Tag Archives: Henri Bergson
Léo
Léo A few days ago I took a trip to Manhattan, formerly my home town, to visit old friends. One friend was Laurin Raikin, a founder of NYU’s Gallatin Division. We’ve known each other for many years and among the … Continue reading
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Tagged "Fiddler on the Roof", academic celebration, aesthetics, anonymous gift, anti-clerical, anti-clerical Spaniard, art history, benefactor, books on kabbalah, Brandeis University, Brazilian cafe, Catalan style, Catalonia, celebratory weekend, challah, City of Lights, communal prayer, cosmopolitan, deceptive evil, downtown Manhattan, dream of one's death, epic story, evil doers, existential choice, expensive concert, Fine art, foster father, free thinker, Friday night candles, godfather/godchild, Gruenewald "Crucifixion", handsome youth, Henri Bergson, Henri Foçillon, Jewish mysticism, last rites, Laurin Raikin, leading revolutionary, Leo Bronstein's Kabbalah and Art, Leon Trotsky, leukemia, Lower Manhattan, male friendship, Manhattan, meaningful mystery, meaningful story, men friends, moral rank, mortal illness, motorcycle accident, mystery, Narcis Serradel I Pascual, New York Public Library, nom de guerre, nonjudgmental, NYU Gallatin Division, objectivity, old Jew, Paris in the '20s, Paris in the '30s, philosophy, philosophy of art, poor Jews, precognitive dream, professors of the Sorbonne, Russian revolution, sabbath wine, seductive evil, Shabbos, shtibl, spontaneous remission, students at Brandeis, tenderness, the Sabbath, true story, undeceived, unhappy love affair, University of Paris, unseduced
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“What Kind of a God?”
“What Kind of a God?” I have been following, with a mixture of emotions — including curiosity and claustrophobia — C. S. Lewis’s account, in Surprised by Joy, of his conversion to theism (belief in a personal God) from his … Continue reading
Posted in Academe, Art, Culture, Desire, Faith, Gender Balance, history of ideas, life and death struggle, Literature, Masculinity, nineteenth-century, Philosophy, Political, Psychology, Social Conventions, The Examined Life
Tagged Absolute, anthroposophy, élan vital, Britain, C.S. Lewis, conversion, divine, England, Henri Bergson, holistic healing, honor, human desire, Materialism, New Age, occult, Occultism, Oscar Wilde, Oxford University, philosophy, prayer, prophetic, reality, sex, Spinoza, SUNY, Surprised By Joy, theism, theosophy, World War I, yoga
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