Monday, November 16, 2015

About Beethoven

Picture This

Was the Romantic Beethoven Really a “Radical Evolutionary”?

Of all the standard myths and accepted truths of the life and music of Ludwig van Beethoven, the idea of the “Romantic” Beethoven—the embodiment of Germanic sturm und drang and 19th century revolution—clings the most. In a massive new biography, Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph, Jan Swafford hopes to tear away that and many more myths to rediscover the real man and artist buried beneath. “Beethoven was not a Romantic, and he never called himself a revolutionary,” Swafford asserts. “He based much of what he did on tradition, models, and authorities, and he never intended to overthrow the past. He was an evolutionist more than a revolutionist. Call him a radical evolutionary, one with a unique voice.” Using his own unique voice as biographer of great composers, Swafford traces the life and art of Beethoven in eye-opening, rational detail and gives you a more human, more fascinating portrait of Beethoven the radical evolutionary than even the Beethoven the Romantic of legend.
A composer himself, Swafford’s written weighty and well-received biographies of American composer Charles Ives and German composer (and heir to Beethoven) Johannes Brahms, but neither of those biographies match the task Swafford sets for himself in Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph. A titanic, thousand-page achievement about one of the great titans of music and Western civilization, Swafford’s latest biography recognizes, as he puts it, the “great danger in that kind of ubiquity” Beethoven’s achieved, which results in “[m]any present-day books [that] concern ideas about Beethoven rather than Beethoven himself.” In Swafford’s “composer’s-eye view of a composer,” he purposely avoids “two words that are all too familiar in biographies of artists: genius and masterpiece.” Stripped of those now-meaningless superlatives, Swafford restores the Beethoven of flesh and blood struggling to learn the craft of music and then how to make that craft into something new and his own, all while dealing with the day-to-day desires for love, family, and friendship.
“Music was the one extraordinary thing in a sea of the disappointing and ordinary,” Swafford writes of Beethoven’s early life. “Reared as he was in a relentless discipline, instinctively responsive to music as he was, the boy never truly learned to understand the world outside music.” As much as Beethoven was a “radical evolutionary” in music, in life he never overcame the personal arrested development of his youth. In the first few hundred pages of this biography, we get a sense not just of the failures of Beethoven’s upbringing, but also of how growing up in that time and place set in motion the artist he would become. “Music was everywhere,” Swafford says of late 18th century Bonn, Beethoven’s birthplace. Although only 12,000 people lived in Bonn, it provided a whole universe of musical opportunities, from the folk songs of the commoners, to the professional musicians such as his Kapellmeister namesake grandfather and musician father (who failed to keep the Kappelmeister job and shifted his ambitions to young Ludwig), to rulers such as Max Franz, Beethoven’s first patron and financier of his first trip to Vienna. “If in the larger world Bonn was too much a backwater for a musician to find wide fame,” Swafford writes, “it was still a town as good as any in which to learn the art. Beethoven was not the only virtuoso to emerge from Bonn as if out of nowhere to dazzle the capitals of music.” Swafford swats away Beethovian exceptionalism not to diminish him but instead to explain just how he and his art came to be more clearly and believably than generic “genius” labels can.
Swafford writes with a great warmth and personality of Beethoven’s early years, setting up beautifully many of the conflicts and triumphs to come. Too often dismissed as a mere footnote, Beethoven’s early teacher Christian Gottlob Neefe finds new life in Swafford’s text as one of the great Schwärmers of the period—an enthusiast not just of music, but also of poetry, literature, philosophy, and how all those elements intersected in the politics of the age. One of the “cultish few” in the late 18th century who recognized the mostly forgotten J.S. Bach’s “stature and the importance and the synoptic quality of his Well-Tempered Clavier,” Neefe brought Beethoven into the cult of Bach as well, resulting in Ludwig becoming not only, as Swafford suggests, one of the first non-Bachs to learn keyboard by practicing The Well-Tempered Clavier, but also a key inheritor of the Bach tradition of composition so as to build upon that foundation in the future. “Teaching the boy the WTC from the age of ten or eleven may have been the single most important thing Neefe did for him,” Swafford concludes.
