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Top 50 Songs

(In No Particular Order)

1) Folkloric Feel – Apostle of Hustle
2) Neighborhood # 1 – Arcade Fire
3) Stranger in a Strange Land – U2
4) Your Ex-Lover is Dead - Stars
5) Lovers in a Dangerous Time – Barenaked Ladies
6) Bad / Where the Streets Have No Name (live) – U2
7) Love, Bricks and Guns – Betablokka
8) Hopeless – The Trews
9) Friday I’m in Love – The Cure
10) Helicopter – Bloc Party
11) Letters to God – Boxcar Racer
12) Anthems of a Seventeen Year Old Girl – Broken Social Scene
13) Guilty Cubicles – Broken Social Scene
14) What The Snowman Learned About Love - Stars
15) Pacing the Cage – Bruce Cockburn
16) See You Soon – Coldplay
17) B;lack Swan - Thom Yorke
18) Calendar Girl - Stars
19) Hello, I’m in Delaware – Dallas Green
20) Ashes - Embrace
21) Stay (Wasting Time) – Dave Matthews Band
22) Don’t Waste Your Breath - Pilate
23) Nerves Normal, Breath Normal - Wintersleep
24) Transatlanticism – Death Cab For Cutie
25) We Looked Like Giants – Death Cab For Cutie
26) Croblinst - Wi;lliam Lazarus
27) Gin Soaked Boy – Divine Comedy
28) The District Sleeps Alone Tonight – Postal Service
29) Bittersweet Symphony – The Verve
30) New Planet – Drew
31) Existentialism on Prom Night – Straylight Run
32) Your Hand in Mine – Explosions in the Sky
33) Ahead By A Century – The Tragically Hip
34) High – Feeder
35) This is the Dream of Win and Regine – Final Fantasy
36) Track 3 – From Monuments to Masses
37) Acoustic # 3 – The Goo Goo Dolls
38) How Are You Today – Seize the Day
39) High School – Jeremy Fisher
40) Come On, Teacher – Joel Plaskett
41) Quiet – John Mayer
42) Lola, Stars and Stripes – The Stills
43) Cookie Jar - Jack Johnson
44) I Live to Fall Asleep – The Manic Street Preachers
45) While We Were Hunting Rabbits – Matthew Good Band
46) East Van – Memphis
47) Absinthe Party at the Fly Honey Warehouse – Minus the Bear
48) Bury Me With It – Modest Mouse
49) An Olive Grove Facing the Sea – Snow Patrol
50) The Protagonist Suddenly Realizes What He Must Do in the Middle of Downtown Traffic – The Most Serene Republic




Top 40 Books

(In No Particular Order)

1) The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy – Douglas Adams
2) The Restaurant at the End of the World – Douglas Adams
3) Life, the Universe and Everything – Douglas Adams
4) So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish – Douglas Adams
5) Mostly Harmless – Douglas Adams
6) The Unauthorized Autobiography – Lemmony Snicket
7) The Bridge - Ian Banks
8) Discworld - Terry Pratchett
9) Silent Boy – Lois Lowry
10) Sabriel – Garth Nix
11) Lireal – Garth Nix
12) Abhorsen – Garth Nix
13) Brave New World - Huxley
14) Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency – Douglas Adams 15) The Long, Dark Tea Time of the Soul – Douglas Adams
16) Gathering Blue – Lois Lowry
17) The Maestro – Tim Whynne Jones
18) The Golden Compass - Philip Pullman
19) The Curious Incident of the Dog In the Night-Time – Mark Haddon
20) The Salmon of Doubt – Douglas Adams
21) The Heart is a Sleeping Beauty – Wim Wenders
22) War of the Worlds – H.G Wells
23) The Giver – Lois Lowry
24) Borstal Boy – Brendan Behan
25) Titus Groan – Mervyn Peake
26) Gormenghast – Mervyn Peake
27) The Subtle Knife - Philip Pullman
28) My Dog Skip – Willie Morris
29) I Seem to be a Verb – R. Buckminster Fuller
30) The Little Prince - Exupery
31) The Amber Spyglass - Philip Pullman
32) The Day of the Triffids - Wyndham
33) Confessions of an Irish Rebel – Brendan Behan
34) The Series of Unfortunate Events – Lemmony Snicket
35) Stardust - Neil Gaiman
36) Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen
37) Consider Her Ways - John Wyndham
38) The Medium is the Massage – McLuhan and Fiore
39) Complicated Kindness – Miriam Toews
40) To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee




