If it were possible to put together a discussion group of great people, past and present, who would you choose? We know who the #1 choice would be for most of us. Who else, and why? Limit it to your top ten.
Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin because of their brilliant minds. C. S. Lewis and Bishop Fulton J. Sheen...to see how they would do in a religious discussion with Ayn Rand. Jane Austen for her wit. Ambassador John Bolton who wouldn't put up with ISIS for one minute. Mickey Mantle because he was great, and I would like to know what he thought of his father.
Thanks, Herb. What will make this post interesting is how diverse it will become. We'll probably all have a chance to say, "Why didn't I think of him/her." Or "Good grief, why that person!" It should be fun. So thanks for posting the subject.
My top ten would be (latest to earliest): 1) Jesus 2) Thomas Sole 3) Ronald Reagan 4) Margaret Thatcher 5) Thomas Jefferson 6) George Mason 7) George Washington 8) Tesla 9) Marcus Tullius Cicero 10) Cincinnatus
I like your list. Having Jesus in a discussion group with Ayn Rand would be interesting to say the least. I should have thought of Margaret Thatcher and Thomas Sole. I also would like to see Walter E. Williams added
Limiting to ten is what makes the discussion interesting in that you'll always find persons that deserve to be on the list but didn't make it, resulting in revised lists.
Michael a great choice. "The times call for courage. The times call for hard work. But if the demands are high, it is because the stakes are even higher. They are nothing less than the future of liberty, which means the future of civilization" Henry Stuart Hazlitt His opposition to Bretton Woods agreement that created the world bank and the IMF as he said would cause inflation was spot on.
Adams definitely had a little attitude. Teddy and FDR would be fascinating to talk to. Should have put Jackie Kennedy in there. A very private person in life I would love to hear what she would say about JFK personally, as President and her opinions on who was behind his assassination.
See if you can find an old copy from Revolutionary Comics of the JFK assassination (1991). I wrote it and based on my research, I think I got it right.
Both Teddy and FDR were extreme Progressives added to our malaise with FDR's programs only succeeding in prolonging the Great Depression and putting us on this trajectory to the "1984" Brave New World we are facing today.....Roosevelt would be a great counterpoint to the cast of truly great thinkers!
Another interesting era of history. Stock Market Crash, Great Depression, unemployment figures for the New Deal and WWII. Can you think about how far apart the dates were in terms of years?
Barney the Dinosaur--just kidding! George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, George Patton, Alvin York, Baron von Richthofen, Oswald Boelcke, Vincent Van Gogh, Bram Stoker, Edgar Allen Poe, Ray Harryhausen, Ray Bradbury, Frank Frazetta, Bernard Herman, Sergio Leone and Enio Morricone.
Just added Oswald Boelcke, who first established the rules of aerial dog fighting. Had a time finding him with limited time to edit on the search engine just to spell his last name.
I'm fascinated with World War One overall and of the air http://combat.in particular. I'm currently working on a novel called "Chasing Little Red" about boche horsemen chasing a prized hostage for a French general's daughter (she's an expert rider with a photographic memory and a lunatic horse) about the Belgian countryside. Well, I;m a wannabe novelist trying to write it. Yes, a few airplanes are in it All are unmarked with both sides shooting at any aircraft in the sky. That last bit's a historical fact.
Warning (if I'm successful)! If it was done for books, it would be rated R for violence and salty language. I'm certain European soldiers of 1914 talked very much like the U.S. Marines I was drafted to be with 1969-71. In one scene, Babette witnesses the massacre at Dinant from a cliff that overlooks that riverside town. Women and children were also lined up and murdered separate from the men who were all shot and then bayoneted. The historical account itself is shocking. I pull few punches. I do try to balance the horror of war and war crimes with humor to give the reader a break. I keep in mind what I read about Shakespeare. Provide something for everyone.
My Babette is quite a character. One minute she'll be fervently praying and the next she will be wiggling her butt on her horse to taunt her pursuers. Her photographic or endemic memory has given her some crazy as a fox mental issues. Pick a subject and she feels compelled to rattle on about it forever. She can pick up a foreign language in a snap. Babette does not need to read a book. She scans it and never forgets anything she sees. Her ailment is her super power. She could make a great spy if I ever write sequels.
