02/8/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 N

Summary of text [comment] page 80

[Freud’s model describes the human psyche in a fashion that matches an intersection.

What does this imply?

Maybe, once upon a time, the id, superego and ego worked like a functioning engine. The ego was the perspective that brought the situation-based superego (conforming to social rules and traditions) into relation with the possibility of the id (expressing the desires of the individual).

Now, we are broken. We do not operate according to our evolutionary manual. Our evolutionary trajectory has been derailed.]

01/30/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 H-2

[The single actuality that encompasses valves and boilers emerges from and situates two potentials that seem to have nothing to do with either boilers or valves.

The single actuality underlies the two normal contexts that describe the normal functioning steam engine.

It also belongs to a context that seems to have nothing to do with the mechanics of an engine. The normal context for the single actuality is the running of the engine.

That normal context is informed by the perspective of transportation in figure 2.3G.]

01/27/17

Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 H-1

Summary of text [comment] page 80

[Of course, trains are well and good until something goes wrong.

Did the know-it-alls who named ‘the engine bearing unit of a train’ the ‘locomotive’ also know that the word ‘loco’ is slang for ‘crazy’? Word historians take note!

When something goes wrong, the actualities of the boiler and the valves merge into a single problem. The piston does not work!

What could the issue be? The fuel? The flow of water and steam? The pressure? The regulators and valves?]