Tag: travel

  • Dine Entente Cordiale

    Dine Entente Cordiale

    You do all that work—invitations, shopping, preparing an awesome meal.

    A wonderful evening you envision—one abounding in cordiality, universal involvement, and engaging conversation.


    Dining Room (1886) painting high
    by nationalgalleryofart
    Llicensed under CC-CC0 1.0

    Instead, you realize that the evening could go flat. Rather than a triumph, conversation could lag —revived only by tired talk about pets, family, bills, costs, ailments, neighbors. Some people struggle to participate. Others incessantly monopolize. People leave appreciative of your efforts, but relieved to go home.


    Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels.com

    Hosts usually aim to enrich relationships.

    Yet, they realize that a meal alone, no matter how sensational, may not achieve such.

    Intuitively, however, they know what can. That is great conversation.

    But where might they find a catalyst for this? How is it introduced?

    This website proposes a catalyst and vehicle.

    My wife and I like having dinner guests. We too have faced these dilemmas.

    Some advice we gleaned from professional dinner organizers. One recommended: “By the way, if you don’t usually prepare topics for conversation, you should.”1 Another declared: “If it makes your guests uncomfortable, then avoid it.”

    To the soundness of this advice we concur with a couple of provisos.

    The first regards uncomfortable subjects. Often hosts interpret this as excluding politics and religion. To that I say, “No way!” Contrarily, I maintain that if you and your guests are adult enough to speak of such with reasonable civil gentility, then go for it. (Disregard, however, if you live in Putin’s Russia, Xi Jinping’s China, the Ayatollah’s Iran, Kim Jong Un’s North Korea, Lukashenko’s Belarus, etc. Note too that MAGA America seemingly aims to join this list.)

    The second proviso is about preparing. Some think that identifying interesting topics completes the task.

    In fact, engaging subjects, while important, are not the sole ingredient for best ensuring invigorating conversation.

    What else is needed? An appropriate format helps. This reduces the likelihood of these discussion derailments:

    • The topics do not take;
    • Conversation veers to uncomfortable tangents like gossip;
    • A catty remark causes hurt;
    • Veering the conversation back to more appropriate realms makes the host seem tyrannical.

    Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

    What is a dining format? It is structure that provides:

    • A comfortable setting for hosts and guests to share thoughts; and
    • Boundaries that help maneuvers conversation toward a desired goal.

    The idea of a dinner format is not unique. Search the internet. Examples there one can readily explore.

    Some popular ones include Jeffersonian and Zeldin dinners.

    For certain circumstances we perceive how each might work well.

    Nevertheless, they seemed inappropriate for our home dinners. A successful Jeffersonian, for example, hinges upon having a scholarly somewhat authoritarian moderator. Such did not seem to fit a pleasant occasion with four to six neighbors and friends. The Zeldin dinner, on the other hand, elicits too much personal information from guests.

    So we opted for another solution–“Dining Entente Cordiale.” That is dining pursuant to a friendly agreement, a working relationship, or an accord.


    Photo by Pavel Danilyuk on Pexels.com

    The gist of the idea is this: Guest and hosts agree to dine together to tackle a set of issues.

    Book clubs operate similarly.

    Likewise does the Sky News program, “Press Preview.” There a host moderates a discussion with prominent guests from the British press. Together they parse daily articles from assorted newspapers and tabloids.

    Major components of this format include:

    • Issuing invitations informing of the conversational dinner; plus
    • Supplying guests beforehand with the discussion material, drafted questions, and the meal’s itinerary.

    Sounds like a lot of work! Well, yes, it can be.

    At this site though we take on much of that. For each dinner option we present much of what is needed. We supply a topic or topics, a sample invitation, the review material, and the dinner questions and itinerary.

    One surprising benefit of this format is that it fosters engaging color in guests’ and hosts’ interactions.

    People seldom in our modern world have the opportunity to discuss the same texts with others. This is especially so in light of the alarming decline in local print medias. Often people’s information flows from the multitude of national or international news outlets toward which they incline. Seldom do they sit down together to talk about material from a shared source.

    In our format, on the other hand, all of our guests have agreed to familiarize themselves with the same text. To it they bring their own perspectives. Yet, these perspectives have a unified focus–the shared material.

    This format, also, encourages guests to explore issues with others with whom they would not often have the opportunity. Seldom in most of our lives are we and others sufficiently versed on the same subject with people of different professional, educational, or social backgrounds. At our dinner everyone can confidently and competently discuss the issues at hand. All have had an opportunity to review the text/s and questions. The result is often refreshing perspectives expressed.

    There are, of course, disadvantages .

    One previously mentioned is that it requires more up-front work for all involved. The guests have additional preparing added to their busy lives. The hosts have increased moderating responsibilities.

    On the other hand, for the guests they are compensated with a good meal and refreshing conversation and camaraderie.

    The hosts too have the increased likelihood of presenting a fluid, organized, rewarding evening.

    Our Dinner

    After presenting a dinner topic, I with my wife, plan to host a dinner. There we will moderate a conversation with four to six friends, neighbors, and acquaintances. It will focus on our recently concluded blog topic/s.

    After the dinner, I will draft a report. This will include an “after action review” in which my guests and my wife and I participate providing input on what went well, what needs improvement, and suggestions for how to make the evening better.

    Once these things have been recorded, others wishing to similarly host a dinner will have access to our insights.

    Hopefully, soon we will also have other prepared topics available.

    If you have ideas for such, let us know.

    In the meantime, feel free to use that presented.

    If you do, please give us feed back on how well it worked for you.


