Thursday, February 29, 2024
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
Mr. Kipple Goes to Budapest
All right. It’s time to get this off my chest. It’s
been sitting there over four decades, since I was put a poor confused lad
navigating the mean streets of middle school. True, many years have gone by
where I haven’t thought one iota about this, but it is also true that, from
time to time, it does revisit me and haunt me.
In 1980 Mr. Kipple was my social studies teacher in eighth
grade. He was a fun, young teacher, small in stature but a student favorite, fairly
easygoing and innovative. For example, he assigned us seating in reverse alphabetical
order, a fantastic novelty for me, whose last name begins with an a followed
by a c, who sat in the front desk on the left or right in 99 percent of
my classes. He had a friendly, curious demeanor, kept us laughing, and gave us
unique projects over the course of the semester.
One of the more basic “fun” projects was for each
student had to select any city, anywhere in the world, to research and prepare
a report about it. For some bizarre reason – or maybe for no reason at all – I
chose the Hungarian city of Budapest. And for a less bizarre reason, I attacked
this project with my usual modus operandi – I waited until the last
minute. After burning some midnight oil the night before it was due, I had the
horrifying realization I didn’t have enough material.
Remember, this was a quarter-century before the
internet. We did our research in the library. Not having access to a library at
10 pm on a Sunday night, I was at a loss of what to do. So I fudged some facts,
small things, little items I think would fall between the cracks and would not
be caught by Mr. Kipple. After all, he had 29 other cities to visit via his
students’ reports.
A week or so later he bounced around class excited to
talk about our reports. They were all very, very good, he noted, very
interesting and informative. We’d be tested on the information we were about to
discuss and review that afternoon.
Can you see where this is going?
He had a huge checklist he wanted to go over based on the
“cool stuff” he gleaned from our research. Thank God he did not make each one
of us stand up and read them. Instead, he picked on random people and
complimented them for this piece of information, that factoid, this legend,
that myth, this stat.
Then he called my name, and studying the paper in his
hand, asked me if Budapest really did mean “the land at the fork of the rivers
in ancient Magyar.” I turned white as a ghost and gulped and nodded. With a
faraway look in his eyes, Mr. Kipple uttered but one word: “Neat!”
Now, Wikipedia tells me that the etymology of
“Budapest” has something to do with the merging of two names, Buda and Pest,
both probably Roman Empire names either of ancient rulers or fortifications.
Less certain is that idea they derive from the Turkic word for “branch, twig”
and the Slavic word for “cave.” That night in 1980 when I was stumped for facts,
I noticed that the Danube ran through Budapest, and thought that “the land at
the fork of the rivers” would be a great translation.
I lied academically for the first of only two times in
my life. I felt awful. But the worse was to come. Later in the week we were
tested on the class review of all our city reports, and two-thirds down the
page was the following question:
22. This city derives its name from the Hungarian
phrase “the land at the fork of the rivers”: ______________________ .
Oh no! Not only have I deceived my teacher, but
through me twenty-nine of my fellow students were also fed and learned
falsified knowledge, even though they may have promptly forgot the origin of
the word “Budapest” over the subsequent years and decades.
Unlike the other time when I faked my way through an
essay exam on Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities, which I made amends for by
actually reading the novel 20 years later (and a half-dozen other Dickensian
works since), I do not see how I can restore balance over this deceit. So,
suffice it to say, this is my mea culpa. I can only hope that it was
never a secret dream of Mr. Kipple’s to vacation in the Hungarian capital, and
if it was, hope that he was never laughed out of a tavern in that noble city
for disrespecting the origin of its name.
Sunday, February 25, 2024
Book-Beaten
Well, this is a first.
And it’s kinda embarrassing.
A book has defeated me.
Sure, probably a half-dozen or so books I start each
year don’t move me. So with a “Life’s too short to read a bad book,” I set it
aside with all due reverence and respect. Some I realize I am not ready for,
and place atop a pile to revisit at some point in the future. Others I realize
I will never be ready for, and return them for pennies at the used book shops.
