Back in the Drew U library today. I’ve been feeling quite pedestrian the past
two weeks, and I mean this in the most literal sense of that word, which
denotes, for me, the walking person.
Translation, I’m really into walking, which is a big change for me. I’ve never ever been one to enjoy taking a
walk. Running or jogging for exercise,
and biking has been my preferred mode of transportation since I was in
elementary school. But after hiking up
Mt. Jackson and then returning to Crawford Notch a week later, I’m hooked on
hiking, which sounds like a corny bumper sticker, but so be it. I’ve been into hiking for a very long time,
since I was introduced to it at Skoglund and we hiked Katahdin. But hiking and walking are not necessarily
the same. In fact, they are quite
different, unless, of course, one can see them as not simply complementary, but
two forms of the same experience. When
is almost always walking when on a hike, but one is not always hiking when on a
walk. Or walking to and fro doesn’t
necessarily entail hiking. For example,
when I walk to the restroom, or to the drinking fountain, I’m not hiking. But one can feel as though one were hiking
when walking to the train station, or to the farmers market. And, in fact, I felt very much as if I were
hiking when I first arrived to Hofstra last week and walked across campus. (And if memory serves me, I wrote about that
in my blog commentary). At the moment the common denominator that is
determining a walk to be a hike are the trees!
I can’t quite put language to it…and perhaps I never will…although I
haven’t actually put forth much effort
to do so…but I’m experiencing a lasting and deepening affinity [I think that’s
the right word] for trees, specifically when they are gathered together in the
community we call ‘forest’. And this is
not in any way a contrived way to connect my mood and modality with the Legend
of Zarathustra, which is now going on its 9th consecutive day. It’s not surprising that the Legend, that is
the stuff of a naturalist’s imagination, would be written in the weeks
coinciding with the end of summer break, a summer, like the one I’ve just
experienced, that was defined by outdoor experiences, most of it camping. But
the mood/modality of affinity I’ve been experiencing the past two weeks is
different, if only because I have an acute awareness of the…feeling? [I’ve just now an exchange with a librarian
that raised an interesting question for me on this matter. As she passed through the doorway that leads
into the Cornell Room -- a stacks and
study area – she stopped and turned as the door shut slowly. I presumed she was wondering if the door was
making louder than library appropriate sound, but then she looked at me and
then pointed at a 2 inch hole in the ceiling of the threshold above the
doorway. ‘Hmmm…I wonder what that is
from…leaking?’ She then knelt down, felt
the carpet, then stood on a chair and examined the hole. I shrugged and smiled. ‘No clue,’ I said. ‘Well, I suppose it was there all along I
just never noticed it.’ She smiled and
left. And I thought, ‘Exactly!! That hole, like the connection I’m feeling
with the trees, has been there all along and I just didn’t notice it!’ Now this is yet another moment when the
leitmotif of the week is surfacing: the hermeneutic circle. Ever since I read this in the Fink/Heidegger Heraclitus seminar, I’ve been referring
to it when communicating with my philosophy friends and colleagues.]
Affinity
a
spontaneous or natural liking or sympathy for someone or something: he has
an affinity for the music of Berlioz.
•
a similarity of characteristics suggesting a relationship, esp. a resemblance
in structure between animals, plants, or languages: a building with no affinity to contemporary
architectural styles.
•
relationship, esp. by marriage as opposed to blood ties.
•
chiefly Biochemistry the degree to which
a substance tends to combine with another: the affinity of hemoglobin for
oxygen.
ORIGIN
Middle
English (in the sense ‘relationship by marriage’): via Old French
from Latin
affinitas,
from affinis
‘related’
(literally ‘bordering
on’),
from ad-
‘to’
+ finis
‘border.’
I find this dictionary definition
of affinity is useful, especially the first line of the entry: ‘a spontaneous or natural liking or sympathy
for someone or something.’ Sympathy can
be misunderstood in the same way that Rousseau’s ‘pity’ is misconstrued. In both cases
we immediately project sentimentality, when something much more
impactful and profound is happening.
Indeed, with the experience of affinity, we sense a connection that is
happening by way of an exchange, a communication that remains almost hidden, in
the way that electrical wires are tucked away behind walls, or, perhaps even more
appropriate analogy, the way radio waves are invisibly moving all around us,
full of content. Here the last entry,
the one from biochemistry, is also evocative and relevant: affinity as a substantial combination. This gets me closer in a way that the
sentimental takes me further from the experience I am having.