Oh, Babette can cook big time! Babette's retired French general father has a semi-retired former Parisian gourmet chef for a cook at an inherited chateau in Belgium near Neer. (I have a lot of fun with something being "near Neer," an actual town). The chef's wife in the first chapter speaks highly of Babette as "a little rich girl who did not have to" ~ "become a wonderful help. A perfect student for you." Shown one time two weeks previously, Babette can duplicate putting together a complicated salad garnished with goat cheese she made herself due to their being goats on an estate that breeds racing horses and grows its own horse feed and other crops. Babette has seven brothers with five there presently helping out. During this scene Babette has just baked a goat cheese crepe with spinach and prosciutto (ham from the thigh of a wild boar shot on the property) garnished with a red brandy cream sauce.
Maybe you're right, you might not want to write a recipe book. Coming up with a recipe for Filet of Stegosaurus might be rather difficult let alone finding the ingredients.
I had an aviator friend whoe grandfather was a WW1 pilot. He told me two amusing stories. They tried to mount macine guns over the engines of the planes but they kept shooting up the propellers until they learned how to time them. In WW2, he was too old to be a front line pilot, but he was sent to Belgium in 1940, I guess to help them form an air force. To his surprise, they only had two planes. He asked them to perform a basic flight formation whereupon they took off and flew into one another.
Oops, only at the beginning of that war were airplanes unmarked and somehow I did that combat glitch. My late Dad's cousin and best friend flew a P-51, shot down three Italian planes, got nailed by a Messerschmidt and his plane was last seen falling into the Mediterranean. My Dad tried to join after Pearl Harbor but the government wanted him to use his engineering skills for converting a company that make swing sets and tricycles into producing parts for Corsair fighters.
Good list, but I must confess that I had to look a few of them up. I read a little science fiction but not a lot. Seeing Enio Morricone on your list, makes me want to ask if you like Bix Beiderbecke?
I had to look Bix up. Found out all I needed to do was type Bix to find all that rest of his name I copied down. He's okay but I bet I would have liked him a lot better if I lived back into 20s. Listening to Bix reminded me how I Youtube looked up and surfed dancers of the Charleston after I Netflix watched The Great Gatsby a year or so ago.
Between Bix and Louis Armstrong, they changed the role of the trumpet in jazz. Bix proved he could do riffs as fast as a clarinet while Louis played high notes that weren't supposed to be able to be played. If you see a movie in which Armstrong is featured look closely at his lips and note the callous impressed right in the center of the upper and lower lip. Think of how many hours of playing it took to create such a result. However, they were mostly New Orleans style jazz as opposed to the big ban era of the 30s and 40s.
Even though I didn't live during the 20s, I really like Bix's music. My mom played the piano in a combo during the thirties and early forties before marriage and and my sister and I came along. This was the type of music that was heard in our home.
I recall as a little kid listening to my Dad's big band music on the car radio before rock 'n roll came along. Then that kind of music faded away except in old movies and the Lawrence Welk Show.
It takes 500 GB on an external HD to have all the rock'n'roll ever was including the historical tapes. Another 500 GB for Blues, Soul, Rhythm and Blues and the complete Bob Dylan recordings, Lomax recordings, Leadbelly recordings AND folk music. There is just enough room left over for the five or ten decent pieces of music since 2000. So...answer this On What Day .....did the Music Die.
Actually I erased a few. Neil Young except for Down By The Rivere and The Doors except for Light My Fire.
Herb, I am so sorry. I taught in an elementary school for several years, and met so many children who suffered from horrible family conditions. About all I could do was make the time that they spent in my classroom as pleasant as possible. Many of them overcame great odds and became productive citizens like you obviously have.
Thanks. In my case, ignorance was the culprit, not so much intentional cruelty. But when you're a kid, it really doesn't take too much to get you screwed up.But I have been most fortunate in life to have gotten the goodness I have.
