Tuesday 4th January 2011

All the things that are big

are

in the storm

                                                                                   Martin Heidegger

How many storms in the life of Jesus

What a storm of light in His death

“Storm” in German: Sturm, the fatal word of the great German Romanticism. Heidegger modifies Plato, who says instead:«Everything which is big is in danger», that is at risk. It risks to die.

Heideggerian intuitions

1) “The thought

Starts only when

We have learned

That such a magnified thing

That is the reason

Is the worst enemy

Of the thought”

2) The thought

is

“poem that thinks”

The ordinary saying of men

Cannot be enough
It is necessary to turn to

«the saying that mainly says,

The saying of those who mainly risk»

The «most saying saying»

The song of the poets

3) Every science is philosophy

Whether it knows and wants or not

Wednesday 29th December 2010. Morning. Vision. D. Armando Dorsi, dead priest from Monopoli, offers to take him to the last path. The demons react calling d. Armando del “fool” and “dickhead”.

Sunday 2nd January 2011. Morning. Vision. The carthusian concelebrates with two dead priests, of whom one close friend, d. Mario Pinto.

The fundamental question of philosophy

Is not

“Why the Being and not the Nothing?”

but

what is the Being

                                                                                            the Prophet

Physical attacks from Satan. Hot water bottle strangely broken. Flooded mattress. Pushed to fall on his back. He falls on the backchair luckily open.

Satan

Wants the prophet to die or commit suicide.

Wednesday 5th January 2011

Epiphany’s eve

160 days

Of Eucharistic sustenance

And following fast

Solid and pharmacological

We seriously know things

As beings

But we do not know them in practice

Unlike the angels,

Science

Only gets their phenomenal side

And describes it

Science is Phenomenology

Is not Noumenica

                                                                                      The Prophet

This article is available in Italian too