AuthorWriter

I'm a "Cat Detective" I help reunite lost cats with their families. I recharge over a cup of café latte, enjoy walking and traveling, and expand my thoughts through writing. By observing the world closely and following my intellectual curiosity as a blog writer, I hope my words can offer help and comfort to others.

Is Santiago’s relentless struggle to catch the marlin a challenge against time and the passage of years?

This blog post examines the meaning of aging, time, and artistic rebirth through Santiago’s battle with the marlin in The Old Man and the Sea.   As is often the case with Hemingway’s works, and particularly with The Old Man and the Sea, the diversity of its themes is striking. Like many works that have attained classic status, this novel also acts as a mirror, allowing critics...

Why did Hemingway turn away from the tumultuous world history and focus on Santiago’s fishing?

This blog post examines why Hemingway focused on Santiago’s fishing amidst the tumultuous world history, exploring the literary significance and direction of thought behind that choice.   In theater, the setting—whether spatial or temporal—is merely the stage upon which events unfold. In novels, however, such settings are invariably closely linked to the work’s theme, whether...

Is Santiago’s solitary struggle in The Old Man and the Sea a survival strategy or the practice of a normative life?

This blog post examines Santiago from The Old Man and the Sea not through the lens of an immigrant’s survival logic, but as Hemingway’s normative protagonist, analyzing the ethics of endurance and action inherent in his solitary struggle.   Santiago, the protagonist in The Old Man and the Sea, can be seen as an existence that has grown into the young boy Nick Adams (In Our Time)...

What truth does Les Misérables reveal about the 19th-century French Revolution?

This blog post examines how Les Misérables shows the 19th-century French Revolution was not merely a political event, but a history condensed with the lives, suffering, frustration, and hope of the people.   Victor Hugo, Confronting the Revolution The film Les Misérables, which gained immense popularity in Korea several years ago, was a musical adaptation of the novel of the same name...

Is Inspector Javert a villain, or a victim trapped in a “wrong righteousness”?

This blog post examines Inspector Javert from Les Misérables not as a simple villain, but as a character ensnared by a “wrong righteousness.” It explores the tragic clash of law, justice, and conviction, tracing why his choices led to catastrophe.   It shows how people, as individuals or as a community, forge the right path of history. Moreover, it starkly reminds us of the many harrowing...

How did Victor Hugo’s life shape his literary world?

This blog post examines how Victor Hugo’s life—transforming from a royalist poet to a republican writer—infused his literary world, including works like Les Misérables.   Born in 1802 in Besançon, eastern France, he was the third son of Joseph Léopold Sigisbert Victor Hugo, a soldier under Napoleon. His father’s frequent postings abroad, including Spain and Italy, meant Victor...

How far can evolutionary psychology explain human behavior?

This blog post examines how much evolutionary psychology can explain human behavior, critically exploring the tension between innate and environmental factors. Through this, it considers both the explanatory limitations and potential of evolutionary psychology.   Recently in Korea, social controversy has arisen over claims that high school textbooks should delete or reduce content related to...

Could rape be an adaptive behavior in human evolution?

This blog post explores whether rape could be an adaptive behavior for survival and reproduction during human evolution, from scientific and evolutionary psychological perspectives.   To answer any question, one must first understand it clearly. “Is rape adaptive?” is no exception. While we need not debate what rape is, we must first clearly define what an adaptation is to answer this...

Is science interconnected, or is it fragmented into independent pieces of knowledge?

This blog post explores whether scientific knowledge is closely interconnected by examining the process of solving the Poincaré Conjecture.   In ‘The Structure of Scientific Revolutions,’ author Thomas Kuhn argued that scientific theories are not continuous, do not develop gradually, and their direction is not the pursuit of truth. This caused significant ripples among many scientists...

The Speed and Direction of Evolution: Why Did Dawkins and Gould Hold Different Perspectives?

This blog post compares the evolutionary approaches of Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould, exploring why they held differing views on the speed and direction of evolution.   This book creates a fictional debate using the opposing views of Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould on Darwin’s theory of evolution. Richard Dawkins wields the powerful weapon of ‘The Selfish Gene’ to explain...