
It would be difficult to overstress how much Jimmy Dorrell has meant, and will continue to mean, to Waco. May the Lord bless Jimmy in his retirement โ though I doubt that heโll be very retiring.ย
I've been reading too much on Instapaper. Saving articles for later is a powerful way to manage my time, but it produces a huge pile of content that I then feel obligated to work my way through.ย
Instapaper has the opposite effect on me. I save many articles there, and when I visit the site the first thing I do is delete the articles I am no longer interested in reading. Usually thatโs more than half of the articles Iโve saved. (โWhy did I think I wanted to read that?โ) Very liberating. The key is not to visit Instapaper too often โ twice a week is about right.ย
Abandoned reading: The Matter With Things: Our Brains, Our Delusions and the Unmaking of the World by Iain McGilchrist. What an infuriating endeavor. McGilchrist seems to think that he he makes a claim stronger by giving, not three, not five, but forty-seven supportive examples โ and that he canโt say what he wants to say about the hemispheres of the brain without pausing to articulate a Theory of Truth. I began as an exceptionally sympathetic reader and now want to throw these volumes as far from me as possible. ๐
I've had a number of people ask me about this: A 12-Month Immersive Course in Humanities - by Ted Gioia. Iโll just say that my version would be, not 52 assignments in a year, but one assignment in a year. Pick one vital book and read it slowly. Pause to think. Re-read difficult passages. Take your time, and be willing to set it aside for a while. And remember what Auden said: โWhen one thinks of the attention that a great poem demands, there is something frivolous about the notion of spending every day with one. Masterpieces should be kept for High Holidays of the Spirit.โย
And from six years ago, on my old Buttondown newsletter: Easter with Arcabas.
New from me: “Welcome to the party, Christmas and Easter Christians!”
Tech CEO asks
Chatbot why it is frozen.
Chatbot: โYouโre frozen.โ
The other day I wrote, โChatbotsโ brains donโt have a right hemisphere.โ Several people โ surprisingly many โ have asked me to expand on that. But I dunno: expanding on it feels like a very left-hemisphere thing to do.ย
My advice for the new Archbishop of Canterbury | Rowan Williams:ย
It might sound odd to approach Easter thinking about fear. But itโs striking that the earliest gospel finishes by telling us that the women who came to the tomb of Jesus and found it empty initially โsaid nothing because they were afraidโ. Nothing is going to be the same again: being afraid is the most natural reaction. We are all on the back foot: the โcultural Christianโ, who likes to have a little bit of Christian decor in the house; the Christian nationalist, who wants non-Christians to know their place; the liberal Anglican, who wants everyone to feel comfortably at home. If what is said to Mary and what is done on Easter Day are indeed world-changing matters, we do well to be apprehensive. Only then can we begin to see just what we are to be thankful for. Release. Transformation.ย
The key point about all these โhigh agencyโ people is that theyโre agentic in relation to existing institutions and human beings but mimetic in relation to money. They do whatever money wants. They want to be money. They put money where their mouth is. And it talks.ย