Well done. There are so many analogous examples of this kind of natural ordering in human societies. The Shaman who lives outside the village, the Australian Aboriginal walkabout and perhaps even the rural/ urban divide. I think if we become tenders of the garden instead of dominators, we have a good chance of finding that unclaimed mountain top. Just a thought.
Well done. There are so many analogous examples of this kind of natural ordering in human societies. The Shaman who lives outside the village, the Australian Aboriginal walkabout and perhaps even the rural/ urban divide. I think if we become tenders of the garden instead of dominators, we have a good chance of finding that unclaimed mountain top. Just a thought.
Tower vs. mountain is promising.
In The Four Loves, CS Lewis says repeatedly "The highest does not stand without the lowest."
Think about tower vs. mountain:
The tower's peak stands alone; it is not accompanied by lower peaks.
The mountain rises gently and naturally, the peak accompanied by the entire ridge line.
https://youtu.be/csou5n_Qud0
My friend Shari, who also commented here, just shared this with me. Martin Shaw also brings up the idea of an inner and outer mountain.
I watched the Martin Shaw video and enjoyed it.
Two things.
Simpsons Paradox. Philosopher and the street porter.
I see how the first one relates (and have linked it) but not the second.