Author Topic: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!  (Read 171497 times)

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Offline flyboy4ual

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1120 on: January 04, 2012, 07:20:43 PM »
Awesome!

Offline tinroofrusted

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1121 on: January 04, 2012, 08:09:24 PM »
Hey Omid, I'm wondering if there is a book you use as your inspiration for topping your pizza's? I love to eat, and enjoy just about any meat/veggie, but have mostly stuck to traditional toppings when making pizza.  I'm looking for a book that may go over some other great pizza combinations.  Any suggestions?  



A few books that I have found inspiring as far as toppings go are:

(1) the Mozza Cookbook, by Nancy Silverton, and  http://tinyurl.com/86yyh5z

(2) Pasta, Pizza & Calzone, by Alice Waters http://tinyurl.com/7xsh7xt

(3) The Figs Table, by Todd English http://tinyurl.com/7jy7a66

(4) The Opera of Bartolomeo Scappi (1570): l'arte et prudenza d'un maestro cuoco
 By Bartolomeo Scappi, Terence Scully, http://tinyurl.com/6ukk7od

Regards,

TinRoof
« Last Edit: January 07, 2012, 10:47:59 AM by tinroofrusted »
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Offline JConk007

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1122 on: January 04, 2012, 10:35:16 PM »
OMG!! Omid I would love to see your Margherita next to the Bruno Margherita. I have had the pleasure to cook in these great ovens, and yes there is a marked difference, as seen in your art , we call pizza!
John
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Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1123 on: January 05, 2012, 06:54:21 AM »
Omid your pizza looks amazing from the SF oven.  It truely looks like the Queen's crown adorned with jewels.  Will you compare the differences in taste and texture to your home oven baked pies?

Ditto.

. . . It is also mouth watering to look at - it must be a triumph for you.

John

Omid, fantastic! My jealousy grows... I need to befriend someone with a WFO so I too can have such an incredible experience. Did your dough live up to your own expectations?

Salvatore

Omid. Bravo! Those are pizzas worthy of a Maria Callas aria and then some. Stunning. You are a master artist. Here are your pictures color corrected. Thank you for the beautiful pizzas! --K :)

Awesome!

OMG!! Omid I would love to see your Margherita next to the Bruno Margherita. I have had the pleasure to cook in these great ovens, and yes there is a marked difference, as seen in your art , we call pizza!
John

Dear friends, I am grateful for your warmth and compassion toward me! THANK YOU!

In my assessment, the Neapolitan oven makes a conspicuous difference in the way it bakes and transforms pizzas. My home gas oven can bake pizzas and imitate what a Neapolitan oven does no better than a parrot can mimic human words—without understanding what they mean! As dear Craig can confirm, the Neapolitan oven enchants the pizzas it bakes. So, dear Chau, to answer your question, both the flavor and texture of the pizza baked in the Ferrara oven were more distinguished and exalted in comparison to the pizza I baked, using the same exact dough from the same batch, at home on the same day after I came back home from Bruno. (See the 2nd to 5th pictures, below, and compare them to the 1st picture, which is the pizza baked in Bruno's Ferrara.) In this particular case, there is no comparison!—the same dough, but two different results. Please, allow me to quote a paragraph from my opening post in this thread:  

§11. THE TEMPLE OF BRICKS
In this endeavor [i.e., making pizzas], the Neapolitan oven is not just a tool, but an indispensable ingredient—the 5th element. . . . The brick oven is the sacred temple where the flavors of the toppings enchant one another for the sake of ornamenting the subtle flavors of the crust. Furthermore, the forno insinuates and blesses the pizza with a flavor and texture that it would not otherwise have. At last, in this marriage ritual, beneath the dome shaped canopy of the forno, form (design) and matter (the 5 elements and attendant toppings) are wedded!—a work of art is born. And, borrowing the words of Johann Joachim Winckelmann, the prominent art scholar of the 18th Century, “In the presence of this miracle of art, I forget all else, and I myself take a lofty position for the purpose of looking upon it in a worthier manner.”


