Showing posts with label rare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rare. Show all posts

Sunday, August 25, 2019

See

9.1.19
Zendaya

See
Energy
看能量 
Kàn néngliàng
エネルギーを見て
Enerugī o mite
ps81
Vide industria

When September observes the death of August
the heat of day starts to diminish for us.

Nature remembers the value of labor.
Vegetable harvest is sold to savor.

Summer has moved closer to Fall. 
Light has decreased some from the solstice call.

The wind blows cool to calm the heat.
People find ways to stay off the street.

The bee still dances from flower to flower
to drink the golden glow of particulate power.

The comb is a home
to many a drone.

This model of society is a recognized monarchy.
The natural government has a strong hierarchy.
The hierarchy frames the strength for society.

There is order, stability and interest for production.
The utility of purpose acts as a reduction.

The reduction of wasted time and effort is the result.
The production of a tasteful product reduces tumult.

I am the sole unbusy thing.
My watching doesn't make honey, build or sing.

The hive is the superorganism.
The community is a form of swarming formalism 

Observers open the chambers hunting for the queen.
Is she eating honey, laying eggs or avoiding being seen?

Love fulfilled is chance imbibed. 
The dance circumscribed 
is the eternal flow of time in the hive.

Darkness is welcome even without rain.
The clouds spell relief from the heat as pain.

The earth waits with patience for the golden guest of ray.
The brilliance is released to sing of angelic play.

This voice of gold has called me out there,
outside the window to receive the soft stare.

The uncontested summer played plainly in the air.
Your love looked as simple as that purest of pears
that you picked for me with the greatest of care.

The pearskin’s fleck and trace
was as smooth as any human grace.

It gave the power to break the attack
that held us back from what we lack.

You were brought into a plentiful land
to enjoy its fruit and to make it grand.

The prophets prophesied by the official deposit
then went after things that do not profit.

People changed their glory
for the deception of the liberal media story.

The fountain of living water has been forsaken.
Faith in God has been given away or taken.

That barrier that held us back
was best known to our zodiac
as the curse of the megalomaniac.

The “fear” most of us defined
was a product of the mind. 

Those who conquered this great foe
weren't called heroes.  

The feeling was brave
for it seemed unafraid. 

The fear was not ejected.
It was actually extended
that courage could be defended.

Corporations probed households to increase their prices.
The prices shrieked MORE despite the height of their highness.

The veil of light in day hid the sky seen at night.
The memory of the hive was inscribed in the light
of mind's sight.


Industry sat in the shell of defense.
We built benefit to protect ourselves from menace.

The world was all that was the case.
The Dutch republic decided to give monarchy chase.

The seventeenth century was the frame.
The slave trade became the insane part of the game.

Otherwise, Dutch art became world reknowned.
It celebrated life as it was found.

Sea travel became more frequent.
The ships increased risk with the increase in sequence.

Large waves due to storms had a regularity in their swell.
The up and down was large, but it was manageable.

The rogue wave that was thought to have been a fiction
was met more often in the sailor predeliction for prediction.

The ocean south of Africa's Cape of Good Hope
was likely to make the seasoned sailor feel like  a dope.

The monster wave was formed by different factors.
They came together when it was wished that it hadn't mattered.

Crosswinds can push the water waves into a higher swell
when they converge in diagonals in the currents that propel.

Ocean currents also created a rogue.
The water conjoined as the waves arose.

The result was a monster twice the size of normal.
This wave could break your boat as if it were paranormal.

I heard the unfamiliar voice say,
"I eased his burden along the way."

I answered you from the secret place of thunder.
You were rescued when you thought you had made a fatal blunder.

The bitter bite of storm
had threatened to take you from your normal forms.

The calm waters appeared to be made from luck
after the storm had tossed the ship around like a rubber duck
in a tub of foamy bubbles to remove your nasty funk. 

Moxibusted mugwort was worth more than gold
when the sailor felt that his body had been told
that it had been mugged, drugged, thugged and rolled.

We confront death while we live
that salvation may be that which gives
us life as the win.

It is energy for the body 
that makes it feel alive or godly.

Time for rest is given as a form of freedom
that the body may be forgiven for being driven as needed 
in season with or without reason.

Beauty is a state of mind in elegance
that is refined with the practice of intelligence.

Let love be mutual. 
Functional relationship has to be usual.

Do not neglect to show kindness to the stranger.
Some have entertained angels that delivered them from danger.

Cool black night had crept in through the forest.
The shadows shrunk as the darkness became enormous. 


L'Auberge (The Inn) de Sedona, AZ

The shy moon cast little light between the stones upon the river.
The river of stars reached across forever to cause a shiver.


Milky Way

The artist pulled back to look at the canvas.
Certain strokes needed more art as exacted by practice.

The musician cast a wary eye out the window.
The rest was a pest that wanted to be known as wind blown.

The ravine was parched by the heat of the day.
The porch held some souls without much to say.

The black leather jackets were open all the way.
Whatever the color, the wooden house looked grey.

