certainly certainty is always out of reach but to ascertain the moment is most certainly the most certain of any other certainty.
ah maestro you got a way with words
I wonder if it was your Jesuit education
Speaking of Jesuits there is an audio book called
A Canticle for Liebowitz. Kind of a classic . Why have so many of my favorite authors suicides I wonder. Even Kerouac too, but he was too good a Catholic and bad a buddhist to do it, so he drank himself to death. Me? I am still smoking
PS
I am not as certain as the guy who quoted Nietzsche
here
My favorite Nietzsche quote might be ...
"Rather like one who, delighting in a divine distraction, or sunken in the seas of his own soul, in whose ear the clock has just thundered with all its force its twelve strokes of noon, suddenly wakes up, and asks himself, "What has in point of fact just struck?" so do we at times rub after-wards, as it were, our puzzled ears, and ask in complete astonishment and complete embarrassment, "Through what have we in point of fact just lived?" further, "Who are we in point of fact?" and count, after they have struck, as I have explained, all the twelve throbbing beats of the clock of our experience, of our life, of our being—ah!—and count wrong in the endeavour. Of necessity we remain strangers to ourselves, we understand ourselves not, in ourselves we are bound to be mistaken, for of us holds good to all eternity the motto, "Each one is the farthest away from himself"—as far as ourselves are concerned we are not "knowers."
Religious Faith and Certainty