard Rorty quoted by Peter Watson *
Poetry *
Mozartian Joy
Myths
Arthur Schopenhauer & Will
riCH(əw)əl
Figure 24
Leave Us Out Of It
The Tiger and The Thistle - Tipu Sultan and the Sc…
Thus spake the tree
Earthworms, Charles Darwin & Secular enchantment
Shirt on your back and coffee in your cup
Conversation
Radio
Walden cabin - sounds
A ream of paper *
Story of Pencils *
Daguerreotype
Slave Export from Africa *
Rosa Park *
Image 6 *
Invisibility ~ The person I am thinking of tends t…
Sun light
*
"Natural desire lines" and/or Culture*
Walk in the park*
Existential Philosophy
Table 12.1 ~ Inflation
Anthropocene Sky *
Sycamore / Pane
BEING AND NOTHINGNESS
What next?
K 127
~ Reading ~
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
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Ivy, Oak & ....... *
In marriage, the women's graceful ivy was seen as ornamenting the man's sturdy Oak. Alas, Wollstonecraft says, if only husbands were so stable and reliable, rather than more like "overgrown children". Yet thanks to upbringing and lack of education, their wives are similarly weak. They lack order in their activities, because they were never taught method or reasoning. They learn only "in snatches," by observations picked up through daily life and society, and have no body of abstract knowledge against which to test what they discover. Women's mental understanding has always been sacrificed to the need to look good or seem charming, and even their body is only half-developed through lack of exercise or physical training. (Mary Wollstonecraft)
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