Special Interest

GENERAL VISUAL ART / LITERATURE DISCUSSION => GENERAL VISUAL ART / LITERATURE DISCUSSION => Topic started by: JLIAT on August 29, 2020, 11:32:14 AM

Title: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on August 29, 2020, 11:32:14 AM
Quote from: AnonMessAgeSage on August 28, 2020, 09:25:50 PM
Quote from: JLIAT on August 28, 2020, 09:00:03 PM
Quote from: AnonMessAgeSage on August 28, 2020, 07:20:29 PM
Humans are impossibly stupid and self-centered, they are merely just one speck in evolution and cosmology.
There is nothing unique to humans, that isn't also seen in other animals.



Hmmmm.. evolution... well i guess animals use tools and language...and you could argue Mars landers and the LHC are 'merely' tools but its been said that evolution by natural selection is no longer appropriate to humans... your own criticism in part shows the survival of no longer the fittest in your opinion.  I guess war is also a fairly human trait. I'm also not sure if other animals genetically modify plants and animals for their use? I'm think of wheat... et al.

As for wikipedia, its not always a reliable source, but what i've found a benefit of recent technology is print on demand such that you can get texts which are out of print or of a niche nature by the likes of Amazon.

And to be picky, there is a line of thought that goes without humans there wouldn't be (a theory) of evolution or cosmology.




Don't be picky, because you are an inquisitive person, and you actively take an interest in 'far-out' things, which makes me respect you.

Damming myself with faint praise, typically English. By picky I mean the assumption some people make about 'Science'. Science tends to generalize, and categorize, and use mathematics. These are all human traits and very successful ones. However 'nature' – (and here 'nature' is a human idea) does not generalize. Its why things such as Covid don't have the same effect in everyone.  But the generalizations of Science are incredibly useful.  Or should I say the theories or 'models', like a map. Now maybe once (Newton et al) thought nature obeyed the laws, simply because these laws were how God made nature. He, Newton, simply discovered them, however this is no longer the case. Atoms don't 'obey' laws, laws give the best possible model. Whereas philosophy aimed at concepts which were actual. Here the aim was Ideas that were identical to Reality. I guess you know this. But that is why I was picky.
Quote from: AnonMessAgeSage on August 28, 2020, 09:25:50 PM
And Nature itself, when She gets pissed by the lack of proper breeding habits among humans, may take it upon herself to release hurricanes, volcanoes, tsunamis, pathogens, and whatever else to rectify the situation.

It would be arrogant to presume human knowledge as the pinnacle of knowledge.

I see you again anthropomorphize nature. There is in reality no such thing as nature, and certainly not a she who gets pissed. It strikes me as not much different to the idea that God caused the Lisbon earthquake. Obviously things like Covid, spread due to globalization, but its NOT the case that it takes advantage. And there were hurricanes, volcanoes, tsunamis, long before humans, and will be long after no doubt. But you're right about human arrogance IMO, we call this planet 'Earth' yet its mostly water... :-)

Though it certainly would be arrogant to assume human knowledge is any pinnacle. In coming to terms with reality, life as lived experience IMO Art does a better job than science. (or I should say 'did')  - And by the by  IMO this last thing fits in with the guidelines. And raises the idea of Art being more than fun....
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on August 29, 2020, 01:10:21 PM
Quote from: Atrophist on August 28, 2020, 10:44:29 PM
Quote from: JLIAT on August 28, 2020, 09:00:03 PM

And to be picky, there is a line of thought that goes without humans there wouldn't be (a theory) of evolution or cosmology.

But surely the reality these theories attempt to describe would be the same, whether there were people to attempt to understand it or not? Or do you disagree?

I find such a question deeply puzzling.  I cant do the maths for physics and maybe the more crazy aspects are just that, i.e. observations actually changing the physical reality,  (the twin slit experiment) similar to Berkeley's   esse is percipi (to be is to be perceived) ... which I cant understand! and the idea of Reference Frames... & Simultaneity
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wteiuxyqtoM  or more recently for me the idea that time and space simply don't exist for a photon. And yet these are streaming into my eyes as I type... so time and space are real for me, but not for photons. Crazy! And Kant way back claimed time and space were not 'real'.


