Re: [NetBehaviour] Working notes for coming talks in London

2017-05-28 Thread aharon
May 28 2017 3:47 AM, "Alan Sondheim"  wrote:
hi.

is there a bit of syneastisia implied?
space as sound/audio as space?

the body.. define?

(writing something re "mind painting" when the mind is a sensory organ like 
hair, eyes, fingers and skin - as a way to go beyond the trap of mind/body bs 
binary, i hope..

what is your body sensation in this context?

london??
are you crossing the pond ??

when?
where?

cheers and have fun!
ahaxxx
> Working notes for coming talks in London
> 
> */ example tinnitus: gamespace/edgespace/blankspace
> http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.png
> http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.mp3 (within range)
> http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni2.png end example
> (i have continuous tinnitus; the frequences here are
> within the range; i hear the piece in the form of
> audio dreamwork, the dreaming of audio conveyances /*
> 
> gamespace/edgespace/blankspace /
> semiotic splatter /
> voice and body of the philosopher /
> anguish / */so many categories, terms, paralleling
> Celine, "my little categories"/*
> 
> gamespace - clean and proper space/body, containment
> and at the edge, into:
> 
> edgespace - material-epistemological transformations -
> improper mappings into no-mappings
> water into land
> place into no-place
> temporality into delay, indeterminacy
> and at the no-place, into:
> 
> blankspace - 'heere be dragonnes' -
> 
> blankspace and the delay
> 1. arctic travels - summer - supplies : _we wait_
> 2. reconnoitres - recuperation - evidence _they wait for us_
> 3. voice and body of the philosopher: on and off the trip
> 4. slow semiotic splatter: anecdotal inflation (Mandeville,
> legends, etc.)
> 
> arctic blankspace continuously carved away as exploration
> increased, legends atrophied, delays shortened.
> 
> */And the terminal was there as the murmur of the world (Lingis)
> was there, and present and neither in the background nor
> foreground, but somehow aligned with the mechanism or the
> membrane which contained the whole. But the machine itself was
> not there. And I do not know where the machine was, but it was
> not within me doing the dreaming (Sartre) but somewhere was.
> Nor was it a woman or with a woman or a possession of or by the
> woman./*
> 
> machine provides the wonts.
> 
> is it always a return to the body?
> 
> Cumming, Sartre Critique of Dialetical Reason, '"girls working
> in a factory are ruminating a vague dream," but they are at the
> same time "traversed by a rhythm external to them" so "it can be
> said that it is the semiautomatic machine that is dreaming
> through them."' 'Similarly the girl in the factory gives herself
> "to the machine," which takes possession of her work, until
> finally "she discovers herself _the object of the machine."' 'It
> is the machine in her which is "dreaming of caresses."'
> Cambridge Companion to Sartre, ed. Christina Howells
> 
> --> difficulty locating the quotes -
> 
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[NetBehaviour] Esther Rolinson in conversation with Douglas Dodds, the V&A's Senior Curator of Digital Art | Watermans

2017-05-28 Thread Irini Papadimitriou
Dear all

I hope you can join us for the launch event of our new exhibition,
Gravitate by Esther Rolinson at Watermans, and special event in partnership
with CAS; artist Esther Rolinson and Douglas Dodds, the V&A's Senior
Curator of Digital Art, will discuss Rolinson's new exhibition, in which
her drawings and light installation Flown will be exhibited together for
the first time.
The exhibition opens on Wednesday 7 June.

The conversation will take place in the theatre and will last approximately
45 minutes, followed by drinks in the gallery. All are welcome - please
book your free ticket on our website.


*Gravitate Exhibition Launch Event*Wednesday 7 June, 6.30-8.30pm
Theatre, FREE
Bookings:
https://www.watermans.org.uk/events/esther-rolinson-in-
conversation-with-douglas-dodds-senior-curator-of-digital-art-at-the-va/


Gravitate gives insight into Rolinson’s meditative drawing process in which
she explores sensations, structures, movements and connections. Hand-made
pencil drawings on paper are often digitally manipulated to experiment with
forms in light and colour, and simple combinations of lines are repeated
building up complex forms. Rolinson's construction rules are a method of
disassociating from conscious thoughts and allowing spatial patterns and
movements to emerge. Some of these works conclude like solved puzzles,
whilst others have the potential to grow infinitely.
Her installations are immersive, extendable structures that can be adjusted
to fit diverse environments from light festivals to art galleries.  In 2016
she was awarded The Lumen Global Digital Arts Prize Sculpture and 3D Award,
and the first prize at the inaugural International Art CHI Exhibition,
Computer and Human Interaction Conference, San Jose, California for Flown
developed in collaboration with artist and programmer Sean Clark. Examples
of Esther's drawings and prints have been acquired by Victoria and Albert
Museum, London.

