Counting and recounting

In A Beautiful Mind, the biography of John Forbes Nash Jr. by Sylvia Nasar, one finds the following passage

Margaret Wertheim, author of Pythagoras’ Trousers, a history of numerology, has pointed out that “people look to the order of numbers when the world falls apart, suggesting once again that delusions — like “mystical, cultic religious efflorescence” — aren’t merely the ravings of madmen but conscious, painstaking, and often desperate attempts to make sense out of chaos.

1,2,3

And a little further on we read

To stay in one place and not to run away, to labor at articulating his delusions in a way that attracted an audience that valued them must be seen as evidence of some progression back to consensual forms of reality and behavior. And, at the same time, to have his delusions seen not just as bizarre and unintelligble, but as having an intrinsic value, was surely one aspect of these “lost years” that paved the way for an eventual remission.

Numerology as a ground for dialogue? It makes sense given its function in this case of constraining of behaviour to make communication possible.

And so for day 390
07.01.2008

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Increments of incrimination

Martin Buber Tales of the Hasidim: The Early Masters translated by Olga Marx

Zusya’s account of the “incomplete” angel-accuser that emerges from acts of sin

The Accuser

This is Rabbi Zusya’s comment on the pasage in the Sayings of the Fathers: ‘He who commits one transgression has gotten himself one accuser.’ “Every sin begets an accusing angel. But I have never seen a complete angel spring from the sin of a devout man of Israel. Sometimes he lacks a head; sometimes his body is crippled. For when a man of Israel believes in God, believes in him even while he is sinning, his heart aches, and what he does, he does not do with all his will, and so the angel never emerges complete.”

Reminds one of the Buddhist teaching about how the seeds of hate shrivel up while tending with loving kindness to one’s affairs in the world, especially as related by Thich Nhat Hanh.

And so for day 389
06.01.2008

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Kline on future values

Peter Kline The Everyday Genius (1988)

Relieved of the burden of drill, repetition and boredom, teachers will then be able to help us enter a new age of excitement about learning […] For when machines handle the presentation of information, providing students with rapid evaluation and feedback, teachers will be free to engage in activities and discussions which help their students humanize what they have learned. […] Because the interactive video-computer will bring rich new possibilities to the classroom, most people will desire to continue being students, at least on a part time basis, all through life. This will create new job opportunities for teachers, who will also be better paid than they are now. Indeed, education may become the biggest growth industry of the next half century. For there’s nothing that can benefit people more, provided it actually works.

I like the ambiguity of “provided it actually works”. It could be the education system or it could be the course of events predicted. Either way is pleasing to see the utopian bent reined in by a wry comment on contingency.

And so for day 388
05.01.2008

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White on ornamentation

Edmund White The Burning Library “The Wanderer: Juan Goytisolo’s Border Crossings”

Artistically he has taken the post-modernist technique of intertextuality but given it an Arabic flavor not only through quotations from Arabic and Persian writers but also through the imitation of of esthetic rules behind Muslim music and architecture — repetition, abstraction, fluid variations on fixed themes, improvisation. Whereas Western art subordinates the parts to the whole, demotes decoration and promotes functional or structural clarity, Muslim art dissolves or rejects these hierarchies and prizes ornamentation and spontaneity.

@–>–
how odd that ornamentation would be associated with spontaneity
–<–@

And so for day 387
04.01.2008

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Time again for more space

From Elements of Japanese Design by Boyé Lafayette De Mente on “MA Mixing Space and Time”

Ma means space as well as time and refers to the space of time between events. It is space that is sensually as well as intellectually perceived. In the Japanese concept of things, ma gets your attention and directs your mind or thoughts along specific paths that lead to some kind of conclusion or some pleasant event. In art circles, ma also refers to the aesthetic and creative sense of the artist — in the artist knowing how structure the flow of time.

It is worth spending a while again meditating on the modifications of our perceptions of time.

And so for day 386
03.01.2008

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White on time in the novel

Edmund White The Burning Library “Southern Belles Lettres: Cormac McCarthy”

Time as a resource…

Since fiction, like music, is primarily a temporal art, any device that inflects the reader’s perception of time becomes crucial, not just as a hook for grabbing the reader’s attention but as a strategy for modifying the very material out of which this art is composed: time. Plots generate suspense and characters promote a sense of identification, both elements that engender a taut awareness of duration that has little to do with clock time.

