Apologise for my tardiness I have been helping a friend with a little R&R . Even a little respite seems to go a long way.
Was going to say that i have lost the thread, but apparently that doesn't matter.
It would be grim if we had no space for dissent or disputation. Disputation is often deflected onto questions of who said what to whom rather than why something happened.In a pseudo public sphere where politicians act out a travesty of democratic debate it is no wonder we are easily turned onto something else more entertaining, like "gossip" Gossip is more entertaining when we have someone to talk about, rather than to.Listening to the news teaches us a lesson every day, not so much a cognitive but rather an emotional lesson. What we are getting is "infotainment"or selective distortion.
Regarding "the coffee houses", they were often referred to as ' the penny universities"being places that people of all shades were able to afford a penny and mingle and "gossip" (if you wish) with, for example, in the Rota coffee house you would have such devotees as Milton, Cyriac Skinner,James Harrison (the founder and political theorist) John Aubrey, and Pepys, to name a few.
They had a swear box, they didn't discuss religion, there were no cards or dice, no betting and I'm afraid no women.Politics however were much discussed, and had their been universal benefits, a proposal to regulate them would no doubt have been discussed.
For a penny admission to the exchange of sparkling wit and brilliant conversation was within the reach of all. It was not long before the government became worried, and calling the coffee houses, " Seminaries of sedition"and Charles11 was asking how lawfully he might proceed against them.He finally issued a proclamation against them, in only eleven days he realised he had made a mistake and had to recant.