The hi-fi made "Angels Never Die" echo through the trees.
The memory of the highway played along with the breeze.

The Harley hog road by fields, gardens and towns.
Nomadic soul drowned amidst the domestic sounds.

The starving black angel hid in human disguise
with dimensionless being by American design. 

A solemn charge was laid upon our gift
as we had come from the land of misery for this.

We are born to suffer
the power of the other.

Sit down and breathe
the breath that you need.

The breath relaxes tension
with attention for descension.

Aim high and plan low.
Constant effort will help you grow.
A mockingbird chased a squirrel with the confidence of flight. 
The squirrel had to scramble as the bird left sight.

Choice in chance is a social gambit
but there are times when things work as you plan it.

Work like the sun 
to see what you've done.

Don't take poison to see if the antidote works.
If it doesn't, your body will suffer pain or worse.

Realize birth in the boundless moment. 
The light is delight in what power has chosen. 

The celestial entourage shines in paradise.
The divine device resides inside your surprise.

Shine in your heaven.
The news is on at seven.

Give the past its place. 
The present shapes your face. 

The future will meet you further in space 
with a place for you in grace. 

Forget the flash in which you exist.
The world is your map should you persist. 
If there was a time when you had to resist,
it went by like a gift without a twist.

This level of gambling is high stakes.
Preserve your benefit with what is right about what it takes.

The logic of reason in constitutional life
is a measure that proves progression against strife.

You are the other already. 
You took the Chevy to the levy.

It may sound heavy, 
but eternity is steady.

It's a lasting paradigm.
You are the heavy in eternal time. 
Become one with your story. Revel with your rhyme.

Tell us who you are with every step. 
We vanish inevitably, only when inept. 

You remain in the experience you have kept. 
You were hewn in dreams as you slept.

The shadow of the dome of pleasure
drifts past with the mingled measure.

I don't know how to pray to make pain pass.
I know how to fall down on my knees in the soft grass
to press the earth with my temple sideways cast. 

It is a miracle of rare device.
My heart becomes warm where there had been ice. 
What do you plan to do with your wild and precious life?

Sing with joy as your strength.
Let the divine experience of being human guide you at length.

-------------------

81 Exultate Deo
Exult in God

1 Sing with joy to God our strength
and raise a loud shout to the God of Jacob.
2 Raise a song and sound the timbrel,
the merry harp, and the lyre.
3 Blow the ram's-horn at the new moon,
and at the full moon, the day of our feast.
4 For this is a statute for Israel,
a law of the God of Jacob.
5 He laid it as a solemn charge upon Joseph,
when he came out of the land of Egypt.
6 I heard an unfamiliar voice saying,
"I eased his shoulder from the burden;
his hands were set free from bearing the load."
7 You called on me in trouble, and I saved you;
I answered you from the secret place of thunder
and tested you at the waters of Meribah.
8 Hear, O my people, and I will admonish you:
O Israel, if you would but listen to me!
9 There shall be no strange god among you;
you shall not worship a foreign god.
10 I am the Lord your God,
who brought you out of the land of Egypt and said,
"Open your mouth wide, and I will fill it."
11 And yet my people did not hear my voice,
and Israel would not obey me.
12 So I gave them over to the stubbornness of their hearts,
to follow their own devices.
13 Oh, that my people would listen to me!
that Israel would walk in my ways!
14 I should soon subdue their enemies
and turn my hand against their foes.
15 Those who hate the Lord would cringe before him,
and their punishment would last for ever.
16 But Israel would I feed with the finest wheat
and satisfy him with honey from the rock.

----------------------

Jeremiah 2:7-13

I brought you into a plentiful land
to eat its fruits and its good things.
When you entered you defiled the country
and made my heritage an abomination.

The priest did not say, 'Where is the LORD?'
Those who handle the law did not know me.
The rulers transgressed against me.
The prophets prophesied by Baal
and went after things that do not profit.

Once more I accuse you, says the LORD.
I accuse your children's children.
Cross to the coasts of Cyprus and look.
Send to Kedar and examine with care.
See if there has ever been such a thing.

Has a nation changed its gods
even though they are no gods?
My people have changed their glory
for something that does not profit.

My people have forsaken me,
the fountain of living water.
They dug out cisterns that cracked
and can hold no water.

----------------------

You were brought into a plentiful land
to enjoy its fruit and to make it grand.

The prophets prophesied by the official deposit
then went after things that do not profit.

People changed their glory
for the deception of the liberal media story.

The fountain of living water has been forsaken.
Faith in God has been given away or taken.

================

Hebrews 13:1-2

Let love be mutual. Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers. Some have entertained angels without knowing it.

----------------------

Let love be mutual.
Functional relationship has to be usual.

Do not neglect to show kindness to the stranger.
Some have entertained angels that delivered them from danger.

================

Luke 14:10-11

Jesus said, 'When you are invited to a banquet, go and sit at the lowest place. When your host comes, he may say to you, "Friend, move up higher." Then you will be honored in the presence of all who sit at the table with you.