Here's my list (in no particular order): 1. Jesus Christ 2. Confucius 3. Mohatma Gandi 4. C.S. Lewis 5. Thomas Payne 6. George Washington 7. Plato 8. Karl Marx 9. Mohammed 10. Saul Alinsky
You might consider both Lenin and Mussolini.. the latter especially. The father of new age fascism in the 30's he invented most of the term s in use today, invented the triumverate of socialist leadership still in use today and terms like statist and corporatist. Got Lenin to admit that one could never teach Marxist economics but only preach it and was along with Lenin huge ini pushing the idea the center is always the center of the left. His most famous namesake Benita Pelosillyni followed in his inventive footsteps with not quite the same accuracy nor success. Based on 7 & 8 possibly 9 his most famous progeny are 10, Lakoff, G. and Soros. G. guy looked liek a puchero clown for ATT/Cingular/United but he was a serious thinker and used a sort of reverse objectivism. How can we get people to do as they are told or remove them from the equation. Thus the Carcano rifle good only short execution range distances was born. This value added method was later adopted by his progency Benita who is iplanning on adding it to the tax code except she can't figure out what the word 'add' means. Math is SOOOOOOOoooooooo hard.
Good ideas. I didn't really think of them because I always thought of them less as original philosophers and more as people who used their personal cults of personality (like Hitler and Stalin) to push a particular philosophy. I do agree that Mussolini was more of a thinker than Hitler and shudder to think of the Third Reich and WWII if it their places had been reversed...
More discussion than debate - but debate's ok too. A very creative mix. The first three would be quite a huddle. Overall, a little leftish for my taste, but I'd break out the refreshments.
I didn't say I necessarily agreed with them - especially the last three. I looked for those people throughout history who contributed significantly to the field of philosophy - whether or not I agreed with them. It would be up to them to defend their respective ideas. But you can't really have a thorough discussion of something if you only include like minds. All that does is reinforce groupthink.
Benjamin Franklin, Ayn Rand, Mark Twain, Jack London, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Isaac Asimov, Michael Moorcock, Bernard Cornwell, John Wayne. I have a few others but I'm limiting it to 10.
John Wayne, interesting American. Maybe Clint Eastwood. (as no.11) Jack London, I respect his do-it before you write it adventuresome nature. (don't care much for his socialism though)
If we follow London's advice, the entire field of science fiction would disappear. But he was a great adventurer. What kept me from a lot of great adventures was the lack of a flush toilet. Took a 7 day trip with my sons down the Colorado River from Lake Powell to Lake Mead, and that was in '75 and we still talk about it -- but that damn port-a-potty......
Never jump to conclusions. Michael Moorcock about gave me a heart attack until I realized yu were referring to someone different than I had imagined. Didn't recognize the name so went to Google. A glance down the page came upon a poem about Ged's boat Lookfar and that led to a new world of undiscovered fiction but the key was the name Lookfar. My old boats name under many different owners A 26' sloop twin keel Westerly Centaur that has two claims to fame. Never had an inboard engine and circumnavigated twice maybe three times by now. It was that boat that carried me on many adventures under a Norske translated name. and rekindled my interest in philosophy. For no sailing with sails fan can manage a passage without that science....So a sideways plus and thank you for your suggestion. here's a 4
Michael Moorcock's Universal Champion series is one of the greatest fantasy concepts I've ever read, bar none.
I imagine a spirit who manifests itself in the guise of a race/planets supreme hero to thwart an civilization ending apocalypse wouldn't exactly be on an objectists bookshelf.Great stuff, would love to chat with him.