Seems most of us live in a more Newtonian world where space and time are fixed. And odd that Kant back in the 1700s  said different, that we can never know 'things in themselves'...  all very interesting for some, me, but not others. So maybe there is some objective reality, but if so it seems to be beyond my understanding, and maybe the idea of such is more like religious belief?

Which is why as I said I think Art can (or did) allow some engagement with 'reality', but this will always be subjective and beyond explanation.

And as part of this my ideas re art have changed,  the kind of subjective representations of say Picasso are more appropriate than the objective non representational abstractions of latter art.

Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Atrophist on August 30, 2020, 02:42:32 AM
I'm like you, as much as I'd like to, I cannot simply wrap my mind around higher physics or mathematics. I have Roger Penrose's Road to Reality and a few other similar books, and once in a blue moon I'll have a stab at them. I'm usually lucky if I make it more than 5 pages before getting utterly lost.

So, I cannot explain how in scientific terms, but as far as I understand it, the (possibly) troubling implications of the double-slit experiment are simply a quantum version of the plain old observer effect.

To me the idea that we somehow create external reality by observing it is anthropocentric hubris. But what do I know. Did you know our senses deceive us much of the time? We don't really see what we think we see, instead we see a composite view our brain has scrambled toget her from raw visual data, hoping it will make sense to us. Etc.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on August 30, 2020, 10:34:04 AM
Quote from: Atrophist on August 30, 2020, 02:42:32 AM
I'm like you, as much as I'd like to, I cannot simply wrap my mind around higher physics or mathematics. I have Roger Penrose's Road to Reality and a few other similar books, and once in a blue moon I'll have a stab at them. I'm usually lucky if I make it more than 5 pages before getting utterly lost.
Penrose is difficult, I find John Barrow 'better'. I think his 'The Book of Nothing' is a fairly easy read, and his demonstration of there being more than one zero, but his final point about the idea of eternal recurrence very interesting as its basically the same idea of Nietzsche's, (and his acceptance of it overcoming nihilism...)  though for me it doesn't 'work'  -  due to 'The identity of indiscernables'... Also his book on 'Impossibility'.  Again forgive me if you are familiar with these, and this, the proof by Gödel that mathematics is incomplete. I think this is a fundamental problem for a science which uses maths. I taught computer science, and can 'get it' via 'The halting problem'.
And in mentioning Gödel and his work which is deeply significant, also the work of Cantor, set theory, which is used in computing – databases... but within this the idea of different infinities. Again I can get the first two, the countable infinities, - rational numbers, and the uncountable ones, The Reals. Cantors proof of uncountability is fantastic.
Quote from: Atrophist on August 30, 2020, 02:42:32 AM

So, I cannot explain how in scientific terms, but as far as I understand it, the (possibly) troubling implications of the double-slit experiment are simply a quantum version of the plain old observer effect.

I think its more than this, to observe is to change, like being watched doing something... but here its not quite the same, the state of reality before the observation is it holds all possibilities, the observation collapsing these into one. Such that phenomena such as tunnelling diodes 'work' because they 'obey' (they don't) QM probability and not classical physics, which would rule out the ability to pass through an 'unpassable barrier'.

(http://www.jliat.com/tunnelsmall.jpg)

As i said its because of this reality that Tunnelling Diodes work, Barrow shows in his book on Nothing, given infinite time history will repeat...

Quote from: Atrophist on August 30, 2020, 02:42:32 AM

To me the idea that we somehow create external reality by observing it is anthropocentric hubris. But what do I know. Did you know our senses deceive us much of the time? We don't really see what we think we see, instead we see a composite view our brain has scrambled toget her from raw visual data, hoping it will make sense to us. Etc.

True, but if what we see is not the visual image, I mean its upside down for a start, then in a way the brain does create a reality, 'for us'. I could bore for England over this, but bird's brains have huge chunks for spacial awareness as their world is 3D.  But the reverse of  anthropocentric vision is what, to see things as they actually are? Which is as God would.... Again I could go on and on, but Heidegger – the MAN – would probably question the question 'What is Reality' by asking and demonstrating the problem in this by asking "What is 'is'?" That's the problem...!





Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: bdr on August 31, 2020, 01:52:43 AM
Check out the "Transactional Model of Quantum Mechanics"
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on August 31, 2020, 09:35:34 AM
Quote from: bdr on August 31, 2020, 01:52:43 AM
Check out the "Transactional Model of Quantum Mechanics"




Thanks I will...

"1. "TI does not generate new predictions / is not testable / has not been tested."

TI is an exact interpretation of QM and so its predictions must be the same as QM. "

As would the idea that God or the Devil is causing these effects. TI may or may not be a better model for 'reality' but it is not how reality works. Photons are worse at maths than I am. The problem is the mistake made for thinking the (mathematical) model IS identical to reality - and Hegel got there back in 1812, "The Ideal (idea) is the Real". Nope!

Physics like insurance companies is highly successful, and 18 year old males will find it hard to get insurance for a Porsche, no matter how safe a driver they are....

Which led me to this... which is very interesting...

"Relational quantum mechanics"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_quantum_mechanics


"There is no privileged, "real" account.

The idea has been expanded upon by Lee Smolin[5] and Louis Crane,[6] who have both applied the concept to quantum cosmology, and the interpretation has been applied to the EPR paradox, revealing not only a peaceful co-existence between quantum mechanics and special relativity, but a formal indication of a completely local character to reality.


As was discussed above, it is not possible for an object to contain a complete specification of itself."

Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: AnonMessAgeSage on August 31, 2020, 06:53:24 PM
Quote from: JLIAT on August 31, 2020, 09:35:34 AM
Quote from: bdr on August 31, 2020, 01:52:43 AM
Check out the "Transactional Model of Quantum Mechanics"




Thanks I will...

"1. "TI does not generate new predictions / is not testable / has not been tested."

TI is an exact interpretation of QM and so its predictions must be the same as QM. "

As would the idea that God or the Devil is causing these effects. TI may or may not be a better model for 'reality' but it is not how reality works. Photons are worse at maths than I am. The problem is the mistake made for thinking the (mathematical) model IS identical to reality - and Hegel got there back in 1812, "The Ideal (idea) is the Real". Nope!

Physics like insurance companies is highly successful, and 18 year old males will find it hard to get insurance for a Porsche, no matter how safe a driver they are....

Which led me to this... which is very interesting...

"Relational quantum mechanics"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_quantum_mechanics


"There is no privileged, "real" account.

The idea has been expanded upon by Lee Smolin[5] and Louis Crane,[6] who have both applied the concept to quantum cosmology, and the interpretation has been applied to the EPR paradox, revealing not only a peaceful co-existence between quantum mechanics and special relativity, but a formal indication of a completely local character to reality.


As was discussed above, it is not possible for an object to contain a complete specification of itself."


Honestly, people whine about off-topic posts. But it's a forum. The nature of discussion leads to tangential conversations online. Also, music scenes change, and that's a good thing.

For instance, I always associated with artists on the "dark net," so to speak. Except for maybe some of the TRULY obscure experimental / Noise music of the 70's and 80's, that was made for maybe two people, the larger scene developed TOTALLY independently, despite calling itself by the same name, it was world's apart.

That OLD scene, more or less faded into the darker recesses of the internet as it was just coming-out, as all the new scene developed with the acts of the 90's, which everybody knows on here.

So I always laugh when people whine about the "new scene."

That old-style never died-out, though, it morphed into smaller and fractured groups. So I never cared to belong to a modern "underground Noise" scene. There are some literal fucking masterpieces if you know where to look. Extremely intelligent people, and they all scoff at the likes of the people here.

If you know where to look, you will see. There are no names, like a band or "project" name. And if there is a name, it is usually some code, riddle, or sequence of numbers, or outright MOCKERY of the subject of names itself.

It demands a certain amount of functional intelligence of the viewer of the art, because the viewer itself, becomes an active participant.

