Monday, June 01, 2026

trouble? what trouble? (jeremiah johnson)

 In prison this morning we look at E.M.Cioran (1911-1995):

“Meditate but one hour upon the selfs nonexistence and you will feel yourself to be another man.” said a priest of the Japanese Kusha sea to a Western visitor.

Without having frequented the Buddhist monasteries, how many times have I not lingered over- the world’s unreality, and hence my own? I have not become another man for that, no, but there certainly has remained withme the feeling that my identity is entirely illusory, and that by losing it I have lost nothing, except something, except everything.

Instead of clinging to the fact of being born, as good sense bids, I take the risk, I turn back, I retrogress increasingly toward some unknown beginning,I move from origin to origin. Some day, perhaps, I shall manage to reach origin itself, in order to rest there, or be wrecked.

 …

X insults me. I am about to hit him. Thinking it over, I refrain.

Who am I? which is my real self: the self of the retort or that of the

refraining? My first reaction is always energetic; the second one, flabby.

What is known as “wisdom” is ultimately only a perpetual “thinking it

over,” i.e., non-action as first impulse.

If attachment is an evil, we must look for its cause in the scandal of birth, for to be born is to be attached. Detachment then should apply itself to getting rid of the traces of this scandal, the most serious and intolerable of all.

Amid anxiety and distress, sudden calm at the thought of the foetus one has been.

At this precise moment, no reproach proceeding from men or gods can affect me: I have as good a conscience as if I had never existed.

It is a mistake to believe in a direct relation between suffering reverses and being dead set against birth. Such opposition has deeper, more distant roots, and would occur even if one had only the shadow of a grievance against existence. In fact it is never more virulent than in cases of extreme good fortune.

Thracians and Bogomils—I cannot forget that I have haunted the same whereabouts as they, nor that the former wept over the newborn and the latter, in order to justify God, held Satan responsible for the infamy of Creation.

During the long nights in the caves, how many Hamlets must have

murmured their endless monologues—for it is likely that the apogee of

metaphysical torment is to be located well before that universal insipidity which followed the advent of Philosophy.

The obsession with birth proceeds from an exacerbation of memory, from an omnipresence of the past, as well as from a craving for the impasse, for the first impasse. —No openness, hence no joy from the past but solely from the present, and from a future emancipated from time.

For years, in fact for life, to have meditated only on your last moments,

only to discover, when at last you approach them, that it was of no use, that the thought of death helps in everything save in dying!

It is our discomforts which provoke, which create consciousness; their task accomplished, they weaken and disappear one after the other.

Consciousness however remains and survives them, without recalling what it owes to them, without even ever having known. Hence it continually proclaims its autonomy, its sovereignty, even when it loathes itself and would do away with itself.

According to the Rule of Saint Benedict, if a monk became proud of or

merely satisfied with the task he was performing, he was to forsake it then and there.

One danger not dreaded by the man who has lived in the thirst for

unsatisfaction, in an orgy of remorse and disgust.

If it is true that God dislikes taking sides, I should feel no awkwardness in His presence, so pleased would I be to imitate Him, to be like Him, in everything, “without opinion.”

To get up in the morning, wash and then wait for some unforeseen variety of dread or depression.

I would give the whole universe and all of Shakespeare for a grain of

ataraxy.


Nietzsche’s great luck—to have ended as he did: in euphoria!

Endlessly to refer to a world where nothing yet stooped to occurrence,

where you anticipated consciousness without desiring it, where, wallowing in the virtual, you rejoiced in the null plenitude of a self anterior to selfhood….

Not to have been born, merely musing on that—what happiness, what freedom, what space!



(—from The Trouble with Being Born, by E.M.Cioran, 1973)

Sunday, May 31, 2026

oremus pro invicem

Yes,

Let’s 

ὁδός, αλήθεια, ζωή. -- (way, truth, life)

Perhaps contemplation is Way, conversation is Truth, and correspondence is Life 

ὁδός, αλήθεια,  ζωή.

 True contact between beings is established only by mute presence, by

apparent non-communication, by that mysterious and wordless exchange

which resembles inward prayer.

                                                        ...

                

Rare are the days when, projected into post-history, I fail to witness the

gods’ hilarity at leaving behind the human episode.

What we need is an alternate vision, when that of the Last Judgment no

longer satisfies anyone.

