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A batch of the best highlights from what Todd's read, .

Let me propose a radically simplified version of that structure, something that might serve as a kind of template or Ur-recipe for dishes organized around the element of water: * Dice some aromatic plants * Sauté them in some fat * Brown piece(s) of meat (or other featured ingredient) * Put everything in a pot * Add some water (or stock, wine, milk, etc.) * Simmer, below the boil, for a long time

Cooked

Michael Pollan

Christian ethics, as a cultivation of those virtues needed to keep us on the journey, are the ethics of revolution. Revolutionaries, whose goal is nothing less than the transformation of society through revolution, have little patience with those among them who are self-indulgent, and they have no difficulty disciplining such people. The discipline they demand of themselves is a means of directing the others to what is true and good. Having no use for such bourgeois virtues as tolerance, open-mindedness, and inclusiveness (which the revolutionary knows are usually cover-ups that allow the powerful to maintain social equilibrium rather than to be confronted and then to change), revolutionaries value honesty and confrontation—painful though they may be.

Resident Aliens

Stanley Hauerwas & William H. Willimon

The more aware we are of our basic paradigms, maps, or assumptions, and the extent to which we have been influenced by our experience, the more we can take responsibility for those paradigms, examine them, test them against reality, listen to others and be open to their perceptions, thereby getting a larger picture and a far more objective view.

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

Stephen R. Covey

...catch up on these, and many more highlights