Best wishes
Irini

-- 
Irini Papadimitriou
Head of New Media Arts Development
Watermans
40 High Street
Brentford
TW8 0DS

Direct line: +44 (0)20 8232 1012
Admin: +44 (0)20 8232 1020

www.watermans.org.uk
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[NetBehaviour] FWD: Part-time creative coding teacher

2017-05-28 Thread Edward Picot

From ArtsJobs -


   Part-time creative coding teacher, blue{shift} creative coding

 * Closes6th June 2017
 * LocationLondon
 * TypePart time
 * SalaryPaid (£10k-15k pro rata)
 * Artformcombined arts ,
   visual arts , Other, animation
 * ContactHeather Lyons j...@blueshiftcoding.com
   



   Description

blue{shift} is looking to grow our team of teachers and educators who 
want to inspire children to express their creativity through the 
language of code. We are specifically looking for team members to fulfil 
the following roles:


 *

   Minecraft Expert & Creative Coding Teacher

 *

   Creative Coding Teacher of JavaScript, Python and/or P5.js

 *

   Creative Technologist

 *

   Creative Coding Teacher of Robotics

 *

   Creative Coding and Animation Teacher

Short Description:

Would you like to empower children by helping them understand how the 
technology they use every day works? Are you passionate about education 
and creative coding? If your answer is yes, then get in touch! 
blue{shift} is looking for regular weekly part-time teachers for our 
after school clubs and holiday camps. Our current courses focus on 
teaching the fundamentals of programming using Scratch, Processing, 
JavaScript, web based tools and coding for Minecraft.


This is a flexible freelance role and would be ideal for recent 
graduates or current students who are passionate about creative 
computing. We are looking for experts and innovators who want to inspire 
the next generation of technology users and creators.


Requirements:

 *

   Our camps and clubs cover a wide range of content and you will not
   necessarily be expected to be an expert in all areas and in fact we
   are interested in people who may be expert in one area rather than
   basicly proficient in all.

 *

   Being an engaging and passionate teacher with experience working in
   a school setting or with school aged children is also of huge
   importance to this role.

 *

   A degree in Computing or related field or sufficient experience in
   programming

To apply, please email j...@blueshiftcoding.com a CV, along with a cover 
letter that explains how you would fit with blue{shift}, and answer the 
following questions:


 *

   What’s your favourite piece of tech for kids, either in or out of
   the classroom?

 *

   Imagine an  8 year old coder says they are bored in class and their
   refusal to continue is distracting the other class members. How
   would you deal with this issue

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Re: [NetBehaviour] linux laptops

2017-05-28 Thread aharon
might also interest people here:

https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/zerophone/

is there a workshop in it..? ;)

cheers!

ahanox?
xxx

May 27 2017 12:51 PM, "aharon"  wrote:
> Thanks Helen, didn't know of lineageos.org. will try the os..
> Fairphone.. yes.. I wonder about the price.. out of my range, but is this 
> difference in price the
> kind of number, in pounds, euros and other currencies - of a person's 
> mobile-linked freedom?
> the price to pay for not working for google's fame and fortune?
> 
> cheers!
> 
> aharon
> xx
> 
> May 24 2017 1:07 PM, "helen varley jamieson"  
> wrote:
> 
>> i don't know about all mobile devices, but fairphone has a forum of 
>> alternative operating systems:
>> https://forum.fairphone.com/c/software/alternative-oses
>> 
>> (i don't have actual experience of any of them, i'm just using the standard 
>> fairphone kola nut OS)
>> 
>> h : )
>> 
>> On 23.05.2017 23:22, x wrote:
>> 
>>> oh.. operating systems..
>>> just had over a month of being on road and having to keep technologically 
>>> cheap yet light..
>>> hence still suffering android..
>>> 
>>> am i missing something or there is a complete and utter absence of quality 
>>> free operating system
>>> for mobile devices?
>>> 
>>> rant apart 😃 if people need a light, Graphical and upto date os for an old 
>>> netbook laptop etc
>>> maybe check puppylinux,?
>>> you can get, in a sense, latest ubuntu or slackware running on an old or 
>>> new netbook
>>> without habing to deal with the commandline bits..
>>> 
>>> ciao from brasilia.
>>> aharon
>>> xxx
>>> 
>>> --
>>> Sent from myMail for Android
>>> 
>>> Monday, 22 May 2017, 10:22pm -03:00 from Alan Sondheim sondh...@panix.com:
>>> 
 It installed quickly for me. I think there's a way to get a graphic os on
 it but I haven't tried. Used to use Cygwin and still have it!
 
