THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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EATING CHEX MIX WHILE NOT AT A PARTY IS A SIGN |
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or maybe i'm missing something? |
or in this case he could have... umm... had a bad experience... with chex mix...yeah... maybe it was burnt or maybe someone forgot to put peanuts in it or something like that... |
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even if he is a Boring play. |
Augh. Not. A. Boring. Play. Philistine. Certainly not my FAVORITE. But not BORING. I think it's one of Nussbaum's favorites, integral to the flesh of the fragility of goodness. |
I've been thinking about that a lot lately. I read an interview with David Bazan of Pedro the Lion in which he said that he had struggled for years to "be good" and he had always failed. He then described the freedom that came with realizing that he wasn't a good person and he never would be. Now I've never read "Antigone," so I don't know how this issue is dealt with in that play, and seeing how it was written pre-Christianity, I imagine that the Greeks' conception of goodness would be different than our own. But if you believe that people are inherently good, and that one can do bad things and still be a good person, goodness is quite robust. People make mistakes. I know I insult people unknowingly all the time. I certainly don't mean to and I don't plan to....so while insulting people is bad, I don't think that *I'm bad* because I do it. I also think there are very few people who truly enjoy doing wrong and aren't just kidding themselves. I do know people who say that they don't care that they do wrong but clearly are fooling themselves, because they have a very low self-opinion and are unhappy people. So doing wrong doesn't sit right with them, and how could that tension exist if not for the goodness inside them? |
I am not sure if you have rcvd the cynics welcome to sorabji......so eat a dick! |
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it's bell_jar. though you knew that. make cracks at me personally, please, but leave the name alone. if it'll be a problem i'll change it, but we owe sylvia the respect... i am certain. |
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So let's see you do one thing as graceful as Sylvia Plath... So let's see you do one thing as senselessly cruel as Sylvia Plath. |
i really don't care what the lady did in her personal life, her poems could easily appeal to me right now and i have liked them in the past.... Although Spider, i generally would agree with you. I didn't agree with Miller's promiscuity, or neglect for his kids at certain times....but damned if i don't think he is one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.... by the way, I have been meaning to dive into Ionesco...an influence from a Miller essay...any thoughts or opinions on him....... also...if you have not seen the Hal Hartly film Henry Fool......i suggest you get it....it's a great little flic..... |
all people are good good people do bad things suicide is a bad thing (or so they say) therefore, people who commit suicide are still good. do you think that good people don't deserve respect? |
my fucking god the irony of this conversation. yes, good people can do bad. it happens all the time. We are only human and subject to whims of the day, despite negative repercussions. furthermore i only reserve brutal judgement for those who beat helpless furry animals. poop |
I also have a great aversion to her poetry, with the exception of the six-line "The Hanging Man" and the last three lines of "Lady Lazarus." Oddly enough, I do like Yeats, even though he too rolled in the angst more than a bit. |
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I haven't played Scrabble since I was a kid. I don't remember why, but I always quit the game in a big huff. |
i wanna play dammit |
It's only wonderful because of the tubesteak comment, though. |
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I still love Auden. Rhiannon, did you see his poem about Yeats? sniffle. |
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Rhi: Nussbaum is a bit more Aristotelian than I am prepared to get, but this book is a good read. |