Aside from Beethoven’s musical development (dependent not only on the influence of Bach, but also that of nearer contemporaries Mozart and Haydn), we get many pictures of Beethoven’s arrested personal development from letters and accounts of friends. “Beethoven craved companionship, love, stimulation intellectual and spiritual, but other than people to play and publish and listen to his music, for most of his life he would never truly need anybody,” Swafford suggests. Throughout, Swafford keeps the psychoanalysis of his subject to a minimum, harking back on his pet peeve of books with ideas about Beethoven rather than about Beethoven himself. When Swafford writes about Beethoven’s raptus—the trance-like state friends remarked upon when he was most lost in his musical world—you feel as if you were there, listening to the improvisations flowing from the virtuoso’s fingers. Likewise, when Swafford gets to the “anguish” promised in the title, he does so with his own verbal virtuosity free of melodrama: “his body became his most virulent, most inescapable enemy. His livelihood, his creativity, his spirit were under siege by a force that did not care about his music, his talent, his wisdom.” When Beethoven’s deafness robs him of his career as a piano virtuoso (and the accompanying income), the reality of his desperation to compose and publish to make money deflates all previous biographies trumpeting the triumphs too loudly.
All the triumphs are here, of course. Swafford hits all the highlights with masterful set pieces on the Third or “Eroica” Symphony, the courage of the Heiligenstadt Testament, Missa solemnis, and the utopian Ninth Symphony.  Thanks to Swafford’s earlier set-up, Beethoven’s admiration of Napoleon as a benevolent dictator akin to those of his youth helps make the “Eroica” more logical to modern minds. But whereas others focus almost exclusively on the politics of the Third Symphony, Swafford shows how the music conveys the journey of a hero, any hero, coming into his or her own. Giving example of developed as well as discarded ideas for the symphony, Swafford takes us inside the mind of Beethoven as his musical essay on being and becoming itself comes into being. For those who cannot read music, Swafford’s published excerpts can look daunting, but with a little work and a good CD collection, anyone can follow Swafford’s journeys through Beethoven’s journeys. The payoff is more than worth it. Writing of the “Ode to Joy” finale of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, Swafford momentarily (and justifiably) waxes poetic: “There’s something singularly moving when this man—deaf and sick and misanthropic and self-torturing, at the same time one of the most extraordinary and boundlessly generous men our species has produced—greets us person to person, with glass raised, and hails us as friends.” There are many such moments when you’ll want to raise a glass not just to Beethoven, but also to the Beethoven Swafford brings to us.
Whereas early portraits of Beethoven (such as the one above) showed us the dynamic performer and composer in action, later portraits painted after he became a living legend often showed him raising his eyes to heaven as if communicating with the divine. “In fact,” Swafford counters, “it was the characteristic stare of a deaf man straining to hear.” If you’ve ever rolled your eyes at the mythologizing and mischaracterizing of the Beethoven story, Jan Swafford’s Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph will keep your eyes on the prize of a fuller understanding of the humanity of this artist that celebrated humanity as an abstraction while unable to deal with humans as individuals. I found myself wanting to wrap my arms around Beethoven by the end, but mentally stopped short knowing that he never could or would accept any embrace. Today, Beethoven might be labeled a savant or autistic for his low emotional IQ paired with his high musical aptitude, but in his day he faced such emotional trauma on top of his physical pain alone but with grace and courage. Swafford erases the Romantic revolutionary Beethoven for good while giving us an evolutionary Beethoven that invites us to learn and maybe even evolve in our own humanity from his story.
[Image: Joseph Willibrord Mähler. Portrait of Beethoven (detail), 1804-1805.]

