"*He who ceases from zeal for writing because of printing is no true lover
of the Scriptures." - *The Abbot Trithemius (1462-1516): The Renaissance of
Monastic Humanism
On Fri, May 3, 2013 at 1:03 PM, Eddan Katz <eddan(a)clear.net> wrote:
The fact that no one else came for Friday Filosophy
gave me some time to
think about the possibility of a different format for the weekly
congregation.
In addition to the time of day being problematic for a meat/(vegan)space
gathering, it seems unnecessarily old-fashioned to confine the conversation
to any particular bounds of time and space anyhow. So, in the Kopimist
spirit of post-neo-luddite optimism -- I propose that Friday begin a
virtual and asynchronous form of worship that can last for whenever you
have the time for it before the sudo-minyan meets on Sunday.
Rather than a particular form of chant, I propose the prayer take the form
of a 'rant'. Due to the nature of this format, Ray gave a wise suggestion
to cap it 2 pages/minutes, [as in 2 minutes of hate (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_Minutes_Hate) in Orwell's 1984.]
Given this week's interest in bookmaking, I thought to start off a rant
with a parable about the good old days when the people who made the books
mattered.
from Robert Darnton's, The Business of Enlightenment: A Publishing History
of the *Encyclopédie* 1775-1800 (1979) ...
pg. 230
...
To see into the life behind a fingerprint in the *Encyclopédie* is to get
some sense of how men moved through the obscure channels of working-class
history, but Bonnemain's thumbmark also can be studied for its
typographical significance. It illustrates a point that is difficult to
appreciate in an age of automation: the printers of the Old Regime left
their mark on their books -- literally, in Bonnemain's case, and
figuratively in all the others. For each workman stamped each page with
something of his individuality, and the quality of his craftsmanship
affected the success of the product.
Bonnemain's fingerprint really resulted from a typographical trick. By
smearing the forms excessively with ink, he and his companion did not have
to pull so hard at the bar of the press to get an impression. But the extra
ink came off on their fingers and smudged the sheets during handling.
...
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