Magazine Topics



In Europe, you do philosophy by performing discourse on another guy’s text, and so Derrida will go over Heidegger, and Habermas will extend Marx’s corpus; but in America you could never get away with kinky stuff like that, for you have to generate philosophy from real things—like computers or television. You need to look at Omni magazine to get a feel for this new kind of mail-order, Popular Mechanics science of mind. It’s full of articles about meditation helmets and downloading the soul into computers so that when your body wears out you can live forever. What is completely missing in Europe is precisely what you will find in America: namely, an electronic Umwelt in which history is replaced with movies, education is replaced with entertainment, and nature is replaced with technology. This peculiar wedding of low kitsch and high tech generates a posthistoric world that no European literary intellectual can quite fathom.
—William Irwin Thompson (b. 1918)

Then I discovered that my son had learned something new. For the first time, he was able to give a proper kiss, puckering up his lips and enfolding my face in his arms. “Kees Dada,” he said as he bussed me on the nose and cheeks. No amount of gratification at work could have compensated for that moment.
—Donald H. Bell. “Conflicting Interests,” New York Times Magazine (July 31, 1983)

It is as often a weakness in the aged to dictate to the young, as it is folly in the young to slight the warnings of the aged.
—H., U.S. women’s magazine contributor. American Ladies Magazine, pp. 230-3 (May 1828)