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Frensh Poetry / Poesía Francesa



Paul Éluard

 

Twenty-Four Poems


 

HOME                                                                           DOWNLOAD

 
Translated by A. S. Kline © 2001 All Rights Reserved
This work may be freely reproduced, stored, and transmitted, electronically or otherwise, for any non-commercial purpose.


Contents




Absence


I speak to you over cities

I speak to you over plains

My mouth is against your ear

The two sides of the walls face
my voice which acknowledges you.

I speak to you of eternity.

O cities memories of cities
cities draped with our desires
cities early and late
cities strong cities intimate
stripped of all their makers
their thinkers their phantoms

Landscape ruled by emerald
live living ever-living
the wheat of the sky on our earth
nourishes my voice I dream and cry
I laugh and dream between the flames
between the clusters of sunlight

And over my body your body extends
the layer of its clear mirror.





Easy


Easy and beautiful under

your eyelids
As the meeting of pleasure
Dance and the rest

I spoke the fever

The best reason for fire
That you might be pale and luminous
A thousand fruitful poses
A thousand ravaged embraces
Repeated move to erase themselves
You grow dark you unveil yourself
A mask you
control it

It deeply resembles you
And you seem nothing but lovelier naked
Naked in shadow and dazzlingly naked
Like a sky shivering with flashes of lightning
You reveal yourself to you
To reveal yourself to others





Talking of Power and Love


Between all my torments between death and self

Between my despair and the reason for living
There is injustice and this evil of men
That I cannot accept there is my anger

There are the blood-coloured fighters of Spain
There are the sky-coloured fighters of Greece
The bread the blood the sky and the right to hope
For all the innocents who hate evil

The light is always close to dying
Life always ready to become earth
But spring is reborn that is never done with
A bud lifts from dark and the warmth settles

And the warmth will have the right of the selfish
Their atrophied senses will not resist
I hear the fire talk lightly of coolness
I hear a man speak what he has not known

You who were my flesh’s sensitive conscience
You I love forever you who made me
You will not tolerate oppression or injury
You’ll sing in dream of earthly happiness
You’ll dream of freedom and I’ll continue you




The Beloved


She is standing on my eyelids

And her hair is wound in mine,
She has the form of my hands,
She has the colour of my eyes,
She is swallowed by my shadow
Like a stone against the sky.

Her eyes are always open
And will not let me sleep.
Her dreams in broad daylight
Make the suns evaporate
Make me laugh, cry and laugh,
Speak with nothing to say.



Max Ernst


In one corner agile incest

Turns round the virginity of a little dress
In one corner sky released
leaves balls of white on the spines of storm.

In one corner bright with all the eyes
One awaits the fish of anguish.
In one corner the car of summer’s greenery
gloriously motionless forever.

In the glow of youth
lamps lit too late.
The first one shows her breasts that kill the insects that are red.




Series


For the splendour of the day of happinesses in the air

To live the taste of colours easily
To enjoy loves so as to laugh
To open eyes at the final moment

She has every willingness.




Obsession


After years of wisdom

During which the world was transparent as a needle
Was it cooing about something else?
After having vied with returned favours squandered treasure
More than a red lip with a red tip
And more than a white leg with a white foot
Where then do we think we are?



Nearer To Us


Run and run towards deliverance

And find and gather everything
Deliverance and riches
Run so quickly the thread breaks
With the sound a great bird makes
A flag always soared beyond



Open Door


Life is truly kind

Come to me, if I go to you it’s a game,
The angels of bouquets grant the flowers a change of hue.



The Immediate Life


What’s become of you why this white hair and pink

Why this forehead these eyes rent apart heart-rending
The great misunderstanding of the marriage of radium
Solitude chases me with its rancour.



Lovely And Lifelike


A face at the end of the day

A cradle in day’s dead leaves
A bouquet of naked rain
Every ray of sun hidden
Every fount of founts in the depths of the water
Every mirror of mirrors broken
A face in the scales of silence
A pebble among other pebbles
For the leaves last glimmers of day
A face like all the forgotten faces.



The Season of Loves


By the road of ways

In the three-part shadow of troubled sleep
I come to you the double the multiple
as like you as the era of deltas.

Your head is as tiny as mine
The nearby sea reigns with spring
Over the summers of your fragile form
And here one burns bundles of ermine.

In the wandering transparency
of your noble face
these floating animals are wonderful
I envy their candour their inexperience
Your inexperience on the bed of waters
Finds the road of love without bowing

By the road of ways
and without the talisman that reveals
your laughter at the crowd of women
and your tears no one wants.



