of the mind, or any other kind of life, requires living in a body. But the body's problems are manifold; repeating and repeatable, even as they're unknowable. Hannah Arendt wrote The Life of the Mind to query how thinking connects the active life and the contemplative mind. She asked, "What are we doing when we do nothing but think?" As we discover, the world of appearances from which we draw evidence of our science and art, reveals as well as conceals. The moment the mind lights on a string of inverted clouds, science comes up with a name for it. But no one has yet definitively answered what it all means: we are trial and error. This is what we call the ineffable—never arriving at zero, or upon arrival, finding out the restless mind is off again to dance with the next illusion.


