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Everything I needed to know, I learned in the 1600s.
grant balfour | Nov 7 2007
It's taken as a given that we now deal with more information than previous generations ever imagined, living lives in which "number of clicks" is a meaningful measure of time. As Spanish productivity guru Balthasar Gracian says: There is more required nowadays to make a single wise man than formerly to make Seven Sages, and more is needed nowadays to deal with a single person than was required with a whole people in former times. Except he wrote that in the 17th century. I first heard about Balthasar Gracian's The Art of Worldly Wisdom from an old friend - the mother of a girl I grew up with. Later, I went into a pretty good bookstore with a couple of college buddies and asked the guy behind the counter if they had any copies. He got very excited and said, "Gracian's Manual? Why, that's been an underground classic for four hundred years!" I'm continually surprised at how much it remains underground, since it's really quite useful in almost every way. It's a collection of aphorisms - short little bits of advice - so maybe it's just permanently unfashionable. Gracian was a Jesuit scholar, army chaplain, philosopher, raconteur and novelist, and his most famous little book is something like a cross between D.T. Suzuki's digestible Zen Buddhism, Machiavelli's political scheming, Dale Carnegie's personal diplomacy, Schmidt & Eno's Oblique Strategies and Sun Tzu's advice on overcoming conflict. If you're interested in increasing your mindfulness and basically putting things in order, there are worse books to keep on your nightstand. Or, you know, bookmarked for a quick glance between projects. 3 Comments
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Nothing changesSubmitted by tepeka on November 7, 2007 - 5:31pm.
Just read a few of the aphorisms online, and went to Amazon and ordered the book. We think that just because we’re in the 21st century we’ve a monopoly on this kind of insightfulness. Nothing ever really changes… Thanks for introducing me to Gracian - looking forward to (slowly) digesting the book. »
There's nothing new under the sunSubmitted by Chrome47 on November 8, 2007 - 7:02am.
It looks like this kind of wisdom is truly timeless. I’m reminded of Ecclesiastes, probably the earliest example of existential literature. Mankind hasn’t really changed in 6,000 years of recorded history. It’s our technology that has. »
The good old daysSubmitted by jamiegrove on November 14, 2007 - 7:00pm.
No doubt, Chrome. It seems like we’re always hearkening back to the good old days, isn’t it? But then, someone looks under the rock and finds someone pointing even further back. I like Gracian. Thomas Merton was also accessible in the same vein. Speaking of mindful, I love Zen and the Art of Archery by Eugen Herrigel. I listened to that on tape in the car driving back and forth to work. Amazing (and very German). I can also recommend the German film Enlightenment Guaranteed. Funny and thought provoking. Two German brothers go to a Zen monastery in Japan, what they find in themselves makes one wonder why we keep chasing our tails. »
About grantBio grant lives in a palatial suburban estate in West Palm Beach, Florida, surrounded by chickens, dogs, cats, children and semi-animate piles of clutter. Older, irregular writings on various topics can be found at Flying Fists, although lately he spends more time trying to get people to join him recording songs of discovery (and reading the latest weird science headlines) at The Guild of Scientific Troubadours. He is an Aquarius, a vayu/kapha body type with a tendency to stagnant liver heat, and remembers when the internet was just a bunch of UFO enthusiasts and HAM radio nuts dialing up to local BBSes to post on something called FIDOnet. His day job is writing about unexplained phenomena for Sun, a magazine that has yet to catch up with FIDOnet’s amazing technological breakthrough, but can be found on dead trees in supermarkets nationwide. |
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