It is worth spending a while meditating on the modifications of our perceptions of time.

And so for day 385
02.01.2008

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And the moral of the story is

Finished reading His Dark Materials. It’s moving in a kind quiet way. It celebrates the everyday goodness of living a humble but engaged life. Its final emphasis is on building the Republic of Heaven in the here and now:

But then we wouldn’t have been able to build it. No one could if they put themselves first. We have to be all those difficult things like cheerful and kind and curious and patient, and we’ve got to study and think and work hard, all of us, in all our different worlds, and then we’ll build … [ellipsis in the original]

And so for day 384
01.01.2008

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Ghost Days Spectral Hours

Jill Walker Rettberg.
Blogging

To really understand blogs, you need to read them over time. Following a blog is like getting to know someone, or like watching a television series. […] A blog consists of more than words and images. It cannot be read simply for its writing, but is the sum of writing, layout, connections and links and the pace of publication.

Time Stamp Fiction

In short, it helps to consider timestamps as cueing devices. Timestamps begin to make sense in a series. […]

The book Kari recommends has some very suggestive divisions. Revolution in Time is divided into three parts : Finding Time, Keeping Time, Making Time. This threesome might also provide an analogy for the psychosocial aspects of those timestamps you are studying in relation to the practice of blogging. Initially they assist the blog writer (and readers) in marking the phases of an intentional practice of recurring composition. Blogging once a day in the morning or in the evening etc. The ritual becomes incorported hence finding time — the hour of the timestamp is key. Keeping Time — the timestamp helps organize the archive and retrieve entries. The day and month of the timestamp are key. Making Time — timestamps become labels for a number of traversals through a blog […]

Accessions

Blog entries are often time stamped and dated. It is assumed by many readers that the displayed time stamp corresponds to event of composition. However the resourceful author could be publishing from a store of pre-written texts. As well, time stamps can be fudged for a variety of purposes. […] If accounting is to telling, could collecting be to accessing? In a sense blogging is a redistributive activity. By playing with the partitions, the user, be they writer, reader or viewer, affect the nature of redistributive activity. […] Gives new expression to the phrase “blogging on borrowed time.”

http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~lachance/jardin/html/invertTEIblog.htm#user111

Blog as TARDIS

Any room can become a time machine. A lesson taught to us by reading Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams.

First series of never ending looks future-wards 1, 2, 3, …
Then as I child I learnt of integers and the doubleness of lines … -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, …
And then the numbers between 3.2, 3.3, … 4.0

Each day then has many more than 24 hours.
It has mine, yours and theirs.
There are hours within hours.
Work. Series. Work.
Stories.

And so for day 383
31.12.07 23:59
01.01.08 00:01

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Spectral Hours Ghost Days

Jill Walker Rettberg.
Blogging

To really understand blogs, you need to read them over time. Following a blog is like getting to know someone, or like watching a television series. […] A blog consists of more than words and images. It cannot be read simply for its writing, but is the sum of writing, layout, connections and links and the pace of publication.

Time Stamp Fiction

In short, it helps to consider timestamps as cueing devices. Timestamps begin to make sense in a series. […]

The book Kari recommends has some very suggestive divisions. Revolution in Time is divided into three parts : Finding Time, Keeping Time, Making Time. This threesome might also provide an analogy for the psychosocial aspects of those timestamps you are studying in relation to the practice of blogging. Initially they assist the blog writer (and readers) in marking the phases of an intentional practice of recurring composition. Blogging once a day in the morning or in the evening etc. The ritual becomes incorported hence finding time — the hour of the timestamp is key. Keeping Time — the timestamp helps organize the archive and retrieve entries. The day and month of the timestamp are key. Making Time — timestamps become labels for a number of traversals through a blog […]

Accessions

Blog entries are often time stamped and dated. It is assumed by many readers that the displayed time stamp corresponds to event of composition. However the resourceful author could be publishing from a store of pre-written texts. As well, time stamps can be fudged for a variety of purposes. […] If accounting is to telling, could collecting be to accessing? In a sense blogging is a redistributive activity. By playing with the partitions, the user, be they writer, reader or viewer, affect the nature of redistributive activity. […] Gives new expression to the phrase “blogging on borrowed time.”

http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~lachance/jardin/html/invertTEIblog.htm#user111

Blog as TARDIS

Any room can become a time machine. A lesson taught to us by reading Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams.

