September 6, 2020 Dear Dr. Meyer: I had my own thinking on myth recently, in the midst of what I called my shallow pursuits. Aside from randomly searching for things on the internet----mostly about rockets, which for some reason I find comforting and less unenjoyable than other things-----I've been watching or mostly rewatching popular science fiction, like Star Wars. It occurred to me as I was doing this that there is something fundamentally different about our age. Past ages made up myths about the past; we have myths about the future. I wonder if one could pinpoint the time when this shift happened. Marxism, I suppose, is in part a myth about the future, and Jules Verne really began the genre of science fiction (though there were earlier examples). However a good deal of Jules Verne is set in the present, so I would set the origin of the shift to future-myth in the twentieth century, in the 20's and 30's. Incidentally, much of science fiction is of very poor literary quality, with the exception of the Polish author Stanislaw Lem. His Solaris is one of the great books I have read. I am sure there is a direct translation from Polish to German (English-speakers have to make do with a translation to English via the French). It is a short book and a good read, and it touches on subjects I know you are very much concerned with: the possibility of communication, the presence of memory. Your waking up at 7 am is a healthy practice, one I have not been adhering to. I appreciate your wishes for me to be well, but most days I am cowering in bed, more or less, and sleeping fitfully at night. That is not being well. I had a pronounced allergy attack on Wednesday, and since it seemed possibly consistent with Covid I am getting a test tomorrow. Until then I am technically obliged to quarantine. I've seen nobody while down in Boston anyway, but staying inside in this condition feels like solitary confinement. I do wish I knew how to be content with solitude as you are. If I can manage it it will be a very great skill, for then I will not be obliged to make compromises for companionship. Perhaps there has been a bit of an opening today: I had elaborate dreams as I slumbered until noon, and then got up for some reason feeling able to write. So far today I have written ten pages edging into the subject of what happened to me this year, hoping to uncover what I did. It is in the form of a reply to a distant friend. I was tempted to send it to you, but not sure if I should wait until it is in a more complete form. I think I have needed to write this story down for some time, but mostly I did not have the wherewithal. It seems like the step that preposes before doing other things. Perhaps once I have written it I shall have some more understanding, and then I will be able to move on. As I was driving back from the Covid test site yesterday (it was, in the event, not a test, but a screening for the test: tests before tests, and so on ad infinitum), I heard Bach's Fourth Orchestral Suite on the radio. I realized then why I was avoiding music and literature all this summer; Bach did touch me (I had been afraid that music would not touch me at all), but as I was touched, I felt a very great pain. I have stuck to shallow pursuits to avoid this pain. Is it, perhaps, the pain of having a loving heart? I loved David Gonsalves, and suffered greatly for this love. I am not sure that I loved Michael Ochoa, but I certainly felt an affection for him, one that turned ultimately to dread and a sense of betrayal. So perhaps my anomie is utterly reasonable: since Bach is capable of inducing love, perhaps I must avoid Bach until I have figured out how to love safely. But perhaps Bach was also the first step: Bach one day, and my ability to write returns the next. Nick. On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 9:48 PM Ernst Meyer wrote: Dear Nikola, Thank you for your letter. I think of you often. I hope that my inference that you are managing, is not overly optimistic. I am well satisfied with my solitary existence - thinking, reading, writing, eating and sleeping, to bed at 9 p.m. and up at 7 a.m. I have been subjecting to critical review my thesis that history is myth. Probably better said that both history and myth are fiction; that history is plausible fiction, and that myth is implausible fiction. I've started to read a five volume "Deutsche Geschichte im 19.Jahrhundert (German History, 19th Century) very elegantly written over a period of 30 years by a talnted high school teacher Franz Schnabel, books that I bought 70 years ago to console myself with me medical school curriculum. I haven't read it until now. Better late than never. Please give my regards to your parents. EJM On 09/05/2020 07:43 PM, Nikola Chubrich wrote: > Dear Dr. Meyer: > > I hope you are well. I have had so little to say and think that I > haven't called. I'd like to say I feel something stirring though. > > I wish so much to think about mathematics, but I am not very good at it. > > In the meantime I waste time with shallow pursuits and mere sleep. > > Nikola.