As Far As My Eye Can See In My Body’s Senses


All the trees all their branches all of their leaves

The grass at the foot of the rocks and the houses en masse
Far off the sea that your eye bathes
These images of day after day
The vices the virtues so imperfect
The transparency of men passing among them by chance
And passing women breathed by your elegant obstinacies
Your obsessions in a heart of lead on virgin lips
The vices the virtues so imperfect
The likeness of looks of permission with eyes you conquer
The confusion of bodies wearinesses ardours
The imitation of words attitudes ideas
The vices the virtues so imperfect

Love is man incomplete



Barely Disfigured


Adieu Tristesse

Bonjour Tristesse
Farewell Sadness
Hello Sadness
You are inscribed in the lines on the ceiling
You are inscribed in the eyes that I love
You are not poverty absolutely
Since the poorest of lips denounce you
Ah with a smile
Bonjour Tristesse
Love of kind bodies
Power of love
From which kindness rises
Like a bodiless monster
Unattached head
Sadness beautiful face.

 

 


In A New Night


Woman I’ve lived with

Woman I live with
Woman I’ll live with
Always the same
You need a red cloak
Red gloves a red mask
And dark stockings
The reasons the proofs
Of seeing you quite naked
Nudity pure O ready finery

Breasts O my heart



Fertile Eyes


Fertile Eyes

No one can know me more
More than you know me

Your eyes in which we sleep
The two of them
Have cast a spell on my male orbs
Greater than worldly nights

Your eyes where I voyage
Have given the road-signs
Directions detached from the earth

In your eyes those that show us
Our infinite solitude
Is no more than they think exists

No one can know me more
More than you know me.

I Said It To You


I said it to you for the clouds

I said it to you for the tree of the sea
For each wave for the birds in the leaves
For the pebbles of sound
For familiar hands
For the eye that becomes landscape or face
And sleep returns it the heaven of its colour
For all that night drank
For the network of roads
For the open window for a bare forehead
I said it to you for your thoughts for your words
Every caress every trust survives.

It’s The Sweet Law Of Men


It’s the sweet law of men

They make wine from grapes
They make fire from coal
They make men from kisses

It’s the true law of men
Kept intact despite
the misery and war
despite danger of death

It’s the warm law of men
To change water to light
Dream to reality
Enemies to friends

A law old and new
That perfects itself
From the child’s heart’s depths
To reason’s heights.



The Curve Of Your Eyes


The curve of your eyes embraces my heart

A ring of sweetness and dance
halo of time, sure nocturnal cradle,
And if I no longer know all I have lived through
It’s that your eyes have not always been mine.

Leaves of day and moss of dew,
Reeds of breeze, smiles perfumed,
Wings covering the world of light,
Boats charged with sky and sea,
Hunters of sound and sources of colour

Perfume enclosed by a covey of dawns
that beds forever on the straw of stars,
As the day depends on innocence
The whole world depends on your pure eyes
And all my blood flows under their sight.




Liberty


On my notebooks from school

On my desk and the trees
On the sand on the snow
I write your name

On every page read
On all the white sheets
Stone blood paper or ash
I write your name

On the golden images
On the soldier’s weapons
On the crowns of kings
I write your name

On the jungle the desert
The nests and the bushes
On the echo of childhood
I write your name

On the wonder of nights
On the white bread of days
On the seasons engaged
I write your name

On all my blue rags
On the pond mildewed sun
On the lake living moon
I write your name

On the fields the horizon
The wings of the birds
On the windmill of shadows
I write your name

On each breath of the dawn
On the ships on the sea
On the mountain demented
I write your name

On the foam of the clouds
On the sweat of the storm
On dark insipid rain
I write your name

On the glittering forms
On the bells of colour
On physical truth
I write your name

On the wakened paths
On the opened ways
On the scattered places
I write your name

On the lamp that gives light
On the lamp that is drowned
On my house reunited
I write your name

On the bisected fruit
Of my mirror and room
On my bed’s empty shell
I write your name