Jesus -to find out if he was really any more the child of God than I am 2. Jack the Ripper - to find out who he really was 3. Einstein 4. Shakespeare - to find out who he really was 5. My grandfather who died before I was born and I would have liked to have met him 6. Michaelangelo - to find out if he was really an alien or not 7. Galileo 8. Jimmy Buffet - because he seems like THE MOST FUN person EVER 9. Joan of Arc 10. Leonardo da Vinci
Murray Rothbard, one of the broadest political and economic thinkers, agree with him or not; Thomas Jefferson - especially would want his take on what the US has become and what to do about it; Richard Feynman - master physicist, brilliant, wild mind; Henry Ford; Albert Einstein; Nikola Tesla
There was a TV show hosted by Steve Allen called Meeting of Minds (1977–1981) that addressed this discussion topic. At each episode, Allen had actors portraying various characters of history as realistically as possible, in a round-table discussion. Actual examples: Queen Cleopatra / Theodore Roosevelt / Thomas Aquinas / Thomas Paine on a two-part episode, Emily Dickinson / Attila the Hun / Charles Darwin / Galileo on another, and Florence Nightingale / Plato / Martin Luther / Voltaire on yet another. The shows were always superb.
John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison for the founders. Generals Grant and Lee. Lincoln for the sheer burden of office from the loss of so many. George Washington, a rare man that gave up power willingly. Einstein and Edison for science and invention. And last, George Armstrong Custer just because I'd like to know what really happened that day.
Dan Ackroyd, Jim and John Belushi, Rosann Rosana Danna (Gilda Radner), Gene Wilder, Leslie Nielsen, Rodney Dangerfield, Bob Hope, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis. Have to add a dozen or so playboy bunnies to pop out of the cakes.
Aristotle, John Locke, David Hume, David Kelley, Nat Brandon, Thomas Jefferson, Tom Paine, Mark Twain, Milton Friedman, Ludwig Von Mises, General John J Pershing, General George S.Patton, General George Washington
Generally a good list. You've got a few of my favorites there. An interesting trio of Aristotle, Locke and Hume. Bandon instead of Rand? Very creative.
I thought you were an Air Force pilot. I want to add Misa767ca to my list of nominees. Carlos Marighella who invented the Cycle of Repression currently in use by Obeyme against the population of the USA, and unlike that clown Guevera deserves some recognition even if it's honoring a worthy opponent.
wee need some great military minds for what we are facing today...Pershing is perfect to deal with it as is Jefferson who formed the marines to deal with muslim pirates in Tripoli...
Nickola Tesla, Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin, Akhenaten, Javerman lV, Issac Newton, Thomas Payne, the leader of the Olmec, the builder of Sacsayhunan. My grandpa Dewey.
Sorry spelling error Sacsayhuaman Near Cuzco in Peru built by the predecessor's to the Inca's the place has thousands of stones many over 80 tons fit together so tight like they were playdoh when constructed.
Ah, yes. I have similar curiosity about Punta Puma. Not only how they moved stones weighing 50 to 100 tons but how the hell did they make razor sharp cuts and joinings with primitive tools.
Exactly, many questions to the engineers of these megalithic sites using massive stones thousands of years ago. The stone work is as if it was machine cut , complex intricate designs. The quarry used for Puma Punku Was 60 miles away and the site is at 12,800 ft. well above the tree line. Along way to haul, it's like it was easy for them. BTW , have you heard of the Serapeum of Saqqara ?
AHA! Finally someone talking my language. I'd have a hard time selecting more than a few, but there are two that would be an absolute must, Mozart and Beethoven.Then there's the 19th and twentieth centuries. Which single composer would represent a whole century. Can't be done which is why the 10 person restriction makes for a major scrutiny situation.
Perhaps two each from Classic, Baroque, Romantic and Modern and two left over. Topic of ht eevening which current composer most typifies the one in AR who ruiined Richard Halley's concerto.
Bach,,Beethoven any of the greats followed in Baroque with Salieri, Boccherini.,Corelli, Scarletta I have some of these spelled wrong and later on Sibelius,. the AS anti-music composer in real life. Phantom of the Opera what's his name.
1) Me @ Age 5. 2) Me @ Age 10. 3) Me @ Age 15. 4) Me @ Age 20. 5) Me @ Age 25. 6) Me @ Age 30. 7) Me @ Age 35. 8) Me @ Age 40. 9) Me @ Age now.^ 10) Me @ 1 day before my death.
^In my life experience, I've fully accepted that you can change no one else except yourself. Those 10 people would make one #ell of a talk that I wouldn't want to miss!
