I’ve been tagged by Gordon Watts:
So the game is, take the closest book to you right now, go to the fifth sentence on page 123, write the following three sentences in the blog, and tag three people.
I’m home at my mom’s house in Yreka, and the closest book is “Man’s Search for Meaning” by Viktor E. Frankl. On page 123, I find, a fifth sentence of
Sometimes the situation in which man finds himself may require him to shape his own fate by action.
Pretty optimistic, no? But what does it mean for you to take action and shape your own fate? Yep, I must get my philosophical genes from my mom 🙂 So I need to tag three people:
No blog should be lonely on New Year’s Eve! Plus, we’re at a break-point in our molecular imaging experiment (attempting the first viral-scale images). So here are the two books closest to my hand:
The Matt Rielly technothriller Ice Station, from which sentences 6-8 of page 123 read:
Now, I can guess what you’re thinking: “Why is the killer whale biting a Frenchman? Why is it not biting a Britishman?” To which I can only say, with reference to page 400, that gigantic plutonium-mutated (and extremely hungry) Antarctic elephant seals definitely prefer British cuisine.
Uhhh … what’s the next-nearest book? It’s Jonathan Israel’s similarly gigantic (but hopefully not plutonium-mutated) Enlightenment Contested, from which sentences 6-8 of page 123 read:
Of course, many of us are thinking the same thing. Hey, Jonathan Israel is cheating! He’s using semicolons to make his sentences longer! While Matt Reilly, with greater consideration for the reader, wholly eschews semicolons, no doubt because they slow down the action.
On the other hand, perhaps some of us are wondering, upon further reflection: “Maybe, just maybe, Matt Reilly and Jonathan Israel are really the same person. An author who writes history under his own name, while secretly authoring techno-thrillers for fun and profit? In which case, the killer whale surely represents the modern Radical Enlightenment, which allegorically seeks to devour the Moderate Enlightenment of Voltaire, Newton, and Locke?”
In favor of which hypothesis we note, first, that Enlightment authors have long embraced a tradition of anonymous publication, and second, that no other explanation of Matt Reilly’s elaborate plot makes any rational sense.
The only remaining question is “who to tag?” The obvious candidates are the quantum theorists Stephen Adler, Erik Verlinde, and Gerard ‘t Hooft. Stephen Adler, because he is prominently thanked by Jonathan Israel in the preface to Enlightenment Contested. Erik Verlinde and Gerard ‘t Hooft, because their quantum research has been sponsored in part by the Spinoza Institute.
It’s good to know that the centuries-old engagement of science and philosophy is, evidently, still vital in the 21st Century.
Happy New Year to all! 🙂
As a followup to the above tongue-in-cheek post, our QSE Group’s (more sober) two-page New Year’s essay entitled What is Quantum System Engineering? is now on-line here.
This essay was written originally as the introduction to a review article on large-scale quantum simulation, and it equally serves to provide a paragraph-by-paragraph tribute and acknowledgment of the influence of Prof. Jonathan Israel’s Enlightenment Contested on our engineering research (as discussed in an appendix to the essay).