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What of architectural beauty I now see, I know has gradually grown from within outward, out of the necessities and character of the in-dweller, who is the only builder — out of some unconscious truthfulness, and nobleness, without ever a thought for the appearance; and whatever additional beauty of this kind is destined to be produced will be preceded by a like unconscious beauty of life.

Thoreau, Walden

whorl, n.

1. A small fly-wheel fixed on the spindle of a spinning-wheel to maintain or regulate the speed; a small pulley by which the spindle is driven in a spinning-machine. Also locally applied to small wheels or pulleys for other purposes. c1460 Promp. Parv. 526/2 (Winch. MS.) Wharwyl of a spyndyl, vertebrum. 1483 Cath. Angl. 417/1 A Wharle, giraculum, neopellum, vertibulum. 1532 MORE Confut. Tindale Wks. 628/2 Take out thy spindle & bryng me hither the wharle. 1566 in Peacock Engl. Ch. Furnit. (1866) 170 One crwet defaced whearof was made wharles for spindels. 1589 Shuttleworths’ Acc. (Chetham Soc.) 55 Spindles and wharles ijd. 1828 Craven Gloss., Wharle. 1884 W. S. B. MCLAREN Spinning (ed. 2) 239 [They] drive this spindle by the friction of a very heavy collar on it against a large leather washer, which rests on the wharl. c1440 Promp. Parv. 526/1 Whorlwyl, of a spyndyl (K. whorwhil, P. whorle), vertebrum. 1483 Cath. Angl. 298 A Qworle of A roke. 1610 R. VAUGHAN Water-Wks. O4b, The Stanke-royall (running on a whorle, his sluce being taken vp) is receiued by a Bastard-sluce. 1773 EMERSON Princ. Mech. (ed. 3) 189 Let EG be a spinning wheel,..whilst the rim makes 1 revolution, the twill makes 9, and the whorle and feathers 6. 1808 JAMIESON, Whorle, a very small wheel, as that in a child’s cart. 1865 LUBBOCK Preh. Times v. 133 Spindle whorls of rude earthenware were abundant in some of the Lake-villages even of the Stone age. 1886 J. BARROWMAN Sc. Mining Terms 73 Whorls, pithead pulleys.

2. Bot. A set of members, as leaves, flowers, or parts of the flower, springing from the stem or axis at the same level and encircling it; a verticil. Also in Zool. a set of parts or structures, as scales or tentacles, similarly arranged. [1551 TURNER Herbal I. Gvj, The stalke is foure square,..where about doth grow in equal order,..certayne knoppes, lyke whorlles. 1578 LYTE Dodoens II. lxv. 232 The floures [of Pennyroyal] growe..about the stemmes like whorles or garlandes.] 1688 HOLME Armoury II. 98/2 Rosemary, hath Wharles or small slender leaves set at distances about the stalk. Ibid. 106/1 Flowers set together in a Whorle or Coronett. 1713 PETIVER in Phil. Trans. XXVIII. 43 Its Spikes of Flowers are thick set in striated hairy whorls. 1837 Penny Cycl. VII. 215/1 An orange..consists of one whorl of carpels, which are consolidated into a round fruit. 1860 SALA Lady Chesterf. iv. 64 A flattened head,..a forked tongue, a body of scaly whorls. 1861 BENTLEY Man. Bot. 358 A flower is said to be complete, when the four whorls,calyx, corolla, stamens, and pistil are present. 1872 H. A. NICHOLSON Palæont. 75 The stem terminates in a single polypite, the mouth of which is surrounded by a single whorl of slender processes or ‘tentacles’.

3. a. Conch. and Anat. Each of the turns, coils, or convolutions of a spiral shell, or of any spiral structure. 1828 STARK Elem. Nat. Hist. II. 52 Shell conoid, with the whorls rounded or convex. 1855 TENNYSON Maud II. ii. 6 See what a lovely shell, Small and pure as a pearl,..With delicate spire and whorl. 1890 BILLINGS Med. Dict., Whorl of heart, vortex of heart. [Ibid., Vortex of heart, the close spiral arrangement of fibres which occurs at the apex.] b. A configuration in finger-prints. 1880, etc. [see LOOP n.1 4h]. 1954 F. CHERRILL Cherrill of Yard vi. 62, I noticed particularly the patterns on the ends of the fingers, for they were of the whorl type. 1977 Sci. Amer. Dec. 141/1 The resulting patterns are known to the dermatologist respectively as loops, triradii and whorls.

