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1.96 MB

Extraction Summary

6
People
1
Organizations
2
Locations
0
Events
0
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Introduction or foreword to a collection of speeches (evidence in house oversight investigation)
File Size: 1.96 MB
Summary

This document appears to be an introduction or foreword to a collection of speeches written by a former Prime Minister (the context of 'native title' and 'Joern Utzon' strongly suggests Australian PM Paul Keating). The text is philosophical, discussing the interplay between creativity, music, science, and politics. It is stamped with a House Oversight Bates number, indicating it is part of a larger document production for a congressional investigation.

People (6)

Name Role Context
Unnamed Author Former Prime Minister
The writer of the text, referring to their 'prime ministerial life' and 'period in government'.
Mahler Composer
Mentioned as an example of creativity (Gustav Mahler).
Beethoven Composer
Mentioned in relation to E.T.A. Hoffman.
E.T.A. Hoffman Author/Critic
Quoted regarding the nature of music.
Kant Philosopher
Referenced regarding 'policy ambition arising from Kant's higher self'.
Joern Utzon Architect
Mentioned in relation to the Opera House.

Organizations (1)

Name Type Context
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Locations (2)

Location Context
Mentioned in the context of the 'rise of China'.
Referenced as 'Joern Utzon's Opera House' (Sydney Opera House).

Key Quotes (3)

"Science is forever trying to undress nature while the artistic impulse is to be wrapped in it."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029664.jpg
Quote #1
"While the speeches are from the period after my prime ministerial life and period in government, the impulse in writing them came from the same framework and inclinations which informed my life in public office."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029664.jpg
Quote #2
"Music reveals to man an unknown realm... a world in which he leaves behind all feelings circumscribed by intellect in order to embrace the inexpressible."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029664.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,135 characters)

But we need tools to mine good intentions: inspirations, ones which await the creative spark, the source of all enlargement. Creativity is central to our progress and to all human endeavour.
Music provides the clue: unlike other forms of art, music is not representational. Unlike the outcome of the sciences, it was never discoverable or awaiting discovery. A Mahler symphony did not exist before Mahler created it.
E.T.A. Hoffman, a contemporary of Beethoven's, famously said: "Music reveals to man an unknown realm, a world quite separate from the outer sensual world surrounding him, a world in which he leaves behind all feelings circumscribed by intellect in order to embrace the inexpressible."
This is not to turn our back on reason. Or to argue that modernism, with all its secular progress through education, industrialisation, communications, transport and the centralised state, has not spectacularly endowed the world as no other movement before it. But a void exists between the drum-roll of mechanisation with its cumulative power of science and the haphazard, explosive power of creativity and passion. Science is forever trying to undress nature while the artistic impulse is to be wrapped in it.
While these approaches are different - perhaps often diametrically opposite - they inform related strands of thinking in ways that promote energy and vision.
This is what I have found when these forces are contemplated in tandem. When passion and reason vie with each other, the emerging inspiration is invariably deeper and of an altogether higher form. One is able to knit between them, bringing into existence an overarching unity - a coherence - which fidelity to the individual strands cannot provide.
In the world I have lived in, the world of politics, political economy and internationalism, the literature exists in abundance. But what is far from abundant are the frameworks for the intuitive resolution of complex problems that require multi-dimensional solutions.
But from where do we glean this extra dimensionality?
For me, it has always been from two sources: policy ambition in its own right and from imagination - the dreaming. Policy ambition arising from Kant's higher self, and imagination promoted by those reliable wellsprings - music, poetry, art and architecture - blending the whole into a creative flux.
This collection of speeches reflects many of those interests and impulses - whether it be Joern Utzon's Opera House or the imperative of liberal internationalism in foreign policy or Neoclassicism, the future of native title or the rise of China. Each is related in a wider construct which is part and parcel of the way I have viewed and thought about the world.
While the speeches are from the period after my prime ministerial life and period in government, the impulse in writing them came from the same framework and inclinations which informed my life in public office.
The speeches may be read individually or read together, subject to subject, idea to idea. Either way, a common thread informs them all.
I trust this might be evident to the reader.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029664

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