 - Alan
 
 On Tue, 23 May 2017, James Morris wrote:
> It's only really the command line tools (which is still a lot!).
> 
> I got quite excited about it at work where I'm using a few BASH scripts 
> with
> Cygwin on a regular basis. Unfortunately the Windows 10 Anniversary update
> which contains the Linux tools consistently fails to install - and takes 
> 3/4
> hour to not install :-(
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> On 22/05/17 23:40, Alan Sondheim wrote:
>> 
>> Fwiw, one thing worth noting - for those who are using limited memory 
>> (like
>> my netbook), Midori's an excellent browser -
>> Also wanted to mention that you can open up Ubuntu in Win10 - I have it
>> working there as well. It comes with the OS,
>> 
>> - Alan
>> 
>> On Mon, 22 May 2017, helen varley jamieson wrote:
>> 
>>> 
>>> thanks alan :)
>>> 
>>> i have noticed how much less space the OS needs, & how quickly 
>>> everything
>>> runs!
>>> 
>>> h : )
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 22.05.2017 18:59, Alan Sondheim wrote:
>>> 
>>> I use linux on my older laptops; it's easy to install; in fact
>>> I'm on a Dell netbook now with only 2 gig of ram and it runs
>>> fine. One good thing about the OS is that you can install a
>>> different one in maybe 15 minutes, so you can tailor the linux
>>> distro to your needs. Fwiw, I use linux mint for the most part,
>>> lots of terminal stuff.
>>> 
>>> Good luck with this!
>>> 
>>> - Alan
>>> 
>>> On Mon, 22 May 2017, helen varley jamieson wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> hi everyone,
>>> 
>>> more than a year ago i wrote to this list asking for
>>> advice about buying a
>>> linux laptop. it took me a while, but i'm now
>>> happily working with ubuntu
>>> mate on a no-brand machine :)
>>> 
>>> i spent quite a lot of time looking at second-hand &
>>> B-ware (ex-display)
>>> machines, & also at new models (lenovo, dell, hp,
>>> acer, asus, etc etc ... )
>>> & got quite overwhelmed by the choice & variables.
>>> nothing was exactly what
>>> i wanted, & i couldn't decide on what to compromise.
>>> i had a couple of
>>> things that were definite - not bigger than 14",
>>> must have ethernet port,
>>> prefereably separate audio in & out; so that
>>> narrowed things down quite a
>>> bit, but still i wasn't finding anything that felt
>>> right.
>>> 
>>> then i found a uk company that sells no-brand
>>> laptops with linux
>>> pre-installed (https://www.entroware.com). i could
>>> choose the hard drive,
>>> RAM, keyboard layout, etc & it arrived 5 days after
>>> i ordered it. i took it
>>> out of the box, turned it on, & started using it.
>>> the trickiest thing i've
>>> had to do so far was use the command line to get it
>>> to talk nicely to my
>>> printer - & i managed that without incident.
>>> 
>>> i'm still adjusting to the non-mac keyboard
>>> shortcuts - it's easier to take
>

Re: [NetBehaviour] Working notes for coming talks in London

2017-05-28 Thread Alan Sondheim



On Sun, 28 May 2017, aharon wrote:


May 28 2017 3:47 AM, "Alan Sondheim"  wrote:
hi.

is there a bit of syneastisia implied?
space as sound/audio as space?

