These notes are for books read from June 1st to August 31, 2014
June 5th
Meditations of Marcus Aurelius – written by the wise philosopher-emperor
Marcus while he was on the Roman frontier at the head of his legions fighting
against the Germans. He was the last of the so-called 5 good emperors, and he
was a proponent of Stoic philosophy, which meant he was not too attached to
material gain and determined to make the best of his situation with the talent
available. So far I am discovering that Marcus was ruthless about self-examination
and eliminating anything from his schedule that he felt was unnecessary. It is
said that this is the best ancient writing by a ruler, and I’m finding that a
big statement considering I’m simultaneously reading Caesar’s fascinating
Conquest of Gaul. They were about 200 years apart, so it’s like reading George
Washington’s personal notes during the American Revolution (comparable to
Caesar) and Obama’s memoirs after his Presidency finishes and he completes two
wars (comparable to Marcus finishing the German wars). Apparently Marcus
Aurelius was universally respected and admired, and he did work tirelessly and
come to wise judgments.
Eureka! 81 Key Ideas Explained – Greek Philosophy: Plato’s Cave
(idealism), The Three Laws of Thought; Beginnings of Modern Philosophy: “I
Think, Therefore I Am” (Cogito Ergo Sum),
Hume’s Fork, The Scandal of Induction
Plato’s cave is a
good illustration of what we perceive as reality. Think of a group of men
living in a cave, chained to their seats and only looking at a wall. The fire
behind them only shows them shadows of figures on the wall. When they
experience someone or something, it is as a wall-shadow, but if one escapes
into the outside world, he sees things as they really are. For him to return
and describe the world outside to his former companions would be insufficient
for them to fully understand reality – they need to be freed. Plato posits only
philosophy can free one’s mind to the ideal form of reality that exists in the
world, which is unavailable to most chained minds. The Three Laws of Thought is
basically Aristotle’s take: 1) A=A, 2) A cannot equal not-A, 3) if we’re
discussing a quality A, then a thing will either have it or not: Either A or not-A
(maybe like, either pregnant or not pregnant). And an Important note about Hume
and Induction – the Scientific Method is based on experience – induction,
basically, because we are empirically measuring things for experiments that are
repeatable. However, Hume does not trust experience. Just because the sun has
always risen every morning of your life does not prove that it must rise again
tomorrow. Causality must not necessarily come from this experience, however it
is a practical certainly, which was enough for Hume, but not for later
philosophers. Kant, for example, mentioned a priori knowledge, or things you
just know before experiencing them, like concepts of time and space. And
another philosopher mentioned related to science was Popper (born in 1902) who,
like Kant, said we are not really using induction. Popper is saying scientific
hypotheses do not come from observation, but from creative imagination, and
then we experiment to test theories. We are not really trying to prove our
theories (or hypotheses) correct, but prove them false, and another hypothesis
is created that is better. A theory that survives experiment gives us a good
working description of reality. Popper also observes that the more general the
theory is, the more useless it is: “Black swans exist somewhere in the world”
is quite general, and not so useful. But “Black swans exist in Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania” is more specific, easier to refute, and also more useful.
June 2nd
Great Short Stories – The Enchanted Bluff (Willa Cather) – beautifully written
with descriptive passages of rivers and camping, boys around the campfire share
where they would like to go upriver, looking for gold. One talks of a claim his
wondering uncle had, which consisted of a bluff of red granite that went straight
up and was basically unscalable. An old Indian village ruin is said to be on
top, with perhaps some valuables. And they all express interest in going and
promise to inform the others if any find out what’s on top of the Enchanted
Bluff, but the cares of modern life take almost all possibility or desire from
most of them to still speak of going there, yet the legend lives on. This story
portrays well the feeling of young summer hopes and the encroachments of real
life.
Conquest of Gaul – Caesar explains that when an enemy army asked for
safe passage through his territory, and though he had no intention of allowing
it, asked for time to think about it, which gave him time enough to build
excellent defenses. When two of his legions cornered one-fourth of the enemy
army on the wrong side of a river crossing, he regained Roman honor in victory
and settled a private quarrel simultaneously, he notes. His wife’s great
grandfather had been killed along with Roman consul Lucius Cassius by the same
trapped unit he fortuitously demolished.
June 1st
Through the Looking Glass – morning read about a dozen pages – she’s playing with a cat – makes me want one. Read Alice in Wonderland last academic year; want to finish this second part. Saw a chess puzzle.
Conquest of Gaul – fascinating journal of his time in France by Julius Caesar – read perhaps a dozen pages in evening. Caesar immediately describes the geography of
France and the three main peoples there – the Gauls, or Celts, which were in
the middle part were by no means the most militaristic of them. Caesar unabashedly
and convincingly puts forth a strong case for the character of a people and its
motivations being preprogrammed by its geography.
About this Journal– Finalized reading list today, with page totals. It can be viewed as a three-month reading goal, from June through end-of-August, 2014, but will go as long as needed for each book to have comments here. When I am off in July, I am devoting 10 hours per day to reading, and will gauge my reading speed. Since I have high standards of comprehension, the goal will not be to plow through the material quickly, but thoughtfully. All books have been carefully chosen, and none have been completed before, although a few have been attempted.