Apologies if this dips too far into the metaphysical, but I think this sentiment is an essential aspect of critical theory as I read it:
Sin is evasion of time. In giving way to nostalgia, for example, we flee from time into the past. Evading time is accomplished mainly, however, by constructing worlds — orders of life in which everything has its assigned place, and all events are foreknown if not willed. There are personal worlds, occupied perhaps by only a single individual; and there is also ‘the world,’ the surrounding order of society, treated as objectively knowable, humanly controllable, and morally final. A world is always a kind of fortress against time.
From Glen Tinder’s “The Fabric of Hope: An Essay” via From Andrew Sullivan
Comments 4
Eoin O'Mahony — February 17, 2010
Jose, thank you for this quote this morning. It is not too a dip into the metaphysical and captures exactly where I am right now. The flee from the present is evident all around us and those who wish to preserve the past in some sort of idealist aspic are very powerful.
jose — February 17, 2010
Thanks Eoin....idealistic aspic...I like that.
Jonathan Pfeiffer — February 19, 2010
Whoa, you lost me. :)
Post Modernism on the web « — April 5, 2010
[...] quote from ThickCulture, a bastion of such verbage, who excerpted it from an Andrew Sullivan blog post who yet further [...]