I wasn't thinking of synaesthesia; certainly not in relation to tinnitus, 
which pretty much appears constant and directionless. But audio does 
gather and disseminate in space; the reverse reverberation work I do is 
based on that.



the body.. define?


That would take too long here...


(writing something re "mind painting" when the mind is a sensory organ 
like hair, eyes, fingers and skin - as a way to go beyond the trap of 
mind/body bs binary, i hope..


what is your body sensation in this context?

They're all - the senses - and the neural pathways etc. intertwined; I'm 
not sure how one would separate them. I get 'twitches' at times which 
appear to come from within the brain, but was told that they're actually 
from the surface/skin etc. area, which is interesting. Then migraines etc. 
appear localized etc.


I don't think that binary's operable anymore, not a clear divide?


london??
are you crossing the pond ??

when?
where?


Yes, June 29 - July 12, to Furtherfield, staying in Finsbury Park. Are you 
around?


Best!, Alan



cheers and have fun!
ahaxxx

Working notes for coming talks in London

*/ example tinnitus: gamespace/edgespace/blankspace
http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.png
http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.mp3 (within range)
http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni2.png end example
(i have continuous tinnitus; the frequences here are
within the range; i hear the piece in the form of
audio dreamwork, the dreaming of audio conveyances /*

gamespace/edgespace/blankspace /
semiotic splatter /
voice and body of the philosopher /
anguish / */so many categories, terms, paralleling
Celine, "my little categories"/*

gamespace - clean and proper space/body, containment
and at the edge, into:

edgespace - material-epistemological transformations -
improper mappings into no-mappings
water into land
place into no-place
temporality into delay, indeterminacy
and at the no-place, into:

blankspace - 'heere be dragonnes' -

blankspace and the delay
1. arctic travels - summer - supplies : _we wait_
2. reconnoitres - recuperation - evidence _they wait for us_
3. voice and body of the philosopher: on and off the trip
4. slow semiotic splatter: anecdotal inflation (Mandeville,
legends, etc.)

arctic blankspace continuously carved away as exploration
increased, legends atrophied, delays shortened.

*/And the terminal was there as the murmur of the world (Lingis)
was there, and present and neither in the background nor
foreground, but somehow aligned with the mechanism or the
membrane which contained the whole. But the machine itself was
not there. And I do not know where the machine was, but it was
not within me doing the dreaming (Sartre) but somewhere was.
Nor was it a woman or with a woman or a possession of or by the
woman./*

machine provides the wonts.

is it always a return to the body?

Cumming, Sartre Critique of Dialetical Reason, '"girls working
in a factory are ruminating a vague dream," but they are at the
same time "traversed by a rhythm external to them" so "it can be
said that it is the semiautomatic machine that is dreaming
through them."' 'Similarly the girl in the factory gives herself
"to the machine," which takes possession of her work, until
finally "she discovers herself _the object of the machine."' 'It
is the machine in her which is "dreaming of caresses."'
Cambridge Companion to Sartre, ed. Christina Howells

--> difficulty locating the quotes -

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New CD:- LIMIT:
http://www.publiceyesore.com/catalog.php?pg=3&pit=138
email archive http://sondheim.rupamsunyata.org/
web http://www.alansondheim.org / cell 718-813-3285
current text http://www.alansondheim.org/uq.txt
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[NetBehaviour] outside in inside out outside out inside in

2017-05-28 Thread Alan Sondheim



outside in inside out outside out inside in

http://www.alansondheim.org/insideout.png
http://www.alansondheim.org/outsidein.mp4
http://www.alansondheim.org/outsidein.png

21st century

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Re: [NetBehaviour] linux laptops

2017-05-28 Thread Rob Myers
From a Free Software point of view, anything with radio communication
involved is hard because the chips that do the communication tend to use
proprietary firmware (they are blobs of code with no source available).

As a phone has at least one more channel of radio communication compared
to a laptop, it's even harder to get an entirely free phone.

Strangely it's often the camera firmware that's the problem though. :-)

My personal laptop has a replacement WiFi chip which does use entirely
free firmware. I'm not sure what I'm going to have to do to ensure that
I'm still using a free system when I get a new laptop soon (this one is
six years old!).

- Rob.

