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LETTER: BAZELOW TO Blücher [1969?]
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Heinrich:
Once you asked me if someday I hoped to write books on philosophy
and I remember having told you that I did not know if I would ever
be able to write a book but that what I wanted most in my life was
to be able to keep certain ideas alive, even if this could only
be in my own very small way.
It was with great disappointment that I came to discover that
despite the many years of your life that you devoted to teaching
at Bard, there exists no transcripts of any of your lectures or
anything you have ever written with the exception of several tapes
which were made several years ago of your Commons [sic] Course lectures.
These tapes however are in danger of being destroyed and I discovered
that several of them were damaged in parts almost beyond repair.
It was for these reasons that I have gathered togethered [sic]
the tapes as well as my lecture notes from last years Senior Symposium
and transcribed them onto paper, a task which I hope to complete
by the time of my graduation next year. After the notes have been
transcribed they will be gathered together into six small volumes
and placed in the philosophy section of the Bard Library so that
future generations of Bard Students will be able to read them, and
be able to share in the asking of those questions, the nature of
which alone justifies our existence in this universe.
What follows here is the first of those small volumes, the
transcription of my notes which were taken during your lectures
of last year. The ideas that you brought forth then have gone through
many moments of reflection in my own mind. Some of them I came to
feel were true in the light of my own experience; others I have
come to disagree with, and still others I must wait since their
meaning I do not entirely understand; and yet I hope that the existence
of these small volumes will give other students the chance to take
pause for reflection. Perhaps it may in the end be true that any
expression of the deepest and most genuine questioning spirit in
man must be destined to failure or at the most deafness at the hands
of the majority of mankind, and yet I think it significant that
the words of all those who have given voice to this spirit be kept
alive and that we must constantly, as Camus believed, "when
in the presence of such a human being tell him from our hearts that
he is not alone and that his efforts are not meaningless."
It is with a feeling of the deepest gratitude in having been
one of your students and the consciousness of the many inspiring
as well as angry and frustrated moments that your ideas have given
me, that I would wish for you to accept this gift.
Sincerely
Alexander Bazelow
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