Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-11-01 Thread Alan Sondheim via NetBehaviour
> > Max > > -- > *From:* NetBehaviour on > behalf of Max Herman via NetBehaviour > > *Sent:* Friday, October 29, 2021 11:50 AM > *To:* netbehaviour@lists.netbehaviour.org < > netbehaviour@lists.netbehaviour.org> > *Cc:* Max Herma

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-11-01 Thread Max Herman via NetBehaviour
via NetBehaviour Sent: Friday, October 29, 2021 11:50 AM To: netbehaviour@lists.netbehaviour.org Cc: Max Herman ; Anthony Stephenson Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding Hi Anthony, That is a very interesting idea from Heydenreich, who I've never read and don't really know a

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-29 Thread Meredith Finkelstein Chang via NetBehaviour
eral universal or environmental properties > of the latter. But it's very slow going and still no more than a hobby. > > All best, > > Max > > > -- > *From:* NetBehaviour on > behalf of Anthony Stephenson via NetBehaviour < > netbehaviour@lists

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-29 Thread Max Herman via NetBehaviour
ue transmitting both the individual and the general universal or environmental properties of the latter. But it's very slow going and still no more than a hobby. All best, Max From: NetBehaviour on behalf of Anthony Stephenson via NetBehaviour Sent: Fr

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-29 Thread Anthony Stephenson via NetBehaviour
Hello Max, Your continuing investigation into La Giocondo made me break open my only book on Leonardo. An interesting aside is something Ludwig Heydenreich once pointed out that Leonardo's sketch of the Arno valley (https://fineartamerica.com/featured/arno-landscape-leonardo-da-vinci.html) is "The

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-28 Thread Max Herman via NetBehaviour
he new case of it seems more like an infernal twin, but no one ever said time couldn't go backward. 🙂 From: NetBehaviour on behalf of Anthony Stephenson via NetBehaviour Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2021 9:30 AM To: netbehaviour@lists.netbehaviour.org Cc: Anthony Stephenson Subject: Re: [Ne

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-28 Thread Alan Sondheim via NetBehaviour
Alarming it is and breathtaking as well. The desiccation of the Great Salt Lake doesn't affect drinking water or the cities directly; it's far too saline. But the wider ecosystem as a whole, of course, and hopefully fires and storms won't increase in ferocity in the N.American west in general - Be

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-28 Thread Alan Sondheim via NetBehaviour
Hi Anthony, This resonates and doesn't for me; it's illuminating but it also seems too neat, too schematic, too totalizing, too clear in a sense. I always have difficulties with D&G and their language that way. But the resonance is clear. Then in my writing (which isn't part of Plateaus in thought

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-28 Thread Edward Picot via NetBehaviour
Alan, I skimmed through the video, but the landscapes are completely breathtaking - and at the same time, the dryness of the landscape looks very harsh and alarming. Edward On 28/10/2021 05:14, Alan Sondheim wrote: Ontological Banding http://www.alansondheim.org/banding2.jpg https://youtu

Re: [NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-28 Thread Anthony Stephenson via NetBehaviour
Consider: "... On the intensive continuum, the strata fashion forms and form matters into substances. In combined emissions, they make the distinction between expressions and contents, units of expression and units of content, for example, signs and particles. In conjunctions, they separate flo

[NetBehaviour] Ontological Banding

2021-10-27 Thread Alan Sondheim
Ontological Banding http://www.alansondheim.org/banding2.jpg https://youtu.be/oWgD6V8t_zA video http://www.alansondheim.org/banding1.jpg So this is referencing and returning to the great Salt Lake in Utah and we have traveled there to look at the extent of the damage done find E drought that