June, 2010 Archives
Jun
No Mystery Left Between the Sexes?
Filed under Links
Camille Paglia takes a shot at explaining the female sexual apathy for which drug makers seek to provide a “female Viagra”. She makes a few good observations, including:
In the discreet white-collar realm, men and women are interchangeable, doing the same, mind-based work. Physicality is suppressed; voices are lowered and gestures curtailed in sanitized office space. Men must neuter themselves, while ambitious women postpone procreation. Androgyny is bewitching in art, but in real life it can lead to stagnation and boredom, which no pill can cure.
Let that sink in for a minute and then see what you think of this:
The sexes, which used to occupy intriguingly separate worlds, are suffering from over-familiarity, a curse of the mundane. There’s no mystery left.
Mystery… It almost seems like a nasty word in this day and age. Like mystery is a shameful failure instead of the main fixture of our human condition. Read more: Op-Ed Contributor – No Sex Please, We’re Middle Class – NYTimes.com.
Jun
Bob Lefsetz on People
Filed under Quotes
Life’s a struggle. It’s the people who get us through.
Jun
When you will find that money cannot be eaten
Filed under Quotes
A Cree Indian prophecy, remembered by a man thinking about the effects of the BP oil spill:
Only after the last tree has been cut down… Only after the last river has been poisoned… Only after the last fish has been caught, only then will you find that money cannot be eaten.
Jun
Should Jessica Bennett Think Twice?
Filed under Links
Jessica Bennett lists 10 facts (although I have a hard time regarding figures from an AskMen.com poll as facts) that should cause a person to think twice about marriage. A commenter responds:
Youth is a time of selfishness and immaturity, when the world revolves around you, and you think that’s the way it should be. But as you grow older, you realize that there is more to life than an endless party, more to life than even living for fun—that happiness too vigorously pursued doesn’t lead to happiness at all.
@Marriage Facts and Trivia: Men, Women and Surveys – Newsweek
Jun
Who Decides How Much Money is Enough Money for You
Filed under Quotes
Thomas Sowell talking about letting politicians decide you have enough money:
Once you buy the argument that some segment of the citizenry should lose their rights, just because they are envied or resented, you are putting your own rights in jeopardy — quite aside from undermining any moral basis for respecting anybody’s rights. You are opening the floodgates to arbitrary power. And once you open the floodgates, you can’t tell the water where to go.
Jun
The Same Old Story
Filed under Quotes
Jonah Lehrer, talking about how we think some new scientific tool or discovery will reveal the simple clock-like structure underlying a phenomenon but instead reveals the phenomenon to be even more complex and less clock-like than we originally thought:
This same story plays out over and over — only the nouns change.
@Jonah Lehrer | Breaking Things Down to Particles Blinds Scientists to Big Picture