On my dog greedy tender
On his listening ears
On his awkward paws
I write your name

On the sill of my door
On familiar things
On the fire’s sacred stream
I write your name

On all flesh that’s in tune
On the brows of my friends
On each hand that extends
I write your name

On the glass of surprises
On lips that attend
High over the silence
I write your name

On my ravaged refuges
On my fallen lighthouses
On the walls of my boredom
I write your name

On passionless absence
On naked solitude
On the marches of death
I write your name

On health that’s regained
On danger that’s past
On hope without memories
I write your name

By the power of the word
I regain my life
I was born to know you
And to name you

LIBERTY

Ring Of Peace


I have passed the doors of coldness

The doors of my bitterness
To come and kiss your lips

City reduced to a room
Where the absurd tide of evil
leaves a reassuring foam

Ring of peace I have only you
You teach me again what it is
To be human when I renounce

Knowing whether I have fellow creatures





Ecstasy


I am in front of this feminine land

Like a child in front of the fire
Smiling vaguely with tears in my eyes
In front of this land where all moves in me
Where mirrors mist where mirrors clear
Reflecting two nude bodies season on season

I’ve so many reasons to lose myself
On this road-less earth under horizon-less skies
Good reasons I ignored yesterday
And I’ll never ever forget
Good keys of gazes keys their own daughters
in front of this land where nature is mine

In front of the fire the first fire
Good mistress reason
Identified star
On earth under sky in and out of my heart
Second bud first green leaf
That the sea covers with sails
And the sun finally coming to us

I am in front of this feminine land
Like a branch in the fire.



Our Life


We’ll not reach the goal one by one but in pairs

We know in pairs we will know all about us
We’ll love everything our children will smile
At the dark history or mourn alone



Uninterrupted Poetry


From the sea to the source

From mountain to plain
Runs the phantom of life
The foul shadow of death
But between us
A dawn of ardent flesh is born
And exact good
that sets the earth in order
We advance with calm step
And nature salutes us
The day embodies our colours
Fire our eyes the sea our union
And all living resemble us
All the living we love
Imaginary the others
Wrong and defined by their birth
But we must struggle against them
They live by dagger blows
They speak like a broken chair
Their lips tremble with joy
At the echo of leaden bells
At the muteness of dark gold
A lone heart not a heart
A lone heart all the hearts
And the bodies every star
In a sky filled with stars
In a career in movement
Of light and of glances
Our weight shines on the earth
Glaze of desire
To sing of human shores
For you the living I love
And for all those that we love
That have no desire but to love
I’ll end truly by barring the road
Afloat with enforced dreams
I’ll end truly by finding myself
We’ll take possession of earth


Index of First Lines



Sunday, October 18, 2015

Richard Dawkins: The God of the Old Testament

Richard Dawkins: The God of the Old Testament

(Repost with Bible verses that support Richard Dawkins' description of the Old Testament God. Let me know if I've left out some good verses -- I started to poop out toward the end.)




The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully.  

Richard Dawkins: The God of the Old Testament

Saturday, October 3, 2015

El hombre que predijo la caída de la industria musical

  • 3 octubre 2015
Image copyright Getty
Image caption Éste es el hombre: Jacques Attali.
A diferencia de sus predecesores del siglo XX, es improbable que los músicos de hoy en día se vuelvan ricos vendiendo discos... y hubo un hombre que predijo que así sería cuando era impensable que eso pasara.
En 1976, la industria musical parecía indestructible.
ABBA, los Beach Boys y Rod Stewart vendían montañas de discos y las cosas sólo podían mejorar.
Image copyright AFP
Image caption Con "Ruido", Attali alertó sobre el fin de la era de oro de la industria musical. ¿Qué piensa ahora?
Las ventas crecieron casi sin control hasta 1999, el año más rentable de la historia de la industria.
Pero con el cambio de siglo llegó la web y MP3, y los ingresos colapsaron: un cambio sísmico que nadie había anticipado.
¿Nadie? Bueno, no exactamente.
También en 1976, un erudito francés llamado Jacques Attali escribió un libro que predijo esa crisis con una precisión asombrosa.
Se llamaba "Ruido: la economía política de la música", y en él llamó a la turbulencia que se avecinaba "la crisis de proliferación".
Image copyright THINKSTOCK
Pronto, dijo, vamos a tener tal cantidad de música grabada que cesará de tener valor... y, ponte a pensar, ¿cuándo fue la última vez que pagaste US$15 por un álbum?