On Sun, 28 May 2017, at 07:01 AM, aharon wrote:
> might also interest people here:
> 
> https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/zerophone/
> 
> is there a workshop in it..? ;)
> 
> cheers!
> 
> ahanox?
> xxx
> 
> May 27 2017 12:51 PM, "aharon"  wrote:
> > Thanks Helen, didn't know of lineageos.org. will try the os..
> > Fairphone.. yes.. I wonder about the price.. out of my range, but is this 
> > difference in price the
> > kind of number, in pounds, euros and other currencies - of a person's 
> > mobile-linked freedom?
> > the price to pay for not working for google's fame and fortune?
> > 
> > cheers!
> > 
> > aharon
> > xx
> > 
> > May 24 2017 1:07 PM, "helen varley jamieson"  
> > wrote:
> > 
> >> i don't know about all mobile devices, but fairphone has a forum of 
> >> alternative operating systems:
> >> https://forum.fairphone.com/c/software/alternative-oses
> >> 
> >> (i don't have actual experience of any of them, i'm just using the 
> >> standard fairphone kola nut OS)
> >> 
> >> h : )
> >> 
> >> On 23.05.2017 23:22, x wrote:
> >> 
> >>> oh.. operating systems..
> >>> just had over a month of being on road and having to keep technologically 
> >>> cheap yet light..
> >>> hence still suffering android..
> >>> 
> >>> am i missing something or there is a complete and utter absence of 
> >>> quality free operating system
> >>> for mobile devices?
> >>> 
> >>> rant apart 😃 if people need a light, Graphical and upto date os for an 
> >>> old netbook laptop etc
> >>> maybe check puppylinux,?
> >>> you can get, in a sense, latest ubuntu or slackware running on an old or 
> >>> new netbook
> >>> without habing to deal with the commandline bits..
> >>> 
> >>> ciao from brasilia.
> >>> aharon
> >>> xxx
> >>> 
> >>> --
> >>> Sent from myMail for Android
> >>> 
> >>> Monday, 22 May 2017, 10:22pm -03:00 from Alan Sondheim sondh...@panix.com:
> >>> 
>  It installed quickly for me. I think there's a way to get a graphic os on
>  it but I haven't tried. Used to use Cygwin and still have it!
>  
>  - Alan
>  
>  On Tue, 23 May 2017, James Morris wrote:
> > It's only really the command line tools (which is still a lot!).
> > 
> > I got quite excited about it at work where I'm using a few BASH scripts 
> > with
> > Cygwin on a regular basis. Unfortunately the Windows 10 Anniversary 
> > update
> > which contains the Linux tools consistently fails to install - and 
> > takes 3/4
> > hour to not install :-(
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > On 22/05/17 23:40, Alan Sondheim wrote:
> >> 
> >> Fwiw, one thing worth noting - for those who are using limited memory 
> >> (like
> >> my netbook), Midori's an excellent browser -
> >> Also wanted to mention that you can open up Ubuntu in Win10 - I have it
> >> working there as well. It comes with the OS,
> >> 
> >> - Alan
> >> 
> >> On Mon, 22 May 2017, helen varley jamieson wrote:
> >> 
> >>> 
> >>> thanks alan :)
> >>> 
> >>> i have noticed how much less space the OS needs, & how quickly 
> >>> everything
> >>> runs!
> >>> 
> >>> h : )
> >>> 
> >>> 
> >>> On 22.05.2017 18:59, Alan Sondheim wrote:
> >>> 
> >>> I use linux on my older laptops; it's easy to install; in fact
> >>> I'm on a Dell netbook now with only 2 gig of ram and it runs
> >>> fine. One good thing about the OS is that you can install a
> >>> different one in maybe 15 minutes, so you can tailor the linux
> >>> distro to your needs. Fwiw, I use linux mint for the most part,
> >>> lots of terminal stuff.
> >>> 
> >>> Good luck with this!
> >>> 
> >>> - Alan
> >>> 
> >>> On Mon, 22 May 2017, helen varley jamieson wrote:
> >>> 
> >>> 
> >>> hi everyone,
> >>> 
> >>> more than a year ago i wrote to this list asking for
> >>> advice about buying a
> >>> linux laptop. it took me a while, but i'm now
> >>> happily working with ubuntu
> >>> mate on a no-brand machine :)
> >>> 
> >>> i spent quite a lot of time looking at second-hand &
> >>> B-ware (ex-display)
> >>> machines, & also at new models (lenovo, dell, hp,
> >>> acer, asus, etc etc ... )
> >>> & got quite overwhelmed by the choice & variable

Re: [NetBehaviour] Working notes for coming talks in London

2017-05-28 Thread aharon
Sure, I utterly misread with syneastisia.
Apologies!

