Methodical Banality

23 CharlesW 5 5/16/2025, 8:39:30 PM aeon.co ↗

Comments (5)

Calwestjobs · 49m ago
Similar problem with law. Rules based order is not ONLY about laws, it is about ethics which is represented, imperfectly, thru law. That is why most professions which deal with humans have ethical codes, oaths, so even people who do not have same morals ( or do not care about them, but want the job ) can do job in accordance with ethic frame law is based on.

And if people follow only laws, without understanding of ethics behind those laws, we get very strange and oppressive society. Rules based order is system of rules which helps to make meaningful, better life for everyone while minimizing harm we do to each other.

So fascism, as journalist use it currently, is a lack of effort for minimization of harm we do to each other. Never heard anything scarier than that.

Law is not a goal but a means.

Calwestjobs · 1h ago
This is why communist / soviet countries were declining. Most people get confused how can anyone label what happened in those countries as decline, they build factories, they catapulted peasants, serfs into city dwellers, they made huge scientific progress. Those people do not realize that soviet countries did it after it was done in west. For example Large Panel System building so pervasively used in communist block was invented and used 50 years before in England. Inventiveness was limited only into areas that the regime deemed necessary. And even those areas were not free to pursue scientific method, having go back and forth between photos, books and letters from relatives, from west + back and forth between "government ideologist" responsible for "right" way of thinking made any effort to move human endeavor into higher levels impossible.

https://www.socialismrealised.eu/normalistion-everyday-life/

mighmi · 34m ago
I guess the ussr originally were vibrant and full of innovation but especially the 30s purges killed it off.
Calwestjobs · 8m ago
Social change was global. It had different local outcomes.

1918 was end of 2WW, most of Europe went from monarchy to democracy, except Russia which went from monarchy to autocracy. This change had orders of magnitude less victims in west.

1917 - 1990 soviets killed more of their own fellow citizens than Hitler did kill any citizen. so if soviets / current Russian establishment says Nazis were bad, then logically they have to say that they were bigger monsters themselves.

And if we talking about 6 million people dead in Holocaust, than current Russian establishment killed 1/6 of that amount in current war ON Ukraine. Just think about that perverse disaster currently happening and we live like it does not matter...

A lot of Russian capital from selling natural gas to Europe went to US.... most of NY diamond district is about Russian money. at least 30 % of Israelis are descendants of Russians. These thing mean nothing to anyone.

EDIT: 1918 was end of 1WW of course...

vunderba · 2h ago
> They internalised the qualities of their models’ prose as much as possible, and also kept a sort of verbal rainy-day fund in something called a commonplace book, which is to say that, as they read, they transcribed a stockpile of salient words, metaphors, turns of phrase and clichés – usually organised thematically – that they would then draw upon while writing.

I'm reminded of an excellent passage from "Lives of the Great Pianists" by former New York Times music critic Harold Schonberg when speaking on the strength of Beethoven's musical extemporization:

"How much Beethoven prepared his improvisations we do not know. Most pianists did prepare, knowing full well that sooner or later they would be called upon to supply an improvisation on 'Batti, batti' or a similar well-known tune. And all pianists had at their command a thorough supply of passagework by the yard, which they could snip off and use for any possible contingency. But when Beethoven improvised, prepared passagework or no, it was evident to his hearers that after a while he was on his own, idea pouring after idea. Then he would get carried away, pound the piano, and the strings of the delicate Viennese instruments would pop, or hammers would break."

Speaking on a purely personal level, I am mostly unconcerned with the amount of purple prose a writer chooses to embellish their work with - because I'm always internally stripping away the literary wrapping paper to get at the heart of the idea itself.