Keep inquiring. You will see.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: AnonMessAgeSage on August 31, 2020, 07:16:26 PM
It is also true that those people who cannot understand how larger ideas relate to one another confuse subjects as being unrelated by their small-brained inability to focus on things outside of easily-packaged and consumable ideas.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on August 31, 2020, 08:58:58 PM
I'm not averse to tangents but started this thread because some were, OK the discussion of genetics in the reading thread upset some, which is why I started this " there just be one dedicated thread for this stupid bullshit and kept out of the regular ADULT threads? " why though this is thought stupid bullshit and not ADULT I don't know.

And my interest was in the ideas re 'reality'.

"For instance, I always associated with artists on the "dark net," so to speak. Except for maybe some of the TRULY obscure experimental / Noise music of the 70's and 80's, that was made for maybe two people, the larger scene developed TOTALLY independently, despite calling itself by the same name, it was world's apart."

I'm not sure what you mean by this, in the 70s I was introduced to the likes of Cage, Stockhausen, and groups like intermodulation, Spontaneous Music Ensemble- Derek Bailey, Riley, Reich et al. who i'd never heard of. The latter only available in the UK with difficulty as imports.

I'm unaware of hidden masterpieces, and within the context of 'music' as 'Art' i'd say, and argue that they are now not possible.


As for  "Extremely intelligent people, and they all scoff at the likes of the people here." I've maybe met some, and that is the last thing they do, its more the second rate who think themselves above the herd IMO, and experience.

"It is also true that those people who cannot understand how larger ideas relate to one another confuse subjects as being unrelated by their small-brained inability  "

Another interesting comment. It relates to my notions above, given the idea of an infinite reality, any finite intelligence would have no more a handle on it than a rock would.

"Keep inquiring. You will see."

I've come to see that inquiring is only of interest in and of itself. But then I'm old...




Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: AnonMessAgeSage on August 31, 2020, 10:15:52 PM
No, they do.
I shouldn't even be posting here. I only do it to guide those with an inkling suspicion.
I personally couldn't care if I'd be mocked a million times over.

In fact, I've received extreme amounts of criticism. I'm also not trying to fit in. I only care about planting seeds.

The rest is up to you mortals.
It's beneath me to even type on a godforsaken forum.

But how does one escape the tragedies of the 21-century?
It's impossible.

Gore porn and Kim Kardashian's ass now exist on the same level.

Not my fucking problem.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: AnonMessAgeSage on August 31, 2020, 10:39:55 PM
People wouldn't know HELL if it were staring them in the face.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Atrophist on August 31, 2020, 11:59:26 PM
Quote from: JLIAT on August 31, 2020, 08:58:58 PM
I'm not averse to tangents but started this thread because some were, OK the discussion of genetics in the reading thread upset some, which is why I started this " there just be one dedicated thread for this stupid bullshit and kept out of the regular ADULT threads? " why though this is thought stupid bullshit and not ADULT I don't know.


Actually I didn't interpret it that way, or perhaps didn't want to ... So it's okay to just report what book you are reading at the moment, but actually discussing the books, as well as the topics they cover, is stupid non-adult bullshit? That makes absolutely no sense whatever.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Atrophist on September 01, 2020, 12:04:39 AM
Quote from: JLIAT on August 30, 2020, 10:34:04 AM
Penrose is difficult, I find John Barrow 'better'. I think his 'The Book of Nothing' is a fairly easy read, and his demonstration of there being more than one zero ...

I looked this author up on the Helsinki library system online catalogue, and they have several of his books. Not this one however. They do have something called The Book of Universes which based on the title I guess might be related to that one?
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 01, 2020, 10:09:37 AM
Quote from: AnonMessAgeSage on August 31, 2020, 10:15:52 PM


But how does one escape the tragedies of the 21-century?
It's impossible.


At times you are very Nietzschean, at others not. There is no escape, but to quote ...

"Amor fati"

or

" One must imagine Sisyphus happy."

― Albert Camus
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 01, 2020, 10:44:28 AM
Quote from: Atrophist on August 31, 2020, 11:59:26 PM

Actually I didn't interpret it that way, or perhaps didn't want to ... So it's okay to just report what book you are reading at the moment, but actually discussing the books, as well as the topics they cover, is stupid non-adult bullshit? That makes absolutely no sense whatever.