4. gen. A convolution, coil, curl, ‘wreath’ (esp. of something whirling, or suggesting a whirling movement). 1592 R. D. Hypnerotomachia 51 The head of a Storke, with her beake against the open mouth of a Monster,..and certaine Whorelles or Beades rysing vp betwixt his mouth and her beake. 1851 NICHOL Archit. Heav. (ed. 9) 99 Intervals between successive whorls of the starry stream. 1863 BARING-GOULD Iceland xii. 210 Vast clouds of steam..roll in heavy whorls before the wind.

5. Comb., as whorl-flowered, -leaved, -shaped adjs.; whorl-flower, a plant of the genus Morina (N.O. Dipsacaceæ), having the flowers in dense whorls; whorl-grass, a grass of the genus Catabrosa. 1822 Hortus Angl. II. 204 M[alva] Verticillata, Whorl-flowered Mallow. Ibid. 423 C[oreopsis] Verticillata, Whorl-leaved Coreopsis. 1850 DAUBENY Atom. The. xii. (ed. 2) 423 The parts of the pistils are disposed in a whorl-shaped manner around an..axis. 1861 MISS PRATT Flower. Pl. (1900) IV. 69 Whorl-grass (Catabrosa). Water Whorl Grass (C. aquatica). Panicle with half whorls of spreading branches. 1884 MILLER Plant-n. 220 Morina longifolia, Long-leaved Whorl-flower.persica, Persian Whorl-flower. Hence whorl v. trans., (a) to draw up by means of a ‘whorl’ or pulley (local); (b) to arrange in whorls or convolutions. 1886 J. BARROWMAN Sc. Mining Terms 73 The cage is said to be whorled when it is drawn up to or over the pulleys. 1904 Daily Chron. 6 Aug. 4/5 The stars, braided and whorled in patterns too intricate for our eyes.

Understanding is merely the instrumentalization of knowing-being. Any active attempt to understand must be circumvented by prior knowledge, as such, lest it seek validation in the comprehension of things through the covering of beings’ being.

Alchemy

We may one day look back in regret at this comfortable, civilized time in our lives. We may one day see the American miracle: investments in nothing transformed into just what we deserved.

They are acing it, these guys. Election Day is now only a month away. The demoralized Democrats are held hostage by the unemployment numbers. And along comes this marvelous gift out of nowhere, Christine O’Donnell, Tea Party everywoman, who just may be the final ingredient needed to camouflage a billionaires’ coup as a populist surge. By the time her fans discover that any post-election cuts in government spending will be billed to them, and not the Tea Party’s shadowy backers, she’ll surely be settling her own debts with fat paychecks from “Fox & Friends.”

Frank Rich, “The Very Useful Idiocy of Christine O’Donnell,” New York Times, October 2, 2010

“Anyone can revolt. It is more difficult silently to obey our own inner promptings, and to spend our lives finding sincere and fitting means of expression for our temperament and our gifts.”

— Georges Rouault

Why say “X is like Hitler” or “X is like Nazism”?

If you wanted to erase the impact of a visceral recent historical memory, one of the best ways would be to render it absurd. You could, for example, bring it up over and over again, in increasingly ridiculous comparisons, until it became nothing but meaningless hysteria. Then, when you do something that genuinely compares to the horror of that memory, you can be sure that legitimate reminders of the historical lesson are tuned out as nothing but noise and posturing.

You can’t erase history, but you can certainly beat the relevance out of it.

Some (obvious) claims

  • The current cultural climate in the US stems from three decades of a deliberate, systematic disruption of education. It’s an engineered disease.
  • Corporate fundamentalism (megachurches, scapegoating by means of so-called culturally conservative values, etc.) takes hold as an opportunistic infection in a diseased body. 
  • The media are addicted to celebritizing as such, because celebrity allows them to productize what they sell to viewers in order to attract ad dollars. 
  • Despite the fake outrage about the mainstream media, none of the current crop of radicals in populist clothing would exist otherwise. 
  • The dominant narrative of an election constantly shifts state between cause and effect.
  • In the same way that talent has been fundamentally decoupled from entertainment, wisdom and ability to govern have been disconnected from politics.
  • Large swaths of voters are bewitched by the idea of change and by the circus of campaigns, without considering that their choices will be in office for years, and the consequences felt for much longer.
  • Votes are typically reactions, rather than intentions.

It’s all been said before, and said better, but my fingers more or less insisted on typing these words this morning. And even though it seems to slant to what most think of as “the left,”  I’d apply the last six points with little alteration to election of Obama, too.

If you’re interested, agree or disagree, please do comment.