3.11.2010

How to Run

In my Origins of Western Morality class, we talked about the Epicureans and their ideas.

The Epicureans thought of the world as consisting of atoms, tiny particles of every sort that fall and swirl, and void, the nothingness that separated the atoms. They tried to apply this model to determining why it is that some things, like horses, have an agency to choose to move and run while other things, like rocks, do not move.

I have been wanting to write about the Epicurean reasoning of how a horse begins to run.

The idea deals with the event that must occur between the before of a still horse and the after of a running horse. They considered that running was caused when an atom for running fit into the right place like an ignition key, causing the horse to begin running when previously, it was still.

The desire to run shapes the horse's mind in a way that is able to receive atoms of running. All things on earth are constantly bathed in a stream of all kinds of invisible atoms, so if the horse positions its mind properly, it is only a brief matter of time until a running atom finds the place prepared to receive it.

Once this running atom fits into the prepared place, this ignites the running ability, and the the horse runs.


I think I believe this.


Things happen because a place has been prepared to receive it.

Sometimes it is said that things are 'for the best' because 'something good will come of it.' I don't agree with the thoughts of good things coming from bad things (to the extent that such a judgment is reasonable). But, I do think that good things will find those who are able to keep their heads up enough to see them.

I must continue to choose open windows.

1 comment:

Churaesie said...

For example,

I have a friend who knows she is a bird, and ain't no one telling her she's a pebble instead.