http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/04/its_the_little_things_remembering_western_civilization.html



April 11, 2016
It's the Little Things: Remembering Western Civilization

By Susan D. Harris <http://www.americanthinker.com/author/susan_d_harris/>

Classical music is a pinnacle of Western civilization that always evokes in
me a feeling of prideful human achievement.  Now, seeing Western
civilization seeming to scramble in disarray, I sometimes feel a bit
mournful when I listen to the great composers.  As ISIS tries to drag us
into the dark days of bloody beheadings and jihad, and the globalists push
us toward a social justice that would have us all grubbing in the Ganges
equally, I struggle to hold onto the beautiful things that used to define
us.

Mendelssohn is a classical composer who lifts me to another realm – a kind
of escapism resulting from the composer's passion and the symbiotic
relationship it forms with my cerebral ear.

Recently, however, while listening to the Hebrides Overture
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcogD-hHEYs> (Fingal's Cave), I rejected
the mournful contemplation of our current cultural demise and mused instead
on those small, seemingly inconsequential moments that affected Western
advancement.

Closing my eyes, I could see Vincent van Gogh's hand as it made circular
swirling motions while composing "The Starry Night."

I could hear Ludwig van Beethoven working out the beginning strains of Für
Elise, defiantly creating though nearly deaf.

I watched as Albert Einstein had the "happiest thought
<http://phys.org/news/2015-11-einstein-decades-longer-gravity.html>" of his
life while sitting in a patent office in Bern, Switzerland, pondering how a
falling person would feel weightless...and setting his mind to unraveling
the profound force of gravity.

I could see Coney Island in 1904, as 90,000
<http://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/luna-park/history> visitors per day filed
into Luna Park, anxiously anticipating how the world would change after
seeing the "Electric Eden" illuminated by a million incandescent light
bulbs.

In a blur of sunlight, I could see John Keats sitting under a plum tree in
the spring of 1819, hearing the song from the nightingale's nest above him,
moving him to set pen to paper.

Over in Stratford-upon-Avon, I could see Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison, touring <https://www.monticello.org/site/jefferson/john-adams>
Shakespeare's home together and forming a bond that, though tested, would
last a lifetime and help forge a country.

Farther back in time, the Roman emperor Constantine stands with mouth agape
as he sees a cross of light in the heavens, changing the course of
Christendom.

Johannes Gutenberg is slapping his hand on an old wooden table in a "by
golly, I'm gonna do it" moment, deciding to use his mechanical moveable
type creation to print the Bible.

There was Michelangelo in 1512, sighing with exhausted arms, as he made has
last brushstrokes for "The Creation of Adam" in the Sistine Chapel.

Farther on in my journey I saw Martin Luther looking for a nail to hammer
his 95 Theses to the door of Castle Church in Wittenberg.

Alas, the music did not last any longer than to accommodate those few
thoughts.

The music stops, and I am back in a harsh reality.  I see anarchy on the
roads, crime in our streets, drugged and drunken masses.  I see
foul-mouthed, vulgar young adults who have no larger concept of where they
came from or where they're going.  Indeed, they mistakenly think Western
civilization, America in particular, is waiting breathlessly to embrace
their falsely fresh concepts of failed utopias.  They believe that
everything that came before them was a terrible mistake; it's up to them to
expose and destroy the hypocrisy of Democrat ideals, capitalism, and
Judeo-Christian morality.

It makes one wonder how so many people can be so easily misguided.  It's
like riding 50 miles on a horse and then being persuaded to shoot him
because it's better to walk.

As far back as 1997, an experimental audience was asked to listen to a musical
piece
<http://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/11/science/undiscovered-bach-no-a-computer-wrote-it.html?pagewanted=all>
and concluded that it was written by J.S. Bach when in reality it had been
composed by a computer.  A computer program called EMI (Experiments in
Musical Technology) had the "ability to scan pieces by famous composers,
automatically distill some of their essence and then churn out imitations
of the work."  Today, artificial neural networks (imitating how the brain
works) and algorithms can generate their own music – creating new
compositions or predicting the outcome of an existing one based on minimal
input.  That's right: you no longer need Beethoven to create the Ode to Joy
<http://web.mit.edu/felixsun/www/neural-music.html>.

