Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Anti-TV Overview

Answer to a question on Reddit "What is your reasons for not liking television?"  Lightly edited.
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Film and television are mass media and expensive to make. As such, they first have to create as large of markets as possible, which in the beginning was done by creating for the pre-existing lowest common denominator and then by forging an even larger market by disrupting communities and families down to atomized, narcissistic individuals. Secondly, it is used to normalize hierarchy and violence, called mean world syndrome. People who watch a lot of TV think the world is more violent than it statistically is, and thus were the reliable supporters for "tough on crime" policies. I'm actually not saying TV makes people more violent. I am saying it normalizes the structures that use violence (and financial debt) that keep people in place. It also makes us more distrustful and lacking in social cohesion (which social media has picked up on and run with). Lastly, TV normalizes a level of greed far beyond what the planet can support and makes people feel inadequate when they are not living up to what they see on the screen -- even though those images are absurdly unrepresentative and made precisely to make you want what you don't have.
If you want to go further down the rabbit hole, here are some links -- I most recommend the article RIP, Kill Your TV; the other links build off it. Also, you could explore our problem with the narcissism that grew out hallowing out the soul and spending our time living up to images.
The main reason the internet can provide something different is the cost of production is so much lower. But even then most people have been trained to want their fear, distrust and greed, so much of the internet (and virtually all of social media) obliges.

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Related, in a correspondence with Nat, he asked me if I liked Rick and Morty.  Lightly edited.

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As for Rick and Morty, Beth and I have seen every episode.  I think that its best episodes are some of the best-written stuff in the history of television.  I must mention reservations with the ideology of the show: it is the greatest glorification of "facts don't care about your feelings" cruelty on TV.  The creators are better people than Rick, at least in terms of public policies they signal wanting to see, but they have bought into the Mean World Syndrome of the American media landscape fully.  This also shows in co-creator Justin Roiland's project on Hulu Solar Opposites (recommended, but totally biting into the same caveat . .. but really, the idea that the world is mean so we need mean badasses to counter that is worked into every prestige show I can think of in our so-called Golden Age of Television).  

Here are two enjoyable YouTube videos on the flaw in Rick and Morty (and, yes, Beth and I will still watch the show).  

https://youtu.be/X-8ICfWsUVw  

https://youtu.be/8vI2j-8To34

Arithmetic as Rugged Beauty

I remember once being put in the hallway for talking too much in a class.  I looked up at the ceiling and counted tiles for a bit, but then I started manipulated numbers in my head, to the limited ability available to me as a middle school student.  I don't remember any of the specifics, just that it was arithmetic, and that I well enough pleased with my time to myself.

Life has lots of little moments where you are essentially trapped, a lot of them having to do with hospitals, but I never rule out the possibility of being a political prisoner.

I know we use our smart phones with their games and anti-social media for these moments, but I would like to more prepared than that.  Also, good luck using your phone in solitary confinement, intubated, when kidnapped for ransom or tied down.  I refer to arithmetic as the most rugged beauty, because it can done without any resources, including social ones.

Here is a running list of some mental arithmetic activities for those types of moments.

* turning words into numbers, doing so with a system of (a=1, b=2, . . . z=26). 
* finding the digital root.  This provides the amusing test of whether the number is a multiple of 3 (or nine).
* converting into binary.  I use my fingers to store the digits as I work.
* Goldbach hunting: Once I have a number, find the answers for 1) Every integer greater than 5 can be expressed as the sum of three primes or 2) Every even number greater than 2 can be expressed as the sum of two primes.

Also, there was a time in my life where I had maintained an Anki deck with, along with way too many other things, a lot of historical information by date.  For example, it's hard for 79 to come up and me not think about Einstein being born in 1879 (on Pi Day (3 14), no less).  Many numbers can trigger a rumination on some historical person or event.

