Lars Iyer's Blog, page 32

January 12, 2016

W: Well��� I don���t know. I���ve had comedians tell me t...

W: Well��� I don���t know. I���ve had comedians tell me that all comedians wish they were musicians��� which I���m not sure if it���s true or not, but a comedian did tell me that��� and I know that on some level, among say The Marx Brothers or Abbot And Costello or The Little Rascals or the stand-up comedy of Steve Martin or Richard Prior, when you���re experiencing that, the impression is they���re living on the correct plane of existence. Living moment to moment, and very quick with their brains, quick with their voices, or in the case of Harpo Marx, quick with their actions. And also using that speed of thought to turn dark situations into light situations. So they���re the ultra-wizards of society, because they can conquer the most complex and devastating of issues and turn them into something that���s nothing but laughter, really just release the power of those things.


Will Oldham, interviewed

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Published on January 12, 2016 07:57

December 17, 2015

Chosen by God ... for damnation?
He who has no secret, h...

Chosen by God ... for damnation?


He who has no secret, has nothing to lose.


Human stupidity is an expression of humanness itself.


the most natural form of openness to the world is naivete.


Yes damns no. No postpones yes.


Time - bleeding tumour of eternity.


Tragic love does not exist. Love is tragic.


Life is for a life span, death is for eternity.


Words don't have to understand themselves.


Truth is a myth of thought.


From the bottom you cannot fall.


[...] Pain is in some ways the condensation of time, a state produced by the fact that time is lacking.


If thinking is painful, what else is a thinker, but a masochist?


A diary entry: 'To grasp time as a summons, for one may burrow into memories. To grasp space as a cult zone. To find correlations. Not to seek, but to find. With discrete steps forward to predestine one's path'.


The meaning of life is what remains when life loses its meaning.


From R��bert G��l, Signs and Symptoms

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Published on December 17, 2015 07:57

December 6, 2015


Steve Mitchelmore's book, based on his blog, is out now.

This Space of Writing


Steve Mitchelmore's book, based on his blog, is out now.

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Published on December 06, 2015 06:41

December 5, 2015

A child cannot love, for it doesn't know what it means no...

A child cannot love, for it doesn't know what it means not to love.


Heavens induced anxiety, screaming into the heavens.


A Cabbalist who has no idea about Cabbala.


The life-long battle with one's whole life.


From R��bert G��l, On Wing

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Published on December 05, 2015 07:44

November 25, 2015

'Real philosophers feel a burning sense of vocation': an ...

'Real philosophers feel a burning sense of vocation': an essay by me on on writing Wittgenstein Jr in the Guardian.

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Published on November 25, 2015 08:46

"Wittgenstein" is the nickname of a philosophy don at Cam...

"Wittgenstein" is the nickname of a philosophy don at Cambridge (we never learn the character's real name) who is so-called by his students because of his intensity, his brooding melancholy and his habit of utterly gnomic aphorisms *sample: "One day, logic will whisper in our ears. Logic will say the kindest words. We will mistake it for roaring ... We will confuse it with the howling wind ...") The novel is told from the point of view of Peters, a Northern undergraduate who falls in love with Wittgenstein. But Wittgenstein is not an easy man to love - almost too brilliant to live, tortured by thought, and by the suicide of his mathematical genius brother, he's constantly on the verge of a crack-up. Lars Iyer also captures the ceaseless ironic banter and the heavy drink-and-drug intake of the undergraduates. The style is unfailingly funny and felicitous. And it's just so clever. Think Martin Amis meets Nietzsche. It's not much longer than a novella, but it has all the heft of a big fat novel.


Brandon Robshaw reviews Wittgenstein Jr in The Independent on Sunday.


[image error] Independent review JPeg

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Published on November 25, 2015 08:44

November 24, 2015

Jane Graham reviews Wittgenstein Jr for the Big Issue.

Jane Graham reviews Wittgenstein Jr for the Big Issue.

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Published on November 24, 2015 08:47

November 23, 2015

Wittgenstein Jr is a London Review of Books bookstore Xma...

Wittgenstein Jr is a London Review of Books bookstore Xmas pick.


Wittgenstein Jr Xmas pick LRB

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Published on November 23, 2015 09:17

November 6, 2015

The paranoid as Buddhist: Schopenhauer���s uniqueness.
T...

The paranoid as Buddhist: Schopenhauer���s uniqueness.


The thinker has emptiness around him. He pushes everything away until there is enough emptiness around him, and then starts leaping from this to that. In his leaps, he creates his road. The ground is sure only because he steps on it; everything in between is doubt.


The illuminating mind is like lightning, it flashes rapidly over the greatest distances. It leaves everything aside and shoots for one thing, which it does not know before illuminating it. Its effectivity begins when it strikes. Without some minimum of destruction, without terror, it never takes shape for human beings. Illumination per se is too boundless and too shapeless. The fate of the new knowledge depends on the place of the striking.