"The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities." ~Ayn Rand
Ayn Rand; Leonard Peikoff; Aristotle; Daddy;Thom- as Jefferson;John Locke; William Blackstone; Benjamin Franklin; Victor Hugo; Harper Lee; William Schwenck (sp?) Gilbert.
Harper Lee? That's interesting. From an author's secretary to an author herself. I wish she had written a sequel to her one book. Scout was such a great character.
Actually, I think I should have left one of those out in order to have room for Yaron Brook. I wanted to ask him about why should people trade with Red China. (There was a video, but the librarian said they had no headphones available any more, and when I went to the Dollar Store, they had none to sell but Communist crap). As to Harper Lee, there is a point that had long interested me. In the movie, which I saw long ago on TV, Tom Robinson is reported dead; it is reported that he tried to escape after his convic- tion, when he was to be taken to prison (where he was to be held pending an appeal). My father said he bet Tom Robinson didn't either try to es- cape, that the guard/guards just murdered him and lied about it afterwards. But in the book, the reported "escape attempt" occurs some weeks after he has been taken to Enfield Prison Farm; the report is that he was shot while attempting to get over the wall. And I wondered if Harper Lee intended this to be true, or just a cover-up like my father thought. ---There was a sort of a sequel to her book. But I read that it was actually written first.One dis- crepancy--Jean Louise ("Scout") remembers her father having actually gained any acquittal in the case of a black accused of rape. ----This book is entitled "Go Set a Watchman". I didn't particularly like it. It makes Atticus Finch look comparitively bigoted. I could well have done without it.
I read a review which stated pretty much what you said. As a result I decided not to read it. Too bad .Perhaps it was just a one trick pony that Lee wrote. Sort of like a golfer getting a hole in one..
Issac Newton, Francis Bacon, Albert Einstein, Thomas Jefferson, Ayn Rand, Steven Hawking, John F. Kennedy, Calvin Coolidge, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Franklin, I have many more to add, but these will do.
The key to this question is the scope of the discussion of the discussion group!
I would want to talk about the best way to construct rules and motivations for a productive and fair society with: Aristotle, Gehgis Khan, Karl Marx, Ayn Rand, Milton Friedman, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Winston Churchill, Mark Twain and George Carlin. I'd want past successes and recent wisdom. There, I said it. Comments welcome?
Have you read about Genghis? Quite the ruler and conqueror. Not quite like one would expect from the colloquialisms. He was the first ruler to support religious freedom. He offered all peoples a chance to become a part of his empire, rather than fighting. If they resisted and he won, he killed the leaders, and left the peoples alone. He was as benign as you could be as a conqueror, and as savage as one could be to his enemies.
Hello Herb7734 After #1 :) Aristotle, Cicero, Locke, Jefferson, Madison, Franklin, Paine, Bastiat, Hazlitt, Friedman. That would make ten. Eleven including Rand as #1. Including myself a dozen; that would make a very busy and enlightening party for me. I would not be so bold as to offer an opinion, but would overflow with questions. Respectfully, O.A.
Besides Rand, I'd go with Napoleon, Billy The Kid, Socrates, Abe Lincoln, Sigmund Freud, Genghis Khan, Joan of Arc, Beethoven, and maybe throw in George Carlin just for fun! If that list seems familiar in any way, it should. (See Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure)
C. S. Lewis and Bishop Fulton J. Sheen...to see how they would do in a religious discussion with Ayn Rand.
Jane Austen for her wit.
Ambassador John Bolton who wouldn't put up with ISIS for one minute.
Mickey Mantle because he was great, and I would like to know what he thought of his father.
1) Jesus
2) Thomas Sole
3) Ronald Reagan
4) Margaret Thatcher
5) Thomas Jefferson
6) George Mason
7) George Washington
8) Tesla
9) Marcus Tullius Cicero
10) Cincinnatus
Robert Heinlein
Temujin Genghis Khan
Henry Hazlitt
The individual who chaired the first French Assembly where they decided who was left and who was right and the vantage point used.