Good to hear about your visit to london!

Hopefully I will be around to visit and meet up. Currently have no idea if and 
when am around blighty come late june early july.

Have fun!

aharon
xx

May 28 2017 6:37 PM, "Alan Sondheim"  wrote:
> On Sun, 28 May 2017, aharon wrote:
> 
>> May 28 2017 3:47 AM, "Alan Sondheim"  wrote:
>> hi.
>> 
>> is there a bit of syneastisia implied?
>> space as sound/audio as space?
> 
> I wasn't thinking of synaesthesia; certainly not in relation to tinnitus, 
> which pretty much appears
> constant and directionless. But audio does gather and disseminate in space; 
> the reverse
> reverberation work I do is based on that.
> 
>> the body.. define?
> 
> That would take too long here...
> 
>> (writing something re "mind painting" when the mind is a sensory organ > 
>> like hair, eyes, fingers
>> and skin - as a way to go beyond the trap of > mind/body bs binary, i hope..
>> 
>> what is your body sensation in this context?
> 
> They're all - the senses - and the neural pathways etc. intertwined; I'm not 
> sure how one would
> separate them. I get 'twitches' at times which appear to come from within the 
> brain, but was told
> that they're actually from the surface/skin etc. area, which is interesting. 
> Then migraines etc.
> appear localized etc.
> 
> I don't think that binary's operable anymore, not a clear divide?
> 
>> london??
>> are you crossing the pond ??
>> 
>> when?
>> where?
> 
> Yes, June 29 - July 12, to Furtherfield, staying in Finsbury Park. Are you 
> around?
> 
> Best!, Alan
> 
>> cheers and have fun!
>> ahaxxx
>>> Working notes for coming talks in London
>>> 
>>> */ example tinnitus: gamespace/edgespace/blankspace
>>> http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.png
>>> http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.mp3 (within range)
>>> http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni2.png end example
>>> (i have continuous tinnitus; the frequences here are
>>> within the range; i hear the piece in the form of
>>> audio dreamwork, the dreaming of audio conveyances /*
>>> 
>>> gamespace/edgespace/blankspace /
>>> semiotic splatter /
>>> voice and body of the philosopher /
>>> anguish / */so many categories, terms, paralleling
>>> Celine, "my little categories"/*
>>> 
>>> gamespace - clean and proper space/body, containment
>>> and at the edge, into:
>>> 
>>> edgespace - material-epistemological transformations -
>>> improper mappings into no-mappings
>>> water into land
>>> place into no-place
>>> temporality into delay, indeterminacy
>>> and at the no-place, into:
>>> 
>>> blankspace - 'heere be dragonnes' -
>>> 
>>> blankspace and the delay
>>> 1. arctic travels - summer - supplies : _we wait_
>>> 2. reconnoitres - recuperation - evidence _they wait for us_
>>> 3. voice and body of the philosopher: on and off the trip
>>> 4. slow semiotic splatter: anecdotal inflation (Mandeville,
>>> legends, etc.)
>>> 
>>> arctic blankspace continuously carved away as exploration
>>> increased, legends atrophied, delays shortened.
>>> 
>>> */And the terminal was there as the murmur of the world (Lingis)
>>> was there, and present and neither in the background nor
>>> foreground, but somehow aligned with the mechanism or the
>>> membrane which contained the whole. But the machine itself was
>>> not there. And I do not know where the machine was, but it was
>>> not within me doing the dreaming (Sartre) but somewhere was.
>>> Nor was it a woman or with a woman or a possession of or by the
>>> woman./*
>>> 
>>> machine provides the wonts.
>>> 
>>> is it always a return to the body?
>>> 
>>> Cumming, Sartre Critique of Dialetical Reason, '"girls working
>>> in a factory are ruminating a vague dream," but they are at the
>>> same time "traversed by a rhythm external to them" so "it can be
>>> said that it is the semiautomatic machine that is dreaming
>>> through them."' 'Similarly the girl in the factory gives herself
>>> "to the machine," which takes possession of her work, until
>>> finally "she discovers herself _the object of the machine."' 'It
>>> is the machine in her which is "dreaming of caresses."'
>>> Cambridge Companion to Sartre, ed. Christina Howells
>>> 
>>> --> difficulty locating the quotes -
>>> 
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Re: [NetBehaviour] Working notes for coming talks in London

2017-05-28 Thread Alan Sondheim



That would be great to get together!