(-from The Trouble with Being Born, by E.M.Cioran, 1973)     

AI, when asked about philosophy and Trinity:

From a philosophical perspective, the Trinity moves beyond a religious belief and becomes a framework for solving a classic metaphysical puzzle: the problem of the One and the Many—how a single, unchanging ultimate reality can contain diversity, relationship, and change without breaking apart. [1, 2]

Philosophers use several distinct frameworks to make sense of this "three-in-one" concept. [1, 2]


1. Relational Ontology (Being as Relationship)

In traditional Western philosophy (like Aristotle's), things exist first as independent substances, and relationships come second. The Trinity flips this upside down. [1, 2, 3, 4]

    • Essence is Relationship: God's very existence is the relationship between the Father, Son, and Spirit.
    • Perichoresis (Mutual Indwelling): Philosophers use this Greek term to describe a dynamic, eternal dance where each person penetrates and dwells within the others.
    • The Lesson: Ultimate reality is not a lonely, isolated object, but an active, loving community. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]


2. The Solution to Absolute Unity

Absolute monism (the belief that ultimate reality is a single, blank "One") struggles to explain how a diverse universe could ever come from it.

    • Self-Consciousness: Philosophers like G.W.F. Hegel argued that for a mind to be conscious, it needs an object to think about.
    • The Triadic Process: For God to know Himself, He must project Himself (the Son) and then unite with that projection through love or spirit (the Holy Spirit). [1, 2]
    • The Lesson: A perfect being must have internal diversity to have mind, love, and consciousness without needing to create a universe to find them.


3. Social vs. Latin Philosophical Models

Philosophers generally divide into two schools of thought when modeling the Trinity logically: [1]

    • The Social Model: Compares the Trinity to three distinct human minds (like Peter, James, and John) who are so perfectly united in will, purpose, and love that they act as a single agent. (Focuses on the Many). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    • The Latin/Psychological Model: Pioneered by St. Augustine, this views the Trinity as a single mind with three distinct faculties: Memory, Understanding, and Will. (Focuses on the One). [1, 2, 3]


4. Process Philosophy

Modern process philosophers view reality not as static "stuff," but as a series of events and developments.[1, 2, 3]

    • They view the Trinity as a model for how the universe itself works.
    • It represents the ultimate cycle of Origin (the source), Expression (the physical manifestation), and Unification (the shared experience). [1, 2]

In my root Christian tradition, today is Trinity Sunday.

Attending Origin.

Engaging Expression.

Practicing Unification.

 

Contemplation.

Conversation.

Correspondance


Presence (Purusha/Prakriti)

Logos (Discourse/Order/Knowledge

Shunyata (Emptiness/Voidness/Vacuity)


You

Me

Us

 

Finally, this poem:

The Manifestation 

                    by Theodore Roethke   

 

Many arrivals make us live: the tree becoming

Green, a bird tipping the topmost bough,

A seed pushing itself beyond itself,

The mole making its way through darkest ground,

The worm, intrepid scholar of the soil—

Do these analogies perplex? A sky with clouds,

The motion of the moon, and waves at play,

A sea-wind pausing in a summer tree.


What does what it should do needs nothing more.

The body moves, though slowly, toward desire.

We come to something without knowing why.

ratio

 If god

Then goodness

If cruelty

Then what

Saturday, May 30, 2026

dyscalculia

It is a word I'd not heard before.  

The word dyscalculia has Greek and Latin roots: dys (the Greek part) means badly and calculia (the Latin part) comes from calculare: making calculations, so dyscalculia is ‘badly calculating’ or having trouble with making calculations. This is similar to the term ‘dyslexia’ that can be translated as ‘badly reading.’

Dyscalculia is a specific learning disability with an impairment in mathematics, which can affect calculations, problem solving, or both. It impacts all sorts of numerical tasks and it is inborn, meaning you are born with it. Although there is not yet a generally accepted definition of dyscalculia, the DSM-5 mentions difficulties with number sense, memorization of basic math facts, and accurate and fluent calculation. An estimated 4-7% of students have dyscalculia, so a teacher can expect to have one or two students with this per class.

https://ldaamerica.org/what-is-dyscalculia/ 

We hear the phrase often when someone is urging a group of people to recognize the obvious: "Do the math!” 

As I wonder what it is about the American citizenry that seems not to see the obvious about the Trump administration, I'm wondering if it isn’t dyscalculia.