How's that?
Couldn't think of any others half so interesting.
Now you can change yours!!! But thanks for the nomination I'm enjoying be atypical.
"The times call for courage. The times call for hard work. But if the demands are high, it is because the stakes are even higher. They are nothing less than the future of liberty, which means the future of civilization" Henry Stuart Hazlitt
His opposition to Bretton Woods agreement that created the world bank and the IMF as he said would cause inflation was spot on.
George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, George Patton, Alvin York, Baron von Richthofen, Oswald Boelcke, Vincent Van Gogh, Bram Stoker, Edgar Allen Poe, Ray Harryhausen, Ray Bradbury, Frank Frazetta, Bernard Herman, Sergio Leone and Enio Morricone.
I'm currently working on a novel called "Chasing Little Red" about boche horsemen chasing a prized hostage for a French general's daughter (she's an expert rider with a photographic memory and a lunatic horse) about the Belgian countryside. Well, I;m a wannabe novelist trying to write it.
Yes, a few airplanes are in it All are unmarked with both sides shooting at any aircraft in the sky. That last bit's a historical fact.
In one scene, Babette witnesses the massacre at Dinant from a cliff that overlooks that riverside town. Women and children were also lined up and murdered separate from the men who were all shot and then bayoneted. The historical account itself is shocking. I pull few punches.
I do try to balance the horror of war and war crimes with humor to give the reader a break.
I keep in mind what I read about Shakespeare. Provide something for everyone.
Her photographic or endemic memory has given her some crazy as a fox mental issues.
Pick a subject and she feels compelled to rattle on about it forever.
She can pick up a foreign language in a snap.
Babette does not need to read a book. She scans it and never forgets anything she sees.
Her ailment is her super power.
She could make a great spy if I ever write sequels.
Babette's retired French general father has a semi-retired former Parisian gourmet chef for a cook at an inherited chateau in Belgium near Neer.
(I have a lot of fun with something being "near Neer," an actual town).
The chef's wife in the first chapter speaks highly of Babette as "a little rich girl who did not have to" ~ "become a wonderful help. A perfect student for you."
Shown one time two weeks previously, Babette can duplicate putting together a complicated salad garnished with goat cheese she made herself due to their being goats on an estate that breeds racing horses and grows its own horse feed and other crops. Babette has seven brothers with five there presently helping out.
During this scene Babette has just baked a goat cheese crepe with spinach and prosciutto (ham from the thigh of a wild boar shot on the property) garnished with a red brandy cream sauce.
I prefer to implant what I lift into a work of fiction and to keep that at a minimum.
My late Dad's cousin and best friend flew a P-51, shot down three Italian planes, got nailed by a Messerschmidt and his plane was last seen falling into the Mediterranean.
My Dad tried to join after Pearl Harbor but the government wanted him to use his engineering skills for converting a company that make swing sets and tricycles into producing parts for Corsair fighters.
He's okay but I bet I would have liked him a lot better if I lived back into 20s.
Listening to Bix reminded me how I Youtube looked up and surfed dancers of the Charleston after I Netflix watched The Great Gatsby a year or so ago.
He sounded real good in a James Bond movie too.
Then that kind of music faded away except in old movies and the Lawrence Welk Show.
I like all kinds of music, but the Big Band sound is pretty much "daddy music" to me.
Actually I erased a few. Neil Young except for Down By The Rivere and The Doors except for Light My Fire.
You are a most fortunate person.
I envy you your childhood.
In my case, ignorance was the culprit, not so much intentional cruelty. But when you're a kid, it really doesn't take too much to get you screwed up.But I have been most fortunate in life to have gotten the goodness I have.
1. Jesus Christ
2. Confucius
3. Mohatma Gandi
4. C.S. Lewis
5. Thomas Payne
6. George Washington
7. Plato
8. Karl Marx
9. Mohammed
10. Saul Alinsky
You did say you wanted debate, didn't you? ;)
Jack London, I respect his do-it before you write it adventuresome nature. (don't care much for his socialism though)
I imagine a spirit who manifests itself in the guise of a race/planets supreme hero to thwart an civilization ending apocalypse wouldn't exactly be on an objectists bookshelf.Great stuff, would love to chat with him.
