The Golden Age

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Authors: Michal Ajvaz

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THE GOLDEN AGE

also by michal ajvaz in english translation

The Other City

THE GOLDEN AGE
a novel by michal ajvaz

translated by andrew oakland

dalkey archive press

champaign / london

Originally published in Czech as
Zlatý v
k
by Hynek, 2001

Copyright © 2001 by Michal Ajvaz

Translation copyright © 2010 by Andrew Oakland

First English translation, 2010

All rights reserved

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Ajvaz, Michal, 1949-

[Zlaty vek. English]

The golden age / by Michal Ajvaz; translated [from Czech] by Andrew Oakland.—1st English translation.

p. cm.

Originally published: Zlaty vek, Prague: Hynek, 2001.

ISBN: 978-1-56478-618-0

1. Travel—Fiction. I. Oakland, Andrew, 1966-II. Title.

PG5039.1.J83Z39 2010

891.8’635—dc22

2009048556

Partially funded by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency

This translation was subsidized by the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic

www.dalkeyarchive.com

Without doubt, metaphysics has to do with everything that exists. However, the totality of what exists, including what has existed and will exist, is infinitely small in comparison with the totality of the Objects of knowledge. This fact easily goes unnoticed, probably because the lively interest in reality which is part of our nature tends to favor that exaggeration which finds the non-real a mere nothing—or, more precisely, which finds the non-real to be something for which science has no application at all or at least no application of any worth.
[…]
There is not the slightest doubt that what is supposed to be the Object of knowledge need not exist at all.

Alexius Meinong,
The Theory of Objects

And they are each other than one another, as being plural and not singular; for if one is not, they cannot be singular but every particle of them is infinite in number; and even if a person takes that which appears to be the smallest fraction, this, which seemed one, in a moment evanesces into many, as in a dream, and from being the smallest becomes very great, in comparison with the fractions into which it is split up.

Plato,
Parmenides

The whole thing looks senseless enough, but in its own way perfectly finished.

Franz Kafka, “The Cares of a Family Man”

Contents

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