TAKE  NOTE OF SOMETHING DIFFERENT
 

Year Three
SESSION TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN

There comes a time in Notes when something not unlike this Note begins to put your mind in a space that confronts itself through your mind without being your mind at all.  Can you identify that space?

 

This Note is nothing.

 

This Note is not quite worth thinking about, but you must see that for yourself.

 

This Note is nothing new unless you have a fresh mind that can see the new.

 

This Note cannot compare to looking around outdoors in Nature.

 

This Note can help you see Notes from the same old angle you always see them from, if that is what you want.

 

This Not challenges you to stick firmly to your original interpretation of it so as to avoid becoming confused.  Therefore, begin to form an original interpretation of this Note.  It can't be that hard.

 

Edmund Husserl once said in his book, Cartesian Meditations, “Anyone who seriously intends to become a philosopher must 'once in his life' withdraw into himself and attempt, within himself, to overthrow and build anew all the sciences that, up to then, he has been accepting.  Philosophy — wisdom ( sagesse ) — is the philosopher's quite personal affair.  It must arise as his wisdom, as his self-acquired knowledge tending toward universality, a knowledge for which he can answer from the beginning, and at each step, by virtue of his own absolute insights.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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