Real Monasterio de Santes Creus

Founded in 1168, it sustained monastic life until 1835.

(c) 2018 JMN.

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Santes Creus: Nuria

Nuria is centered and thoughtful at 21. She studies psychology at university and has widely ranging interests. In the gloom of Santes Creus cathedral she and I contemplated skeptically the riotously decorated altarpiece. I asked her if she was familiar with the Plateresque style. She asked where it had flourished. We agreed that the relative simplicity of the Romanesque style was more to our taste. She used the quarter hour or so to make a small sketch in her pad. Later, she took advantage of another brief pause to sketch in the cloister’s courtyard. At supper she said she wanted to share a reflection with her brother Lluis (18) and me. She proceeded to talk about the uneven distribution of wealth and resources among the world’s peoples. She wants to find some good reading on the topic. Lluis made a comment. Nuria nodded pensively, looking impressed, and said, “There’s much truth in what you say.” Then she recapped and refined his remark about the Earth’s not being able to support the demands being made upon it.

(c) 2018 JMN.

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“A Painter in Sound”

www.nytimes.com/2018/11/19/books/review/claude-debussy-stephen-walsh-biography.html

It is not easy to write meaningfully about music without resorting to technical terminology, and the list of those authors who can find accessible language to convey its subtleties to the nonspecialist is depressingly short. Walsh is a deep reader of Debussy’s music with an uncommon ability to translate complex details into words that are precise yet evocative and that are refreshingly free of academic jargon.

(John Adams, “John Adams on Debussy,” NYTimes, 11-20-18)

(c) 2018 JMN.

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Stephen Pinker’s Optimism

nyti.ms/2zhFcMS

Part of human nature allows us to control the other part of our human nature. Even though humans tend to be unreasonable, it can’t be the case that we’re incapable of reason — otherwise, you’d never be able to make the argument that we’re being unreasonable. Even if we tend to backslide to irrationality, that doesn’t mean we should indulge that when we are deliberating how to run a society.

I would say that it’s appreciating the progress that gives us the courage and conviction to try to strive for more progress. History tells us that attempts to make the world better tend to succeed. We’ll never achieve a utopia, but that doesn’t mean we can’t make things a little bit better.

(Stephen Pinker, quoted by Karen Weintraub, “Stephen Pinker Thinks the Future Is Looking Bright,” NYTimes, 11-19-18)

(c) 2018 JMN.

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The Mas: Palm Trimming Day

“Hoy viene el chico de las palmeras.” A beetle called Rynchophorus Ferruguineus is attacking palm trees all around the Mediterranean. Over a million trees have been lost. There is treatment if it’s applied in time, but there are few specialists who ply this dangerous craft. The mas’s trees are under attack but haven’t succumbed.

(c) 2018 JMN.

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The Mas: Lluis

Lluis (18) radiates composure and confidence. He studies Information Technology at university. His program includes mathematics and physics. He likes math, says concepts don’t always come clear right away, but when he dwells sufficiently on them, they’re his. He doesn’t subscribe to the notion that some persons are innately not equipped to understand mathematics. After dark, before supper, Lluis spars vigorously with a punching bag outdoors. It clears his head and relieves stress, he says. At supper, he invariably asks, “Abi (granddad), what did you do today?” He showed me how to play poker (Texas Hold’em) the other night. He gives signs of having considerable experience in the game. Hmmm. We’ve played one hard-fought bout of chess so far. He won. By a hair. I’d be glad to have Lluis at my side in any kind of a pinch.

(c) 2018 JMN.

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The Mas: Palm Trimming Day

“Hoy viene el chico de las palmeras.” A beetle called Rynchophorus Ferruguineus is attacking palm trees all around the Mediterranean. Over a million trees have been lost. There is treatment if it’s applied in time, but few specialists ply this dangerous craft. The mas’s trees are under attack but haven’t succumbed.

(c) 2018 JMN.

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The Mas: Reus 10:28

Yesteryear’s recreation. JMN.

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The “Mas” (Farm)

The “mas” dates from 1901. It’s a walled compound high in the northern reaches of Reus (Catalonia, Spain). In former times it would have been rural or semi-rural; now it’s an island of serenity in a bustling urban setting: “Mas Querol.” The house with its tower presides over a botanical effusion: plane trees, firs, Holm oaks (encinas), other-kind-of oaks (robles), palms, lemons, oranges, figs, plums, quince, strawberries, and plants yet to be identified.

(Cc) 2018 JMN.

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Family Transport

Eduard bosses the well-traveled, 4-wheel drive Audi Quattro over the switchback roads of the Montsant mountains with the commanding zeal of a seasoned rallye enthusiast. One feels G-force as he accelerates into the curves. It’s an experience to be had and to remember as the peaks loom and the valleys plunge. Eduard insists he has never indulged in rallyeing, but his retired Bertone-built, BMW-powered SUV bespeaks a taste for spirited motor cars. My daughter says he picked her up in it for their wedding.

(c) 2018 JMN.

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