Posts filed under 'Writing'
Everything you can imagine is real
“Everything you can imagine is real”
Pablo Picasso
1 comment April 15, 2008
Everything is what it is
Everything is what it is when it stops.
A neat sentence, but is it true? I don’t think so.
Add comment April 15, 2008
Árd Rí na hÉireann - the High King of Ireland
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_of_Tara
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kings_of_Tara
The Flight of the Earls, which in Irish is Imeacht na nIarlaí, describes the day of September 14, 1607 when Aodh Uî Neill (Hugh O’Neill) and Rudhraighe Ó Domhnaill (Rory O’Donnell) left Ireland in exile for Spain.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_of_the_Earls
According to Irish tradition, the ancient kings of Ireland were the descendants of King Milesius of Spain. Milesius was the grandson of Breoghan, conqueror of Galicia, Andalusia, Murcia, Castile, and Portugal, who was also called Brigus or Brian. Milesius achieved outstanding military success in Egypt, and was given Scota, the Pharoah’s daughter, in marriage. When Spain underwent a twenty-six year famine, Milesius sent his uncle Ithe to seek a new homeland, in accordance with an ancient prophecy. After Ithe discovered Ireland, only to be murdered by the resident Tuatha de Danan, his son Lughaide brought his body home to Spain.
http://www.houseofnames.com/xq/asp.c/qx/durack-coat-arms.htm
Add comment April 14, 2008
Michael Bywater
I kept Michael’s article about the death of his mother for ten years - in a box that I’ve taken around the country with me - like some talisman of good writing. I’m attempting to throw away all this paper - but not before I record it here. Mr Bywater still works for the Independent, as far as I know. If you’re reading this MIchael, get in touch - I’d like to interview you.
An old and common story
Independent, The (London), Jan 31, 1999 by Michael Bywater
“THEY SAY the dreams will start in a week or two. We’ll be chatting on the telephone, she’ll drop in for a cup of tea, I’ll bump into her in the street. This is how it goes, they tell me, and one day she’ll go too far - criticise my waistline, or start making plans to go to Vienna (she always wanted to go to Vienna but never made it) - and I will have to break the news. “Look,” I shall have to say, “you can’t keep just dropping by like this. You’re dead.”
“And so she is. Audrey Jean Bywater, nee Price, born Newport, Monmouthshire, 1st October 1927; died 5.30am, Saturday 16th January 1999…”
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19990131/ai_n9656597
Also:
Last laugh of Alan Coren, comedy king of Cricklewood
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article2701378.ece
Add comment April 13, 2008
“I am nature”
Dripping with significance
Independent, The (London), Mar 9, 1999 by Tom Lubbock
The pros saw the pure, unmediated expressions of body or soul; a painting made in a trance state, with Pollock’s unconscious or impulses marked down on the canvas. Obviously, this was partly what Pollock wanted. He wanted a spontaneous painting that by-passed the turgid symbolism of his earlier psycho-dramas and came straight from the deep psyche. He wanted pictures that - like some decoration - looked unmade and unauthored, as if they had just developed of themselves. But the paradox of his achievement is that these things could only be done with a lot of artistry. Pollock’s act was a careful balancing act; a matter of holding things in tension, fine-tuning so as to keep all possibilities open. The classic paintings have multiple intimations, none of which is quite suppressed, none of which definitely arrives. There are - despite the “over all” talk - hints of an underlying structure, perhaps something quasi-figurative and deeply buried in all the business. There are hints, too, of infinitely complex patterning. There are hints of complete chaos and randomness. There’s finally a strong entropic tendency towards an absolutely inert homogeneity. And all these aspects shift one into another. The result is work that’s untraceable and ungraspable. It offers inexhaustible interest to the eye. It can be contemplated endlessly.
Pollock’s most memorable saying was his reply to being asked, why he didn’t work more from nature: “I am nature.”
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19990309/ai_n14210492/pg_2
1 comment April 13, 2008
Knowledge is a state of being
A neuron can connect with 80,000 others. Human brain contains 20 billion neurons, capable of 100 trillion connections (does this include the brain gas-stuff used to make connections?).
So in 1999, Charles Jonscher in ‘Wired Life’ book said computers are nowhere near to brains.
And that knowledge is a state of being.
Information is transitive.
“We must not mistake gigabytes for wisdom”
Add comment April 13, 2008
No word for volcano
At the time of Pompei - Mt. Vesuvius eruption - there was no word in Latin for volcano?