Música, poder y dinero

Como soy cantante y compositor, me intrigó que Attali hubiera acertado en todo lo que escribió años antes de que ocurriera, por lo que decidí ir a verlo.
Image copyright THINKSTOCK
Image caption Carlomagno hizo cantar a las masas para unir a su reino.
"Fue un libro extraño, sobre un tema extraño", me dijo en su hogar en París. A sus 70 años sigue siendo un pensador y escritor prolífico.
Para entender cómo logró predecir la "crisis de proliferación", uno tiene que entender la teoría que presentó en su libro.
La música, el dinero y el poder están todos estrechamente entrelazados, escribió, e históricamente han tenido una relación díscola.
Los poderosos a menudo han utilizado la música para tratar de controlar a la gente.
En el siglo IX, por ejemplo, el emperador Carlomagno impuso a la fuerza la práctica de cantos gregorianos para "forjar la unión cultural y política de su reino".
Mucho después, el capitalismo y las carteleras de música pop le abrieron a los magnates de la industria la posibilidad de usar la música para extraer grandes cantidades de dinero de la gente.

El lado B de este disco

No obstante, la música también puede usarse para subvertir el poder y socavar el status quo.
El rock'n'roll de los años 50, por ejemplo, ayudó a subvertir un montón de convenciones sociales.
Esa tensión fue lo que llevó a Attali a concluir que los ejecutivos de la industria no podrían controlar la manera en la que adquiríamos la música para siempre.
Cuando nos inundaran con más música de la que podríamos escuchar en la vida, argumentó, el modelo eventualmente colapsaría.
Image copyright THINKSTOCK
Image caption Es cuestión de oferta y demanda... escasez y abundancia.
Esa "crisis de proliferación", como sabemos, efectivamente se dio.
Fantástico para los oyentes, algunos dirán, pero difícil para los músicos que solían depender de la venta de la música grabada para vivir.
"Nos estamos ahogando en música", dice George Ergatoudis, director de música de BBC Radio 1. Y ganar lo suficiente en "época de abundancia" es problemático.

El futuro al ritmo de la música

Attali también tuvo otra gran idea.
En su opinión, la música -o la industria musical- forjan un sendero por el que el resto de la economía caminará.
Image copyright THINKSTOCK
Image caption La música es un indicador de tendencias.
Lo que le ha pasado y le está pasando a la música ayuda a predecir el futuro.
Cuando los músicos del siglo XVIII -como el compositor Handel- empezaron a vender boletos para sus conciertos, en vez de competir por el patronato real, estaban pisando un terreno económico nuevo, escribió Attali.
Estaban marcando el fin del feudalismo y el principio de un nuevo sistema de capitalismo.
En todos los períodos de la historia, señala Attali, los músicos han estado en la vanguardia del desarrollo económico.
Debido a que la música es muy importante para nosotros pero también muy adaptable, es uno de los primeros lugares en los que podemos ver la aparición de nuevas tendencias.

¿Qué va a pasar entonces?

