Welcome to The Light, your quiet hour for reflection.
A nineteenth-century poet once wrote that the world is charged with the grandeur of God, shimmering like light off shaken foil. Gerard Manley Hopkins saw beauty everywhere, and yet wondered why so many miss it β distracted, perhaps, by the noise of ordinary living pressing close around us.
That question of attention carries us naturally toward science, where historian Jessica Riskin has been reconsidering the forgotten naturalist Lamarck, whose ideas about life's restless striving were long dismissed. Riskin finds something quietly radical there β the notion that living things are not passive machinery but participants, reaching toward their own becoming.
And from the philosopher Bertrand Russell comes a kind of answer to both β that in our darkest hours, what restores us is rarely the urgent or the practical. We need the useless, he argued. The arts, the sciences pursued for wonder alone, the willingness to feel what we might otherwise armor ourselves against. Learning something. Holding something. Letting it matter.
That's this hour's reflection. Carry the light gently.["https://odb.org/2026/05/15/","https://nautil.us/what-lamarcks-giraffe-got-right-1280790/","https://www.christianpost.com/news/sebastian-gorka-blasts-tucker-carlson-nick-fuentes.html","https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/05/14/bertrand-russell-useless-knowledge/","https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/05/14/on-children-kahlil-gibran/"]
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