2023-01-02 ------------------------------------------------------------------ "The Soul's Code" by James Hillman is full of quoteworthy material but I am too lazy to type it all up. Here's something that sort of encapsulates the book's message (minus the notion of the daimon which you can find in the phlog post "Daimon") He is referring to the American culture with the first question. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote: Why is the exceptional suspect? Do we resist it because we fear inspiration, conceiving it to be an elitist condition of the private mind, privileging communication with spirits over community of peers? And what about a culture that imagines inspiration to be asocial - will it not cling ever more tenaciously to uninspired mediocrity? Let us not forget that societies are elevated and rewarded by those who are inspired: the emergency nurse; the teacher of the year; the basketball guard who arcs a perfect three-pointer. The inspired moment does not invalidate the team, but belongs to the context of the team and to its wider hometown public. To sink the shot in the final second and thereby save a crucial game is not merely an isolated heroic act. It reconstitutes the hero itself within an archetypal context: The hero is the one who performs inspired deeds for the glory of the city and its gods. Our civilization's egocentric, competitive notions of inspired actions make us miss their social service. "Inspiration" means simply "inbreathing the spirit," not "exaltation of the spirited." ------------------------------------------------------------------