All this to say that I ventured to
the Drew campus today by walking to the train station in Summit, taking the
Morris & Essex line two stops to Madison, and walking up to campus. The total distance is 6.6 miles, which is .5
miles closer than the trip from my house in Portland to Stacy’s house in
Falmouth Foreside, which I rode a few times on my bike in July. (As opposed to
the bucolic and relatively flat water view ride from Portland to Falmouth, 29
Sunset Drive to Drew involves many hill, some quite steep.) But I opted to walk and train and walk
because it seemed to me not only an excellent way to get some exercise, but
also one that is more eco-friendly, both in terms of the use of fossil fuels
and in terms of communing with the trees, who seem to be ‘communicating’
something important!
Now with that suggestion on the
table, I want to share an excerpt from a Heidegger book I happened upon here in
the library, a relatively short (fewer than 100 pages) book, The End of Philosophy, edited and
translated by Joan Stambaugh. It was
originally published in 1961 as volume
II of Nietzsche. I don’t recall seeing this material before,
and when I took it from the shelf I had anticipated finding the essay “The End
of Philosophy and the Task of Thinking.”
But it’s four essays/lectures, all organized around Nietzsche and
overcoming metaphysics. I came across
the following excerpt, which is reminds me of the writing I did on Nature’s
law, and the force of Nature, writing that happened during and just after I was
working from the aforementioned house in Falmouth Foreside, which is captured
in the following in OPM 169/August 2nd: “If the writing ultimately produced the book titled Being and Learning, that is because
Being (and not the human being) is prior and principal. In turn, what is so obvious to me today (a
decade later), and that became very clear to me in the week I was 8 miles north
of my house and perched on the shore of Casco Bay at the top of Town Landing
Road in Falmouth Foreside, is the fundamental relationship of Being and
Learning presumes the reduction of Learning to ‘meditative thinking’ that is
itself reduced to the modality of the solitary thinker, specifically the
thinker who is moving ‘alone’ on the primal ground in concord with the primal
flow. Again, my exemplars are
Nietzsche’s and Thoreau’s ecstatic experiences while hiking in mountain
forests. They were ‘alone’ but hardly
‘lonely,’ yet solitary subjects in the sense of being subjected to the profound
force of Nature: Life!”
All this writing [on
affinity, invisibility, Nature, etc., …prelude to sharing today’s writing from
a decade ago…] leads to the excerpt from Heidegger’s “Overcoming Metaphysics”
essay/lecture, the last of the four in the volume:
“XXVII
Shepherds
live invisibly and outside of the desert of the desolated earth, which is only
supposed to be of use for the guarantee of the dominance of man whose effects
are limited to judging whether something is important or unimportant for
life. As the will to will, this life
demands in advance that all knowledge move in the manner of guaranteeing
calculation and valuation.
The
unnoticeable law of the earth preserves the earth in the sufficiency of the
emerging and perishing of all things in the allotted sphere of the possible
which everything follows, and yet nothing knows. The birch tree never oversteps its
possibility. The colony of bees dwells
in its possibility…
…
It
is one thing just to use the earth, another to receive the blessing of the
earth and to become at home in the law of this reception in order to shepherd
the mystery of Being and watch over the inviolability of the possible.”(p.109)
JUST NOW, when I
retrieved the material from the file where I carry the daily writing meditation
material I was completely thrown by what I encountered: the date from ‘today’s’
writing is 09/12…WHAT?!??! WAIT just a
moment…there is a note in the margins:
“here’s the ‘break’…this is when ‘The Shadow on the Porch’ was completed. That would be the ‘myth’ I wrote based
on Plato’s Symposium, specifically, imagining what occurred in the time when
Socrates drifted off before entering Agathon’s house. I originally engaged with this scene way
back on March 12th, less than a month into the yearlong
experiment. Here’s what I wrote in my
commentary on that day a few months ago, when I was reading and recording the
daily meditations: “PPM28 is read from the verranda (the threshold?!) at the Hotel
Albuquerque, in New Mexico, where I have come for the annual Philosophy of
Education (PES) conference. In my post-reading commentary I note that it
is deeply coincidental that I should find myself on this porch (stoa)
when reading the following lines from the Symposium, which I cite in
this meditation: I write "when they finally arrived at the party
Socrates, much to Agathon's surprise, remained outside where 'he retreated in
the next door neighbor's porch...This is very odd, said Agathon. You must
speak to him again, and insist. But here I broke in [recalled
Aristodemos]. I shouldn't do that, I said. You'd much better leave
him to himself. It's quite a habit of his, you know; off he goes and
there he stands, no matter where it is. I've no doubt he'll be with us
before long, so I really don't think you need to worry him."(Symposium,
175b) This is the end of my meditation, which picked from the prior day's
jam on Socrates' pathos by returning to Plato's Symposium, but
only just the beginning.”
