Finished Soleri's
The Bridge Between Matter & Spirit is Matter Becoming Spirit. It seemed to be a collection of essays he wrote over the course of 11 years, they definitely stand better together than separate. Some of the reading was very enjoyable but near the end it felt like he was writing in such large ambiguities it was hard at times to see what he was getting at. Other essays were much more well developed. There's a .pdf available on archive.org @
https://archive.org/details/bridgebetweenmat00sole . It was an interesting look at how to cultivate "spirit", and culture through a society as opposed to a more individualistic approach. Which went along really well with Watt's
The book on the taboo against knowing who you are which I had just finished prior, I think I'm going to read
The Way of Zen next as I really enjoy Watt's writing style, very palatable/easy reading.
Anyone read Soleri's by chance, or one of the specific essays in it? I want to see how
The City in the image of Man compares with the collection of essays.
Turns out, about 2 months ago, Soleri's daughter came forward about Soleri's sexual misconduct with her in her youth, you can read the article on Medium:
https://medium.com/@soleri/sexual-abuse ... ecb8e99648Where do you all fall on the line about reading authors who have moral issues in their background?
I'll probably grab a copy of
The Death and Life of... because I've been really interested in the urban planning/ecological footprint stuff as of late.