Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    • Home
    • Sedona
      • Steve’s Corner
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Bear Howard Chronicles
      • Business Profiles
      • City of Sedona
      • Goodies & Freebies
      • Mind & Body
      • Real Estate
      • Sedona News
    • Opinion
    • About
    • The Sedonan
    • Advertise
    • Sedona’s Best
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Home»Sedona News»On The Nature of Things
    Sedona News

    On The Nature of Things

    November 5, 2018No Comments
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit WhatsApp
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit WhatsApp

    By James Bishop, Jr.
    (November 5, 2018)

    photo_bishopDo we not see all humans unaware of what they want they want and always searching everywhere,
    and changing place, as if to drop the load they bear
    —Lucretius 90 BC

    Truth be told, in these days dark forces fueled by fear are busy here and there and seemingly everywhere. One way to brighten the mood is to visit Sedona’s cheerful Recycling Center on Shelby Rd and dig around in bins for some throwaway paintings, occasional 100-dollar bills, thought-provoking old books, and poetry in a battered book that nonetheless may contain good news.

    Own In Sedona

    Own In Sedona

              Do not laugh.

              It has worked before.  

          How about the discovery of  a 2000 year-old hundred- four hundred word poem in a trash bin in Connecticut a book brimming with the of works of a Roman poet and philosopher named Lucretius—marked down to ten cents. What a bargain to delve into of an exciting new way of living with modern implications.

    Sedona Gift Shop

            At its unveiling in 90 BC, Lucretius’s poem caused a brouhaha throughout Greece and Rome because the poet announced that from then on citizens need not live in fear of gods but in pursuit of beauty and pleasure, and avoidance of pain. It represented  a swerve in a new direction for the culture—no more revolutions would be needed. No heaven need to be sought, it is here and now.

             Anger flowed from many gods and religious leaders over Lucretius’s poem, so incompatible it was with many cults of the gods. For his creativity he was ridiculed, burned, attacked yet his pursuit of beauty had suffused the legendary likes of da Vinci, Galileo even Machiavelli, moved by his poem “On the Nature of Things”. It posits, “When we look at the sky and marvel at the numberless stars, we are not seeing the handiwork of the gods or a crystalline sphere. We are seeing the same material world of which we are made. There is no master plan , no divine architect, no intelligent design… we are all spring from celestial seed ; all from the same father, from which our fostering mother earth receives drops of water…..”

       Many Hundreds of years have passed during which his idea of pleasure all but vanished all except for a few copies here and there in libraries nonetheless opposition to these ideas never diminished. To his enemies, human beings were by nature corrupt and it was only through pain and punishment that a few would be able to find the narrow gate to salvation.

               To his followers today, his legacy is his condemnation of superstitious fears and the poet’s belief—that everything that ever existed and will exist is put together out of what the poet called “the seeds of things…invisible individual building blocks that could be not divided any further”. The Greeks had a word these blocks: Atoms.

              His poems are back in print thanks to Oxford Classic, doesn’t feel like  the time  has come for a world in which we are not afraid of political gods, and can pursue more pleasure and in avoidance of pain.

               How about now.

    Healing Paws

    This is an advertisement

    Comments are closed.

    Compassion Has no Party

    Whether you are Republican or Democrat, liberal or conservative, one truth remains: the vast majority of people on this planet are, at their core, decent. They believe in fairness, in dignity, and in the simple idea that other human beings matter.

    https://sedona.biz/compassion-has-no-party/

    The Sedonan
    Nampti Spa
    Mercer’s Kitchen
    House of Seven Arches
    Tlaquepaque
    Need More Customers?
    Bear Howard Chronicles
    Verde Valley Wine Trail
    Recent Comments
    • Al Comello on Real Space, Real Life: A New Year’s Wake-Up Call
    • Jill Dougherty on Compassion Has No Party
    • TJ Hall on To Kill or Be Killed — Is That a Question?
    • mkjeeves on To Kill or Be Killed — Is That a Question?
    • Blue Boelter on Compassion Has No Party
    • Mike Johnson on To Kill or Be Killed — Is That a Question?
    • JB on Compassion Has No Party
    • Janice Carter on Real Space, Real Life: A New Year’s Wake-Up Call
    • Jill Dougherty on A Frank Discussion about the Western Gateway.
    • JB on The Future of Work- The AI March to the Unknown
    • JB on Annual SAVCO Gathering Celebrates Service and Community Impact
    • Sean Smith on A Frank Discussion about the Western Gateway.
    • TJ Hall on Epstein, Venezuela, and a Man Who Ate with Reverence
    • JB on Epstein, Venezuela, and a Man Who Ate with Reverence
    • Jill Dougherty on Epstein, Venezuela, and a Man Who Ate with Reverence
    Archives
    The Sedonan
    © 2025 All rights reserved. Sedona.biz.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.