Dear Salvatore, the dough did live up to my expectations. However, if I were to do this again, I would formulate the dough and the dough balls somewhat differently. As you are aware, my Santos mixer's fast fork speed poses a problem, a problem that was manifest in both the dough and the pizza crust. While the crust was soft, its delicateness cunningly disguised a very subtle stiffness therewith.

Dear Pizzablogger, you have done an amazing job with the pictures, which now look true to life! What software did you use to enliven the photos?

Good day gentlemen!

Omid
« Last Edit: January 05, 2012, 03:05:45 PM by Pizza Napoletana »
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
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http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/

Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1124 on: January 05, 2012, 07:06:19 AM »
A few books that I have found inspiring as far as toppings go are:

(1) the Mozza Cookbook, by Nancy Silverton, and  http://tinyurl.com/86yyh5z
(2) Pasta, Pizza & Calzone, by Alice Waters http://tinyurl.com/7xsh7xt
(3) The Figs Table, by Todd English http://tinyurl.com/7jy7a66

Regards,

TinRoof


How fast some people forget! Weren't you supposed to "secure a supply of doves for roasting and boiling" for our next pizzas? :-D

Dear TinRoof, thank you very much for the links. Have a lovely day!

Respectfully,
Omid
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
Vergilius Maro

http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/

Offline tinroofrusted

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1125 on: January 05, 2012, 02:20:39 PM »
How fast some people forget! Weren't you supposed to "secure a supply of doves for roasting and boiling" for our next pizzas?

That's an ingredient you won't find in any of the books I cited.  Thank you for reminding me. Perhaps I can find a game hen or two as a stand-in for doves. 

By the way Omid, I have so much been enjoying your recent posts. Over the New Year's weekend I made pizza for some friends we visited in Cambria, and of course I had to lug all of my equipment and supplies along with me so as to make the pizza according to my standards. My friends were quite amused at how much stuff I brought along, but they did appreciate the final product and ate every bit. Someone commented it was the best pizza they had ever eaten.  I also made them a couple of loaves of bread which we also hungrily devoured.  In any case, upon my return I read your January 3rd response to Danny G about fermentation times (including the photo of us on the edge of the universe) and I forwarded it to my friends as an example of the intense level of care that goes into the art of pizzamaking.

Best regards,

TinRoof
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Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1126 on: January 06, 2012, 02:58:04 PM »
Upon my return I read your January 3rd response to Danny G about fermentation times (including the photo of us on the edge of the universe). . . .

Best regards,
TinRoof


Dear TinRoof, please, do the following:

1. Close all the blinds/curtains in your room;
2. Turn off all the lights;
3. Turn up the volume of the speakers connected to your computer, click on the following link, & come back to this page:
   
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx827bYPBNw" target="_blank" class="aeva_link bbc_link new_win">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx827bYPBNw</a>
 (ODE TO JOY*)
4. Now, click on this link and EXPLORE:
    http://media.skysurvey.org/interactive360/index.html

_________________________________________________
*When Ludvig van Beethoven composed his 9th symphony, sometimes referred to as "Ode to Joy", he was deaf, yet he heard every pulse of the cosmos! I think this is so inspirational—and relative to the art of crafting pizza, as the arts do inform and inspire one another, with one underlying principle: to courageously and fearlessly create, doesn't matter what the odds are! (If you have not seen the movie "The Immortal Beloved", I highly recommend it:
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrWkjTWAYEU&amp;feature=watch-now-button&amp;wide=1" target="_blank" class="aeva_link bbc_link new_win">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrWkjTWAYEU&amp;feature=watch-now-button&amp;wide=1</a>
)