First series of never ending looks future-wards 1, 2, 3, …
Then as I child I learnt of integers and the doubleness of lines … -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, …
And then the numbers between 3.2, 3.3, … 4.0

Each day then has many more than 24 hours.
It has mine, yours and theirs.
There are hours within hours.
Work. Series. Work.
Stories.

And so for day 383
31.12.07 23:59
01.01.08 00:01

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Signs Signs Signs

Inspired by Words in the Wild at lexigraphi.ca here are some intriguing examples of Toronto signage and in once case graffiti.

Sign: Bikes on Wheels - Kensington Market

Sign: Bikes on Wheels – Kensington Market

I like the name of the shop and the round gear-wheel motif of the Bikes on Wheels sign.
Sign: Bite Nightclub

Sign: BITE overhanging the entrance

Night club for vampires? BITE overhanging the entrance
Sign: A new take on getting close: Pedestrians Must Adhere To Traffic Personnel

Sign: A new take on getting close: “Pedestrians Must Adhere To Traffic Personnel”

A new take on getting close: “Pedestrians Must Adhere To Traffic Personnel”
Sign: No one writes to the Colonel

A banner for a lounge with literary allusions (No one writes to the Colonel)

A banner for a lounge with literary allusions (No one writes to the Colonel)
Sign: United Smiles of Kensington - Dentistry in the Market

Sign in Kensington Market for Dentistry

A dentist in the market under a rainbow sign of united smiles
Sign: Jelly Modern Doughnuts

Sign: Jelly Modern Doughnuts

Doughnuts with graphic flare
Signage: Fancy Franks

Wall at Fancy Franks

Wallful of Frankfurter fun
Sign Grindhouse Coffee

Sign: Grindhouse Coffee with skull and bones and cup

Skull and Bones coffee in an appropriately named Grindhouse
Sign: Hairsay - unisex hair design

A bit flared by the light coming through the trees on this side street which boasts a unisex hair design under the moniker of Hairsay

A bit flared by the light coming through the trees on this side street which boasts a unisex hair design under the moniker of Hairsay
Sign: Lilliput Hats

Sign: Lilliput Hats

Lilliput Hats for all sizes and styles
Sign: Head 2 Head Shop

Sign: Head 2 Head Shop: Pipes, Bongs, Hookah, Scales & Papers

For a different head trip, head to Head 2 Head
Sign: Hooked Fish Shop

Sign: Hooked Fish Shop in Kensington Market

The stylized K of Hooked, the fish shop, catches the eye
Sign: Maple tree poem

Sign+Poem – Maple Tree

On a fence in a park, this ode to the Maple Tree


Transcription = “My maple tree / Is neat to climb, / And there’s a special / Branch of mine / Where I can perch / And not be seen, / And watch the world / Go by, and dream.”
Sign: Moonbean Cafe - Kensington Market

Sign: Moonbean Cafe – Kensington Market

Back to the coffee theme with the Moonbean
Mosca in Kensington Market

Mosca in Kensington Market

If you know your Latin, you will connect image and word for the Mosca Boutique
Philth -graffito above Dollarama

Philth -graffito above Dollarama

The juxtaposition of a Dollarama sign with the graffito on the next building brings to mind filthy lucre. Got to love the spelling: PHILTH
Poetry - Kensington Market

Poetry – Kensington Market

Poetry, a jazz cafe, deserves two shots. One for the mural and one for the name.
Poetry in Kensington Market

Poetry in Kensington Market – Close up

Sign: Rasta Pasta

Sign: Rasta Pasta – Jamaican and Italian Cuisine

Rasta Pasta for Jamaican and Italian fare
Sign: She Said Boom!

Sign: She Said Boom! Records and Books

Book and record store whose name is inspired by lyrics by Fifth Column: She Said Boom!
Sign: Thirsty & Miserable

Sign: Thirsty & Miserable

Industrial drinking? at Thirsty & Miserable, Purveyors of Fine Ales
Sign: Vicki'z Vegetarian Eatery

Vicki’z Vegetarian Eatery

Vicki’z at ease with possessive marks

Some are gone some still there. Signs everywhere.

And so for day 382
31.12.2007

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