    Photo by Lisa from Pexels on Pexels.com

    Our hope is that dining entente cordiale brings captivating twists that gratify your fondest expectations.

    1. LeTournea University at letu.edu/aluni/dining-etiquette.html ↩︎
  • An Inscription!

    An Inscription!

    History VI

    [Ebal’s Plea, twelve of thirty-two]

    Although Stripling realized that glyphs adorned the tablet’s outside, he was most intrigued by what may lie within. There as with other defixios someone likely inscribed a curse.

    Usually this was of a trivial nature, often something like, “She stole my boyfriend, may all of her hair fall out!”1

    Stripling and a colleague therefore gingerly attempted to open it. The lead of one corner, brittle with age, however, crumbled. Further efforts they thus ceased.

    Fortunately, the lead fragments Hebrew University in Tel Aviv successfully analyzed. The determination was that the lead originated from a mine in Lavrion, Greece.2

    About that mine historians and archaeologist have arrived at an accepted position. It is that it exported to the Middle East from before the Late Bronze Age well into Roman times.

    Here a curious historical anomaly deserves consideration.

    In the Mediterranean world around the 12th century B. C. a dark age ensued. Then effectively Late Bronze Age civilization mysteriously imploded. Ancient exports plunged. Ostensibly European / Asian economic and cultural sophistication wilted. Among those civilizations disappearing or massively squelched include the Hittite, Ugarite, Minoan, Mycenaean, Trojan, and Babylonian.3 A definitive explanation for why alludes scholars to this date.4


    Mycenaean Sieve Jug Painter 20

    J. Paul Getty Museum
    Licensed under CC-CC0 1.0
    Lion-Gate-of-Hattusa,-Turkey

    Lion Gate of Hattusa, the Capital of the Hittites


    Bogazkale, Turkey

    Photo by u00f6zhan Hazu0131rlar on Pexels.com
    Knossos-Palace,-Crete

    Knossos in modern Crete, a leading cultural center of the ancient Minoans


    Photo by Luo on Pexels.com
    Minoan fresco

    Minoan bull fresco in Knossos Palace, Crete, Greece

    Photo by Gu Bra on Pexels.com

    From this dark age understanding Stripling deduced a probability.

    He proposed that likely someone imported the lead tablet in the thirteenth, fourteenth, or earlier centuries B. C. Zertal dated pottery at the site between 1250 B. C. and 1400 B. C. Given the twelfth century’s mysterious economic and cultural collapse, someone likely imported the lead tablet in previous centuries. That is before the ancient dark age of 1200 to 1150 B. C.

    The metallurgical analysis, therefore, strengthened Stripling’s idea about the tablet’s date. Although not concrete, likely, the defixio dated from early in the late bronze age.

    Nevertheless, Stripling perceived that he had exhausted the tablet’s plausible investigative analysis. It was time for greater focus on his many other administrative, scholarly, and archaeological pursuits.

    Thinking thus, he sent an email to a colleague attaching a tablet photo. Subsequently, among archaeological circles this began to circulate.

    Then afterwards an unexpected opportunity for further investigation materialized.

    Stripling read of a technological advancement. The ability to peer into lead to discern written content had been demonstrated. Also, he learned that the Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics in Telč (Czech Republic) excelled at the process.

    Arrangements were made. Israeli authorities gave a colleague a license to courier the “defixio” to Prague.5

    Prague

    Prague

    Photo by Eduardo Ortiz on Pexels.com

    Time passed. The Institute at Telč, 152 km. from the capital, finished its analysis and forwarded the results, scientific and epigraphical.

    Amazingly the Telč team indeed perceived something within. An epigraphic expert there suggested proto-alphabetic letters. That is, ancient letters representing sounds rather than complete thoughts.

    These initial revelations alone had profound meaning for Stripling. Now he had his most conclusive evidence for the date of the tablet. It had to be Late Bronze Age or Early Iron Age I. That is, from as early as 1400 to as late as 1250 B.C.6

    Why? Such was the epigraphically and archaeologically accepted period for use of proto-alphabetic script.

    No longer did the tablet present an anachronistic dilemma. It now definitively matched Zertal’s pottery dates.

    What else could this new evidence portend?

    This I probe further in my next post!

    Next post: “Attribution Crisis”

    1. Sean McDowell, Oldest Hebrew Writing? Mt. Ebal Curse Tablet (Revisited) m.youtube.com>watch, (8:51), 11 May 2023. ↩︎
    2. Special Update: The Mount Ebal Curse Tablet (Ep1 of 3), Youtube: Patterns of Evidence, youtube.com/watch?v=YX3TH_nfgLo, Episode One at (26:12), May 21, 2024. ↩︎
    3. Stan Guthrie, “The Book of Joshua and the Late Bronze Age Collapse”, https://www.newcovenantnaperville.org/the-book-of-joshua-and-the-late-bronze-age-collapse, 02 Jan. 2025 ↩︎
    4. Matti Friedman, “An Archaeological Dig reignites the Debate Over the Old Testament’s Historical Accuracy”, mattiefriedman.com, paragraph 21. December 12, 2021. ↩︎
    5. Breaking News “Mt Ebal Curse Tablet Peer Review Complete”, Appian Media, In Roads, youtube.com/watch?v=_15tYO4hqJS, (27:30), May 12, 2023. ↩︎
    6. Id., (06:40). ↩︎
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    Dinner-bouquet-option

    Lagniappe Joshua’s Altar link / “See for Yourself”
    Dinner-bouquet-option

    Lagniappe Curse Tablet link / Armstrong Institute, Curse tablet