Pliny and nephew gaius?
Also, the Pompeii bodies are made of plaster.
“The Italian archaeologist Guiseppe Fiorelli made the first attempts at preserving bodies in 1863 by casting them in plaster.
Only victims who were buried in volcanic ash can be cast. Those killed in the rain of fiery pumice were burned and remain only as skeletons. But those buried in the fine ash slowly decayed, leaving a hollow with every fold of cloth imprinted in the hardened ash. Fiorelli poured plaster into the cavities, revealing somewhat crudely the people of Pompeii in their final moments.”
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg13418154.400-pompeiis-electronic-guide-after-250-years-of-excavationarchaeologists-working-at-pompeii-have-discovered-a-powerful-new-tool-anexhibition-that-opens-in-london-this-week-shows-how-computers-are-bringingthe-roman-town-back-to-life-.html
Add comment April 13, 2008
Dreaming and the web-surfing mind
Cyberspace can become a dream world says John Suler.
http://www-usr.rider.edu/~suler/psycyber/psycyber.html
Rapid shifts of scenario - without travelling over ground - web surfing is like dreaming. Users can transcend the laws of space and physics.
People and images appear out of nowhere.
Time is irrelevant.
When computer freezes - it’s like a paralysis nightmare?
Dissociation - people “lose themselves” - in web surfing and dreams. Your dreams may be from you - but are fragmented - and the dreamer is not aware.
Wish fulfillment.
** This reminds me of the san dot paintings - their red line between the human and spirit world.
Add comment April 13, 2008
A little tiny dot on this world
Today UK prime minister Gordon Brown called for the release of Zimbabwe’s election results.
President Robert Mugabe called Brown “A little tiny dot on this world” - a put-down calculated to make Brown go red.
Add comment April 13, 2008
Umberto Eco on Chief Inspector Derrick
Horst Tappert retired from being Derrick (long-running, slow-paced, German TV show) in 1998.
Umberto Eco, ‘Electrifying Mediocrity’, wrote:
“Derrick is the quintessence of all television spectacles, even those in which there are real characters who are loved only because, in a triumphal manner, they prove to be even more mediocre than the most mediocre viewers.”
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_/ai_n14190828
Add comment April 12, 2008
The essence of a sit-com
Situation comedies need:
A hook - an intriguing situation with allows a strong plot (with conflict - the characters must be set against each other)
Dialogue - Every piece of dialogue must do three things:
1) Be funny (linked to other 2 and 3)
2) Advance the plot
3) Provide character background
Premise: Must be contemporary feeling (Yes minister was right for its time etc)
Add comment April 12, 2008
Ethics and biology
Evolutionary theory differs from behaviour genetics:
It’s unwise to deduce ethical premises from biology.
But you cannot understand ethics without looking to biology for explanations.
See:
Maths:
Robert Axelrod
John Maynard Smith
(Game theory illuminates why self-interested individual co-operate)
Evolutionary psychology:
Leda Cosmides (cheating causes)
Edward O’Wilson wrote Sociobiology: The new synthesis
Peter Singer attempted to refute in: The Expanding Circle (1979)
People are co-operative and competitive - see:
Emile Durkheim’s ’social facts’ - Customs, institutions, nations etc that are more than the sum of their individual parts.
Add comment April 12, 2008
San dot paintings
San paintings - Matopo hills of Zimbabwe. Dot patterns - cave art. San people were among the first humans - the oldest people in the world?
Dots are part of a complex system of markings that represent life force - potency. An attempt to represent the spiritual dimension - a mistrust of appearance. Religious iconography.
Also they used a long red line through their paintings on the cave wall - to divide the human from the spirit worlds? Arrrgh can’t remember.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushmen
Add comment March 26, 2008
Alice Lok Cahana
Alice Lok Cahana - look up her story. Her mother arranging violets - in the ghetto.
Add comment March 25, 2008
Charles Babbage does poetry criticism
he wrote to Alfred Lord Tennyson:
“Sir: in your otherwise beautiful poem The Vision of Sin There is a verse which reads: every moment dies a man/every moment one is born.
“It must be manifest that, if this were true, the population of the world would be at a standstill — I would suggest you have it read: every moment dies a man/every moment 1 1/16 is born.
“I am, Sir, yours etc, Charles Babbage”
See also: Ada Lovelace. She tried to resolve the workings of the human heart through a programmable machine?
Add comment March 24, 2008