Agreed, there are are some however who dislike wider discussions of books and of noise... normally they make the point by referring this as 'pseudo intellectual bullshit.." The 'non-adult' thing threw me, as prior in the thread someone was discussing comic books. Which is fine by me, one reads what one likes or what is puzzling. I read mainly non fiction, philosophy, and in the past popular science – hence the Barrow books I mention. The Book of Universes relates more to cosmology, whereas the Nothing book is an insight into Mathematics and its relation to Physics, the 'Impossibility' book sketches out the limits of science. His 'Artful Universe' is also interesting, there is a chapter on "NOISE"!!  I do take issue though with his ideas re Art, IMO there is no comparison with the momentous idea of Gödel with the illustrations of Escher. A better one would be Duchamp or Cage, who I would (as others) argue fundamentally changed the ideas re music/art.

If like me mathematics is difficult but intriguing I wonder if you have come across  "Introducing Mathematics", by Ziauddin Sardarin in the comic paper back series.  It covers Gödel and Cantor in terms that even I can follow....  :-)
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Got involved in a similar conversation this morning.  Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground", be it noise, punk, metal, or whatever.  The more normalized they've become, the more I've noticed it.  I'm guessing it is that blue collar reflex from joylessness, self-loathing, or inferiority complex they manifest into the universe.  Don't want to get too speculative or psychological with it.  I just know its presence.  Like with the rest of the world and things, that voice has become louder (again) in the past few years.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:10:19 AM
Quote from: AnonMessAgeSage on August 31, 2020, 10:15:52 PM
But how does one escape the tragedies of the 21-century?
It's impossible.

Rope and a stool
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:14:26 AM
People who complain about the 21st century are delusional. Things have never been better for more people than now. If you'd have lived 100 years ago, chances are you would have been dirt poor, forced to do menial labour until you died an early death due to disease. People who moan about how modern life is hell like to imagine themselves as being somehow above the rest of us, and keep that status in their daydreams of past life. Delusional.

If you feel modern life serves no purpose, shut off your smartphone and computer and all home appliances and dig ditches for a month. I doubt you'll like it, hah.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 11:20:09 AM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Got involved in a similar conversation this morning.  Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground", be it noise, punk, metal, or whatever.  The more normalized they've become, the more I've noticed it....

I think this is part of a process where a genre, which is created out or from some reason, reaction... becomes a style in which the original motivation for producing the genre is no longer significant. Once a style the issues / problems become technique, how does X get that sound... as opposed to Why does X make that sound.

Along with this is the idea or style of 'retro'.  
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 11:34:28 AM
Quote from: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:14:26 AM
People who complain about the 21st century are delusional. Things have never been better for more people than now. If you'd have lived 100 years ago, chances are you would have been dirt poor, forced to do menial labour until you died an early death due to disease.
100 years ago if you had survived WW1 you would be in the middle of a pandemic.... and heading for mass unemployment and economic collapse..
We seem to have avoided the war and will wait and see about Covid. But all things considered 2020 was a surprise... and we've 3+ months to go ...

Quote from: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:14:26 AM

People who moan about how modern life is hell like to imagine themselves as being somehow above the rest of us, and keep that status in their daydreams of past life. Delusional.

If you feel modern life serves no purpose, shut off your smartphone and computer and all home appliances and dig ditches for a month. I doubt you'll like it, hah.

I tend to think life has no purpose, which is a problem. But in the main i think you are right, given anytime in history to live i'd probably pick now.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:51:32 AM
Quote from: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 11:34:28 AM
Quote from: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:14:26 AM

People who moan about how modern life is hell like to imagine themselves as being somehow above the rest of us, and keep that status in their daydreams of past life. Delusional.

If you feel modern life serves no purpose, shut off your smartphone and computer and all home appliances and dig ditches for a month. I doubt you'll like it, hah.

I tend to think life has no purpose, which is a problem. But in the main i think you are right, given anytime in history to live i'd probably pick now.