And a tiny percentage gall me so bad I simply toss them in the trash (this has
only happened twice, though).
But I’m kinda embarrassed to admit that, yes, Edward
Gibbon’s History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire has beaten
me. Not for reasons that you might think. I still enjoy the topic immensely. I’ve
learned Gibbon’s foibles and prejudices, and I’m okay with them. I just can’t
physically read the book.
Yes, you read that right.
Over the past week or so I’ve been going to bed with
terrible headaches. Centered at the front of my brain. My eyes, specifically. From
about eight p.m. on I can’t read at all, whether it’s my daily spiritual reading,
whether its my side read, and especially if it’s Gibbon.
The version of The History of the Decline I
am currently reading is from the Great Books of the Western World series. Now,
I’ve read other books from this series without ill effect. But something with
the tiny-sized print, the double-columns per page, the two-hundred sentence
paragraphs, well, it all just perfect-stormed it’s way into making my eyes –
and my brain – strain terribly.
So I must with great reluctance set it aside.
I am coming up to the end of Volume II in 48 pages. My par is 10 pages a night, so I’ll continue with it throughout this upcoming
week. The work itself has six volumes, so I’ll have made it through two complete
volumes in six weeks. Not bad. I did learn a few interesting things about
Gibbon, the History of the Decline, and the Roman Empire itself I will blog about in a few days.
I originally had the idea (actually, Tolkien came to
me in a dream and commanded me to take up the work) of reading The History of
the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire for the four months my oldest
daughter will be studying abroad in Italy. Well, the spirit was willing but the
flesh was weak. I’m getting heavy vibes that Little One would want me to switch
over to modern, cutting-edge hard SF this spring, so, hey, that’s what I’m going to
start. And with that will come more book reviews. Yay!
Happy reading to all, but don’t read so much you lose
your eyesight!
Sunday, February 18, 2024
Single Focused Mind
“We have seldom an opportunity of observing, either in active or speculative life, what effect may be produced, or what obstacles may be surmounted, by the force of a single mind, when it is inflexibly applied to the pursuit of a single object.”
Neat, really neat sentence from Chapter 21 of The History
of the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire (page 316 in my Great Books of the
Western World volume). I have thought this thought many times throughout my
life, even wrote about it here in these electronic pages: What could I do with a hundred such men under my command? (Click on the link for the
answer.)
And as applied to myself? Good Lord, I wanted to do
too much that the force of this single mind became too diluted – write a
paradigm-changing novel, discover the basic building block of the basic
building blocks of matter (I still think it has something to do with the
photon), re-write or re-discover history, compose something that will last long
past I’ve lived, and on, and on, and on.
Still, though, the thought itself and the ideas behind
it resonate very strongly and clearly with me on an almost daily basis. Nice
and neat to see it in Gibbon’s 1781 work.
N.B. The mind in question regarding Gibbon’s quoted
remark is Athanasius of Alexandria, a fourth century Christian theologian and
Church Father noted for his tireless efforts to defeat Arianism. Perhaps later
this week I’ll post a “workman’s guide to Christian heresies” regarding
Arianism and Donatism, as I am somewhat hazy on the terms …
Sunday, February 11, 2024
No Bread and Circuses Today
My family won’t be watching the Super Bowl today. We decided
we have better things to do.
Now, the NFL died to me sometime around 2017 or 2018,
I think (I haven’t been keeping track and can’t be bothered to confirm the
exact season). You know, when the whole kneeling thing started. I didn’t watch
a single game for several years, and that includes my beloved New York Giants
as well as any playoff games or Super Bowls.
This unofficial boycott lasted until about 2022 or so.
