The End

Day 361 of A Year of War and Peace

In the first case it was necessary to renounce the consciousness of an unreal immobility in space and to recognize a motion we did not feel; in the present case it is similarly necessary to renounce a freedom that does not exist, and to recognize a dependence of which we are not conscious.

So Leo Tolstoy concludes his great novel. Because of course any sane man would end his epic nineteenth century tale of love and loss and strife and joy set against the backdrop of the Napoleonic Wars with an extended expatiation on Copernican physics and scientific historiography. That’s just Novel Writing 101 right there. All joking aside, perhaps this ending is the perfect ending for our purposes. What Tolstoy is saying is that we must abandon old ways of thinking if those ways of thinking no longer stand to reason. And isn’t that what we’ve been working on this year? Hasn’t our project been a project of self-improvement by means of literary and philosophical reflection on the lives of Tolstoy’s characters? Haven’t we seen the errors of our ways in the similar follies of Natasha, Pierre, Nikolai, Marya and Prince Andrei? Haven’t we thought about new ways to address the vicissitudes of life and perhaps avoid the many existential pitfalls those characters fell into?

That’s been the idea anyway. I hope it’s helped.

Thank you for reading with me.

DAILY MEDITATION