'Those who exalt themselves will be humbled. Those who humble themselves will be exalted.'

----------------------

Aim high and plan low.
Constant effort will help you grow.

Choice in chance is a social gambit
but there are times when things work as you plan it.

================

Stanley Cavell was subtle in the way he addressed the idea of eternal return in the re-construction of classical consciousness.

If the Greek thought was tainted with obsession for technical brilliance in individual exposition and the Roman polytheistic variant was more concerned with the public proof of personal expertise, then what is the goal for philosophy in monotheistic culture?

Where does personal perspective fit into the grand scheme of cultural development? How does the comedy of re-marriage influence the view of how things change with a different partner? Is it possible to achieve progress in the recurrence of cyclical events?

Are we condemned with Nietzsche to rant at the errors of the Christian religion as the weakness of western society? The logical positivists attempted to rule out metaphysical thought as an absurdity for public discourse.

The broad reach of the philosophy of language has sought to limit debate to areas of concern that can be resolved in the course of human knowledge. It is a reasonable limitation when socialist or populist economic theory isn’t seeking to destroy opposition to the demands of the liberal political position. 

Liberals want government to create problems that only their political position can refuse to resolve in order to elevate their own benefit to a superior place in society.

Cavell turned to the aesthetics of film with ordinary language philosophy to look for ways to deal with the problem of recurrence.

Re-marriage and Change
http://img.picturequotes.com/2/314/313360/can-human-beings-change-the-humor-and-the-sadness-of-remarriage-comedies-can-be-said-to-result-from-quote-1.jpg

Stanley Cavell
b. 9.1.1926 Atlanta, Georgia
d. 6.19.2018 Boston, Massachusetts

Stanley Louis Cavell was an American philosopher who taught at Harvard University for much of his life. He made statements in the fields of ethics, aesthetics and ordinary language philosophy.

He produced influential works on Wittgenstein, Austin, Emerson, Thoreau and Heidegger. Much of his expression was published as an interpreter. His work is characterized by its conversational tone and frequent literary references. He is noted for having included film and literary study in philosophical inquiry.

I remember Stanley Cavell for his recommendation to use ordinary language in philosophy, but his use of film for commentary set him apart from the philosophers who preceded him.

Atlanta

Atlanta is situated among the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. It  straddles the Eastern Continental Divide. The rainwater that falls on the south and east side of the divide flows into the Atlantic Ocean. The rainwater on the north and west side flows into the Gulf of Mexico. It has one of the highest elevations among major cities east of the Mississippi River.

It is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Georgia. The estimated population in 2018 was under 500,000. The larger metropolitan area holds 5.9 million people. It is the ninth-largest metropolitan area in the nation.

Atlanta was originally founded as the end of the line for a major state-sponsored railroad. It soon became the convergence point between multiple railroads with rapid expansion. Further growth was spurred. The city's name was derived from that of the Western and Atlantic Railroad's local depot.

The city was almost entirely burned to the ground during the American Civil War in  General William T. Sherman's famous March to the Sea. The city rose from its ashes and quickly became a national center of commerce and the unofficial capital of the "New South".

It experienced a period of unprecedented growth during the first decades of the 20th century. The population tripled as the city limits expanded to include nearby streetcar suburbs in three decades.

The city's skyline emerged with the construction of the Equitable, Flatiron, Empire and Candler buildings. Sweet Auburn emerged as a center of black commerce.

The period was also marked by strife and tragedy. Increased racial tensions led to the Atlanta Race Riot of 1906. The violence left at least 27 people dead and over 70 injured.

Leo Frank, a Jewish-American factory superintendent, was convicted of the murder of a 13-year-old girl in a highly publicized trial in 1913. He was hanged in Marietta by a lynch mob after having his death sentence commuted in 1915. The event deeply impacted the Jewish community in Atlanta and across the country.

The city became a major organizing center of the civil rights movement with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Ralph David Abernathy during the 1950's and 60's.

Stanley Cavell

Stanley Louis Goldstein was born to Jewish immigrants in Atlanta on September 1, 1926. His mother, Fannie (nee Segal) was a locally renowned pianist. She trained him in music from his early years. His father, Irving, had a series of jewelry and other small shops.

The family moved from Atlanta to Sacramento, California and back again several times when he was young. His father was chasing economic stability during the Depression.

Stanley was a gifted student. He played lead alto saxophone as the youngest member of a black jazz band in Sacramento when he was an adolescent. He graduated from high school in Sacramento in 1943.

He changed his name to Cavell. “Goldstein” had been assigned to his father, an immigrant from Poland, when he arrived in the United States. “Cavell” was a variant on the family’s original Polish name.

He attempted to enlist in the military. He was rejected because of ear damage he had suffered when he was struck by a car at age 6. He tried to bluff his way through. He was eager to serve due to his family roots. He lied about his age and forged a doctor's note about his ear.  The entry physician took a look at his ear and sent him home.

He enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley and studied music with his friend, Bob Thompson. He graduated in 1947. He studied composition at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City for a short time. He discovered that it wasn't his vocation.

He entered graduate school at UCLA to study philosophy, then transferred to Harvard. The influence of J.L. Austin "knocked him off his horse" as a student. Austin was a British philosopher of language and leading proponent of ordinary language philosophy. He is perhaps best known for developing the theory of speech acts.

Austin pointed out that we use language to do things as well as to assert things. The utterance of a statement like "I promise to do so-and-so" is best understood as doing something. It is the act of making a promise. This speech is more significant as an act than making an assertion about anything.

He made a significant challenge to the philosophy of language with his theory of speech acts. It went beyond the analysis of morphological sentence forms that function to do what they name.

Utterance is the doing of something with words and signs. It challenges the metaphysics that would posit denotative, propositional assertion as the essence of language.

Cavell was awarded a Junior Fellowship at the Harvard Society of Fellows in 1954. He became an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1956 before the completion of his Ph.D.

Cavell's daughter by his first wife (Marcia), Rachel Lee Cavell, was born in 1957. His marriage to Marcia ended in divorce in 1961.

He was a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey from 1962-63. He befriended the British philosopher Bernard Williams there.

Williams was a visiting professor at Princeton University in 1963. He was an English moral philosopher. He is known for his efforts to reorient the study of moral philosophy to psychology, history and in particular to the Greeks.

Cavell returned to the Harvard Philosophy Department where he became the Walter M. Cabot Professor of Aesthetics and the General Theory of Value in 1963.

He joined a group of graduate students who taught at Tougaloo College in the summer of 1964. Tougaloo was a historically black college in Mississippi. The group organized a volunteer drive to register as many African American voters as possible in Mississippi.

This was part of the Civil Rights movement in the 1960's. The claim that white racism divided and oppressed black people was used as the organizational motivation.

He and Cathleen (Cohen) were married in 1967.

Cavell was helped by his colleague John Rawls  to draft language with a group of African American students for a vote by the faculty that established the Department of African and African-American Studies at Harvard.

Rawls is known for his moral position against ultilitarian political philosophy. He argued that the 'veil of ignorance' kept people from fairness in the theory of justice. He basically asserted that there is no such thing as institutional racism from the minority group.

White racism is defined as a mechanism of the majority group. This is the political mechanism that has to be countered socially for justice. The theory institutes racism against the majority group with stories about it in the liberal media.

Cavell's first son Benjamin was born in 1976.

Prof. Cavell interacted with the continental group even though he was trained in the Anglo-American analytic tradition. He wrote about  Ludwig Wittgenstein, J. L. Austin and Martin Heidegger, as well as on the American transcendentalists Henry Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson. He interpreted Wittgenstein in a fashion known as the New Wittgenstein.

The New Wittgenstein interpretation is a view that the earlier Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus and the later Investigations are actually in less opposition to each other than usually understood. This view is in conflict with the interpretation of the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus advocated by the logical positivists associated with the Vienna Circle.

A prominent view set out in the Tractatus is the picture theory of language. The picture theory is an explanation of the capacity of language and thought to represent the world. Wittgenstein was largely concerned with the way propositions function as representations although something need not be a proposition to represent something in the world.

Propositions can "picture" the world as being a certain way. The picture can accurately represent it either truly or falsely. Pictures have what Wittgenstein calls Form der Abbildung or pictorial form which they share with what they depict. This means that all the logically possible arrangements of the pictorial elements in the picture correspond to the possibilities of arranging the things which they depict in reality.

Pictures cannot represent their own logical form. They cannot say what they have in common with reality. They can only show it.

This conception of representation as picturing also allows him to derive two striking claims. No proposition can be known a priori. There is only logical necessity. If a proposition pictures a state of affairs in virtue of being a picture in logical space, then a non-logical or metaphysical "necessary truth" would be a state of affairs which is satisfied by any possible arrangement of objects.

This means that the would-be necessary proposition would not depict anything as being so. It will be true no matter what the world is actually like. If that's the case, then the proposition cannot say anything about the world or describe any fact in it. It would not be correlated with any particular state of affairs. It is like a tautology insofar as it lacks sense.

When a proposition is thought or expressed according to the logical positivists, the proposition represents reality (truly or falsely) by virtue of sharing some features with that reality in common.

Those features themselves are something Wittgenstein claimed we could not say anything about.
We cannot describe the relationship that pictures bear to what they depict, but only show it via fact stating propositions.

We cannot say that there is a correspondence between language and reality. The correspondence itself can only be shown since our language is not capable of describing its own logical structure. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink.

The Tractatus caught the attention of the philosophers of the Vienna Circle (1921–1933). The interest of Rudolf Carnap and Moritz Schlick was especially piqued. Schlick eventually convinced Wittgenstein to meet with members of the circle to discuss the Tractatus when he returned to Vienna.

The positivists argued that the last few passages, including Proposition 7, are confused. Carnap hailed the book as containing important insights, but encouraged people to ignore the concluding sentences.

