"...They are, I believe, deeply woven into the fabric of experience, and finding real peace depends on being able to accept and live with them.
The first ambiguity lies in the nature of imperfection. It is this: we are idealistic beings, driven to create ideas and objects and to do things of great purity and beauty. We are deeply drawn to these ideas and objects and actions. And yet, the very moment we make ourselves part of them, we seem to find that they are - or become - flawed. There seems to be an unerring tendency in everything we are part of to fall short of ideals and to be imperfect. Indeed, this imperfection can sometimes take on very sinister forms, as we shall see later. Hints of this are there in that interior darkness in the cathedral. Imperfection is deeply part of us, and we are part of it. We cannot escape from this.
The second ambiguity lies in the nature of the end of human progress. The old Victorian sense of progress ever onward and upward has given way to a much more uncertain sense of where we are heading. What is the outcome likely to be? You can make the bull case or the bear case with about equal conviction. So there is an ambiguity about what the end of it all will be. Climate change brings this into a sharper focus, as did the nuclear arms race in the middle of the last century (with the difference that the climate change is a slow burning fuse, whereas the spectre of nuclear catastrophe had a unique immediacy about it). As life around us improves, and standards of health care and education and recreation all steadily progress, the thought must remain: The world could be less good for our grandchildren. Will we ever get to the point where the job is all done, where humanity has reached a stable, comfortable, peaceful, shared existence on a planet that is sustainable, where individuals are at peace with themselves and each other? Will we get to that, or will there be a different kind of destination: flood and fire, pandemics, conflict on a previously unknown scale?
The third ambiguity lies in the nature of hope. I believe this is the most significant of them all, and the central ambiguity of our existence. It is this: we know that evil is widespread in the world, and yet we believe that something better is possible - we go on hoping, often in the teeth of the evidence. For the most part, in the tortured words of the poet (and priest) Gerard Manley Hopkins, we do "not choose not to be". Even in the darkest times in human history or in our own lives, there still seems to be the recurrent possibility of making the assertion (even though it may at the time be groundless) that hope will endure. We may not know at all what grounds we have for believing it. Why in the midst of awfulness would we believe it? And I am not talking about naive hope. The hope we may find in the midst of evil is not a material hope of a kind that holds that life will get better or that progress is inevitable: it is a hope that is a strange as the evil we know to be endemic in our experience. Can it meaningfully be the response to the question: Why bother?"
by Stephen Green, "Good value - reflections on money, morality and an uncertain world"
Bolds by me
10 Oct 2010
8 Oct 2010
In my ears...
With no doubt the perfect soundtrack after coming back from Paris!
St. Germain, "Rose Rouge"
26 Sep 2010
Chavez' Portuguese friends should be proud

Just to keep in mind:
....with his friend Mário Soares
...with his friend José Sócrates
In one word: 'Verguenza!'
18 Sep 2010
12 Sep 2010
Cities of this world
Following this initiative of Público's supplement about cities I here add two very interesting links for two very different cities' rankings:
Metropolis Now
World's Happiest Cities
The question now is "which one to consider as the most relevant?"
Metropolis Now
World's Happiest Cities
The question now is "which one to consider as the most relevant?"
7 Sep 2010
Quotes
"Have you ever observed that we pay much more attention to a wise passage when it is quoted than when we read in the original author?" by Philip G. Hamerton
....now I understand why I feel that I should be quoted more often! lol
....now I understand why I feel that I should be quoted more often! lol
29 Aug 2010
19 Aug 2010
21 Jul 2010
Rica Democracy
How well this quotation describes the portuguese governace problem:
"Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve"
George Bernard Shaw
"Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve"
George Bernard Shaw
24 Jun 2010
30 May 2010
23 May 2010
Rica Lecture
Berkeley - Nonviolence Course
"Given what is going on in the world today, this might very well be the most important subject that we could possibly be studying!"
"Given what is going on in the world today, this might very well be the most important subject that we could possibly be studying!"
Watch it on Academic Earth
19 Apr 2010
Rica Ceremony
Why must a child holding the national flag see his dead president being carried by a war machine such as this Hummer, followed by cannons aimed at mourning family?! One can always tell the level of solemnity of a ceremony by the amount of military equipment engaged. I find it despicable!
10 Apr 2010
Rica Polska
A story of a Country abused by History. This People's profound faith and devotion to a God could deserve more of His care.
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