Exactly, life has no purpose. You make your purpose, and I truly pity everyone who's life's purpose seems seems to be moaning online how their life has no purpose, hah. Or how they were born too late, or how everything sucks etc. We've (talking as a european, not true for everyone living right now) never had a better chance of shaping our lives how we choose, yet even all this freedom and stability makes many people anxious. Maybe humans aren't really meant to feel happy and fulfilled? I don't know, I just feel now is the golden age of humanity. It's been a steady climb and it might be downhill from here. Enjoy it while it lasts!
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 12:13:22 PM
I think there have always been pessimists who think things were once better, there is a hindsight that makes the past seem comfortable whereas now the future is fairly unpredictable, e.g. this pandemic, or Trump getting elected. Though there were precedents, the 1919 pandemic and Reagan? And civilizations certainly collapse, some seem currently in the west thinking that western civilization was maybe suspect.  (Both Greek and Roman civilizations at present seem to avoid this criticism.) I guess a real problem with technology is its speed / information and seemingly its uncontrollable, which might be a danger, something the Chinese seem very aware of. There is certainly no guarantee of a dark age, why do civilizations fail, lack of resources or confidence...?
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: host body on September 05, 2020, 12:41:06 PM
Quote from: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 12:13:22 PM
I think there have always been pessimists who think things were once better, there is a hindsight that makes the past seem comfortable whereas now the future is fairly unpredictable, e.g. this pandemic, or Trump getting elected. Though there were precedents, the 1919 pandemic and Reagan? And civilizations certainly collapse, some seem currently in the west thinking that western civilization was maybe suspect.  (Both Greek and Roman civilizations at present seem to avoid this criticism.) I guess a real problem with technology is its speed / information and seemingly its uncontrollable, which might be a danger, something the Chinese seem very aware of. There is certainly no guarantee of a dark age, why do civilizations fail, lack of resources or confidence...?

It's weird because even the dictatorships, meaning china and russia now are pretty humane. Sure dissidents and enemies of the state (or uighurs in China) get the stick rather than the carrot, but life as an average, middle class person in China or Russia isn't that different from living in a liberal democracy. North Korea seems to be the only state that actually doesn't try to make the lives of their citizens better. When has it ever been like this before? Certainly not prior to liberal democracy, say 100 years ago when the lower classes were more resources rather than individuals with human rights.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 01:04:07 PM
My wife recently went back to art college (in the UK) lots of Chinese students and made friends with one. Obviously they are vetted before being allowed to study in the west but she like others seemed happy with things, ambitious to make a success. Working in video, seems if you avoid politics things are OK, but then my Italian brother-in-law said the same about living in Italy. 

Could having an IKEA be a sign of a more benign state?   ;-)
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Bloated Slutbag on September 05, 2020, 05:27:13 PM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground"

That may or may not be true, but at least there's a level of humor there that might otherwise be thought to be lacking.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 05, 2020, 05:49:35 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 05, 2020, 05:27:13 PM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground"

That may or may not be true, but at least there's a level of humor there that might otherwise be thought to be lacking.

How true!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H574WR2Wmz4
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Zeno Marx on September 05, 2020, 07:05:12 PM
Quote from: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:51:32 AM
yet even all this freedom and stability makes many people anxious.
That's a human problem.  Maybe an animal problem?  Maybe a universal problem?  Watch a child with too many options.  System overload.  Play with this for two seconds, then that for ten seconds, then...  Meltdown.  If I was an ambitious person, I'd look for some studies to cite.  In individual-based and freedom-based culture, we stubbornly see options, and yet more options, as only positive.  It's profane to consider otherwise.  It's a relatively new phenomenon.  Maybe in the last 100+ years?  Possibly significant to the overall existential crisis?

