Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Minds like an open window, sometimes

Both of my parents had good ideas, but operated on different planes. My mother lived and loved the life of the mind, celebrating books and ideas and discussions and people gathered for that purpose. My father saw life's fulfillment in a job well done, finding a good value for a product or service, finding satisfaction in the elegance of the basics.
Back in the 50s, my mother started a group that would bring her joy for the rest of her life, a Great Books discussion group in Westminster. It started in a rather formal framework, based on the classics from the Great Books Foundation. Over the years, the group drifted from the rigors of classical literature and on to books of their own choosing.
For most of its time, the Great Books group met in people's homes. There would be a light meal or just a snack. Sometimes, just a handful of people would gather; in other times, they might have a couple dozen.
Although our house was pretty much finished during this time, there was always more work to be done.
One summer evening, it was my mother's turn to host the group. It was a hot evening, so all of the awning windows had to be open.
It was also an evening when my father found a great deal and so arranged for delivery of a truckload of fresh manure that he'd use to fertilize the new front lawn.

4 comments:

Lori said...

Well this ties into your Krista birthday post above, but that reminds me of the time I had my 14th birthday party and invited the whole 8th grade, only to have the backyard sewer system overflow.

T-Traveler said...

ALEX Beam the globe writer put out a book about the great books movement, a great idea at the time. You can read sections of it on google books
http://books.google.com/books?id=xyQOZUzkt3UC&pg=PA196&lpg=PA196&dq=great+idea+at+the+time+first+chapter&source=bl&ots=AyN6ZYHgr5&sig=879X_iau5FfKH5daWDcKmjuh0aw&hl=en&ei=Bk9US8_eGo7AlAe-_sSxCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CA8Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=&f=false

Karl Hakkarainen said...

T-Traveler -
Nifty. Thanks.
kh

Max Weismann said...

Argumentum ad Hominem

The subtitle should have read, Every Negative Fact and Innuendo I Could Dredge Up

I found virtually every page to be a smart-alecky and snide diatribe of the worst order against me, the Great Books, Mortimer Adler, Robert Hutchins, et al. Plus the book is replete with errors of commission and omission.

As an effective antidote, I prescribe Robert Hutchins' pithy essay, The Great Conversation.

If the Great Books crusade is as bleak as Beam purports, then happily, not many will read his invective book.

Max Weismann,
President and co-founder with Mortimer Adler, Center for the Study of The Great Ideas
Chairman, The Great Books Academy (3,000+ students)

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