lunes, 26 de enero de 2009
Casas para los damnificados
El persuasor
"Tú no sabes lo peligrosa que es la gente persuasiva, nunca te enfrentes a quienes lo sean a menos que estés dispuesto a volverte más ruin que ellos y creas que tu imaginación, no, tu capacidad de fabulación es superior a la suya, y que tu brote de cólera se esparcirá más rápido y en la dirección correcta. Has de tener presente que la mayoría de la gente es tonta. Tonta y frívola y crédula, no sabes hasta qué punto, una permanente hoja en blanco sin la menor huella de resistencia, por mucho que te parezca saberlo no puedes saberlo bien, hasta qué punto, tú no has vivido guerras, espero que no te toquen. El persuasor cuenta con ello, cuenta incluso más de la cuenta y sin embargo no se equivoca nunca, cuenta hasta la exageración y hasta el último extremo y eso le confiere casi una audacia sin límites. Pero si es bueno, nunca yerra. – Se calló un momento, dejó que se aplacara el humo que parecía salirle ahora de su pelo pastelero blanco, entonces me miró muy fijo, con una mezcla de curiosidad y confirmación, como si me viera por primera vez y al mismo tiempo me reconociera (quizá como sujeto de la última frase que había dicho), o me comparara con alguien o consigo mismo, o me bendijera acaso-. Pero tú también tienes eso, tú eres persuasivo. Es mejor no enfrentarse contigo."
viernes, 23 de enero de 2009
Sobre las escobas masturbatorias de las brujas
Al revisar el desván de la dama se encontró un tubo de ungüento, con el cual engrasaba un bastón, sobre el cual podía deambular y galopar a través de todos los obstáculos donde y como ella quisiera.
El vulgo cree, y las brujas confiesan, que en ciertos días y noches untan un palo y lo montan para llegar a un lugar determinado, o bien se untan ellas mismas bajo los brazos y en otros lugares donde crece vello...
"WEYER, JOHANN. De Praestigiis Daemonum et Incantationibus ac Veneficiis. BasUeae, 1568.
This book is dedicated to the Duke of Cleves and Juliers and Berg, whose physician Weyer had been for fifteen years. It was submitted before publication to the theologians and priests of the court. (Reference to year 1566 in iv, 8; to 1563 in iv, 13 ; to 1564 in v, 22 ; to 1567 in vi, 6.) First ed. 1563.
…iii, c. 16 [bis]. The experiences of witches are delirious dreams induced by the drugs wherewith they confect their ointments.
Long quotation from Jo. Bapt. Porta (Magia Naturalis, lib. ii, c. 26), who had investigated the matter carefully. He gives the ingredients which are mixed with infants' fataconite, eleoselnium, frondes populneae, soot, [suim], pentaphyllon, bat's blood, belladonna, etc. They first rub the surface till red, to open the pores, and then rub the ointment strongly in. He experimented with a well known witch who promised for money to bring him answers. She turned everyone out of the room, but he watched her through the crack of the door, saw her strip herself naked and anoint herself thoroughly all over with an unguent. The somniferous drugs threw her into a deep sleep, out of which she could not be aroused by a smart whipping. When she awoke, she recited a long delirium, how she had crossed mountains and seas, etc., bringing false responses, and persisted pertinaciously on being contradicted. Their minds dwelling perpetually on these subjects, they are more susceptible, and as they live exclusively on insufficient vegetable foodbeets, chestnuts, greens, etc. they are more easily affected."
Lea, Henry Charles. Materials Toward A History Of Witchcraft p. 505
martes, 6 de enero de 2009
La calma antes de la tormenta
En relación con la claridad como segundo enemigo del hombre de conocimiento:
"No Congress of the United States ever assembled, on surveying the state of the Union, has met with a more pleasing prospect than that which appears at the present time. In the domestic field there is tranquility and contentment, harmonious relations between management and wage earner, freedom from industrial strife, and the highest record of years of prosperity. In the foreign field there is peace, the good will which comes from mutual understanding, and the knowledge that the problems which a short time ago appeared so ominous are yielding to the touch of manifest friendship. The great wealth created by our enterprise and industry, and saved by our economy, has had the widest distribution among our own people, and has gone out in a steady stream to serve the charity and the business of the world. The requirements of existence have passed beyond the standard of necessity into the region of luxury. Enlarging production is consumed by an increasing demand at home and an expanding commerce abroad. The country can regard the present with satisfaction and anticipate the future with optimism."
State of the Union, President Calvin Coolidge
December 4, 1928
"...Let’s not mince words: This looks an awful lot like the beginning of a second Great Depression. So will we “act swiftly and boldly” enough to stop that from happening? We’ll soon find out. We weren’t supposed to find ourselves in this situation. For many years most economists believed that preventing another Great Depression would be easy. In 2003, Robert Lucas of the University of Chicago, in his presidential address to the American Economic Association, declared that the “central problem of depression-prevention has been solved, for all practical purposes, and has in fact been solved for many decades.”"
Paul Krugman.
viernes, 2 de enero de 2009
El origen de la monta de toros
"Quiero aprovechar para hablar un poco de la historia de la monta.Y es que debe haber sido muy curioso para los colonos venir acá a Costa Rica, traer sus toros, y ver a nuestros indígenas, los autóctonos, subirse encima de los toros, debe haber sido muy simpático para ellos.Además eso ayuda para que en nuestro país casi ni existan clases sociales, pues eso acercaba a los colonos y a los ticos."