Si la música realmente predice el futuro del resto de la economía, ¿qué piensa Attali que nos está anticipando?
En opinión del erudito, la manufactura sufrirá una crisis idéntica a la de la industria musical, en este caso causada por la impresión 3D.
"Con la impresión en 3D, la gente podrá imprimir sus propias tazas, muebles...", indica.
"Todos harán sus propios objetos, de la misma manera en la que están haciendo su propia música".
Los prototipos de los objetos pueden ser copiados y compartidos en línea -igual que los archivos de música digital- y luego ser impresos en casa, por un precio módico.
De hecho, eso ya está ocurriendo, y algunos de ellos están en Pirate Bay, el sitio web que se convirtió en el destino favorito de la gente que quería copiar enormes cantidades de música -gran parte ilegal- hace más o menos una década.
"Apenas hay unos pocos cientos de prototipos en Pirate Bay en este momento, desde repuestos para autos hasta pistolas y juguetes", dice el cofundador del sitio Tobias Andersson.
Image copyright Getty
Image caption Desde armas hasta juguetes se pueden imprimir ya usando prototipos que se consiguen en la red... pero eso es sólo el principio.
"Pero en unos años imprimir y escanear algo será un proceso rápido. Para entonces habrá prototipos de casi todo lo que uno puede visualizar en internet".
"Todas las industrias que distribuyen objetos estará en la misma situación en la que la industria de la música ha estado en los últimos 10 años. No creo que la mayoría de ellas comprende la inmensidad de lo que está por venir... y está viniendo rápido".

¿Alguna tabla de salvación?

Le pregunté a Attali si artistas como yo, tenemos alguna esperanza.
"Lo único escaso es el tiempo", respondió el profeta.
Así me recordó que como el tiempo no se puede copiar, vender experiencias en vivo -como conciertos- deben mantener su valor.
De manera que no tengo que irme a buscar trabajo en un banco... aún quedan esperanzas.
O quizás el amable visionario es demasiado cortés como para decirme otra cosa.
******************************************************

El profeta y el cantante pop

Jacques Attali es un renombrado economista, filósofo y asesor político, autor de más de 60 libros. Fue el arquitecto del ascenso al poder del presidente Francois Mitterrand, organizador de la cumbre del G7 de 1987 y el primer presidente del Banco Europeo para la Reconstrucción y el Desarrollo.
Sam York ha cantado con artistas como Tom Jones, Ed Sheeran, Jessie J, Dave Gilmour, Ronan Keating y Jack Bruce, y ha sido artista residente en el famoso club de jazz Ronnie Scott como guitarrista, pianista y vocalista. Ahora está lanzando su carrera como cantante y compositor.

habla la Dra. Francesca Stavrakopoulou

¿Estamos programados para creer en un Dios?

  • 3 abril 2015



La religión -la creencia en seres sobrenaturales, incluidos dioses y fantasmas, ángeles y demonios, almas y espíritus- se encuentra a lo largo de la historia y en todas las culturas.
La evidencia de la suposición de la existencia de una vida de ultratumba data de hace al menos 50.000 a 100.000 años atrás.
Cada cultura humana conocida tiene su mito de la creación, con la posible excepción del pueblo amazónico Pirahã, que tampoco cuenta con palabras para los números, colores y jerarquía social.
Es difícil conseguir datos exactos sobre el número de creyentes hoy en día, pero algunas encuestas sugieren que hasta el 84% de la población mundial es miembro de grupos religiosos o dice que la religión es importante en su vida.
Vivimos en una época de acceso sin precedentes al conocimiento científico, que algunos consideran que no concuerda con la fe religiosa. Entonces, ¿por qué la religión es tan omnipresente y persistente?
Psicólogos, filósofos, antropólogos y hasta neurocientíficos han sugerido posibles explicaciones de nuestra predisposición natural a creer, y para el poderoso papel que la religión parece jugar en nuestras vidas emocionales y sociales.

Muerte, cultura y poder

Las actividades religiosas más tempranas aparecieron como respuesta a cambios corporales, físicos o materiales en el ciclo de la vida humana, principalmente la muerte.

