MDMD(1):Euphroe
Thomas Vieth
whoge at hotmail.com
Fri Jun 27 08:38:46 CDT 1997
Ever heard of Schrödinger's Cat?
Thomas Vieth
Down with Triolahidi
Long live Hollerodullyo
----Original Message Follows----
Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 18:38:31 -0700
From: Scott Badger <lupine at ncia.net>
To: jporter <jp4321 at IDT.NET>
CC: pynchon-l at waste.org
Subject: Re: MDMD(1):Euphroe
jporter wrote:
>
> >I know this is similar to Jody's comment, but
>
> But you probably said it better!
No, no, you said it better!...
<snip>
> >Like the
> >awning between light and dark, or storm and shelter, Hepsie holds a
> >false, or logically impossible, position between opposed states or
> >points.
>
> Hepsie subsumes logic. Her truth is greater than that which can be
reached
> logically. she is a young and full of cheer, but remains so only as an
> archetype. Yet as an archetype she is also ancient and accessible to
all.
> All notions suggested by Pynchon's choice of the word euphroe.
>
> and may You stay...forever young,
>
> jody
That too, but what I meant by "logically impossible" is this; A frequent
Pynchon theme is the idea of "in-between". That is, what happens at the
point, cusp, interface, etc. between two paired and opposite states.
Take, for example, a light going from on to off (or vice versa). If
time is a continuum then at some point, logically, the light must be
simultaneously on and off, or neither on or off (We can go directly from
one state to the other if time, as in calculus, is a series of smallest
possible segments, but then causality goes out the window). Hepsie,
then, is a manifestation of this paradox - her existence is as necessary
as it is impossible.
Thinking that we'd better catch up with the rest of the class....How
'bout those Euphroes on page 53?
s
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