Top 30 Bands

(In No Particular Order)

1) Jack Johnson
2) Arcade Fire
3) Barenaked Ladies
4) Thom Yorke
5) Broken Social Scene
6) Dallas Green
7) Coldplay
8) Death Cab For Cutie
9) Divine Comedy
10) John Mayer
11) The Decemberists
12) Explosions in the Sky
13) Final Fantasy
14) From Monuments to Masses
15) Iron and Wine
16) Wintersleep
17) The Manic Street Preachers
18) Matthew Good Band
19) William Lazarus
20) Minus the Bear
21) Modest Mouse
22) The Most Serene Republic
23) Pilate
24) The Postal Service
25) Snow Patrol
26) Stars
27) The Stills
28) People For Audio
29) Radiohead
30) U2




Top 20 Movies

(In No Particular Order)

1) The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
2) Rory O’Shea Was Here
3) Supersize Me
4) Spellbound
5) You and Me and Everyone We Know
6) Million Dollar Hotel
7) Cannes Ad Festival Award Winners 04 / 05
8) Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
9) Dr. Strangelove
10) Gattaca
11) Big Fish
12) Go Furthur
13) 28 Days Later
14) Elephant
15) The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
16) Finding Neverland
17) Garden State
18) The Delicate Art of Parking
19) The Corporation
20) Bowling For Columbine




Top 10 Links

(In No Particular Order)

1) www.toothpastefordinner.com
2) www.bbc.co.uk
3) www.pickuphockey.com
4) Scary Parrot
5) www.familyguyquotes.com
6) www.joshbrownphoto.com
7) Wikipedia
8) Rachel’s Blog
9) KD’s Blog
10) Best record label




Top 5 TV Shows

(In No Particular Order)

1) Arrested Development
2) Rick Mercer's Report
3) Futurama / Bromwell High
4) Hockey Night in Canada
5) Doctor Who

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Sunday, September 24, 2006
Plato Essay

Since the beginning of time, man has wondered about goodness. Philosophers throughout the ages have asked various questions about the nature of goodness, what is right and wrong, how one goes about obtaining happiness, and what basic moral principals are worth following. From early Sophists to modern philosophers such as Emmanuel Levinas, the nature of goodness has been a concern for many key thinkers throughout the ages. Though several philosophers agree on certain principals in this regard, a rich variety of theories have been formulated throughout time, many of which contradict or disagree with one another. This is part of what makes goodness such an interesting topic of discussion and study. Plato, a well-known Greek philosopher, was in awe of the good, and held it in high esteem. Consequently, he studied the nature of goodness at length, and came up with several noteworthy philosophies.

 

Before delving into the origin of goodness and the path to reach it, Plato considered the meaning of the term ‘good’. There are several things in this world that do not have identity by themselves, but are nonetheless omnipresent in all we know and do. “Truth, and goodness, and beauty, are but different faces of the same All” Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, indicated three of such entities. Plato thought of goodness this way - it is everywhere, but exists nowhere on its own; it is a characteristic that defines many things, but it is not an identity in and of itself. After establishing this definition of the good, Plato went on to dictate methods by which one can become closely acquainted with the good. "Until philosophers become kings, or kings become philosophers, humanity would not be free from trouble." Here, Plato underlines his profound belief that philosophers – and all those who contemplate goodness – are the most intelligent and good of all those in society. He believed that rationality and thinking formed the stepping-stones in the path to goodness, and that it was a just and righteous man who chose such a path. “If one devalues rationality, the world tends to fall apart,” said Lars von Trier, illustrating perfectly the sentiments of Plato.