We moved down to Texas which has such a football culture. My brother-in-law
tried to get us into watching college ball, but it just didn’t stick with me. Funny
story with that – and one I can’t write about without being canceled. And as a diehard
Giants fan, I can’t rightly root for the Cowboys. So that season I think we
just watched the Super Bowl. Rams, was it? Or was it Tom Brady’s Bucs? Can’t
remember; these things all seem to mishmash into each other.
Then early this past fall with the horrendous Giants
having something like four primetime appearances in the first five weeks we
started watching them again. After that, not so much as both the Giants and
Jets were a little south of mediocre all year and not often broadcasted this
part of the South. We watched some post-season games; since my wife spent her
first eight years of life in a Detroit suburb, we rooted for the Lions.
Naturally, they did not advance to the Super Bowl.
The whole thing has an astroturfed stink to it, doesn’t
it? I mean, that obnoxious Kelce guy and the NFL embarrassingly fawning over
all things Tayor Swift. You absolutely knew the Chiefs would be in the big
game. Go to YouTube and you’ll find any number of videos about the current
state of NFL refereeing, horrible and conspiratorial and hypocritically
subjective. They’re like Goodell’s evil minions, the NFL commissioner’s
praetorian guard. And the league still panders to the left-wing wokeism from
the late 2010s. It’s all so overtly manufactured and it’s all, ultimately,
meaningless.
So instead of watching the “festivities” drone-like,
hive-like, NPC-like, we’re going to do something different this year. Yeah, we’ll
still have the appetizers coming out of the oven full-force later today (potato
skins, mozzarella sticks, jalapeno poppers, etc.) but we’ll eat them watching a
classic from by-gone days: 1977’s Star Wars, the original, the
one-and-only, untainted by Disney and DEI. I’m actually really looking forward
to it. Last time I saw it the little ones were really little.
If you want to subject yourself to Taylor Swift – I mean,
the Super Bowl – more power to you. I was once in your shoes. Actually, for most
of my life. I’ll be on Tatooine and the Death Star this evening.
Thursday, February 8, 2024
Persecutions
“They died in torments, and their torments were
embittered by insult and derision. Some were nailed on crosses; others sewn up
in the skins of wild beasts, and exposed to the fury of dogs; others again,
smeared over with combustible materials, were used as torches to illuminate the
darkness of night. The gardens of Nero were destined for the melancholy spectacle,
which was accompanied with a horse-race, and honored with the presence of the emperor,
who mingled with the populace in the dress and attitude of a charioteer. The
guilt [sic] of the Christians deserved indeed the most exemplary punishment,
but the public abhorrence was changed into commiseration, from the opinion that
those unhappy wretches were sacrificed, not so much to the public welfare as to
the cruelty of a jealous tyrant.”
- Tacitus, quoted
by Edward Gibbon in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,
chapter sixteen.
“[sic]” addition mine.
Just finished Volume I of Gibbon’s great work, the first
fifteen chapters detailing the reigns of Aurelius to Constantine, roughly 180 to
310 AD. Volume II starts off with a grim and powerful exploration of why the Empire,
famous for its tolerance of religious polytheism, persecuted the Christians in
waves of vicious bloodshed. Tough read for me, and I am detecting a slightly-more-than-slight
anti-Christian bias in Gibbon that I had been warned about. Still, faults and
all, productive reading. Learning much about an Empire that reached the peaks
of splendor with frequent descents into valleys of madness, often at the whim
of the personality of the man in charge.
Saturday, February 3, 2024
Cosmodrome
Cleaning out my office a few days ago I realized I
had, mixed among the stacks of bills, unfiled paperwork, books, records, and boxes
of DVDs and NJ memorabilia, 27 Astronomy magazines.
