tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21999805.post344456310793222107..comments2024-03-28T19:56:32.848-05:00Comments on Anecdotal Evidence: `It True, Rightful and Final Owner' Patrick Kurphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08436175583386298032noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21999805.post-62345608732357120012015-08-18T17:53:13.589-05:002015-08-18T17:53:13.589-05:00> "To me it seems to possess an obvious or...> "To me it seems to possess an obvious organic unity [that word again], that of my whole life"<br /><br />Yes indeed. Some libraries, though, come to their end before their proper time, like a child that dies before its parents. This was mine:<br /><br />http://rjohara.net/johnsonia-fire/Robert J.https://www.blogger.com/profile/12937384579138400443noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21999805.post-19265895294570402412015-08-18T04:00:42.790-05:002015-08-18T04:00:42.790-05:00I like your "one could start with any book on...I like your "one could start with any book on my shelves and find one's way thematically to any other". I find my library accumulates in a curious way. To an observing physicist the career from one book to another might resemble Brownian motion in a cloud chamber- apparently random. In fact each book I read, through a casual remark or reference contained, always sparks my interest in another book or author. So, I guess its more like a chain reaction or nuclear fusion (fission? I'm not a physicist). Endless appetites are sparked and never satisfied. Blogs like yours add to the mix!Subbuteohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11263202102536057266noreply@blogger.com