Although Beethoven's compositions were inspired by Mozart's genius (and there are questionable accounts claiming that he actually studied with the master), Beethoven had a different character and frame of mind than Mozart. While the music of Mozart was a magnificent manifestation of the age of individualism (one can think of his opera "Don Giovanni"), Beethoven's music ventured beyond the bounds of that age, beholding the totality, the cosmic. Beethoven's 5th symphony is a response to the individualism that he deemed as delimiting and inadequate. According to the composer, as related by his colleague Anton Schindler, the opening crescendos in the outset of the 1st movement of his 5th symphony represent the "Fate knock[ing] at the door", as though proclaiming: Wake up, you speck of dust! (
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRwqDf3GYgM" target="_blank" class="aeva_link bbc_link new_win">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRwqDf3GYgM</a>
). I do not believe Beethoven tried to negate individualism, but to elevate it to an all-encompassing or cosmic height for the sake of a more all-embracing human consciousness. Perchance, the dialectical moments (individualism oriented toward collectivism) between the two masters can inspire one to strive toward creating a well-balanced pizza, a balance, for instance, between the crust and the toppings it bears! The ultimate impact of the inspiration, in my opinion, will be on one's ethical (being "able") and artistic character (the artist's morality), which are fundamentally productive of the pizzas one creates.

Respectfully,
Omid
« Last Edit: January 10, 2012, 12:09:40 AM by Pizza Napoletana »
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
Vergilius Maro

http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/

Offline tinroofrusted

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1127 on: January 06, 2012, 03:30:48 PM »
Dear TinRoof, please, do the following:

1. Close all the blinds/curtains in your room;
2. Turn off all the lights;
3. Turn up the volume of the speakers connected to your computer, click on the following link, & come back to this page:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx827bYPBNw  (ODE TO JOY*)
4. Now, click on this link and EXPLORE:
    http://media.skysurvey.org/interactive360/index.html

_________________________________________________
*When Ludvig van Beethoven composed his 9th symphony, sometimes referred to as "Ode to Joy", he was deaf, yet he heard every pulse of the cosmos! I think this is so inspirational—and relative to the art of crafting pizza, as the arts do inform and inspire one another, with one underlying principle: to courageously and fearlessly create, doesn't matter what the odds are! (If you have not seen the movie "The Immortal Beloved", I highly recommend it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrWkjTWAYEU&feature=watch-now-button&wide=1)

Respectfully,
Omid


I will do it this weekend!  I did sneak over and had a look at the skysurvey website, and it is quite remarkable. I tried not to look too much so to preserve the surprise effect when accompanied by Ludvig Van. 

Regards,

TinRoof
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Offline Barnstable

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1128 on: January 07, 2012, 06:35:43 AM »
Dear Omid,

I note in a recent post that you have started to ferment/proof your dough in 3 temperature ranges. 1st Chamber - 43 - 49 degrees, 2nd Chamber - 59 - 62 degrees, final phase 72 - 74 degrees. In your experience, is this similar to practice in authentic Neapolitan pizzerias. Can I ask what you see as the purpose/benefits of it?.

Kind Regards,

Barnstable   

Online TXCraig1

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1129 on: January 08, 2012, 01:18:14 PM »
How fast some people forget! Weren't you supposed to "secure a supply of doves for roasting and boiling" for our next pizzas? :-D

I saw this little fellow in my yard today and couldn't help but think of you guys.

Craig
I love pigs. They convert vegetables into bacon.

Offline tinroofrusted

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1130 on: January 08, 2012, 03:05:40 PM »
I saw this little fellow in my yard today and couldn't help but think of you guys.

Craig

He (or she?) is a beauty. Nice photo!

TinRoof

P.S. Thanks for your kind words about my bread.
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Offline pizzablogger

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1131 on: January 09, 2012, 01:57:16 PM »
Dear Pizzablogger, you have done an amazing job with the pictures, which now look true to life! What software did you use to enliven the photos?

Thanks Omid. But you did all the work, the technique on the software merely corrects lighting casts and helps reveal the beauty that was already there.