“The Shadow on the Porch” was written
in Edinburgh, Scotland, for a conference.
Here are the details as the appear on my CV: Duarte, Eduardo Manuel, "Allegory, Meaning and Philosophical
Education: Learning
to Think Poetically through the
Legends of Socrates." Paper presented at the conference REASONS OF THE
HEART: Myth, Meaning and Education,
University of Edinburgh, Scotland, September 9-12, 2004.
Today is September 7th,
and I’m presuming that I was on my way to Scotland, arriving on the 8th,
a day before the conference. I’m also
presuming that I broke from the writing of the Zarathustra legend in order to
focus on writing the Socrates story, which I would read at the conference
alongside my colleague, the analytic philosopher Harvey Siegel. (It was thought to be something of a joke to
place Duarte and Siegel during the same slot, but the joke was on them, because
Harvey and I had a long standing mutual respect for one another.) At any rate, I was caught by surprise today
and don’t have the material I wrote ten years ago today to revisit. I’m glad I was caught by surprise, because it
means I’m approaching this commemoration in earnest. Having said that, I’m glad that today was one
of those days that I was drawn into the place of thinking and wrote something before I encountered ‘break’ in the
writing. So tomorrow, when I return to
campus, I’m determined to find that myth, which, if memory serves me, was
written out by hand into a notebook. I’ll
find the notebook, and perhaps a copy of the version I typed up. And while I don’t have the notebook in front of
me, I have a very vivid recollection of writing part of the material on a very
famous landmark in Edinburgh, Arthur’s seat.
3.0 (Sunday, Portland, ME). I have to smile at the claim made 10 years ago that I have a "sudden" affinity for trees! It's possible that I was feeling that extra powerful surge of energy that I often feel in autumn, but it's not like in 2014 I suddenly realized I loved being in forests! On the contrary, as I was thinking about on Friday when I was riding my mountain bike through the forest trails, I think I was born to be a forest dweller, or someone who lives on the edge of a forest and spend lots of time in the forests. 10 years ago my folks still lived in 29 Sunset Drive, Summit, NJ, the house I grew up in, and I was staying there during the week when I commuted down from Portland to teach at Hofstra. The house sat atop a hill above a creek and a forest that I would explore with my friends and by myself when I was young. We used to sled down trails in the winter, and even made an emergency barrier with branches just in case someone missed the turn and was heading for the little cliff (10 feet) that would drop you into the creek. No one went over, but many hit the branch barrier. All that to say our house here in Portland is surrounded by forest (Portland is nicknamed the Forest City), and I've spent most of this summer and now early autumn clearing out the overgrowth, specifically the invasive vine that was allowed to grow widely for decades, taking down no fewer than 4 60ft tall White Pines, the same tree that established this English settlement, Stroudwater, as a mast building location for the Royal Navy. I've taken it as my mission to preserve the remaining grove of White Pines. So needless to say I've been spending most of my time working in the forest and in the past 5 years have cleared most of the overgrowth. Which leads me to conclude I seemed to have been born to be a forest dweller!
ReplyDeleteI was glad to be reminded that 20 years ago I was in Edinburgh for that Myth and Philosophy conference. Aside from the cold and relatively unfriendly Scots, the trip was memorable, mostly because I had brought some bud with me and was enjoying hiking up and down the Arthur's Seat at night! And I recall returning in quite the manic mood and feeling quite high when I teaching my seminars. The other memory is meeting James MacMillan the composer of "Veni, Veni, Emanuel," written for Evelyn Glenie, who is featured in the Nancy paper I wrote last summer. When I told MacMillan that I had heard his piece performed by the LA Philharmonic with Glenie performing, he was quite positive. The smile immediately left his face when I then told him that I had remixed the piece with a Mickey Hart/Billy Kreutzman "Drums." He more or less scowled at me! That's kind of a tale of my experience in academia. One moment I smile and positive recognition, the next a dismissive scowl. I can't help but chuckle at how easily folks will shift their perspectives, confirming that in the end it really is about how it plays into their own egos. This is why a major focus of "LEARN" is the letting go of the self-certain ego. We can't truly listen if we are filtering what we are hearing through our egos. One would imagine that an established composer like James MacMillan would know how to listen! Perhaps he should consult with Evelyn Glenie!