Archive for the ‘fringe’ Category

quantum biology

Monday, February 4th, 2013

Anyone feel daring enough to make a fool of himself, to venture a guess that anything we recognize as psychic phenomenon (by that, I mean the things which aren’t total bullshit to begin with) and the soul might come out of the research in quantum biology? The New Age quacks will be all over this, building elaborate systems out of these fragments of information that will rival any role playing game. However, simple universal mechanism isn’t going to work for explaining every biological system much longer.

And honestly, I look forward to the weird mess that results.

Footage of the Panic! Movement

Friday, October 7th, 2011

Jodorowsky and Roland Topor both visible in the video.  NSFW- bare breasts and buttocks.

 

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Bran Mok Morn save us

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

It’s hard to tell what is going on with this one yet. Secrets Of The Underground Door To An Ancient World is proposed a 12,000 year old network of tunnels from Turkey to Scotland. It’s sounds beautifully outlandish, some serious Robert E. Howard and “The Worms of the Earth” nonsense. I eagerly await news of degenerate reptile men!

However, it’s the Daily Mail and the author is German. There might be some journalism and translation issues here. It might be more about a culture in which underground tunnels were featured and ideas transmitted, not literally a proposal for an underground superhighway existing from Turkey to Scotland.

The London Nobody Knows

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

A brilliant and obscure look at the flip side of swinging sixties London. Narrated by a rather sardonic and sometimes scathing James Mason, we are taken on a tour of the underbelly of London. The film is artfully edited and offers straight factual history with real life characters/ street performers/ vendors who seem very unaware of the camera. The documentary has extremely surreal and quite tragic scenes by turn and encapsulates a London undocumented in the media of the time.

http://www.veoh.com/videos/v15064408nCWcD4Pm

A Klingon Christmas Carol/Fairytale Of New York—The Pogues & Kirsty MacColl

Monday, December 21st, 2009

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Gleanings

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Levels of dissonance in music had been steadily rising since the last years of the nineteenth century, when Liszt wrote his keyless bagatelle and Satie wrote down the the six-note Rosicrucian chords of Le Fils des etoiles.  Strauss, of course, indulged discord in Salome.  Max Reger, a composer versed in the contrapuntal science of Bach, caused Schoenberg-like scandals in 1904 with music that meandered close to atonal.  In Russia, the composer-pianist Alexander Scriabin, who was under the influence of Theosophist spiritualism, devised a harmonic language that vibrated around a “mystic chord” of six notes; his unfinished magnum opus Mysterium, slated for a premire at the foot of the Himalayas, was to have brought about nothing less than the annihilation of the universe, whence men and women would emerge as astral souls, relieved of sexual difference and other bodily limitations.

- Alex Ross, The Rest Is Noise, p.63.

Where has ambition in music gone, brothers?

“Absurdist Fiction” Making Us Smarter?

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Well…

Does absurdist literature make you smarter? Giraffe carpet cleaner, it does!

The befuddled tramps in Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot are a poetic personification of paralysis. But new research suggests the act of watching them actually does get us somewhere.

Absurdist literature, it appears, stimulates our brains.

That’s the conclusion of a study recently published in the journal Psychological Science. Psychologists Travis Proulx of the University of California, Santa Barbara and Steven Heine of the University of British Columbia report our ability to find patterns is stimulated when we are faced with the task of making sense of an absurd tale. What’s more, this heightened capability carries over to unrelated tasks.

In the first of two experiments, 40 participants (all Canadian college undergraduates) read one of two versions of a Franz Kafka story, The Country Doctor. In the first version, which was only slightly modified from the original, “the narrative gradually breaks down and ends abruptly after a series of non sequiturs,” the researchers write. “We also included a series of bizarre illustrations that were unrelated to the story.”

The second version contained extensive revisions to the original. The non sequiturs were removed, and a “conventional narrative” was added, along with relevant illustrations.

All participants were then shown a series of 45 strings of letters, which they were instructed to copy. They were informed that the strings, which consisted of six to nine letters, contained a strict but not easily decipherable pattern.

They were then introduced to a new set of letter strings, some of which followed the pattern and some of which did not. They were asked to mark which strings followed the pattern.

Those who had read the absurd story selected a higher number of strings as being consistent with the pattern. More importantly, they “demonstrated greater accuracy in identifying the genuinely pattern-congruent letter strings,” the researchers report. This suggests “the cognitive mechanisms responsible for implicitly learning statistical regularities” are enhanced when we struggle to find meaning in a fragmented narrative.

In a second study, participants were asked to recall situations in which they responded in very different ways, and instructed to consider the notion “that they had two different selves inhabiting the same body.” They, too, did better on the letter-pattern task than members of a control group. “The breakdown of expected associations that participants experienced when arguing against their own self-unity appeared to motivate them to seek out patterns of association in a novel environment,” the researchers write.

To Prolux and Heine, these finds suggest we have an innate tendency to impose order upon our experiences and create what they call “meaning frameworks.” Any threat to this process will “activate a meaning-maintenance motivation that may call upon any other available associations to restore a sense of meaning,” they write.

So it appears Viktor Frankl was right: Man is perpetually in search of meaning, and if a Kafkaesque work of literature seems strange on the surface, our brains amp up to dig deeper and discover its underlying design. Which, all things considered, is a hell of a lot better than waking up and discovering you’ve turned into a giant cockroach.

What an eccentrically designed study.  They didn’t read Kafka, they read altered Kafka (or kinda-Kafka);  AND WITH PICTURES!  Not sure what this proves, but it makes for a good headline.

Bukowski Against Mickey Mouse

Monday, September 14th, 2009
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PleaseGodNo

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Via metafilter, this thing.

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Scariest pipedream ever.  Imagine having an absinthe in the shadow of St. Louis cathedral (Ms. Thais will hook you up), a cigarette as you stroll in the Quarter, a coffee on the street somewhere in our country’s first and last bohemia (endangered as it is), then imagine looking up…what’s that you see in the distance?

An aesthetic nightmare*.

*Space for three casinos and 500,000 sq. ft. of retail space helpfully included.

Gurdjieff in France

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Note the fez, cig, and camelhair greatcoat combo at the end!