Category: philosophical counseling
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James Ladyman on philosophy that’s not for the masses
In “Philosophy That’s Not for the Masses,” James Ladyman argues that professional philosophers are under no obligation to make their ideas accessible to the public. Philosophers of science and logic, he writes, may get on quite well writing for and speaking with each other, they really should specialize in order to make the questions they…
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On Ulysses’s homecoming: Crying and shivering
And after his return to Ithaca, what there does Ulysses find? That his home is filled with suitors, truculent and obnoxious. And after they’ve been dispatched and the floors cleaned? That there abides a reticent wife, filled with distrust. They shall sleep in separate beds in separate rooms that night. This until, filled with anger,…
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Go down, sweet Moses… On the spiritual exercise of letting go
Go down, sweet Moses, / Your burdens are weighing you down. You’ve borne enmity like a slave: / your past days suppliant, your diurnal turns craven, your Amens bleating, / stern, and uncowed. For how now, gentle Moses? / You, who were offered one sturdy plank, / yet held fast to the rotten. / You, to whom love flowed like spring,…
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Examination of conscience: On humility and compassion: Second day of spiritual exercise (2)
There are times when a problem stops you in your tracks. Mine has been determining how much reality to let in. 1 To live well, we must be grounded in a lived reality. By “a lived reality,” I mean a net of ownmost desires and values that are connected to an external world. Take one…
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Childhood as spiritual exercise: Peter in The Snowy Day
I don’t know what led me to the local library to stand in the middle of the kids’ section, to look down at my running shoes and around me at the little tables, and, standing there not unself-consciously to read Ezra Jack Keat’s The Snowy Day. It may be that the idea of home has…
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