Along the same lines, you don't need van Gogh or Rembrandt anymore,
either.  ING, Microsoft, and several other businesses recently debuted a
new Rembrandt painting
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3527420/Computer-paints-new-Rembrandt-analysing-hundreds-portraits-recreates-brush-strokes-using-3D-printer.html>
created by an A.I. (artificial intelligence) while recreating brush strokes
using a 3D printer.

Will neural networks and algorithms be able to analyze Einstein's theories
and progress to a new discovery that he himself could have made had his
mortal coil not disintegrated at 75?  Will A.I. be able to create a new
Shakespeare sonnet that the bard himself would be proud of?

It is Western civilization that has advanced the world and continues to do
so – so why are we disintegrating culturally?  Can we not advance our
spirit, our souls?  Could it be that the indomitable human spirit that has
been the cornerstone of Western civilization has rendered itself obsolete
due to its own advances?

If so, the teeming masses must be cared for as wards of the state as they
willingly give up original thought and creativity.  As they do so, it
becomes easier for them to dismiss cultural achievements of the past, as
well as the impetus for those achievements.  Once artificial intelligence
takes over our smartphones
<https://www.technologyreview.com/s/539056/artificial-intelligence-that-makes-your-smartphone-smarter/>,
will our creativity and comprehension continue to fall as we ourselves
become robots, simple vessels for thumb-punched data in/data out?

Will we not beg the government to care for us as we lose the ability to
think independently?  Could that be the goal?

One has to wonder, being so advanced, why we can't load America's founding
documents into an artificial neural network and project the outcome and
evolution of their ideals.  By the same token, could we not load data from
Socialist, Communist, or Fascist countries and predict the outcome for
similar emerging states?

Better yet, maybe some artificial intelligence could tell us why
predominantly Muslim countries and areas governed by sharia law are
perpetually truculent, misogynistic, dangerous hell-holes.

If we're so damned smart that we can outwit Beethoven and Rembrandt, why
can't we convince our increasingly dumbed down, brainwashed populace that
we need to preserve Western civilization and not embrace and accept
cultures that not only refuse to assimilate, but are intent on destroying
us?

We've battled our way through the world wars, but nothing can compare
<http://popten.net/2010/05/top-ten-most-evil-dictators-of-all-time-in-order-of-kill-count/>
to thousands of years of man's inhumanity to man and the ongoing parade of
suffering and slaughter in the East.

Why then, when we've reached our greatest peak of academic, technological,
scientific, and economic prosperity, must we commit suicide to honor a
globalist
agenda
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/31/world/middleeast/united-nations-ban-ki-moon-syria-refugees.html?_r=0>
and be forced to absorb cultures that have done nothing but salivate for
the death of the West?


__._,_.___
------------------------------
Posted by: "Beowulf" <[email protected]>
------------------------------


Visit Your Group
<https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/grendelreport/info;_ylc=X3oDMTJmNTlvMTNjBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE0BGdycElkAzIwMTk0ODA2BGdycHNwSWQDMTcwNTMyMzY2NwRzZWMDdnRsBHNsawN2Z2hwBHN0aW1lAzE0NjAzOTE0MDY->


[image: Yahoo! Groups]
<https://groups.yahoo.com/neo;_ylc=X3oDMTJlY3Y0Y28yBF9TAzk3NDc2NTkwBGdycElkAzIwMTk0ODA2BGdycHNwSWQDMTcwNTMyMzY2NwRzZWMDZnRyBHNsawNnZnAEc3RpbWUDMTQ2MDM5MTQwNg-->
• Privacy <https://info.yahoo.com/privacy/us/yahoo/groups/details.html> •
Unsubscribe <[email protected]?subject=Unsubscribe>
• Terms of Use <https://info.yahoo.com/legal/us/yahoo/utos/terms/>

__,_._,___

-- 
-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to