Texts:Reflect/Overview: Difference between revisions

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<h3>Introductory Overview to Reflections</h3>
<h2>Introductory Overview to <i>Appreciations</i></h2>


<p>April Fool's Day, 2025, I began to see clearly why I might write a memoir of sorts. I'm not prominent enough to sense a public call to memorialize my life. It has been long enough but neither notorious nor mad-cap.  </p>
<p>April Fool's Day, 2025, I came to see clearly why I might write a memoir reflecting on my life experiences. I'd been ambivalent, not prominent enough to sense a public call to memorialize my life, but feeling that I still had a lot to say and that a memoir might be a good way to say it. p.  </p>
 
<h3><i>Appreciations</i> is not . . . .</h3>
 
* . . . a work of scholarship. I draw on many original sources and scholarly commentaries as I have encountered them over a 70-year span of work. I do not aim to communicate the current, authoritative state of knowledge for what I write about. Instead, I seek to present the exemplarity of those matters, as I've experienced it. Of course, I believe that <i>cultural knowledge</i> has great human value, but I think advancing and acquiring knowledge has garnered excessive esteem in contemporary educational thought and practice. "Nothing too much!" asserts more than a spoiled-sport admonition. Where limits are actual, too much of this means too little of that; too much knowledge acquisition combined with poorly formed judgment proves dangerous for persons and for polities.

Latest revision as of 13:52, 24 April 2025

Introductory Overview to Appreciations

April Fool's Day, 2025, I came to see clearly why I might write a memoir reflecting on my life experiences. I'd been ambivalent, not prominent enough to sense a public call to memorialize my life, but feeling that I still had a lot to say and that a memoir might be a good way to say it. p.

Appreciations is not . . . .

  • . . . a work of scholarship. I draw on many original sources and scholarly commentaries as I have encountered them over a 70-year span of work. I do not aim to communicate the current, authoritative state of knowledge for what I write about. Instead, I seek to present the exemplarity of those matters, as I've experienced it. Of course, I believe that cultural knowledge has great human value, but I think advancing and acquiring knowledge has garnered excessive esteem in contemporary educational thought and practice. "Nothing too much!" asserts more than a spoiled-sport admonition. Where limits are actual, too much of this means too little of that; too much knowledge acquisition combined with poorly formed judgment proves dangerous for persons and for polities.