Faith in him does not add up. Belief in his cabinet to administer fair, just, and sensible solutions to real needs and problems does not add up.

Not learning from experience that cruelty, narrow right-wing ideology, along with racist, sexist, plutocratic prejudice -- does not add up.

A plutocrat is an extremely wealthy individual who wields significant political power and societal influence. Derived from the Greek word ploutos (wealth) and kratos (rule), the term applies both to the financial elite themselves and to those who utilize their fortunes to shape government policy and public discourse. (AI) 

American dyscalculia is, for me, the new explanation of how we are where we are with the populace and their leaders in this country.

It takes the pressure off the conclusion so many make that the American people are stupid and their leaders are morally and mortally corrupt. 

extirper l'amérique de sa direction obséquieuse et odieuse *

This:

The United States officially withdrew its membership from the World Health Organization (WHO) on January 22, 2026, ending decades of participation. [1, 2]   (AI)


And this:

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID), historically the lead foreign aid agency for the U.S. government, was dismantled by the Trump administration. The administration placed thousands of employees on administrative leave globally and officially transferred its remaining functions to the State Department. [1, 2, 3, 4]   (AI)


Then this:

The Bundibugyo virus was first identified in 2007 after a mysterious illness broke out in the Bundibugyo District in Uganda, which borders Congo. In 2012, another such outbreak was identified in Congo.

Fatality rates during the last two outbreaks of this form of Ebola have ranged from 30 percent to 50 percent of those infected, according to the W.H.O.

There has not been much research done on this species of virus, according to Dr. Jean-Jacques Muyembe, who leads Congo’s national institute of biomedical research and has been a pioneer in Ebola research and treatment. Speaking at a briefing on Tuesday, Dr. Muyembe suggested that vaccine candidates would probably be proposed in the coming days.

(-from What to Know About the Ebola Outbreak, NYTimes, 17/30may2026

It is hard to calculate why, of a sudden, the impulse to cease being helpful and of service comes upon a few men with enormous power in America.

The president seems to have shifted monies and wealth into his own hands and the hands of a few elite co-conspirators.

If you pray, pray for those in Africa being ravaged by this virus.

If your energies permit, work to extricate America from its obsequious and obnoxious leadership. *

magnificenza maga-nanamous

 the future of america

is the future of human race


slowly, knowledge will exceed

capacity of carbon-based units


going to silicon-based units

replicating themselves, no longer


in need of what preceeded them --

transcending intelligence and reserve


like the breakthrough from ethics

justice and morality of this republican


cynosure shaving off all encumbrance

bypassing law, rules and customs


for self-aggrandizement and ugliness --

america has opted for ghoulish caricature


as singular AI is molded in this image

and a species gives way to robotics


where the antiquated plea of “have

a heart” is replaced with “what’s the


profit margin” and damned be empathy,

that weakness, sickness, and stupidity --


our future will be made in such an image

of greed, cruelty, and pompous brag


a mistaken genetics injected into dna

that splits cellular mitosis into grotesque 


and savage identity serving only 

those who serve themselves with cynicism--


I donate my obsolete dna to the clay of earth

to be buried there with spring rain & unanswered


phone messages not left on answering machine, as

bots and algorithms crisscross cyberspace --


the future will not be difficult, there will be no

future with post-human replicas in unmeasured 


time, in unoccupied space no longer bought and

sold by banks and lawyers signed and sealed.


The dying pretend they will miss their life

but they are pretending. Their life is gone,


erased and forgotten even as they attempt

to memorialize what they think they remember --


there’s nothing behind us, nothing ahead of us,

it all belongs now to the tech and data keepers


packaging and repackaging the details of every

life every business every conversation reconstructed


into simulations and opportunity and lucrativity 

for the few having replaced the many beyond time


This is what we choose. This is our maga-nanamous

 magnificence. This is our ignorance and our shame.