I use a now terribly outdated version of Adobe Photoshop Elements (version 4).  The color correction technique I utilize, which I got from a book, is interesting in that even a colorblind person could color correct most photos. --K
"It's Baltimore, gentlemen, the gods will not save you." --Burrell

Offline pizzablogger

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1132 on: January 09, 2012, 02:22:19 PM »
Craig, that is a beautiful photo.

Not to be cruel, but a part of me very much thinks that pigeon/dove would probably be quite tasty on a dinner plate!  :)

Pigeon was one of my favorite dishes when I was in Chianti a few years back....with some herbs, cannellini or fava beans and a good bottle of wine, you really don't need much more.
"It's Baltimore, gentlemen, the gods will not save you." --Burrell

Online TXCraig1

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1133 on: January 09, 2012, 03:23:55 PM »
Not to be cruel, but a part of me very much thinks that pigeon/dove would probably be quite tasty on a dinner plate!  :)

Dove is a fine meat. That little guy didn't end up on the dinner plate however.

CL
I love pigs. They convert vegetables into bacon.

Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1134 on: January 09, 2012, 09:04:51 PM »
Dear Omid, I note in a recent post that you have started to ferment/proof your dough in 3 temperature ranges. 1st Chamber - 43 - 49 degrees, 2nd Chamber - 59 - 62 degrees, final phase 72 - 74 degrees. In your experience, is this similar to practice in authentic Neapolitan pizzerias. Can I ask what you see as the purpose/benefits of it?.

Kind Regards,
Barnstable

Dear Barnstable, the post that you are referring to (i.e., Reply #1099 in this thread) was an experiment driven by certain objectives, involving not fresh yeast, which is commonly used in Naples, but a starter culture that is not predominantly used in Naples. As you know, each of the aforementioned fermentative agents requires its own particularized time-frame and range of temperatures for the sake of fermentation and maturation. Although I have heard of some pizzerias using 2 or 3 dough rooms (each with a different range of temperatures) for the purpose of dough management, I do not believe the way I conducted the experiment is similar, at least not in content but in principle, to the way that generally seems to be practiced by Neapolitan pizzerias in Naples. Besides, while the principles of dough management appear to have remained the same, I am cautiously inclined to opine that there is no one fixed way of dough management in Naples. I reason that this is a logical conclusion given the fact that each kitchen is different, with its own set of variables and circumstances.

As the popular idiom goes, "There is more than one way to skin a cat." Perhaps, this expression is true today as much as it was true when the Neapolitan tradition took roots in Naples. The "principles" are primary and the "content" secondary and transient. The room temperatures, micro-organisms' behaviors, and etc. change, but the principles remain the same. And, by knowing the principles (laws), one can gain a leverage over the process of fermentation and maturation. In other words, one needs to be ideologically equipped to bring about the desired physical change; and, of course, sometimes it works the other way around, that a physical change brings about an ideological change in the human subject!

By the way, I enjoyed your post of Sep. 18, 2012:
"I am a sourdough pizza neapolitan man myself and I am in the process of launching a UK pizza business. I would be interested in talking to any other serious and committed enthusiasts who might have similar thoughts. I would describe myself as honest, ethical and passionate about quality pizza. . . ." I wish you excellence and success in your undertaking!

Respectfully,
Omid
« Last Edit: January 10, 2012, 12:08:30 AM by Pizza Napoletana »
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
Vergilius Maro

http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/

Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1135 on: January 09, 2012, 09:16:27 PM »
I saw this little fellow in my yard today and couldn't help but think of you guys.

Craig

How precious? Beautiful picture you shot, thank you!
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
Vergilius Maro

http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/

Offline BurntFingers

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1136 on: January 09, 2012, 09:33:34 PM »
Your beautiful poetic descriptions are exquisite.

I have noticed that you mention Caputo 00 flour.  In that they make a number of different kinds of 00 flour, is it the one in the 25Kg Blue Bag?

