My best friend's son is an attempting filmmaker after his master's degree. We have a group of men who have Sunday breakfast together and he was included the last few months and there's been a lot of film talk over...um...potatoes. That's it, hash brown potatoes.
I do not know, I do not think so.
Very good, you took the quote. You surprised me!
Film culture or google?
Well, except for all the Italians that are Catholic or otherwise Christian. Those would believe that Man is special.Telling you - Italians are way ahead of the curve on this one. Can you identify the author of this quote?
My best friend's son is an attempting filmmaker after his master's degree. We have a group of men who have Sunday breakfast together and he was included the last few months and there's been a lot of film talk over...um...potatoes. That's it, hash brown potatoes.
Fellini has come up in past months and I have used the Google to find out more--including the quote. But, I did Google it again before writing to make sure it was not linked to an older source. (And, to find anything having to do with him and vegetarianism.) Since he died at 73 from a heart attack (after having a stroke earlier), I'm thinking it is some lifestyle choice that did him in. Having seen multiple pictures of him smoking, I have a guess. But, it might be diet instead. (Or, as well.)
Well, except for all the Italians that are Catholic or otherwise Christian. Those would believe that Man is special.
My favorite was Stanley Kubrick. He said of Fellini: (https://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/polls-surveys/stanley-kubrick-cinephile)Fellini is my favourite director. A Genius.
Why? Is not man special?
Who does not give the right importance to human life, could pay dearly.
Few men feel any shame today. These words led directly to the raw, pegan diet.Most men would feel shame if caught preparing with their own hands precisely such a dinner, whether of animal or vegetable food, as is every day prepared for them by others. - Henry David Thoreau
I'm starting to read Civil Disobedience.
In the 1970's, Civil Disobedience was required reading for many high school students in the US. Hope it still is, but not so sure. We devoted some time to the Transcendentalists, in general. The ideal age to introduce young people to radical ideas.
Must be the margins.Um ... My book is much longer ...
Must be the margins.
More seriously, while the "book" is only 28 pages (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Civil-Disobedience-Henry-David-Thoreau/dp/1505383935), you can find some anthologies out there that include other essays. Perhaps they grouped writings on civil disobedience and started with Thoreau's Civil Disobedience.
Any environment is inhospitable for us and we would not live very long, as we are.
The two old friends hadn’t seen each other lately. Now one of them was on her deathbed, crippled with arthritis, refusing food and drink, dying of old age. Her friend had come to say goodbye. At first she didn’t seem to notice him. But when she realized he was there, her reaction was unmistakable: Her face broke into an ecstatic grin. She cried out in delight. She reached for her visitor’s head and stroked his hair. As he caressed her face, she draped her arm around his neck and pulled him closer.
The mutual emotion so evident in this deathbed reunion was especially moving and remarkable because the visitor, Dr. Jan Van Hooff, was a Dutch biologist, and his friend, Mama, was a chimpanzee. The event — recorded on a cellphone, shown on TV and widely shared on the internet — provides the opening story and title for the ethologist Frans de Waal’s game-changing new book, “Mama’s Last Hug: Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves.”
You did not understand. I said we could not survive "as we are", that is, naked. We have no fur, we do not have the adaptability of other animals. We have the intelligence that has enabled us to survive. Did I explain myself better?
YEP. Not so much this thread but the sentiment.This thread reminds me of why I avoid other vegetarians.
When those animals that possess the rudiments of language, culture, etc. band together and create an international network of devices, treaties, educational achievement, language compatibility that lets a handful of processed oil and sand communicate with other such handfuls most anywhere in the world, I'll accept the premise our intelligence is only "presumably" greater.
We need to ask where the Cro Magnon man came from.
It seems from nowhere.
Nobody explains this to us.
We were monkeys, and now we can break down the atom. Ok. and the other little monkeys are still monkeys, how is that possible?