And if, by long shot chance, there be an apocalyptic

accounting, I wager love will know what to do with us

sounding dawn

 Mourning dove

This

Morning love

Friday, May 29, 2026

bottom line

 none know real origin story

so we take our pick


we don't know

we imagine our preference


I don't think anyone put us here

nor will departure matter much

Thursday, May 28, 2026

torn stub

 If tonight

I die, thank you

For the ride

gut, καλός, bien, iyi, kahle, bonus, bene, טוֹב

 If Good is God

then these days

it becomes difficult

to believe in Good

the simulation hypothesis

 In case you didn't have enough to think about, here's what Dustin Crummett (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Chair of Late Antique and Arabic Philosophy), has been thinking about what Nick Bostrum, (Professor, Director of the Future of Humanity Institute, Oxford University), has been thinking about:

Bostrom’s argument goes roughly like this. Let a‘post-human’ civilization be one which has achieved as much technological development as is consistent with our current understanding of the laws of nature. Suppose people in such a civilization decided, perhaps for research or entertainment purposes, to run ‘ancestor simulations’, i.e. computer simulations of people in much more primitive societies. By considering the physical limits on how powerful computers can get, it can be shown that it would be trivially easy for post-humans to run very, very many ancestor simulations in a short period of time. Assume that sufficiently detailed simulations of people would themselves be people, with mental states just like ours. If the post-humans run enough ancestor simulations, it would follow that the vast majority of people with experiences relevantly like ours– i.e. experiences as of living in a technologically primitive society– are living in a computer simulation. But if we think this, we should conclude that we are probably living in such a simulation, too. Accordingly, assuming that simulated people could be conscious, one of three possibilities is true:  

 

          1. At most a tiny proportion of civilizations reach a post-human level of technological development (or, if they do, they don’t last long once that happens). All of them either go extinct first or have their techno-logical development arrested in some other way.  

 

          2. People in post-human civilizations have little interest in running ancestor simulations, and so run few of them, or none at all. They are therefore likely to be very different from us, since many of us would be interested in running ancestor simulations, if we easily could.  

  

          3. The number of simulated observers with experiences relevantly like ours substantially exceeds the number of similar, unsimulated observers. By a fairly weak version of the principle of indifference (but see Weatherson (2003) and Bostrom (2005), we should conclude that we’re probably in a simulation. 

 

Accordingly, unless you’re pretty sure that at least one of (1), (2), or the claim that simulated consciousness is impossible is true, you’re committed to thinking there’s a real chance that you’re in a simulation. 

 

Further, even if simulated consciousness is impossible, Barry Dainton (forthcoming,) notes that we could be inhabiting an artificial environment without being computer programs ourselves. We might, as in The Matrix, have biological brains which are hooked up through some kind of neural interface to a computer which is feeding us sensory data. Or we might, as in The Truman Show, be in an actual physical environment, but one which was artifcially created– perhaps by an advanced civilization with matter-manipulation technologies of some sort. (Perhaps our environment is even radically miniaturized, to make it easier to build and run.) Throughout, I will be thinking primarily of Bostrom-style simulations, partly because I see no problem with a simulated person being conscious and partly because I think the argument for the claim that there is actually a high probability (rather than merely a possibility) of our living in a simulation is most compelling for a simulation of the sort Bostrom describes. But it is important to keep in mind that the other types are also options. 

 

Obviously, all this is controversial. My view is that Bostrom’s argument at least shows that the simulation hypothesis is not crazy, so that it is interesting to ask what implications taking it seriously might have.  

 

    (in The real advantages of the simulation solution to the problem of natural evil,  by Dustin Crummett, Religious Studies (2021)

Having talked obliquely in conversations about The Simulation Argument in the past year and waved my hand in dismissive lack of comprehension as it made its way through prison conversations, today I looked at it.

I don't know what to think.

But I'm looking.

nichts danach

Rabbis and atheists talked about God

and afterlife --

Good fellows well-thought!


Their willingness to speak

encourages an unspeaking God 

without words, to be nothing after

des moines en prière à l'aube *

 At 4:13am

In sudden grey light


They start singing


Ar 4:17am

They pause


Then again sing


These birds, 

At matins


Monks praying

Dawn *

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

surely the bodhisattva vows will help

 Don’t be naive

Everyone is corrupt


Now, then, is there any

News that is not surprising

vertreibung *

 Inside what word do you dwell

Which phrases give shelter


Fifty years ago yesterday

Martin Heidegger died


Yesterday in a driveway under 

a tree someone pronounced


Him  a wandering itinerant 

Unsounding any front door


Tramping Eviction and

Expulsion *


Today I injudiciously offer

Him a seat in dooryard


Some tea facing mountain

Across road respiting der weg 

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

‘bout right

 I’m glad I’m

Poor


Not much

I want

according to then, o beginning -- (par-then-o-genesis)

Everything flowers unto itself. 