Proposition 7 ends the book with the statement "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent." Wittgenstein told Schlick that he couldn't imagine how Carnap had missed the point of the work.

The New Wittgenstein argues that he did not provide a theoretical account of language that relegates ethics and philosophy to a mystical realm of the unsayable. The purpose for the Tractatus is to make the reader aware of the logic of our language. The reader is presented with a model for reason.

Cavell's writing incorporates autobiographical elements concerning how his movement within the ideas of Wittgenstein, Austin, Heidigger, Thoreau and Emerson influenced his own thought in that it impacted spheres in the arts and humanities beyond the technical study of philosophy.

Cavell established his distinct philosophical identity with Must We Mean What We Say? (1969). It addresses topics such as language use, metaphor, skepticism, tragedy and literary interpretation from the point of view of ordinary language philosophy.

One of the essays discusses Søren Kierkegaard's work on revelation and authority. The Book on Adler was written by Kierkegaard  about pastor Adolph Peter Adler. He had claimed to have received a revelation.

Adler was subsequently dismissed from his pastor duties after some questionable acts. He later restated that his was the work of genius as opposed to revelation. The rest of the work focuses on the concept of authority and how it relates to Adler's situation.

Kierkegaard was against claims of received revelation without due consideration. Cavell described the situation is an effort to help re-introduce the book to modern philosophical readers.

Modern Media

Cavell looks at photography and film in The World Viewed (1971). He also covers modernism in art and the nature of media. He mentions the influence of art critic Michael Fried's writing on his work. The philosophy of film is now a firmly established sub-field of contemporary in aesthetics.

Aesthetics has always had a concern not just with art in general but with specific art forms. Aristotle's Poetics was devoted to explaining the nature of Greek tragedy.

Philosophers have sought to explain the specific characteristics of each significant art form of their culture since controversy in the culture has stimulated a reason to understand the conflict.

Plato had banished poets from his ideal city in The Republic. There has been a thread of hostility towards the arts that has been endemic to anti-aesthetic thought.

Philosophy and the various art forms were perceived to be competing sources of knowledge and belief. Those who sought to maintain the exclusivity of their claim to truth have dismissed the arts as poor pretenders to the title of purveyors of truth.

Philosophers of film have generally opposed this view. Film is a source of knowledge. The media is a potential contributor to philosophy itself. This view was forcefully articulated by Cavell. His interest in the philosophy of film helped spark the field's development.

The meaning of film is inherently concerned with skepticism and the different ways that it can be overcome. He has argued that film shares this concern with philosophy and can even provide philosophic insights of its own in a number of his books and articles.

Cavell described his experience of seven prominent Hollywood comedies: The Lady Eve, It Happened One Night, Bringing Up Baby, The Philadelphia Story, His Girl Friday, Adam’s Rib and The Awful Truth in Pursuits of Happiness (1981).

He argued that these films from the years 1934–1949 formed a part of what he called the genre of "The Comedy of Remarriage." He found in them great philosophical, moral and indeed political significance.

He traced the history of moral perfectionism in the Cities of Words (2004). This was a mode of moral thinking that spanned the history of Western philosophy and literature. He used Emerson to outline the concept. The book suggested a way we might want to understand philosophy, literature and film as preoccupied with features of perfectionism.

He helped found the Harvard Film Archive along with the documentary filmmaker Robert Gardner to preserve and present the history of film.

Cavell is perhaps best known for his book, The Claim of Reason: Wittgenstein, Skepticism, Morality, and Tragedy (1979). It formed the centerpiece of his work. Its origins were investigated in his doctoral dissertation.

His second son David was born in 1984.

He remained on the Harvard faculty until his retirement in 1997. He taught courses at Yale University and the University of Chicago after he retired. He also held the Spinoza Chair of Philosophy at the University of Amsterdam in 1998.

Cavell died in Boston, Massachusetts of heart failure on June 19, 2018 at the age of 91. He was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery among other Boston brahmins.

Stanley Cavell
S. 斯坦利卡维尔
T. 斯坦利卡維爾

斯 Si       this                        斯 shi    this             Su  す       ス            Seu   스  s         
坦 tan    level                       坦  tan    level          tan  たん  タン         taen  탠  tan                       
利  li       to benefit               利  ri      profit         ri     り-      リ-          li      리  lee           
卡 Ka      card                       卡 ka     card            Ka    か      カ           Ka     카   car       
维 wei   to preserve               維 i        tie              be   べ      ベ             bel    벨   bell                 
尔 er       you                         爾  ji      you             ru    る      ル                                         

------------------------

This level of gambling is high stakes.
Preserve your benefit with what is right about what it takes.

The logic of reason in constitutional life
is a measure that proves progression against strife.

