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by 082349872349872
2086 days ago
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Almost 1'000 pages will take me a while, even skimming. At the outset it reminds me a little of A New Kind of Science but with the events of 1914-1918, and their resultant shattering of empires and morals[1], to lend credence to its "copernican" claims to novelty. Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. The Meaning of Numbers
III. The Problem of World-History (1) Physiognomic and Systematic
IV. The Problem of World-History (2) the Destiny-idea and the Causality-Principle
V. Makrokosmos (1) The Symbolism of the World-picture and the Problem of Space
VI. Makrokosmos (2) Appolonian, Faustian, and Magian
VII. Music and Plastic (1) the Arts of form
VIII. Music and Plastic (2) Act and Portrait
IX. Soul-image and Life-feeling (1) On the Form of the Soul
X. Soul-image and Life-feeling (2) Buddhism, Stoicism, and Socialism
XI. Faustian and Appolonian Nature-knowledge[2]
[1] Zweig's The World of Yesterday contrasts the Victorian/Edwardian world and the interwar world.[2] Caveat: the translator may have exoticised perfectly normal words, for instance if Nature-knowledge were Naturwissenschaft, "Faustian and Appolonian science" would have been smoother. |
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https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24710096
Kaka ere apapish, kaka ere perepish.