 That is the one we use in our WFO. In our opinion the results are slightly better than the Red Bag. We also use a sour dough leavening from the Naples area fed only Caputo Blue 00 flour.
Everyone  should note that Caputo Flours have an expiration date for best flavor results.   
Bill

Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1137 on: January 10, 2012, 03:50:18 PM »
Your beautiful poetic descriptions are exquisite. I have noticed that you mention Caputo 00 flour.  In that they make a number of different kinds of 00 flour, is it the one in the 25Kg Blue Bag?

Dear Bill, thank you! Yes, the referenced Caputo is the "Caputo Pizzeria, Tipo 00" that came in a 25 Kg blue bag. Have a great day!

Regards,
Omid
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
Vergilius Maro

http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/

Offline Barnstable

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1138 on: January 13, 2012, 07:12:34 AM »
Dear Omid,
Thankyou for your reply and Best Wishes. Yes, well spotted. I have an interest in wild yeast sourdough management [non refridgerated]within a commercial setting. I remember Marco Parente mentioning that commercial operators often use 3 different temperature controlled areas at progressive stages of the doughs formation journey. Most trials [ room temp ] I have observed from members practice a ferment temperature and then a proof temperature prior to firing, albeit at various temperatures and duration. I thought, mistakenly, that your introduction of a third temperature phase [ seemingly a progressive ferment ] was maybe born from spending some time `behind the scenes` at Pizzeria Bruno and observing the different dough management that a commercial setting demands. Omid, I will now stop playing detective and go back to making dough!.
Kind Regards,
Barnstable

Offline Pizza Napoletana

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Re: A PHILOSOPHY OF PIZZA NAPOLETANISMO!
« Reply #1139 on: January 13, 2012, 04:59:58 PM »
Dear Omid,
Thank you for your reply and Best Wishes. Yes, well spotted. I have an interest in wild yeast sourdough management [non refridgerated]within a commercial setting. I remember Marco Parente mentioning that commercial operators often use 3 different temperature controlled areas at progressive stages of the doughs formation journey. Most trials [ room temp ] I have observed from members practice a ferment temperature and then a proof temperature prior to firing, albeit at various temperatures and duration. I thought, mistakenly, that your introduction of a third temperature phase [ seemingly a progressive ferment ] was maybe born from spending some time `behind the scenes` at Pizzeria Bruno and observing the different dough management that a commercial setting demands. Omid, I will now stop playing detective and go back to making dough!.
Kind Regards,
Barnstable

Dear Barnstable, this morning, after I read your above-referenced reply and prepared some dough, I went back to bed as I was still tired. I had a very vivid and illuminating, yet baffling, pizza dream, which seemed to take a very long time to unfold as I was asleep. This dream of many colors and dimensions was, I believe, triggered by reading your post! If you allow me, I would like to share the dream with you. And, to do that, I will need to somewhat rephrase the account in order to make it intelligible without, hopefully, falsifying it. In the dream, I encountered four philosophers: Patrick Pidgeon (a college professor under whom I studied for a number of years), Martin Heidegger (known for his ontological studies on "being" and "time"), Friedrich Nietzsche (who wrote extensively on the theme of "art" and the psychological "transformations" associated with it), and Søren Kierkegaard (for whom lack of "passion" in the modern age was a central theme). As I was in a dark room sitting before the philosophers, the first one began to speak.

§1. Patrick Pidgeon:
Since the role of language is tremendous, you need better formulation of the concepts "point of pasta", "fermentation", "levitation", "maturation", and "time". [There were more concepts which I can not remember.] They need to be precisely articulated without losing the ground on which they stand. Without them, you are not making pizzas, but accidents. Keep asking yourself what are the questions [or problems] to which these concepts are the answers. Formulate your questions carefully, as wrong questions will beg for wrong answers!