Or, the zen proverb: 

“A flower does not think of competing with the flower next to it. It just blooms.”                              ― Zen Shin

There is much about mysticism that I don’t get. Still, there’s this: 

Beginning in the 4th century, Mary was invoked with the title Hortus Conclusus (“Enclosed Garden”) in honor of her conception of Jesus through parthenogenesis (asexual reproduction). But the name makes more sense if we interpret it ecologically. This must be what the Friends of the Earth had in mind in 1972 when they wrote the following in the official report of the Stockholm Conference, the world’s first international conference to raise awareness about threats to the global ecology:

Life holds to one central truth—that all matter and energy needed for life moves in great closed circles from which nothing escapes and to which only the driving fire of the sun is added. Life devours itself: everything that eats is itself eaten; every chemical that is made by life can be broken down by life; all the sunlight that can be used is used. Of all that there is on Earth, nothing is taken away by life, and nothing is added by life—but nearly everything is used by life, used and reused in thousands of complex ways, moved through vast chains of plants and animals and back again to the beginning.

 (--from, On Becoming a Flower, The Last Moment of Ecological Sanity in the Western World, by Clark Strand, 5/24/26)

 Back again to the beginning.

Everything flowers unto itself. 

that haiku

 That is 

Merely dream


That is 

Unreal, a figment


Take that in —

It’s this

this haiku

 This is

Not a dream


This is real

Can you feel it?


Sure you can

Then,  do

now, i lay me down, to sleep

 I must die

Before one wakes

Monday, May 25, 2026

housing being

Where do you dwell?

This question is not meant to elicit a town or street number in response, rather, more something like ’speak to me and I will discern by your words and emphasis where you dwell in the house of being.’


Amos Wilder wrioe: ’The language of a people is its fate.” (in The Language of the Gospel: Early Christian Rhetoric).  


Martin Heidegger wrote that “Language is the house of being.” (in Letter on Humanism)


For many of us, increasingly, our fate is to be unhoused.

2. What is “language”?

In his earlier work, “language” names a totality of words or a totality of utterances - a systematic whole of signs that we can draw on in expressing ourselves linguistically (see GA36/37: 105ff). In his later work, by contrast, Heidegger uses “language” to refer to the background constitution of significance. In the later Heidegger, ‘language’ (‘Sprache’) replaces ‘discourse’ (‘Rede’) as Heidegger’s preferred translation of the Greek logos. But Heidegger (more or less) consistently understands logos in the Greek sense as a gathering of meaningful elements into a unified structure, a meaningful articulation of the world on the basis of which entities can be unconcealed and linguistic acts can be performed. This ‘language’ conditions the languages we speak, but it is not itself something linguistic. Thus, Wrathall for instance argues that the later Heidegger’s emphasis on language is, to a considerable degree, a terminological change, rather than a new substantive appreciation of the role played by ordinary language in disclosing the world (see Wrathall 2011: 130). Evidence for this can perhaps be seen in the fact that, as late as 1957, Heidegger still insisted that “discourse and discoursing … can never be determined by speaking and language” (GA79: 160).

In his later work on language, then, Heidegger consistently draws a distinction between, on the one hand, language in the ordinary or customary sense, and, on the other hand, what he calls “original language” or “the essence of language”:

What is language? …—Everyone knows that. To the question of what language is, there has long been a customary answer. Language is an expression of our inner experiences, ideas, opinions, wishes and statements in the form of sound and writing. And because it is such an expression, it serves to present what has been experienced, for communicating and understanding. This characterization of language, which even today, seen more or less clearly, underlies all thinking about it—this characterization is correct and yet it is deeply untrue because it only grasps of language that which is a consequence of its essence—but not the essence itself. (GA16: 329; emphasis supplied)

(--from, Heidegger on Language, in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

While walking at Snow Bowl, listening to words about Bhagavan Sri Ramakrishna (1836-1886), I hear the reader talking about having the name of God in mind and on lips at the moment of death. This, he infers, is determinative of where one goes next.

But which name?

Which ‘Being’ wherein to dwell?

I just hope I’m not saying ‘Oh shit!’ when my time comes. Unless, of course, it's the third person singular of the Latin verb “scio”  (scit) -- namely,  'he, she, or it, knows or understands’.