All days referring to days that will never come.


The unbroken, how do they do it? The unshaken, what are they made of? When it is past, what do they breathe? When it is still, what do they hear? When the felled one does not stand up again, how do they walk? Where do they find a word? What wind blows over their eyelashes? Who opens the dead ear for them? Who breathes the frozen name? When the sun of eyes goes out, where do they find the light?


It might be that only the unhappiest man is truly capable of some happiness, and this could almost seem like justice ��� but then there are the dead, and they seem to be silent about that.


I knew him when he walked down the street with hateful fingers and snarled. He was still young, and he thought he needed no one. The distaste he felt towards aging passers-by influenced his motion; he walked along in kicks as it were. He noticed everyone, because he disliked everyone. As for friends, he knew ��� and he was fortunate ��� that he had no friends. It rained on everyone, and it humiliated him that the others felt the very same drops on their skin as he did.


He would like to start from scratch. Where is scratch?


The new, the actual discoveries about animals are possible only because our pride as God���s highest creature is a thing of the past. It turns out that we are really God���s highest creature, that is to say, God���s executioner in his world.


���The Oriental church fathers claimed that Christ was uglier than any man who ever lived. For in order to redeem mankind, he had to take upon himself all of Adam���s sins and even his physical blemishes.���


Wretched the man who knows. How wretched God must be, all-knowing.


More than ever before, there are things in the world that would like to be said.


The prestige that writers draw from their martyrs: from Holderlin, Kleist, Walser. Thus with all their claim to freedom, vastness, and inventiveness, they merely form a sect.


I wonder whether among those who build their leisurely, secure, linear academic lives on the lives of writers who lived in poverty and despair ��� I wonder whether even one of those people is ashamed.


The end, no matter how one glosses over it, is so senseless that no attempt at explaining Creation will mean anything, not even the concept of God as a playing child: the child would have lost interest long ago.


Stupidity has become less interesting, it spreads in the twinkling of an eye and is always the same in everyone.


[���] But he is naturally so much, that he needs a different balance from other people. It is not stilts that he walks on, he always rests roundly upon himself as a gigantic world-globe of the mind; and in order to understand him, one has to orbit him like a small moon, a humiliating role, but the only suitable one in his case.


Everywhere, two paces from your daily paths, there is a different air sceptically waiting for you.


There is a wailing wall of humanity, and that is where I stand.


So long as one says ���tomorrow���, one means ���always���; that���s why one loves saying ���tomorrow���.


It is true that he seduces one into taking leaps. But who is capable of them? Lichtenberg is a flea with a human mind. He has that incomparable strength to leap away from himself ��� where will he leap to next?


To find an old man who has forgotten how to count.


What are you ashamed of when you read Kafka? You���re ashamed of your strength.


Not to wait until dreams become laments.


God put the rib back into Adam���s side, blew out his breath, and deformed him back into clay.


The last people will not weep.


What if it should turn out that we, the everlasting penitents for the future, had lived in the best of all possible time!


If people were to keep trying, even a thousand times, to examine how we managed to have so much freedom, so much air, so many ideas!


Many worm-thoughts: cut in two, they continue to grow.


This whole immense life, multiplying endlessly ��� for us? Only God can believe that.


I always know better, I have a terribly accurate knowledge of people; yet this knowledge does not interest me, anyone who has lived a while could have it. I am interested in what refutes this knowledge, what annuls it. I would like to turn a usurer into a benefactor, a bookkeeper into a poet. I am interested in the leap, the surprising metamorphosis.


There is nothing more to be found, no unknown species of man. Now is the time for entangling all that we know.


The Stoics overcome death by death. The death one commits on oneself doesn���t harm one any more, so one need not fear it.


Pause until the rediscovery of eternity.


Long before the creation of the world, there were philosophers. They were lying in ambush in order to be able to say that everything is good. For hadn���t they thought of it? And how could something they had thought of fail to be good? As their thought, they brought forth the dubious formation, and they giggled over the correctness of their prophesy.


It���s long, long past that he lived under cover of hatred.


It is possible that we are seeing a false history. Perhaps the correct one can be revealed only when death is beaten.


When one knows how false everything is, when one is capable of measuring the extent of falseness, then and only then is stubbornness the best thing: endless striding of the tiger along the bars of the cage so as not to miss the single tiny instant of salvation.


From Elias Canetti���s The Human Province

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Published on November 06, 2015 04:19

You held out your hand for an egg, and fate put into it a...

You held out your hand for an egg, and fate put into it a scorpion. Show no consternation: close your fingers firmly upon the gift; let it sting through your palm. Never mind; in time, after your hand and arm have swelled and quivered long with torture, the squeezed scorpion will die, and you will have learned the great lesson how to endure without a sob.


Charlotte Bronte, Vilette

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Published on November 06, 2015 03:50

Lars Iyer's Blog

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