§2. Next, Heidegger took the floor:
"Time" is not merely a "quantity" of something, but a "quality" that is begot through its passage. [I assume one can entertain the same thought in respect to "temperature".] A burden of the Western societies have been their misconception of time . . . always finding something to count . . . the number of wrinkles on one's face, the number of calories one consumes, one's weight, the number of hours to ferment dough, the maximum number of pizzas prepared in minimum amount of time . . . never thinking that time is expressive of "significations", of "potentials", of "possibilities" [posse ("to exist") + habilitās ("being capable") = "capable of existing"] of being-in-the-world. [Heidegger often viewed "being" as a modality, as opposed to an entity or a thing.]

§3. Next, Nietzsche made himself heard by reading a well-known passage, which I quote verbatim below, from one of his books:
"What? Do we really want to permit existence to be degraded for us like this—reduced to a mere exercise for a calculator and an indoor diversion for mathematicians? Above all, one should not wish to divest existence of its rich ambiguity. . . . That the only justifiable interpretation of the world should be one in which you are justified because one can continue to work and do research scientifically in your sense. . . . —an interpretation that permits counting, calculating, weighing, seeing, and touching, and nothing more—that is a crudity and naïveté. . . . A 'scientific' interpretation of the world, as you understand it, might therefore still be one of the most stupid of all possible interpretations of the world, meaning that it would be one of the poorest in meaning. . . . An essentially mechanical world would be an essentially meaningless world. [Suppose] that one estimated the value of a piece of music according to how much of it could be counted, calculated, and expressed in formulas: how absurd would such a "scientific" estimation of music be! What would one have comprehended, understood, grasped of it? Nothing, really nothing of what is 'music' in it!" (Gay Science, 373)

Creation of a work of art, such as the Neapolitan pizza, fundamentally involves re-creating your self and co-evolving with that which you create. That which you create re-creates you as much as you create it! After all, what is the meaning of art? What is it good for? To what purpose? What was the problem to which art offers to be a solution? What is the human impulse which turns against itself, against life, without art?

Consider artists such as Michelangelo, Mozart, Goethe, even Einstein who was a scientist, and ask yourself what all these great souls had in common in their acts of creating? They were able to overcome—not depreciate—their impulses. They were able to harmonize their passions and reason; they were able to organize the disarray of their impulses, giving style to their own characters; they were masters of their impulses; they were able to overcome—not kill—their animal nature; they were able to sacrifice [make sacred], spiritualize, and sublimate their own impulses to new heights where they could see the world from new perspectives. They knew that mastering their passions was pertinent to a "suffering" that breeds strength and depth of soul. They were able to be tolerant not out of weakness, but out of self-cultivated strength. They gave to others not out of pity or impoverished needs, but out of the richness of their characters. Where they found their well-being, others often find their own ruination! They suffered from the overfullness, not impoverishment, of their lives so much that they had to redeem themselves by recreating themselves and the world in which they found themselves. They were creators. A recipe does not make pizza; human character does!

§4a. At last, Kierkegaard voiced himself:
Any artistic creation, such as crafting a Neapolitan pizza, is at roots a matter of "ethics" [i.e., being "able"] and "morals" [i.e., "what" you do with your ability and "how"]. Your "ethics" and "morals" determine what you can create.

§4b.Then Kierkegaard pulled out one of his works, from which he read aloud (and I am quoting it, below, right from the book):
"Our age is essentially one of understanding and reflection, without passion. . . . In fact, one is tempted to ask whether there is a single man left ready, for once, to commit an outrageous folly. Nowadays not even a suicide kills himself in desperation. Before taking the step he deliberates so long and so carefully that he literally chokes with thought. It is even questionable whether he ought to be called a suicide, since it is really thought which takes his life. He does not die with deliberation but from deliberation." (The Present Age)
« Last Edit: January 19, 2012, 05:46:24 PM by Pizza Napoletana »
"Since I cannot move the gods above, I shall move the gods below!"
Vergilius Maro

http://pizzanapoletanismo.com/2011/09/27/a-philosophy-of-pizza-napoletanismo/


 



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