==================

wiki Stanley Cavell
wiki Atlanta
wiki Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Obituary NYT
Obituary WP
IEP Ordinary Language Philosophy
wiki New Wittgenstein
SEP Philosophy of Film
Abstract for 'Film Philosophy' Ednbrgh Prss

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Make

Agate

Make
Your Name
说出你的名字 
Shuō chū nǐ de míngzì
あなたの名前を作ってください。 
Anata no namae o tsukutte kudasai
ps8

Salvation comes by faith
for those who work while they wait
for grace in redemption 
in the preservation 
of liberty in the law
as worked to reduce flaw.

Justice is the goal for the law.
The goal must be fulfilled in practice as drawn
for improvement upon precedent as the phenomenon.

Cruel punishment 
does not meet royal assent
to correct protest or petition as dissent.

Testimony about the charge of crime is by prejudice often bent.
Severity in judgment often reinforces criminal intent.

Detention provides time 
for the correction of injustice as the cause of crime
in the cognition of the conceptual mind

Belief in liberty FROM the law is flawed.
The law is for civil and human rights for all.
God has raised the Holy One from the dead.

The murderer spent life imprisoned to his dread 
of his memory about the act that had made the living dead.

The resurrected Jesus took a piece of broiled fish.
He ate it in the apostles' presence as a fulfillment of their wish.

Rights are for life, liberty and happiness.
Your name is exalted for health in consciousness.
You are the designer of paradise.

The means to surmise the device 
of this design is often achieved by surprise.

Your majesty is praised above the heavens
out of the mouths of your children assenting to your presence!

You have set up a stronghold for defense
against our adversaries aggression in dissent.

Safety and good health are protectors 
in the risks that challenge our vectors
in the sensibilities for reason's detector.

When I consider the heavens and the earth
as your creation I am filled with wondrous mirth.

The course for the planets around the sun 
has been set with gravity for the celestial run.

The projection of our solar system 
among the galaxies from a point of space in wisdom
is the container for time with the rhythm of mystic vision!

What is human being that you are mindful of our existence?
Does the authentic person express insistence on resistance
to the persistence of the vicious condition?

The Physicist uses math and a microscope to perceive
atomic structure in which you can believe what you conceive.

The Entrepreneur uses the power to deceive
so the market will think about the product to increase prestige

The performer arranges the elements for presentation
for the audience to seize as the mark of gradation
in the meaning of the contextual striation.

The field inside the sound of the musical
is not as rare as it is beautiful.

We have been made to exist only a little lower than angels. 
We are adorned with our contagious relation to changes
in statistical tables regarding the staples of stations
among nations in the international generation
of political expectation.

Right for people is a natural law.
The voluntary aspect is not a flaw.
Conservative reform is a necessary draw.

The preservation of the environment
is our responsibility as our entitlement, 
so we may cultivate food and flora for our joy, 
construct constructs, produce products to employ
and organize organizations for our security to deploy.
It is your name that is exalted among the stars.

You are the designer for the paradise that is ours.
You are the authority for your power!

Power rules power.
You are the tower.

------------------------

8 Domine, Dominus noster
Dominated, Our Dominator

1 O Lord our Governor,
how exalted is your Name in all the world!
2 Out of the mouths of infants and children
your majesty is praised above the heavens.
3 You have set up a stronghold against your adversaries,
to quell the enemy and the avenger.
4 When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars you have set in their courses,
5 What is man that you should be mindful of him?
the son of man that you should seek him out?
6 You have made him but little lower than the angels;
you adorn him with glory and honor;
7 You give him mastery over the works of your hands;
you put all things under his feet:
8 All sheep and oxen,
even the wild beasts of the field,
9 The birds of the air, the fish of the sea,
and whatsoever walks in the paths of the sea.
10 O Lord our Governor,
how exalted is your Name in all the world!

----------------------------

Acts 3:14-15

You rejected the Holy and Righteous One and asked to have a murderer given to you. You killed the Author of life. God has raised him from the dead. We are witnesses to this.

--------------------------------

God has raised the Holy One from the dead.
The murderer spent life imprisoned to his dread
of his memory about the act that had made the living dead.

==================

Luke 24:42

They gave him a piece of broiled fish. He took it and ate it in their presence.

--------------------------------

The resurrected Jesus took a piece of broiled fish.
He ate it in the apostles' presence as a fulfillment of their wish.

==================

The right to own property separates primitive from civilized society.

Natural Law


Emer de Vattel
b. 4.25.1714  Couvet, Val-de-Travers, Switzerland
d. 12.26.1767 Couvet, Val-de-Travers, Switzerland


Couvet


Couvet was a municipality in Val-de-Travers in the western part of Switzerland. It merged with eight other municipalities to form the administrative district of Val-de-Tavers in 2009. The region is known for its production of absinthe.


The municipality is located in a valley in the Neuchâtel Jura. The Jura Mountains are a sub-alpine
range located north of the Western Alps. The range mainly follows the course of the France–Switzerland border. The valley provides a connection between the Swiss plateau and Franche-Comte.


The river L'Areuse flows the length of the valley. Most of this river is shallow and about 10 meters wide. It narrows into a gorge near Noiraigue. This river has provided much of the water and fish for the valley.


