Perhaps a new thread can be started if
Hey, but you know that already
No worries, AS.artisticsolution wrote:Lol...sry bout that M!
Skip wrote:Would it help to say that Ayn Rand had no sense of humour? Zip. Couldn't cook, either, but that's off topic again, except in that I always got a chuckle in the novels when she'd have the hero "fix hotdogs" or something equally haute cuisine, for his friends. They never, ever told a joke or lounged around the pad toking up and laughing their asses off... so how creative could they have been?
Skip earlier:Mary Ann:
Sure. In the late fifties, one afternoon Frank and I went to see Lust for Life, the Vincent Van Gogh movie with Kirk Douglas. And, of course, it included the gory episode of Van Gogh mutilating his ear. When we returned home, Ayn wanted to hear about the movie and especially about Frank’s response. “How was it?” she asked. And Frank said, with a smile, “Well, lend me your ear.” And she said, laughing irresistibly, some words to the effect that it was a gruesome remark. But she couldn’t stop laughing.
Rand communicated quite well, didn't she ?Someone's use of humour gives you a pretty good measure of their intelligence, their creativity, linguistic facility, mental agility and intellectual scope - all of which will determine how well you communicate.
Some people say I'm a hypocrite because I've got money now. When I was poor and I complained about inequality people said I was bitter, now I'm rich and I complain about inequality they say I'm a hypocrite. I'm beginning to think they just don't want inequality on the agenda because it is a real problem that needs to be addressed.
It's easy to attack me, I'm a right twerp, I'm a junkie and a cheeky monkey, I accept it, but that doesn't detract from the incontrovertible fact that we are living in a time of huge economic disparity and confronting ecological disaster.
When I first got a few quid it was like an anaesthetic that made me forget what was important but now I've woken up. I can't deny that I've done a lot of daft things while I was under the capitalist fugue, some silly telly, soppy scandals, movies better left unmade. I've also become rich. I don't hate rich people; Che Guevara was a rich person. I don't hate anyone, I judge no one, that's not my job, I'm a comedian and my job is to say whatever I like to whoever I want if I'm prepared to take the consequences. Well I am.
...I realised then that our treasured concepts of tribe and nation are not valued by those who govern except when it is to divide us from each other. They don't believe in Britain or America they believe in the dollar and the pound. These are deep and entrenched systemic wrongs that are unaddressed by party politics.
The symptoms of these wrongs are obvious, global and painful. Drone strikes on the innocent, a festering investment for future conflict.
How many combatants are created each time an innocent person in a faraway land is silently ironed out from an Arizona call centre? The reality is we have more in common with the people we're bombing than the people we're bombing them for.
OK, I'll try to relate this to the article in question which isn't an 'ideology' as such, ie it is not a system of beliefs which form the basis of a theory. It 'extends research' and 'proposes an alternative understanding of the distinction between aesthetic and non-aesthetic humour'.if one has an ideology...that it is the greatest offense to say...."I am not taking into account X because I don't like X or that X messes up my Ideological thesis by being true" or some other uncomfortable truth. As if not thinking about X makes X disappear or something...
As with comedy too. Not allowing comedy, or disliking comedy does not mean it isn't going to happen. Even the monks who did not allow for such humanness. I wonder how many of them were laughing on the inside?
ARI
Mary Ann, you must have had many conversations with Miss Rand.
Mary Ann
Many. Some long, some short, on a wide range of topics—from current events to psycho-epistemology to women’s clothing. These conversations came about in different ways. Something I said would lead her to inquire further. Very often, something she had written or lectured about prompted questions from me. Over the years, the same subject was discussed in different contexts—if she had made a new identification or defined a new principle, for example. And there were group discussions, too. So, now—years later—it’s not possible for me to separate the content of most individual conversations from her writings and speeches and other discussions—the knowledge is all integrated. But I do remember highlights of conversations that had special, personal meaning for me, that were focused on my questions and concerns.
http://facetsofaynrand.com/book/chap3-c ... y_ann.html
Not very. I do the odd painting of nebulae for my SO, but I no longer write (except billets-dures to theists in forums). I'm not sure why: things change.marjoramblues wrote: M: are you not not creative now?
I think he's done that quite well, right here - and how many similar engagements elsewhere? The subject is never going to be exhausted or closed. Which is good, isn't it?According to Gordon, if humour meets only one or even two of his chosen criteria then it ain't aesthetic...
His approach is 'not intended as a panacea or final word on the subject'; it simply advances the conversation.
Yes, but it's far to idiosyncratic - cultural, temporal, situational and personal criteria vary too widely - to measure.Is there a correlation between the degree to which humour is aesthetic and how funny it is?
Yes, but he had to get some kind of handle on it. When you tackle an enormous subject that's intertwined with other enormous subjects, you have to either start from the general and narrow down toward the particular or start from an arbitrarily chosen point and work outward.I think that his approach is too narrow.
Motivations and intentions are hard to identify, and get more difficult with each level of complexity. The same goes for function. When you get into modern verbal comedy (or not so modern, for that matter - Shakespeare's or Aristophanes') it will be a challenge to figure out how much of it serves exactly what purpose in its cultural context.If a performer's motivations and intentions includes a prompt for people to think more deeply about important issues, provide insight - then how can they be left out of the assessment equation? Simply because they are functional?
That's the usual problem with ideologies: they're based on the (very natural) assumption that "If everybody just behaved the way I tell them to, the world will be a better place." And of course, that's true, from each point of view. If you-all were more like me, i'd like you a lot better. Well, yeah. A system of law or governance must be based on a wider understanding of the subjects it's intended to organize. But some dominant points of view usually prevail and there are always dissenting minorities... if you thought. for example. that listening/analyzing was important, and then tried to make a system based on the idea that from now on everyone would listen and analyse because it was good for them and/or "the system/world", I would think that was not in keeping with the idea that one should "analyse"....as to truly analyse.... would be to also take the inconvenient truth that humans can't always do this into account. It's not being hypocritical that bothers me...it is the not thinking the whole idea through because of ideology.
My guess: The short-sightedness there was not ignoring the fact of sex, but ignoring the law. He thought he'd be allowed to fire any waitress who ceased to fit the uniform.So she asked her higher up about how many cocktail waitress uniforms should be maternity. He said "none".
as, u r not aloneartisticsolution wrote:Sorry M...I got confused. All of my posts have been general ideas/comments regarding the link in your initial post but I think you are talking about the second link you provided. Let me read that one again and get back to you. I am going to California tomorrow (got to pack today) so I might not get back to you until I get settled in the hotel.