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Please read the DISCLAIMERS.

markhoofnagle.jpg Mark Hoofnagle has a MD and PhD in physiology from the University of Virginia, and is now a general surgery resident. His interest in denialism concerns the use of denialist tactics to confuse public understanding of scientific knowledge.

Chris Hoofnagle Chris Hoofnagle is a recovering Washington, DC lawyer and information privacy law expert at UC-Berkeley Law School. Denialism became apparent to him while working on consumer protection laws in Washington. The Denialists' Deck of Cards is essentially a how-to guide for being an industry lobbyist.

PalMD.jpgPalMD is a practicing internist in the Midwestern United States. Aside from the great joy he finds in his family and his work, he likes communicating some of that joy to others. He has a special interest in the ways patients---and we are all patients at one time or another---are deceived by charlatans. He aims to change the world, one reader at a time. Previous writings can still be found here.

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    « Conscientious objector or deserter? | Main | Gardasil idiocy »

    Tangled Bank #111

    Category: Carnivals
    Posted on: August 6, 2008 12:01 AM, by PalMD

    Welcome to Tangled Bank #111! Today's entries are presented without comment, but with poetry, a truly remarkable natural, albeit human, phenomenon, or to quote Love and Rockets:

      You can't go against nature
      Because when you do
      Go against nature
      It's part of nature too.


      In the umbra, the tunnel,
      when the mind went wombtomb,
      then it was real thought and real living, living thought.


      Everything is spoilt by use:
      Where's the cheek that doth not fade,
      Too much gazed at? Where's the maid
      Whose lip mature is ever new?
      Where's the eye, however, blue,
      Doth not weary? Where's the face
      One would meet in every place?


      The island dreams under the dawn
      And great boughs drop tranquillity;
      A parrot sways upon a tree,
      Raging at his own image in the enamelled sea.


      He loves us not, He wants the natural touch. For the poor wren,
      The most diminutive of birds, will fight,
      Her young ones in the nest, against the owl.


      I count those feathered balls of soot
      The moor-hen guides upon the stream,
      To silence the envy in my thought;
      And turn towards my chamber, caught
      In the cold snows of a dream.


      His spear, to equal which the tallest pine
      Hewn on Norwegian hills to be the mast
      Of some great ammiral were but a wand,
      He walk'd with to support uneasy steps
      Over the burning marle.


      Oh! what a tangled web we weave
      When first we practice to deceive!


      No, the heart that has truly lov'd never forgets,
      But as truly loves on to the close;
      As the sunflower turns on her god when he sets
      The same look which she turn'd when he rose.


      As man, as beast, as an ephemeral fly begets, Godhead
      begets Godhead,
      For things below are copies, the Great Smaragdine Tablet said.
      Yet all must copy copies, all increase their kind....


      Galway is a blackguard place,
      To Cork I give my curse,
      Tralee is bad enough,
      But Limerick is worse.
      Which is worst I cannot tell,
      They're everyone so filthy,
      But of the towns which I have seen
      Worst luck to Clonakilty.


      All space, all time,
      (The stars, the terrible perturbations of the suns,
      Swelling, collapsing, ending, serving their longer, shorter use,)
      Fill'd with eidolons only.
      The noiseless myriads
      The infinite oceans where the rivers empty,
      The separate countless free identities, like eyesight
      The true realities, eidolons.
      Not this the world,
      Nor these the universes, they the universes,
      Purport and end, ever the permanent life of life,
      Eidolons, eidolons.


      And God said, Let the waters generate,
      Reptile with spawn abundant, living soul:
      And let fowl fly above the earth, with wings
      Displayed on the open firmament of heaven
      And God created the great whales, and each
      Soul living, each that crept, which plenteously
      The waters generated by their kinds,
      And every bird of wing after his kind;
      And saw that it was good, and blessed them, saying
      Be fruitful, multiply, and in the seas
      And lakes and running streams the waters fill;
      And let the fowl be multiplied on the earth.


      Punishment is a fruit that unsuspected ripens within the flower of the pleasure which concealed it. Cause and effect, means and ends, seed and fruit, cannot be severed; for the effect already blooms in the cause, the end preexists in the means, the fruit in the seed.


      It is a curious sensation: the sort of pain that goes mercifully beyond our powers of feeling. When your heart is broken, your boats are burned: nothing matters any more. It is the end of happiness and the beginning of peace.


    For information on editions past and future, and for information on hosting, please visit The Tangled Bank.

    Comments

    1

    Superb. I was hoping, though, for something about vorpal blades going snicker-snack :-). You've set the bar high indeed.

    Hear me! We've heard of clinic's heroes
    Famous physicians, and the glory they cut
    Swinging mighty stethoscopes.

    Hmm. Beowulf does NOT seem appropriate.

    Posted by: Ames | August 6, 2008 10:13 AM

    2

    Human phenomenon?

    Hmph.

    (nice)

    Posted by: Cuttlefish | August 6, 2008 12:15 PM

    3

    Ames - you want vorpal blades?

    http://www.herring.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/poetry/jabberwocky.htm

    My own take on what really happened to the Jabberwock.

    Posted by: El Herring | August 6, 2008 12:56 PM

    4

    LOVE IT. Well done El! Do you have a take on Schubert's Erlkonig? Elf-kings are so often misunderstood...

    Posted by: Ames | August 6, 2008 1:22 PM

    5

    @Galway...

    County Clare has dank air,
    All the trees are dead,
    No-one wants to go there,
    If they have a head.

    Posted by: eddie | August 6, 2008 4:00 PM

    6

    Brought a tear to my eye! Well done.

    Posted by: Mike | August 6, 2008 5:25 PM

    7

    Good rhymes and great links to most-worthwhile blogs. Well done, each and every one, from start to finish!

    Posted by: mtarnowski | August 8, 2008 9:49 PM

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