Green - 12/1/22

    Reading Dr. Redick’s piece on a “virtuous home” struck me as a rarity in what we have cultivated today. Dwellings are liminal spaces between work and sleep, where the 9 to 5 drone legally must exist between shifts to avoid the Labor Bureau’s swift hammer. Where is the home that reflects the person and fulfills them? Where is the home that was built to withstand the local climate and disasters? Where is the home made with love and craftsmanship that one moves to not only for commuting distance? Heidegger supports these kinds of homes, where the people exist together and live with rather than inside the house. Local communities are formed around dwellings and doors are meant to be opened. Redick was accurate in describing homes as “a factory instead of a dwelling place”, that we are more pilgrims moving from job to job. Our homes are more so houses rather than true homes now. 


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