V.V. (13) 1904
Dave Monroe
davidmmonroe at yahoo.com
Mon Apr 2 03:16:42 CDT 2001
Now, before I go to any trouble to respond to any of
this on Lhamon's behalf (which I'm not going to have
time to do today anyway, and I'm already putting off
other things I wanted to get to), let me know, have
you--has anyone here--actually read Llhamon's chapter
here (Ch. 6, Deliberate Speed)? 'Cos we're talking
approximately 50 pages on V. here (not to mention a
nifty little intro to Wittgenstein). Want to know
just how much of this I'm actually going to have to
post here.
Keep in mind, I post these little excerpts not only
'cos I think they'll be of immediate interest here,
but also as recommendations, enticements, even, to
further reading, and not necesarily as wholesale
endorsements. But while I've no real problem with
following up and addressing questions, criticisms,
whatever, I'm not always up to doing so at length only
to find that I'm doing so for the benefit of someone
who hasn't, or maybe even won't, actually read the
text. I'm generally posting only what I'm reading as
immeditely of interest, only enough to get the gist,
perhaps, of a text, is all ...
That being said, do think there are some quirks to
Lhamon's reading, but, well, will get to it when/if I
get to it ...
--- jbor <jbor at bigpond.com> wrote:
>
> Lhamon's reading neglects the dream aspects of
> Mondaugen's story (eg. that
> important excursus to proto-Depression Munich in the
> text) as well as the ...
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