I will say that I try not to judge anything I've said too harshly.  I don't think it is reasonable to expect people who have not experienced survival-like hardship to be able to deal with survival-like hardship well.  I think of the common unjust comparison of calling contemporary people "weak" because they're in a new set of hardships and said to not have the character to deal with the daily hardships of old.  Learned toughness with different skill sets as much as anything.  As convenience advances, the capacity to deal with hardship changes.  I think of old codgers bitching about how weak and fragile new generations are.  They're right by their metrics, but their also wrong by new metrics.  I don't know how to farm or live the difficult life of a farmer.  I never experienced that life.  Why would anyone expect me to have that exact type of ruggedness or know-how?  That's where nationalism, or whatever shallow gesture prides, come into play.  As if being an American, or German, or whoever, automatically makes you physically tough or resilient, though that isn't developed, or necessary, in 2020 Western culture.  You just have it.  Wrong.  Sorry for the unsolicited diatribe.  I don't tend to care for them, but here I am committing the act.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: AnonMessAgeSage on September 08, 2020, 05:46:26 PM
Quote from: host body on September 05, 2020, 11:14:26 AM
People who complain about the 21st century are delusional. Things have never been better for more people than now. If you'd have lived 100 years ago, chances are you would have been dirt poor, forced to do menial labour until you died an early death due to disease. People who moan about how modern life is hell like to imagine themselves as being somehow above the rest of us, and keep that status in their daydreams of past life. Delusional.

If you feel modern life serves no purpose, shut off your smartphone and computer and all home appliances and dig ditches for a month. I doubt you'll like it, hah.

You are, in actual fact, just a weak fucking pussy, sir.
Right  out of Nietzsche's, how  fitting  of a thread  title.

I cannot  wait to see your  KIND perish,  LAST MAN.
Haha! You justify  your  weakness with arguments  everybody's  already  heard a million  times  over, about  the  luxuries of the 21st-century.

Woooooowwww, how  profound  and  original I never thought of  that  before!
Posting on a forum is a waste of time.
I  no longer  care  at all, to even  plant  seeds.
What is done is done.

All will be judged  by FATE.
So go fuck yourself,  mortal.
You are your OWN self-destruction.
And  you  know  it.

Some of  us were born  to be slaves.  Others  were destined  for  greatness. What is greatness, you  ask? How  could  you  ever  know  that,  even  if I told  you?

You  will see me when  the time  is  right.  But I won't  see you, because  you,  are nothing.
I won't  see  you in person, but you  and other LAST men  of our  times, will indeed  recognize  my greatness and  see that I do what I say.

You  will  worship  me as your  fucking  GOD,  mortal.
And FATE will sort you  the fuck out.

Enjoy your  'luxury.'
You don't  know what  true luxury is.  You  can only  believe  what  you've  been  told.
Unless  you  personally  experienced  life  100 years ago, just  shut  the fuck.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: host body on September 08, 2020, 06:07:09 PM
Never has the title "moderate user" been more misleading.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 09, 2020, 11:01:58 AM
"No shepherd, and one herd! Every one wanteth the same; every one is equal: he who hath other sentiments goeth voluntarily into the madhouse."
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: aububs on September 13, 2020, 09:54:39 PM
the anti-intellectualism is in regards to analysis of the music, not the music itself
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 14, 2020, 10:34:39 AM
Aesthetics is for the artist as Ornithology is for the birds.

— Barnett Newman



Quote from: aububs on September 13, 2020, 09:54:39 PM
the anti-intellectualism is in regards to analysis of the music, not the music itself

Yes i'm aware of that idea, in analysis the impact of the artwork its essence which transcends rational thought and explanation is lost. You can find it in Schelling and the Romantics, as also in Tom Wolfe's 'Painted Word'.

However there is another form in which lets say for instance the motivation for Bennett in creating Power Electronics was the "philosophy" of De Sade and the music/art of Yoko Ono is ignored by someone who merely uses the style for some other purpose, say entertainment.

And I suppose another in which the kind of music is simple folk songs and ballads... which became popular music & rock. The Rolling Stones are number 1 again!



I think the academic interest in "Noise" (which was greater?)  rather than PE / Industrial was the simple question 'is noise music'?

Also it seemed almost predicted by Atali in the 70s...

