【5 in 1 (2022) Full Pinoy Movie】
2025-06-26 11:01:10
960 views
15138 comments
Ignorance Studies in 1 (2022) Full Pinoy Movie and Other News
On the Shelf

An illustration of ignorance personified from an 1890 edition of Pilgrim’s Progress.
- Literary fame has been a thorny thing more or less forever—according to Suetonius, Virgil sometimes ducked into buildings to flee his fans and the adulating masses. But what accounts for this celebrity, and what stokes its flames once a writer has died? Being struck down in your prime helps: that’s why we read Keats, who died at twenty-five, and not Barry Cornwall, who lived to eighty-six. All told, “an appetite for literary immortality, like the desire to read one’s obituary, poses sufficient challenge that a writer should concentrate on other goals.”
- Today in etymology and the patriarchy: misogynyis a very old word, and sexism a fairly new one—in 1933, the Oxford English Dictionarydefined it as “a sequence of six cards”—but despite their nuances, the two are coming to be used interchangeably: “Imputing hatred, which is what misogynistdoes, is an unnecessary step in a different direction … Misogyny isn’t merely a strong version of sexism. Some men go past stereotyping to contempt. Those calling out ‘misogyny’ everywhere do so with the aim of helping women, but overuse of a word weakens it. If speakers keep misogynyto its original and more powerful meaning, it will pack a greater punch, hopefully to land all the harder on the misogynists of the world.”
- If we want to dispel ignorance, there’s one tactic we haven’t really tried yet: teaching it. Ignorance Studies could impart valuable lessons about human folly, in its many guises. “The study of ignorance—or agnotology, a term popularized by Robert N. Proctor, a historian of science at Stanford—is in its infancy … But giving due emphasis to unknowns, highlighting case studies that illustrate the fertile interplay between questions and answers, and exploring the psychology of ambiguity are essential. Educators should also devote time to the relationship between ignorance and creativity and the strategic manufacturing of uncertainty.”
- Since The Corrections, published fourteen years ago, Franzen has assumed a role as our preeminent public moralist, following in the footsteps of Roth and Mailer where once he admired more fringe figures like DeLillo and Gaddis. “His new phase is marked by his conviction that novels be animated by causes … Franzen has always conceived of writing as a competition, with all writers everywhere, living or dead, aligned either with him or against him, or both at once. His critical writings often read like peace treaties or declarations of war, or like the posturings of a permanent undergraduate at pains to take a side. They frequently contain eccentric statements about what it means to read a novel.”
- Charles Simic has been reading Charles Reznikoff’s long poem Testimony: The United States (1885–1915): Recitative, culled from thousands of pages of court records spanning three decades around the turn of the twentieth century: “I know of nothing like it in literature … what we have here is the first found epic poem. It certainly reads like one, with its huge cast of evildoers and victims, vast setting, and profusion of breathtaking stories. Murder, treachery, injustice, greed, foolishness, jealousy, rape, anger, revenge, marital squabbles, cruelty to children and animals, bad luck, and many other miseries human beings bring upon themselves and on their fellow men are all here to behold … It should not be surprising that Testimonyis rarely assigned at our colleges and universities these days; it causes too much discomfort to those who prefer to know nothing about what goes on in the world. This may be precisely what Reznikoff intended with a book like this. Let whoever reads it be upset.”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 9, 2025
2025-06-26 10:51Target, Walmart, and Ebay are pushing Christmas way too early
2025-06-26 09:43Waymo found drivers asleep, so it dumped partial self
2025-06-26 09:39Skywatching is lit in May, says NASA
2025-06-26 09:11Popular Posts
NYT Strands hints, answers for May 18
2025-06-26 10:39Putting the iPhone X's Face ID to the contouring test
2025-06-26 10:05Hello Aibo, goodbye Alexa: Sony turns robot dog into AI assistant
2025-06-26 08:39Brits are making famous horror movies more British on Twitter
2025-06-26 08:37The Anatomy of Liberal Melancholy
2025-06-26 08:22Featured Posts
Character AI reveals AvatarFX, a new AI video generator
2025-06-26 10:48Starbucks ends 'War on Christmas' with new holiday cup
2025-06-26 09:46NYT Strands hints, answers for May 2
2025-06-26 09:15Popular Articles
Trump's new tariff plan spares some smartphones, laptops
2025-06-26 10:41Razer Phone specs reveal 120Hz screen, huge battery
2025-06-26 10:36Astronomers find comets in a solar system 800 light
2025-06-26 09:36Nvidia DLSS: An Early Investigation
2025-06-26 09:02Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (829)
Exploration Information Network
Seven Steam games whose reviews have changed a lot
2025-06-26 10:43New Knowledge Information Network
'Your power scares me' senator tells Facebook during first hearing on 2016 election
2025-06-26 10:07Exquisite Information Network
Russian Facebook trolls pushed for race
2025-06-26 09:45Leadership Information Network
Starbucks ends 'War on Christmas' with new holiday cup
2025-06-26 09:13Fresh Information Network
Keeping Hope Alive
2025-06-26 08:42