- Alan

On Sun, 28 May 2017, aharon wrote:


Sure, I utterly misread with syneastisia.
Apologies!

Good to hear about your visit to london!

Hopefully I will be around to visit and meet up. Currently have no idea if and 
when am around blighty come late june early july.

Have fun!

aharon
xx

May 28 2017 6:37 PM, "Alan Sondheim"  wrote:

On Sun, 28 May 2017, aharon wrote:


May 28 2017 3:47 AM, "Alan Sondheim"  wrote:
hi.

is there a bit of syneastisia implied?
space as sound/audio as space?


I wasn't thinking of synaesthesia; certainly not in relation to tinnitus, which 
pretty much appears
constant and directionless. But audio does gather and disseminate in space; the 
reverse
reverberation work I do is based on that.


the body.. define?


That would take too long here...


(writing something re "mind painting" when the mind is a sensory organ > like 
hair, eyes, fingers
and skin - as a way to go beyond the trap of > mind/body bs binary, i hope..

what is your body sensation in this context?


They're all - the senses - and the neural pathways etc. intertwined; I'm not 
sure how one would
separate them. I get 'twitches' at times which appear to come from within the 
brain, but was told
that they're actually from the surface/skin etc. area, which is interesting. 
Then migraines etc.
appear localized etc.

I don't think that binary's operable anymore, not a clear divide?


london??
are you crossing the pond ??

when?
where?


Yes, June 29 - July 12, to Furtherfield, staying in Finsbury Park. Are you 
around?

Best!, Alan


cheers and have fun!
ahaxxx

Working notes for coming talks in London

*/ example tinnitus: gamespace/edgespace/blankspace
http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.png
http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni.mp3 (within range)
http://www.alansondheim.org/tinni2.png end example
(i have continuous tinnitus; the frequences here are
within the range; i hear the piece in the form of
audio dreamwork, the dreaming of audio conveyances /*

gamespace/edgespace/blankspace /
semiotic splatter /
voice and body of the philosopher /
anguish / */so many categories, terms, paralleling
Celine, "my little categories"/*

gamespace - clean and proper space/body, containment
and at the edge, into:

edgespace - material-epistemological transformations -
improper mappings into no-mappings
water into land
place into no-place
temporality into delay, indeterminacy
and at the no-place, into:

blankspace - 'heere be dragonnes' -

blankspace and the delay
1. arctic travels - summer - supplies : _we wait_
2. reconnoitres - recuperation - evidence _they wait for us_
3. voice and body of the philosopher: on and off the trip
4. slow semiotic splatter: anecdotal inflation (Mandeville,
legends, etc.)

arctic blankspace continuously carved away as exploration
increased, legends atrophied, delays shortened.

*/And the terminal was there as the murmur of the world (Lingis)
was there, and present and neither in the background nor
foreground, but somehow aligned with the mechanism or the
membrane which contained the whole. But the machine itself was
not there. And I do not know where the machine was, but it was
not within me doing the dreaming (Sartre) but somewhere was.
Nor was it a woman or with a woman or a possession of or by the
woman./*

machine provides the wonts.

is it always a return to the body?

Cumming, Sartre Critique of Dialetical Reason, '"girls working
in a factory are ruminating a vague dream," but they are at the
same time "traversed by a rhythm external to them" so "it can be
said that it is the semiautomatic machine that is dreaming
through them."' 'Similarly the girl in the factory gives herself
"to the machine," which takes possession of her work, until
finally "she discovers herself _the object of the machine."' 'It
is the machine in her which is "dreaming of caresses."'
Cambridge Companion to Sartre, ed. Christina Howells

--> difficulty locating the quotes -

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