Val-de-Travers had a population of 10,745 as of December 2017. Most of the population (as of 2000) speaks French (88.9%) as their first language.  Italian is the second most common (3.0%) and German is the third (2.7%) most common language.


Emer de Vattel


Emer de Vattel was born at Couvet, in Neuchâtel on April 25, 1714.The principality was ruled by the kings of Prussia. He was the youngest son of David Vattel and Marie de Montmollin.


His father was a Protestant clergyman ennobled in 1727 by the king of Prussia, Friedrich Wilhelm I. He was the head of the local congregation of ministers. His mother was the daughter of the principality’s ambassador to the Prussian court.


Emer was enrolled as a student of the humanities at the University of Basel from 1728 to 1730. He attended courses on Samuel Pufendorf given by the Huguenot minister Pierre Roques.


Pufendorf had developed a theory about the moral relationships of agents, the authority and duties of states and the lawful interactions among these. His chief objective was to avoid destructive social conflict and the devolution on any level into the antagonistic and self-defeating condition known as the state of nature.


Pufendorf’s approach was secular, non-metaphysical and anti-authoritarian. It eschewed religious appeals,
scholastic dogma, essentialism, teleology and the frequent mix of these that appealed to many German
thinkers, Catholic and Protestant alike.


He built on Bodin, Lipsius, Grotius, Hobbes and the Italian reason-of-state tradition. Pufendorf is known
as a voluntarist in ethics, a sovereignty theorist in politics and a realist in international relations theory.


His kind of natural law is called ‘modern' but it echoed the tradition of the Roman Republic. His law of
nature and nations was an exercise in the consideration of international relations, but it obscured respect
for boundaries.


Emer went to Geneva to pursue theological and metaphysical studies in 1733. One of his teachers was
Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui. It was under Burlamaqui’s tutelage that Vattel developed the principle of the
right of people as the law of nations.


He wrote a series of essays, several of which appeared in Switzerland’s leading literary journal, the
Neuchâtelbased Journal Helvétique in 1740 and 1741. He wrote a lengthy defense of the philosophy of
Leibniz. The Lausanne professor of philosophy and mathematics Jean-Pierre de Crousaz claimed it was
atheism.


Vattel dedicated his defense to Friedrich II. The dedication earned him an invitation from the French
ambassador in Berlin to come to the court of the prince whose subject he was by birth. He failed to
obtain a diplomatic position.


He moved to Dresden due to financial difficulties in 1743. He was promised employment by Count Brühl,
first minister of Elector Friedrich August II of Saxony. The same man that served as the Elector of Saxony
was also the elective king of Poland. His name was August III for that position.   


Vattel spent the next three years in Neuchâtel waiting for orders from Dresden. He wrote essays and
studied the works of the German philosopher Christian Wolff while he waited.


The essays were about the relation between natural and political law. The first asked the question, can
natural law bring society to perfection without the political form? The second was about the first principle
of the obligation to observe law. Both were published in 1746.


Vattel remained in Neuchâtel for much of the next ten years. He sent a stream of letters to Brühl
complaining of his ill health and dire financial circumstances. This turned out to be the most productive
period of his life despite the complaint.


He published a further collection of essays in 1757. These included dialogues between Diogenes and
Marcus Aurelius and between Henry IV of France and his adviser Sully.


He wrote his masterpiece, Les Droit des Gens (The Right of People) which appeared in Neuchâtel at the
end of 1757. The title is translated as The Law of Nations. The work established him as an authority on
natural jurisprudence. He has been identified as an international lawyer.


The work was largely influenced by a book titled Jus Gentium Methodo Scientifica Pertractum (Law of
Nations According to the Scientific Method) by Christian Wolff. Jus Gentium can be translated as the
Right of People.


Vattel's work began by translating Wolff's text from Latin and adding his own thoughts. His thought was
heavily influenced by Gottfried Leibniz and Hugo Grotius. It focused largely on the rights and obligations
of citizens and states


It also changed his personal situation. The elector of Saxony finally recalled Vattel to Dresden in 1759. He
was appointed to the Privy Council and made a chief adviser to the government of Saxony on foreign
affairs.


The Law of Nations was translated into English in 1760.  


He married Marie de Chêne, the daughter of a Huguenot noble family, in 1764. They had a son.

Charles W.F. Dumas sent Benjamin Franklin three original French copies in 1775. He said that this book
by Vattel "has been continually in the hands of the members of our Congress now sitting".


A copy owned by the New York Society Library had been borrowed by President George Washington on
8 October 1789 along with a copy of Vol. 12 of the Commons Debates containing transcripts from Great
Britain's House of Commons. The book was found to be overdue after his death.


Vattel was one of a number of 18th century European scholars who wrote on international law.


These authors were "well known in America" at the time. They included Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui,
Cornelius van Bynkershoek, Hugo Grotius, Samuel von Pufendorf, Thomas Rutherforth, Niccolo
Machiavelli and Wolff. The Law of Nations has been described as "unrivaled among such treatises in its
influence on the American founders."


