tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post3834199767929323664..comments2024-03-28T18:32:05.933-04:00Comments on bensozia: Professorial UniversesJohnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01037215533094998996noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-88655026843886929742018-06-23T11:54:20.646-04:002018-06-23T11:54:20.646-04:00Or perhaps, judging from the length of "Varie...Or perhaps, judging from the length of "Varieties of Religious Experience," he was ruefully commenting on himself? Perhaps my first reaction was paranoid.<br /><br />In my own defense, I will say I didn't invent the tension between professors and the folks who don't say much. I just fully participate in it.Davidhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08993570411881726772noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-89559518417994064022018-06-23T11:27:03.089-04:002018-06-23T11:27:03.089-04:00It is interesting that James carefully avoids sayi...It is interesting that James carefully avoids saying that professors just want to hear themselves discourse lengthily. In other words, the issue goes beyond simple narcissism. For myself, I not only like to discourse lengthily, but often prefer others to do so as well. I tend not to trust a two-sentence universe. (And after all, a brief description represents its own form of narcissism, not only love of one's own pithiness, but also a feeling that one has so conquered a theme that one can reduce it to, so to speak, a motto.)Davidhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08993570411881726772noreply@blogger.com