Remembering One's Ignorance

August 23, 2003

By Kyle Gann (my first blog entry)

"There are no accidents, there are no coincidences," wrote Jung. The day after Douglas McLennan asked me to consider starting a blog, I was moving some books, by chance including Thoreau's Walden. Usually when I run across it I can't resist starting to reread it. I'm now 17 years older than Thoreau was when he wrote Walden, and while he still strikes me as a brilliantly fresh, goodhearted, and highly literate fellow, as a more experienced writer than he was then I can now afford to condescend to some of his flights of verbal fancy that sound ineptly imitated from some passage stored in his memory. Still, he can stop me dead in my tracks with a phrase, and he did it this time with: "How can he remember well his ignorance - which his growth requires - who has so often to use his knowledge?"

I closed the book and thought of my life, and of the proposed blog. In my nose-to-the-grindstone youth I studied voraciously, but in recent years, from economic necessity, my ratio of knowledge gained to knowledge dispensed has shifted dramatically toward the latter. I have made a career from trading my knowledge for money, recycling some of it so often that I cringe to pass it over the counter again. One thing I do not need a blog for is to emit yet another steady stream of the facts about music that I have stored up over 30-odd years of fanatical collecting. What I do need is a place to think out loud, to run up against the ideas of others, to quote striking passages that I'm not sure I agree with, and to foment feedback. Another thing I need a blog for is space, enough column inches to explore a subject thoroughly and truthfully, a commodity that has been quickly diminishing in my various print outlets. So while I take too much pride in my writing skills to go public with an unedited stream of consciousness, I hope the reader will indulge a preponderance of inconclusive cogitation - and give me room to remember well my ignorance, which my growth requires.

Copyright 2003 by Kyle Gann

Return to the PostClassic Blog Archive

Return to the Kyle Gann Home Page



return to the home page