Image caption Antiguos círculos de piedra, como éste, eran espacioes en los que los vivos y los muertos se reunían.
Los rituales de duelo son una de las formas más antiguas de experiencia religiosa. Muchos de nuestros ancestros no creían que la muerte era necesariamente el final de la vida. Era una transición. Algunos creían que los difuntos y otros espíritus podían ver lo que pasaba en este mundo y hasta tenían cierta influencia en los eventos que ocurrían.
Esa es una noción verdaderamente poderosa. La idea de que los muertos o hasta los dioses están con nosotros y pueden intervenir en nuestras vidas es reconfortante, pero también nos lleva a ser muy cuidadosos con lo que hacemos.
Los humanos somos esencialmente seres sociales y por ello vivimos en grupos; como grupos sociales tendemos a la jerarquía, y la religión no es una excepción. Cuando hay un sistema jerárquico, hay un sistema de poder, y en un grupo social religioso, esa jerarquía localiza a su miembro más poderoso en la cima: la deidad - Dios.
Es frente a Dios que tenemos que rendir cuentas.
Hoy en día, la religión y el poder siguen conectados.
Estudios recientes muestran que recordar a Dios nos hace más obedientes.
Hasta en sociedades que han tratado de reprimir la fe, surgieron cosas que tomaron su lugar, como el culto a un líder o al Estado. Entre menos estable política y económicamente sea un país, más probable es que la gente busque refugio en la religión. Los grupos religiosos a menudo pueden ofrecer el apoyo que los Estados no proveen a quienes se siente marginalizados.
Así que factores sociales ayudan a desarrollar y reforzar la fe religiosa, así como lo hace la manera en la que nos relacionamos con el mundo y con los demás.

Dioses como otras mentes


Image caption Neptuno era el dios romano del mar. Cuando había una tormenta, se creía que estaba furioso. Era un dios con temperamento humano.
En todas las culturas, los dioses son esencialmente personas, hasta cuando tienen otras formas o carecen de forma física.
En la actualidad, muchos psicólogos piensan que creer en dioses es una extensión de nuestro reconocimiento, como animales sociales, de la existencia de otros, y de nuestra tendencia a ver el mundo en términos humanos.
Proyectamos pensamientos y sentimientos humanos en otros animales y en objetos, e incluso en fuerzas naturales, y esta tendencia es una piedra fundamental de la religión.
Es una idea antigua, que se remonta al filósofo griego Jenófanes, a quien se le cita argumentando que si los animales pudieran pintar, representarían a los dioses con formas animales.
De manera que la creencia religiosa puede estar fundada en nuestros patrones de pensamiento y cultura humana. Algunos científicos, sin embargo, han ido un paso más allá y han escaneado nuestros cerebros en busca del legendario "punto Dios".

Dios en el cerebro

Los neurocientíficos han tratado de comparar los cerebros de creyentes y escépticos, y de observar qué pasa en nuestros cerebros cuando rezamos o meditamos. Se sabe muy poco en este campo pero hay algunas pistas. Haz clic en cada área del cerebro para enterarte.






Nuestros cerebros cambian a lo largo de la vida, a medida que nos desarrollamos y experimentamos cosas nuevas. Virtualmente todas las partes de nuestro cerebro están involucradas en todo lo que hacemos y experimentamos, así que no sólo no existe un "punto Dios", sino que no hay un punto específico del cerebro dedicado a sólo una cosa.
Hay algo que sí sabemos: el cerebro humano es el más avanzado del mundo animal, y el único con una maravillosa capacidad: la de darle sentido a la realidad.

Poniéndole puntuación a la vida

A menudo se habla del cerebro como una máquina de significado. En la medida en la que estamos constantemente buscando patrones, estructuras y relaciones de causa-efecto, la religión puede proveer una variedad de estrategias para dar significado.
Las creencias religiosas le ayudan a los humanos a ordenar y encontrarle el sentido a sus vidas. Y los rituales en particular pueden "darle puntuación" a nuestras vidas, marcando los eventos más cruciales.
Y los rituales son comunes en todos los grupos sociales humanos, incluidos los de ateos.

Image caption Cuando nace un bebé, generalmente hay ya sea un bautizo o una ceremonia para nombrarlo: eso marca la nueva identidad del chico y le da la bienvenida al grupo social.
Aunque ni la neurociencia, ni la antropología y ni siquiera la filosofía tienen la respuesta definitiva a la pregunta "¿Existe Dios?", todas esas disciplinas dan pistas sobre cómo respondemos a nuestras más profundas necesidades humanas.
Quizás no estemos programados para creer en Dios o en un poder sobrenatural, pero somos animales sociales con la necesidad evolutiva de estar conectados con el mundo y con otros.
De pronto las religiones son sencillamente canales para posibilitar tan significativas conexiones.