Monday, November 21, 2011

Great Living Filipino Thinkers, In Their Own Words 1: Excerpts from the Diary of a Bargain-Book Addict

So you think the word 'Filipina' means maid? Well, think again. For all of you who reached this blog looking for  bargain Filipinas --whether Filipina maids or hot Filipina bodies at bargain basement prices -- well, this is for you! You should also know that Filipinas/Filipinos are also among the world's most efficient people -- on the energy from eating really small pieces of fish and a cup of rice, we can spew out great thoughts! Ha! 

As proof, starting today I am going to splice into my blog short pieces that together make what I like to call Great Living Filipino Thinkers, In Their Own Words. These are excerpts from, and links to, the personal blogs of Filipino thinkers who are living today.

Today's thoughts are those of Romel Regalado Bagares, the Executive Director for the Manila-based Center for International Law, a non-profit engaged in strategic human rights litigation. Bagares  is one of the lawyers representing the families of 14 journalists who perished in the Ampatuan Massacre, said to be the worst single attack on press freedom in recorded history. The anniversary of the massacre will be commemorated on Nov. 23. Bagares also lectures on international law at the Lyceum Philippines University College of Law. Romel’s personal blog is at http://sanpedrostreet.wordpress.com/

Excerpts from the Diary of a Bargain-Book Addict.

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"But perhaps, I digress. After all, we’re talking of bargain books here. Still I think just as well of the famed library at the ancient city of Alexandria which, in the grandeur of its time, was the scale against which the intellectual wealth of other nations and races was measured. One legend - almost surely false, notes Harvard Professor Stephen Jay Gould in his book Eight Little Piggies: Reflections on Natural History (P215) – that the library was still intact when Muslim invaders captured the city in the seventh century. The library, built by descendants of Alexander the Great about 2,000 years ago, housed the largest collection of books in the ancient world – more than 700,000 volumes – including the works of Homer and the library of Aristotle. Historians tell us that Euclid and Archimedes studied there, as did Eratosthenes, the first mathematician to calculate the diameter of the earth."

  Bust of Aristotle. Marble, Roman copy after a ...

 "Or am I just taking my reading habits too seriously? There are times when, having finished a book, I fling it to the floor, feeling exhausted and used up. A certain guilt overwhelms me, indeed, a “complete distaste for words,” all at the thought that in the end, knowledge becomes puffed up and the wisdom of this world is mere vanity, “a chasing after the wind,” in the words of Ecclesiastes."


"I open my Bible to the New Testament. “Where is the wise man? Where is the scholar? Where is the philosopher of this age,” asks the apostle Paul in his first epistle to the Corinthian Christians. “Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?” "A certain mawkishness. The computer’s thesaurus lists the following synonyms: sentimental drivel, mush, sentimentalism, maudlin act, gush, affectation, exaggerated sentiment, excessive sentiment. But no sooner had I promised myself not to indulge in yet another buying spree than I’d find myself inside yet another Booksale outlet, poring over the books it has to offer, wishing I have all the money in the world to satisfy my cravings for words. It’s as if my day by day struggle with words as a newspaper reporter wasn't enough!"

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