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ne of the least influential and
hence unknown philosophers of modern literature (except
to a small group of people
living in or with some connection to Ireland), de
Selby’s historical and
philosophic tracts were instrumental in making the 21st Century
possible. (One of the reasons he was a neglected thinker was that almost
everything he wrote and thought was irrelevant to the 20th Century.) Born
into an English peasant family in the 18th Century, somewhere near what
is now Stevenage (the date of his birth is placed somewhere between 1702
and 1712), de Selby’s early work was dedicated to the explication of
goat communities (between the age of 7 and 17 he wrote his “Society
and Goats”). He later turned his attention to the Industrial Revolution,
time, space, bicycles, telekinesis, death, and history, in rough order.
Some argue that de Selby single-mindedly thought the Millennium into
existence. The power of his thoughts were so powerful, these noncritics
say, that he successfully retroactively inserted the “idea” of the
Millennium into the minds of a number of 9th, 10th, and 11th Century
swordsmen, who traveled throughout Europe and as far
as China spreading
the word of this future along with death and their seed—and thus making
it possible. Prior to that, the Millennium as we know it was nothing more
than a puff pastry recipe in the minds of a large family in Gaul. Others
charge that de Selby was a crank, although they acknowledge that
he
masterminded a method of distilling Irish whiskey in less than an hour
(he disliked all English whiskeys and actually studied Gaelic for two
years on the West Coast of Ireland not
far from Doolin), although the
process required a special crock. (De Selby’s was destroyed by an
explosion.) |
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