Now, I have been an off-and-on subscriber to Astronomy
magazine since my Seton Hall days, beginning sometime around 1992. Occasionally
I’d let the subscription run out and start up a new one with Sky & Telescope, but I’ve been with Astronomy for probably twenty years. Back
in NJ I’d read them cover-to-cover, especially in the 90s, then as physics left
my life and I started a family and gained other obligations, I’d skim the
magazines, reading at best one or two articles for each. We moved down to Texas
two-and-a-half years ago and I notified the publisher of a change in address,
and, 27 issues later, realized I haven’t read a single one.
So I decided that I’d try to get through one a week
when the Mrs. and I are watching the Dallas Stars or she’s watching her thing
on TV. Beats scrolling through twitter. I’m already halfway through the most
recent issue, and will read them backwards over the next couple of months. I’ve
learned (and re-discovered) a lot of interesting things, and learning new
things is high on my values list.
I can’t remember when I last renewed my subscription.
It’s probably due to end soon. Probably did a three-year run for something like
$1.99 an issue. Dunno. Maybe I’ll switch to Sky & Telescope. Again,
dunno. Regardless, I don’t like wasting any amount of money, so I’m off on a
mission.
That mission involves my backyard, my own private
cosmodrome. It’s a heckuva lot better than the one I had in NJ. Back then,
nested in houses, trees, and a downward sloping hill to a highway, I probably
could access maybe 20 to 30% of the bowl of the sky. Here, thirty miles north
of Dallas, sitting in a chair on my backyard patio, I have access to something
like 60 to 70% of the sky.
Down in Texas we have far horizons and big sky. Where
I live there are literally no mountains. Trees, but no forests. All the houses
are no higher than two stories, or fifty feet I’d guess. When I open the
backyard and take a few steps to the center of the patio, I can see the
complete southwest sky to the horizon. A close neighbor blocks off a small part
of the south above the horizon, and another to the west an even smaller portion
as he’s further away. So I can see clear to southern California, in a range
from the Mexican border straight up to Canada, with a slight addition of kryptonian
vision.
I can see up and over my head to zenith, and perhaps
twenty degrees eastward tilting my neck back. (To view the full eastern sky I’d
just have to open my front door.) And turning my head north I see two-thirds of
the sky above the garage. Here’s where I see Polaris, the North Star, every
night, accompanied by the Great Bear, Cassiopeia, or Cepheus, depending upon
the season.
Looking though to that open southwest, this image from
Close Encounters of the Third Kind always comes to mind, though it
doesn’t quite represent actual reality for me:
(Actually, the scene where the police are chasing the UFOs and come to a screeching halt at a cliff as the objects fly over the countryside is a better image, but I couldn’t find it online).
There is lots of activity in this sky: Dallas Fort
Worth Airport is 23 miles south/southwest. Sheppard Air Force Base is 112 miles
west/northwest. Dyess Air Force Base is 200 miles directly west. So there’s
lots of motion all the time. Planes of all types, including helicopters. I
often see them dance before bright Venus setting in the west, or Jupiter and
Saturn slowly traversing a great arc overhead. The moon is brilliant – to my
chagrin as it makes identifying stars more difficult – but it seems to be out and
full every evening, so clear and close I could hit it with a rock or dust it off
had I a stepladder and a broom.
A few days ago we hit 71 degrees – unseasonably warm
for this time of year even down here. I reclined on a chair and mapped the
skies as Charlie the dog inspected the perimeter of the yard for bunny
infiltration. Off to the northwest I see bright globes on the horizon, slowly
nearing, getting brighter, more defined, eventually resolving into massive
jet liners en route to DFW. And each time I see one I hope it won’t. Perhaps it
will zig zag, change colors, speed up or speed away at some crazy angle. And who
knows? It might be some aircraft of unknown origin escaping F-18 Super Hornets
launched from Sheppard or Dyess in hot pursuit.
Ah, my cosmodrome! Looking forward to spring nights
sitting out there sipping a beer and watching the stars.
(And yes, I know “drome” connotes “airfield”, such as “aerodrome”
– UK airfields in WW II, but “cosmodrome” sounds cooler than plain ol’ “observatory”.)