 

Another aspect of his search for the good was the exploration of ‘ideal forms’. Plato was of the opinion that what is real need also be eternal and unchanging, and because our physical world is neither, it must be illusory. To counter this, Plato decided there must be a realm in which all things are unchanging and eternal, wherein lies one ideal, universal, good form of all that we see on earth. The objects, people, animals, plants, and even abstract concepts such as justice and beauty that we encounter everyday are mere imperfect, changing replicas of one unchanging, perfect, universal form. His search for the good, then, did not end at rationality – he felt that good, ideal forms of everything we encounter are present in another realm.

 

To say that Plato was an idealist with no interest in the real world, however, would be a tragically misguided statement. In his best-known work, The Republic, Plato outlines his vision for a utopian society in which the population is separated clearly into three different groups – leaders, soldiers and commoners. The leaders were to be a well-educated, wealthy segment of society, endowed from birth with the power and training to become strong rulers. The soldiers were to cultivate physical strength, ingenuity and craftsmanship, while the commoners were expected to maintain society from the ground up, growing food, building houses, fashioning weaponry for the soldiers, and filling all other necessary positions. In Plato’s vision, no segment of society was any better than the other – the ideal citizen was one who uses his or her talents to the greatest good, be that a ruler who used his rationality to make beneficial decisions for his people, or a commoner who used his skill at farming to cultivate a large harvest to distribute to others for food. Plato felt that this structure of society, though totalitarian in nature, would be strong, organized, and bring the greatest good to the people. Indeed, he dictated that this form of society existed in the realm of all good, ideal, universal forms.

 

As with all philosophers, Plato’s views did not go without contention.  Sophism, a school of philosophy that denied the presence of objective truth (and therefore, objective morals), brought Plato’s theories about the good into question. Is there such thing as a universal ‘good’?  The Sophists argued that there is not, and morals are established on an individual or societal level, through either personal rules to live by, or civil law. Suddenly the good did not seem like the omnipresent, omnipotent entity Plato made it to be.

 

Nonetheless, Plato remained one of the most well-known and highly regarded philosophers of all time. Born in Greece in 428 BC, Plato was one of many students educated by Socrates – a philosopher famous for his persistent berating and questioning of all those he encountered. Because Socrates wrote nothing down, it is difficult to tell which of Plato’s writings are mere dictations of his teacher’s ideas, and which writings contain his genuine thoughts and philosophies. Nevertheless, works of Plato such as ‘The Dialogues’ and ‘The Republic’ are still immensely popular, highly regarded works of philosophical inquiry, remarkable for their relevance to the modern reader. Throughout his life, Plato achieved a great deal, including founding the first Western university, educating Aristotle – who has since become a well-known thinker in his own right, and establishing a great deal of philosophical theories that are very much a part of the modern man’s consciousness. 

 

“No evil can happen to a good man,” said Plato “either in life or after death.” Though Plato’s musings about goodness were often infected with this characteristic idealized language, his theories were rousing and sound in their own right. Goodness is not its own identity, but it is in everything; ideal, good forms of everything exist in a heaven-like realm; there are good ways that we can behave and organize our societies; through contemplation and reason, we can obtain the good. These theories are not simply inspirational, they are useful guidelines by which any man or woman can search for, find, and live through the good. “Good actions give strength to ourselves,” Plato tells us, “and inspire good actions in others.”

 

Posted at 10:16 pm by Dimensions

Posted by Mycaelus @ 03/18/2007 10:06 PM PDT
Ah, Plato. What a wonderful character. I've been reading through his dialogues lately. I've really enjoyed The Republic so far, though I'm only about halfway through it.

Of course, the biggest problem when studying Plato is trying to determine what was his own work and what he was just retelling from what he remembered of the speeches of Socrates. Personally, I think it is all his own work (or near enough), but who's to say for certain? Perhaps that man who finally discovered the secret to time travel...
 

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