B
Bubba_Switzler
Guest
I’ve always wanted to start a thread on this topic but couldn’t quite find the right way to introduce the question. But I found this today and it is perfect:
"All bad poetry springs from genuine feeling,” Oscar Wilde once remarked.
Irving Kristol took Wilde’s observation and ran with it. “The amateur’s feelings are sincere enough — why else should he be writing poetry? — but he takes the writing of poetry to be more important than the poem itself,” Kristol noted in his influential 1972 essay, “Symbolic Politics and Liberal Reform.” “For him, writing poetry is a kind of symbolic action, in which he liberates his most earnest sentiments, and it is in this impatient action and in this instant liberation that he seeks fulfillment.”
The successful poet, meanwhile, understands that good poetry is ultimately not about the experience of the author but of the reader. “He understands that a plea of sincerity is of no account in the ultimate court of literary judgment, which will look at the poem itself and simply ask: Does it work?”
“It seems to me,” Kristol wrote, “that the politics of liberal reform, in recent years, shows many of the same characteristics as amateur poetry. It has been more concerned with the kind of symbolic action that gratifies the passions of the reformer than with the efficacy of the reforms themselves.”
article.nationalreview.com/?q=MGRmZmFlMDNjYjFkNDZhMzQ1NWUxOTU0OGQxNjJlZDI=
The question is, from a moral standpoint, do consequences matter? If I intend to do good and bad results, am I good?
On the one hand, Jesus said that it is what’s in our hearts that matters most. If so, then consequences shouldn’t matter. Ignorance of consequences is blissful acquital, and who can really say what the effects of each of our actions will be?
But can we be so disinterested in consequences? Is such ignorance truly bliss?
Is there a moral duty to study the likely consequences of our actions and to act accordingly?
"All bad poetry springs from genuine feeling,” Oscar Wilde once remarked.
Irving Kristol took Wilde’s observation and ran with it. “The amateur’s feelings are sincere enough — why else should he be writing poetry? — but he takes the writing of poetry to be more important than the poem itself,” Kristol noted in his influential 1972 essay, “Symbolic Politics and Liberal Reform.” “For him, writing poetry is a kind of symbolic action, in which he liberates his most earnest sentiments, and it is in this impatient action and in this instant liberation that he seeks fulfillment.”
The successful poet, meanwhile, understands that good poetry is ultimately not about the experience of the author but of the reader. “He understands that a plea of sincerity is of no account in the ultimate court of literary judgment, which will look at the poem itself and simply ask: Does it work?”
“It seems to me,” Kristol wrote, “that the politics of liberal reform, in recent years, shows many of the same characteristics as amateur poetry. It has been more concerned with the kind of symbolic action that gratifies the passions of the reformer than with the efficacy of the reforms themselves.”
article.nationalreview.com/?q=MGRmZmFlMDNjYjFkNDZhMzQ1NWUxOTU0OGQxNjJlZDI=
The question is, from a moral standpoint, do consequences matter? If I intend to do good and bad results, am I good?
On the one hand, Jesus said that it is what’s in our hearts that matters most. If so, then consequences shouldn’t matter. Ignorance of consequences is blissful acquital, and who can really say what the effects of each of our actions will be?
But can we be so disinterested in consequences? Is such ignorance truly bliss?
Is there a moral duty to study the likely consequences of our actions and to act accordingly?