A Pedagogue's Progress |
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Jacques Barzun's 100th Birthday On the occasion of his 100th birthday, it seems appropriate to write a short note about how much Jacques Barzun has influenced me in the five years that I've known him through his books (of which I have only 14: From Dawn to Decadence; The House of Intellect; Begin Here; Teacher in America; The Modern Researcher; Classic, Romantic, and Modern; Darwin, Marx, Wagner; Berlioz and the Romantic Century; The American University; Clio and the Doctors; A Stroll with William James; The Culture We Deserve; God's Country and Mine; and The Jacques Barzun Reader). But as I'm not nearly as prodigious a writer as he is, and with dinner imminent, I'll just limit myself, for the moment, to these lines from A Stroll with William James . Barzun is describing his intellectual debt to James at the beginning of the book: I find him visibly and testably right -- right in intuition, range of considerations, sequence of reasons, and fully rounded power of expression. He is for me the most inclusive mind I can listen to, the most concrete and the last hampered by trifles. He is moreover entirely candid and full of gaiety...The tone and temper of his thought, aside from its purport and contents, is a prop to independence of mind, an antidote to the opium of modern ideologies, a tonic in the resistance to the sludge of "modern communications," popular and advanced. His resolving lucidity in analysis, his hard-won freedom that frees others (a rare consequence of liberation movements) enables me to better endure or enjoy whatever befalls me -- and all this in the simplest way of making actual and unmistakable what I would otherwise grope toward or dimly sense.Happy 100th, Professor.
Crysis Well, I'm done with that, or rather, the three of us (mostly the two of them) made short work of it in slightly over 12 hours yesterday. It ran slowly (~20 fps) on my two-year old rig, and bugs made life annoying on occasions -- especially right at the end, when I couldn't fire the damn TAC cannon. Gorgeous visuals (even at Medium), and extremely challenging (even on Normal) for someone used to Half-Life 2 (I finished Episode 2 a week or two ago). Monday, November 19, 2007
Update I am probably going to get braces. Please don't laugh. According to Wikipedia, adults who've worn braces include Tom Cruise, Cristiano Ronaldo, Prince Harry, and the Williams sisters. Spent a lot of money on books today, including David Copperfield and a forbidding tome on Southeast Asian political economy. Still haven't spent all $1000. |
WHO AM I? Your author graduated from Dartmouth College in 2004 having majored in History and English. From June 2007, he will be teaching contemporary Southeast Asian history at another of his former schools. SOME WEBSITES I READ The Dartmouth Observer Singapore Websites The Intelligent Singaporean Mr Wang Says So Mr Brown Singabloodypore Singapore Angle Singapore Window A Xenoboy in Sg Gayle Goh Aaron Ng Molly Meek Elia Diodati Stressed Teacher Tym Blogs Too! Yawning Bread Talking Cock Non-Singapore Websites Andrew Sullivan The Belgravia Dispatch The American Scene Oxblog The Corner Bradford Plumer Matthew Yglesias The Washington Monthly National Review Online The Weekly Standard The Plank Open University Marty Peretz Michael Totten Martin Kramer Daniel Drezner Joe's Dartblog Instapundit Christopher Hitchens Ross Douthat IvyGate Les Belles Lettres Arts & Letters Daily The Atlantic Monthly History News Network Guardian Unlimited Books London Review of Books The New Criterion Voice of the Shuttle New York Review of Books ARCHIVES September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008 April 2008 May 2008 June 2008 July 2008 August 2008 September 2008 October 2008 November 2008 December 2008 January 2009 February 2009 March 2009 April 2009 May 2009 June 2009 July 2009 November 2009 July 2010 October 2010 |