It is we who are lost

Through naming comes knowing; we grasp an object, mentally, by giving it a name—hension, prehension, apprehension. And thus through language create a whole world, corresponding to the other world out there. Or we trust that it corresponds. (Or perhaps, like a German poet, we cease to care, becoming more concerned with the naming than with the things named; the former becomes more real than the latter. And so in the end the world is lost again. No, the world remains—those unique, particular, incorrigibly individual junipers and sandstone monoliths—and it is we who are lost. Again. Round and round, through the endless labyrinth of thought—the maze.)

—Edward Abbey, Desert Solitaire, p 288-289, Ballantine Books, New York, 1971.

Posted by Wei@13:02 November 4th, 2005 CST in Uncategorized | Permalink | Trackback.

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