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In reply to the discussion: Is God all in our heads--a product of brain chemistry? [View all]Jim__
(14,570 posts)3. All the Light We Cannot See.
The analogy with the radio made me recall this book, All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr, written in 2014. It won the Pulitzer Prize. It's a book about World War II and a French girl, Marie-Laure, who goes blind when she is a young child, and an impoverished German boy, Werner Pfennig, who grows up in an orphanage. Werner finds an old broken radio and from it he learns all about radio technology. I'm not sure how this paragraph will read to people who haven't read the book, but this is from near the end, years after the war, Marie-Laure is walking with her grandson Michel:
People walk the paths of the gardens below, and the wind sings anthems in the hedges, and the big old cedars at the entrance to the maze creak. Marie-Laure imagines the electromagnetic waves traveling into and out of Michel's machine, bending around them, just as Etienne used to describe, except now a thousand times more crisscross the air than when he lived - maybe a million times more. Torrents of text conversations, tides of cell conversations, of television programs, of e-mail, vast networks of fibre and wire interlaced above and beneath the city, passing through buildings, arcing between transmitters in Metro tunnels, between antennas atop buildings, from lampposts with cellular transmitters in them, commercials for Carrefour and Evian, and prebaked toaster pastries flashing into space and back to earth again. I'm going to be late and Maybe we should get reservations? and Pick up avocados and What did he say and ten thousand I miss yous, fifty thousand I love yous, hate mail and appointment reminders and market updates, jewelry ads, coffee ads, furniture ads flying over the warrens of Paris, over the battlefields and tombs, over the Ardennes, over the Rhine, over Belgium and Denmark, over the scarred and ever-shifting landscapes we call nations. And is it so hard to believe that souls might also travel these paths? That her father and Etienne and Madame Manec and the German boy named Werner Pfennig might harry the sky in flocks, like egrets, like terns, like starlings? That great shuttles of souls might fly about, faded but audible if you listen closely enough? They flow above the chimneys, ride the sidewalks, slip through your jacket and shirt and breastbone and lungs, and pass out through the other side, the air a library and record of every life lived, every sentence spoken, every word transmitted still reverberating within it.
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Then it would appear that whatever entity is responsible for the defective antennas in some of us...
trotsky
Feb 2019
#13
Sure, it's an asshole sometimes, it's a Zoroastrian conceit that it's perfect
marylandblue
Feb 2019
#18