(urth) Fwd: Babbiehorn?: Was: a sincere question mostly for roy
David Stockhoff
dstockhoff at verizon.net
Sat Nov 19 08:06:19 PST 2011
On 11/19/2011 10:50 AM, James Wynn wrote:
> On 11/19/2011 9:09 AM, David Stockhoff wrote:
>> Seems to me that whereas spirit, mind, and body are clear divisions
>
> I'm not so sure they are and this appears to be a definite interest
> for Wolfe.
> When a person suffers a stroke his personality sometimes changes. What
> will heaven be like when we leave our physical memories behind
> (remember Wolfe is not a materialist). Some people claim to remember
> former lives. How does that work? Wolfe is having the Narrator
> remember but not remember.
>
> And as I said, Wolfe is investigating the Incarnation here. And he's
> not all that sure about it himself. Orthodox theology rejects the idea
> of Christ as God "hiding out" in a human body because it makes the
> scene at Lazarus's tomb and his prayer at Gethsemane and his "My God,
> my God" statement just theater. And yet you have that foreshadowing of
> Horn's childhood with the puppet...and that's just the opposite. I
> think it is a mistake to think that just because Wolfe writes novels
> investigating identity that he has this idea in his mind of how it works.
OK. But he has to have at least a recognizable basic mechanism, even if
the details are fuzzy.
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