09-29-2018, 03:19 AM
(This post was last modified: 09-29-2018, 02:00 PM by Eric the Green.)
(09-28-2018, 11:31 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote:(09-28-2018, 11:06 PM)Eric the Green Wrote:What do you have in common with Bach other than admiration the music he created a long time ago?(09-28-2018, 11:17 AM)Bill the Piper Wrote:(09-28-2018, 07:56 AM)pbrower2a Wrote: Intellectually hollow as our President is, he seems to act as if the only mind that matters is his own. That's not quite the complete story, as other minds might simply be irrelevant to him.
There is also a word for that: psychopathy (or narcissism at least).
In this respect, Trump is an embodiment of Thomistic Western civilization, which also behaved as if other cultures (e.g. the Chinese culture) didn't matter, even if these cultures were in some ways more sophisticated than the West.
Quote:It may be that he thinks that minds other than his are irrelevant, which gives him an impoverished view of the richness possible in those who recognize that there are far greater and more productive minds than their own. A truly great man can recognize that he is not Michelangelo, Shakespeare, Vermeer, or Bach. I encounter pretensions to superiority based upon class, power, or wealth and am unimpressed. I encounter intellectual greatness manifesting itself in delightful achievements, and I am humbled.
I don't think disliking Michelangelo, Shakespeare, Vermeer and Bach means that there is something wrong with the person. Many people, like me, prefer rock music.
Recognizing greatness in the arts, music or other achievements, whether it's rock or Bach, old or new, is being able to see the highest potentials in yourself; something to aspire to. Trump doesn't seem to have much capacity to look toward the greatness in others and aspire to something greater for himself. He doesn't seem to be interested in learning beyond his prejudices and desires. He is content to praise himself as he is, and boast and do positive thinking.
Well, the point is not what I have in common with him now that I have actually realized, but that he inspires me and others toward aspiring to greater things, and to see beyond ourselves as we are. So I learned to play his music, and have played it in concerts and for churches. I have written some music like his, though far inferior to his, but who knows in the future. I have written my webpage about how his music is a portrait of the universe. And he inspired other composers whose music I also like, and inspire me also; including rock and new age music. His music may have been created a long time ago, but it is as vital and significant today as it was in his time. That's the real mark of "classic," Mr. Classic.