The Swiss republic in which Vattel did his research was different from the Dutch version in that it was a
federation that allowed for different forms of government in different cities.


The basic reason for the republic was not unique to Rome. Commerce with other nations had been
adopted as the primary goal for the organization of the state by the Phoenicians, the Greeks and the
Carthaginians. The Chinese still use the principle. They don't have the term limits. The others had
monarchs.


The idea was that the cost for military action was to be kept at a minimum by negotiation in relation to the
protection of trade. The extreme restriction of political benefit from the one year term limit for the executive
office however made plunder the only way to accumulate enough wealth to support the military force
needed to protect trade.


The patricians held the official authority in the senate. They divided the world for their benefit. Those who
aspired to power in the Roman state went through the course of offices in order to become a patrician.


The senate made sure that media expression was directed against the enemy (monarchical or tribal
barbarians) to keep the public off balance regarding the power of the patrician.


The Romans didn't defeat the Carthaginians by the limitation of military action to defense. They
aggressively defined their competitors as enemies and promoted insurrection in their territory.


The same kind of aggressive strategy was used to help the Greek empire to fall. Domestic dissatisfaction
with the monarchy was used to divide the house against itself.


The military success of the experienced soldiers against the less organized tribal societies was used to
'defend' the republic from attack.


The republic became an empire when the emperor was accepted as a necessary evil to convert to the
conquered world into republican states. The leadership for the empire eventually divided when the military
was paid enough to determine election outcomes for state officials.


This pattern was used as an argument against the establishment of a standing military by monarchy, but
parliamentary government adopted the practice of precipitating violent conflict for the benefit of official
power.
This was the same tactic that had been used by the Patricians. The authority for the practice was shifted
to the lower house.There wasn't official sanction for the military, but the need for the protection of trade
from attack, whether staged, fictional or actual was established as perpetual.


Roman republic defined executive authority for the government as the greatest threat to the success of
commerce. They implied that the protection of the commerce was subordinate to trade, but commercial
relations were shifted to make success in trade dependent upon the military victory as orchestrated by
the patricians in their class struggle with plebians.   


The Dutch and the Swiss employed mercenaries for the protection of trade in the city and outside of it as
necessary. When mercenaries limited their role to defense, they earned their pay. When they staged events
to make their service look invaluable, they were subversive at least and international terrorists at the
worst.


Vattel claimed that this “delightful dream” for cooperation among nations based on rights in law was
derived directly from human nature. He acknowledged that “most nations aim only to strengthen and
enrich themselves at the expense of others” in the Law of Nations (bk. II, §16).


Prudence in statecraft actually prevented existing states from making mutual aid the guiding principle
of foreign politics. This suggested that states ought to content themselves with a morally less appealing,
but nevertheless workable, order based on the balance of power.


Vattel explained this acknowledgment of the realities of modern European politics on two grounds. The
first was the theoretical incoherence of previous natural law theories with regard to the duties of perfectly
independent states.


Here he turned against Wolff’s idea of a civitas maxima (largest city). He claimed that Wolff had rightly
distinguished between two forms of the law of nations. There was an immutable or necessary right of
people that signified the law of nature applied to individual states.


There was also a voluntary regulation which defined the necessary limitations of natural law within the
realm of international relations.  He argued that the voluntary had to be tolerated in order to avoid great
harm.


Natural law was used by Vattel as an olive branch in international relations. There is an implication for
conservative expenditure in government when natural law is logically associated with the rights of people.
This conservative policy is supported by the royal line of succession. The succession passes on property
and principle in economic leadership from one generation to the next. It serves as a model for household
management with respect for family values in other households.


Executive authority in republic should not have term limits. Indefinite re-election is a better policy for the
competition in conservative policy with monarchy. The Roman republic had to adopt a line of succession
in order to direct official policy.


It wasn't so much a necessary evil as it was economically efficient. It allowed business organization to
develop for the production of value with products or services in the free market.


Liberals would have us believe that government has to regulate success for those who agree with them.
Conservative policy allows for success to be achieved in the market by restricting government intervention
by regulation.   


Emer de Vattel was unable to cope with his office due to ill health and retired to his native Neuchâtel. He
died in December 1767 at the age of fifty-three.


Emer de Vattel
伊玛巴特尔
伊瑪 巴特爾


伊 Yi        he       伊 i that one                   E え エ Em 엠 m          
玛  ma    agate          瑪 me agate                   ma ま- マ- ma 마 hemp   
巴  ba     to hope        巴 ha comma-design       dei でい デイ de 데 place             
特  te      special        特 toku special                   Wa わ ワ I 이 this            
尔  er      you          爾 ore you                    to と ト Wa 와 wow
                                                                                    ru る ル teul 틀 frame


--------------------------------


The right for people is a natural law.
The voluntary aspect is not a flaw.
Conservative reform is a necessary draw.


==================


https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/vattel-the-law-of-nations-lf-ed
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emer_de_Vattel



Goo Goo Dolls
Name

Hillsong Worship
Beautiful Name