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Corey Gruber's avatar

Thanks for this thoughtful piece. I’m a hunter, and can affirm that doing a hard thing with uncertain outcomes provides manifold opportunities (mostly via failure) to cultivate the “love of wisdom.” At its best, the experience of serene detachment hunting provides is, in a sense, divine. Someone once described it as standing “for a moment in the oldest silence on earth.”

The German philosopher Josef Pieper, in his “Guide to Thomas Aquinas” noted how the saint achieved the serene separation required to pen his great works. Pieper said his “cloistral seclusion became inner seclusion” and that Aquinas built a “cell for contemplation within the self to be carried about through the hurly-burly of the vita activa (active life).” That’s an apt description, I think, of hunting: a hunter needs a high level of detachment amidst the “hurly-burly” of gear, game and weather to free the mind for intense physical action. I think that’s what José Ortega y Gasset was getting at in “Meditations on Hunting.”

Herodotus noted “Of all men's miseries the bitterest is this: to know so much and to have control over nothing.” That’s the hunter’s life in a nutshell. You gather information, visualize, practice and prepare, yet it all boils down to how much control you can wrest for the serene second it takes to release the arrow or squeeze the trigger.

I once had a Great Horned Owl alight on a branch not three feet from my head while hog hunting one night in Georgia. We spent 45 minutes intently watching the same bait pile and sharing a philosophy.

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Sam Alaimo's avatar

This is excellent Jesse. I rarely recommend books for others to read because everyone is so strapped for time, but Byung-Chul Han's "The Transparency Society" is 45 pages long and addresses, tangentially, the exact problem you are outlining here. I'm a quarter of the way through it and it is staggering. It may help you evolve your own thinking here. Loved this piece.

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