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Transcript:
https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/56427257
Speaker 0 (0s): You went out,
Speaker 1 (17s): They haven't talked to you for awhile. You're doing well. You could get a haircut. It looks good. I like it. What else was going on having a good day? Good evening. You enjoying a glass of red wine in a beautiful sunset. Talking about your family while you're doing something with you to guard as the thoughts that have attempted enter your conscious time for one, having a great day.
Thanks for asking for things. We're thinking about the topic of drinking. I have been reading a book called The Dialogues of Alfred North Whitehead do you ever get a chance to pick up anything by Alfred North Whitehead I would highly suggest you do it. And that is what this podcast is going to be about. It's important to note that the majority of this book takes place from 1840, tonight at 40, it goes into it a little bit of history in, and it gets into mr.
Alfred, North Whitehead slides. We'll be going through some of his ideas, some of his thoughts and mind you, this is a book, not particularly about anything in particular. It is a sad day. She was a Dialogues at, he had with a lot of different reporters. And so that any further waiting on your part, let's dig in here. I'm just going to go from time to time.
Some things that I've highlighted to get my thoughts of course allow when you talk about it, what it means to be nice to have made friends, do you have a domesticated one? So we have no black looks or angry words for our neighbors.
It's a few enjoys himself on his own way to the whole earth subculture, a famous man, and their story is not a grave and only on stone over their native earth, butterflies on far away without a visible symbol woven into the stuff of other men's lives, pretty feet, right? So we're just going to go through and check out a few more quotes and we get to some that kind of jump in and tell you what I had to think about the American newspapers give a totally wrong impression for the 10 month.
One comes to read their small man. He finds that they are written by very sensible pieces and in their space a lot, they are much more fair to political opponents than
Speaker 2 (3m 36s): English one.
Speaker 1 (3m 39s): Clearly this was written on the creative art. They ran out well, not very imagine the Americans, students that are less well-informed of more eager to learn English are less eager,
Speaker 2 (4m 10s): Have a more informed. The American boy knows less about what interests him more. The English boy knows more about what seems to interest him less. Interesting. I always find it fascinating to learn about different cultures and not just by reading a book, but hearing about the perspective
Speaker 1 (4m 42s): I have other culture for people's point of view. I think the English vs the American culture as fascinating to hear and learn about, especially from a gentleman like Alfred North Whitehead who was prior to coming to America, I would say a part of not the aristocracy, but higher middle class. If you get an idea of the gentleman, what it was like when he moved over here. So it's a fascinating book. If you guys get an opportunity, I'm going to try to stoke your curiosity by getting into some other stuff that you talked about here.
All right. Ages of upheaval, favorable to creation. I fancy they are, if not to prolong to violent, I think that out of great chaos Can come great creation. And in fact, only out of chaos can come without chaos without the tearing down for the great eight.
Is it a, how would you describe, like if you think about things right now, you could make the case that chaos is moving in on our society. Thunder storm clouds gathering, getting ready to fall down on, but we need that. You have to wonder sometimes, you know, as chaotic as it is right now, that can be done except to face the chaos and while its easy to lay blame for saved by it and whatever you want to throw out there it's seems to me that is unavoidable and that there is, there is no solution.
There's just these periods of violent upheaval where we as a species needs to not only face, but become the catalyst on that. We must destroy some of the old ideas so that we could have a new one could argue that things were so well for so long to maintain that I was thinking of a good way to look at our environment right now.
Let me give you an example. I was out of my garden and I didn't have a big garden that I like. It was really beautiful. And I had these 14 years in there. If anyone has gardenias or has ever sold, the idea is just a lovely smell, I guess, like to explain it to me. However, let me imagine a little bit of salt.
Imagine that the next week
Speaker 3 (8m 18s): And Roma have a warm vanilla and that's kind of like how the Gardenia smell And you could begin to smell the Gardenia as it begins to bloom in the life cycle of it is maybe a week. And so you'll see the bud and then it opens up Whoo
Speaker 1 (8m 38s): Beautiful flowers,
Speaker 3 (8m 41s): A white flower looks like a pure white wedding dress
Speaker 1 (8m 47s): And it has this unbelievable But for the sunlight. Then on day four, you could begin to notice with the flowers. You need to have the Brown a little bit fragrances while still notice is nowhere near as the portal becomes a little bit more Brown, day six, it begins the wilting continues
Speaker 3 (9m 27s): And it's all kind of shriveled up
Speaker 1 (9m 28s): And in about a week at fault. Now there are things you can do. You could cut that flower, often, put it in a jar and use some attitudes to keep the flower alive longer. But at that point in time, you cut it off the tree. And I think that metaphor of the garden giving way to the flower beauty, and it's a real flowering and in all its glory and then we'll do it.
That's the cycle. Not only have a flower but of our life in our society. And I would argue that
Speaker 3 (10m 18s): It kind of where our society is right now. I think so. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10m 21s): And it would be the editor's of the guardian you have in Browning for a while in the chaos of the street is the symptom of DK society and its sad to see it also really beautiful. If you could just
Speaker 3 (10m 49s): Step back and look at our society at that level,
Speaker 1 (10m 53s): Our society, it's like the most brilliant flour flowering at the time of the spring and you enjoy it. And you're thankful because you've got to be there to see all of her now in the winter, it goes away. It's just something that it's beautiful, like the destruction,
Speaker 3 (11m 22s): Even the destruction of it. I, and I know
Speaker 1 (11m 25s): That that's, I think that's the wrong word is more of like the decay of close your eyes. You could imagine this slowly start society right now and you could see it as a scary or a chaotic however, really is just a cycle of life and is worthy of it.
So beautiful, such a beautiful flower, a country, the ideas and which we chose to go to our heart were so beautiful is worthy of here, but it should be that any great book, any great concert or any great show you've ever seen. It's brought you to tears because it's kind of sad because there has to be at must be this way. Some people think a Howard