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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger The Crow said...

What we wish for can become obsessive.
If we actually get what we wish for, it very quickly becomes taken for granted. Why we ever wanted it in the first place, seems to become lost in the having.

Sages, through the ages, have noticed this thing:
Desires, fulfilled, do not happiness bring.

31 July 2011 at 18:55

Anonymous R. Sopkin said...

I have just discovered your blog (through a link to your Harry Potter review) and it is fascinating. You may have discovered this elsewhere but are you familiar with the concept of freedom through limitations. The best illustration is that children are more free in a yard next to a highway if it is fenced than if it is not. Our culture thought that removing limitations from art, poetry, literature, dance, and architecture would produce more creativity, but instead it killed creativity. Just one of the many ways we have misused our peace and prosperity. Sigh.

31 July 2011 at 20:45

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@R Sopkin.

Indeed. I first read about the importance of boundaries in Chesterton; in Orthodoxy, I think it was.

31 July 2011 at 22:24

Anonymous James Burke said...

This post is brilliant, Mr. Charlton.

1 August 2011 at 06:54

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@JB - thanks!

BTW when I was a kid I really enjoyed your coverage of the moon landings and appearances on Tomorrow's World

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Burke_%28science_historian%29

or was that, perhaps, another James Burke, I wonder? ;-)

1 August 2011 at 08:20

Blogger The Crow said...

Wow! It's James Burke!
Not THE James Burke?
Now there's the sort of anti-celebrity that lives on in peoples' memories forever.
I agree with BJC on this :)

1 August 2011 at 17:14

Blogger The Sanity Inspector said...

Reminds me of an epigram of E. M. Cioran: "A millennium of warfare consolidated the West; a century of "psychology" has ripped it to tatters."

2 August 2011 at 19:03