"Beyond the rupture of the economic conditions of music, composition is revealed as the demand for a truly different system of organisation, a network within which a different kind of music and different social relations can arise. A music produced by each individual for himself, for pleasure outside of meaning, usage and exchange." (Jacques Atali in "Noise The Political Economy of Music" p. 137.)

When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer
BY WALT WHITMAN

When I heard the learn'd astronomer,
When the proofs, the figures, were ranged in columns before me,
When I was shown the charts and diagrams, to add, divide, and measure them,
When I sitting heard the astronomer where he lectured with much applause in the lecture-room,
How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick,
Till rising and gliding out I wander'd off by myself,
In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time,
Look'd up in perfect silence at the stars.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: aububs on September 14, 2020, 07:43:26 PM
Quote from: JLIAT on September 14, 2020, 10:34:39 AM
Quote from: aububs on September 13, 2020, 09:54:39 PM
the anti-intellectualism is in regards to analysis of the music, not the music itself

Yes i'm aware of that idea
the post i was responding to got deleted
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Atrophist on September 14, 2020, 10:00:13 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 05, 2020, 05:27:13 PM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground"

That may or may not be true, but at least there's a level of humor there that might otherwise be thought to be lacking.

I think you are both right, and there are also lots of exceptions to the points you both make. In my own experience, it's the tr00-kvlt scene police types who are the most grim and humourless types imaginable.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Bloated Slutbag on September 16, 2020, 06:12:41 AM
Quote from: Atrophist on September 14, 2020, 10:00:13 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 05, 2020, 05:27:13 PM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground"

That may or may not be true, but at least there's a level of humor there that might otherwise be thought to be lacking.

I think you are both right, and there are also lots of exceptions to the points you both make. In my own experience, it's the tr00-kvlt scene police types who are the most grim and humourless types imaginable.

Agree that at least one of us is right.;)

I think I'm just rephrasing here, both my own and Atrophist's comment, but humor and apparent anti-intellectualism could be said to reinforce the other. A chicken and egg thing, perhaps. But there's always a bit of a pickle there in reading too much into showbiz. Not that I'm anything like pickle-averse. Far from it.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: JLIAT on September 16, 2020, 07:10:08 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 16, 2020, 06:12:41 AM
Quote from: Atrophist on September 14, 2020, 10:00:13 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 05, 2020, 05:27:13 PM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground"

That may or may not be true, but at least there's a level of humor there that might otherwise be thought to be lacking.

I think you are both right, and there are also lots of exceptions to the points you both make. In my own experience, it's the tr00-kvlt scene police types who are the most grim and humourless types imaginable.

Maybe, but Monty Python is thought to be funny, and most were Cambridge graduates....




Agree that at least one of us is right.;)

I think I'm just rephrasing here, both my own and Atrophist's comment, but humor and apparent anti-intellectualism could be said to reinforce the other. A chicken and egg thing, perhaps. But there's always a bit of a pickle there in reading too much into showbiz. Not that I'm anything like pickle-averse. Far from it.
Title: Re: "Human all too Human"
Post by: Bloated Slutbag on September 17, 2020, 07:41:04 AM
Quote from: JLIAT on September 16, 2020, 07:10:08 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 16, 2020, 06:12:41 AM
Quote from: Atrophist on September 14, 2020, 10:00:13 PM
Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 05, 2020, 05:27:13 PM
Quote from: Zeno Marx on September 04, 2020, 07:13:07 PM
Anti-intellectualism has always been an issue in the "underground"

That may or may not be true, but at least there's a level of humor there that might otherwise be thought to be lacking.

I think you are both right, and there are also lots of exceptions to the points you both make. In my own experience, it's the tr00-kvlt scene police types who are the most grim and humourless types imaginable.


Agree that at least one of us is right.;)

I think I'm just rephrasing here, both my own and Atrophist's comment, but humor and apparent anti-intellectualism could be said to reinforce the other. A chicken and egg thing, perhaps. But there's always a bit of a pickle there in reading too much into showbiz. Not that I'm anything like pickle-averse. Far from it.

Maybe, but Monty Python is thought to be funny, and most were Cambridge graduates....

I'm sorry, but if you want me to go on arguing you'll have to pay for another five minutes.