2. Jack the Ripper - to find out who he really was
3. Einstein
4. Shakespeare - to find out who he really was
5. My grandfather who died before I was born and I would have liked to have met him
6. Michaelangelo - to find out if he was really an alien or not
7. Galileo
8. Jimmy Buffet - because he seems like THE MOST FUN person EVER
9. Joan of Arc
10. Leonardo da Vinci
Thomas Jefferson - especially would want his take on what the US has become and what to do about it;
Richard Feynman - master physicist, brilliant, wild mind;
Henry Ford;
Albert Einstein;
Nikola Tesla
Keep in mind this is a party for fun...
You lost me on Sacsayhunan.
BTW , have you heard of the
Serapeum of Saqqara ?
Finally someone talking my language. I'd have a hard time selecting more than a few, but there are two that would be an absolute must, Mozart and Beethoven.Then there's the 19th and twentieth centuries. Which single composer would represent a whole century. Can't be done which is why the 10 person restriction makes for a major scrutiny situation.
As a reward http://www.theatlasphere.com/columns/...
2) Me @ Age 10.
3) Me @ Age 15.
4) Me @ Age 20.
5) Me @ Age 25.
6) Me @ Age 30.
7) Me @ Age 35.
8) Me @ Age 40.
9) Me @ Age now.^
10) Me @ 1 day before my death.
^In my life experience, I've fully accepted that you can change no one else except yourself. Those 10 people would make one #ell of a talk that I wouldn't want to miss!
"The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities." ~Ayn Rand
as Jefferson;John Locke; William Blackstone;
Benjamin Franklin; Victor Hugo; Harper Lee;
William Schwenck (sp?) Gilbert.
That's interesting. From an author's secretary to an author herself. I wish she had written a sequel to her one book. Scout was such a great character.
in order to have room for Yaron Brook. I wanted
to ask him about why should people trade with Red
China. (There was a video, but the librarian said
they had no headphones available any more, and when I went to the Dollar Store, they had
none to sell but Communist crap).
As to Harper Lee, there is a point that had long
interested me. In the movie, which I saw long
ago on TV, Tom Robinson is reported dead; it is
reported that he tried to escape after his convic-
tion, when he was to be taken to prison (where
he was to be held pending an appeal). My father
said he bet Tom Robinson didn't either try to es-
cape, that the guard/guards just murdered him
and lied about it afterwards. But in the book, the
reported "escape attempt" occurs some weeks
after he has been taken to Enfield Prison Farm;
the report is that he was shot while attempting
to get over the wall. And I wondered if Harper
Lee intended this to be true, or just a cover-up
like my father thought.
---There was a sort of a sequel to her book. But
I read that it was actually written first.One dis-
crepancy--Jean Louise ("Scout") remembers
her father having actually gained any acquittal
in the case of a black accused of rape.
----This book is entitled "Go Set a Watchman".
I didn't particularly like it. It makes Atticus Finch
look comparitively bigoted. I could well have
done without it.
I suppose I should take out William Schwenck Gil-
bert.
2. Aristotle
3. William James Sidis
4. Boris Sidis
5. Grigori Perelman
6. Isaac Newton
7. Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
I would want to talk about the best way to construct rules and motivations for a productive and fair society with: Aristotle, Gehgis Khan, Karl Marx, Ayn Rand, Milton Friedman, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Winston Churchill, Mark Twain and George Carlin. I'd want past successes and recent wisdom. There, I said it. Comments welcome?
After #1 :) Aristotle, Cicero, Locke, Jefferson, Madison, Franklin, Paine, Bastiat, Hazlitt, Friedman. That would make ten. Eleven including Rand as #1.
Including myself a dozen; that would make a very busy and enlightening party for me. I would not be so bold as to offer an opinion, but would overflow with questions.
Respectfully,
O.A.
there's this guy named Herb ... ! -- j
.
.
p.s. mine likes amaretto on the rocks!
.
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