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itscoleman
is on page 81 of 284
This is the slowest I've ever read a book.
I've often found myself reading the same sentence 5+ times; especially in the first section: Theoria.
I resonated with Kohák’s thought of how cities have turned into perpetual days. We’ve clouded the heavens with our lights.
Kohák doesn’t have a pessimistic tone though. He states that there are still nights as they are meant to be off-the-grid and in nature.
— Jan 05, 2024 06:02AM
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I've often found myself reading the same sentence 5+ times; especially in the first section: Theoria.
I resonated with Kohák’s thought of how cities have turned into perpetual days. We’ve clouded the heavens with our lights.
Kohák doesn’t have a pessimistic tone though. He states that there are still nights as they are meant to be off-the-grid and in nature.
itscoleman
is on page 81 of 284
This is the slowest I’ve ever read a book. I’ve often found myself reading the same sentence 5+ times, especially in the first section: Theoria.
But I do enjoy this book.
— Jan 05, 2024 05:44AM
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But I do enjoy this book.
Wiley Waggoner
is on page 89 of 284
I wish Kohák made a more articulated defense of the moral sense of nature, but that may just be because I have studied at a university which views moral philosophy as a technē, in the way Kohák uses the word. His distinction between phenomenological ethics and ethics in a vacuum is incredibly interesting, but it’s position seems to be based on faith. Not necessarily wrong, but difficult to convince others.
— Jul 11, 2023 10:19PM
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Wiley Waggoner
is starting
Kohák identifies—correctly, in my opinion—the illness that currently affects human society and causes all the idealistic calls for a return to nature: we have lived in constant contact with our own creations and in a way we have forgotten for what purpose we built those artifacts. In a very interesting critique of Thoreau, he criticizes the primitivist philosophy, but believes that nature can help us remember.
— Jul 11, 2023 10:15PM
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