I find calculation to be more satisfying than just counting.  (Although counting is a good trick for breaking the trance of television, a trick I picked up from John Michael Greer.  Just keep counting how many times the camera angle changes, etc (Cp this)).   If I'm ever in a hospital bed with control of a TV, I plan to turn it on just long enough to gather some numbers, or words to convert to numbers, and then use that as the source of calculation and then thinking.

Dread, Resentment, Health and Dignity

As I say below in my response to this piece, I guess I have Dutch muse.  Lot's of topics, from media dosages, political madness, the nature of dignity, whether gold and silver should be in an investment portfolio.

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First time I've been back in since I last commented. I'm glad I've reduced my frequency. More on that in the second paragraph, but I might just put an entry in my calendar to catch up every two weeks or so. I value the way our anonymous Dutch writer shows where the emperor has no clothes, and when I think he's wrong, I think he's wrong in ways I find interesting -- interesting enough that I feel inspired to write replies. (I guess I have a Dutch muse. Who knew?)

Today, I am not here to disagree with much. As is the message in the first part of the piece, people need to know what they can handle, and how much good they are actually doing with the time they spend on an issue. I once wasted an entire sabbatical by being on r/collapse too much. Yes, the information itself was a drag, but the real thing to avoid is misanthropes who are sack-of-shitting through life. Once you get the message, hang up the phone. Our Dutch friend, while better than them, is still somewhere on the spectrum enough that I need to put the writing away on focus on my stuff, rather than left is disgust and dread, whether at the world or the writer.

To our current political discussions in our culture. A plague on both your houses. It's all just resentment-ball. And, yes, people who have their shit together by definition know how to cut it off in their heads and move to other, productive things. Obviously, the Twitter left is bound and determined to crowd out any attempts at personal improvement and personal responsibility. The Unabomber Manifesto pointed this out, and it's more true today. On the other hand people, usually on the right, make the mistake of thinking that just because they defend their favorite billionaires they are not resentful. But thinking people on the lowered ends of society are getting more they deserve is just as much resentment as thinking the same thought about those at higher up the pyramid. Either way, the resentment can at best blind a person, and at worse, eat them alive if it is left unchecked. Watch what people are doing to improve themselves, not what they are signaling.

New topic:
I invest with a friend, he grew up effectively in the opposite manner, in excessive luxury. It’s important to meet people who are different from you, they help cure you of your own irrationalities. At this point in time, I’m in the process of learning to treat myself with dignity.
Dignity finally clicks when it is a moment of grace. You don't deserve dignity because you are fit, because your carbon footprint is X, or because your bank balance is Y. Keep playing the differed dignity game and you'll never get there. This is one of the rare Big Truths where Christianity does the best explaining compared to its peers-- and why it's not a coincidence that it was Christendom that came up with liberal democracy and top-notch contract law. And that as we start eroding dignity -- pretending it is in the pursuit of truth, but really to serve consumption imperative better -- we endanger our liberty.

Nietzsche is right about when God died. The foundation of dignity has to be found in something other than Sky God. I think it can be constructed out of a deep understanding of what care is (to some extent I mean the warm fuzzies, like holding a baby, but really I mean more of the sense of "to care about" something). If you can actually care about something, then you are enough of a piece of god-shatter to matter. But. . . so is everyone else.

To sum up all of this: there is a lot of things wrong in the world, but we should try to handle it all gracefully. The real problem with both misanthropes and the overly political is they lack grace.

Two quibbles:
1) Give Direct charities are probably better than UNICEF. When I get back to making money, that's where I am going to tithe. (I'm trying to use that as motivation to get a business off the ground).

2) Precious metals can have a place in a portfolio. Say 10%, up to 20% if you are a paranoid fuck trying to price in big-ass disruptions. Yes, the expected value of a precious metals is 0% growth, but all short-term bonds and many long-term bonds in the wealthy world are either at negative rates or hovering right at the zero-bound. Secondly, since precious metals do not correlate with stocks or bonds, they provide opportunities to buy low and sale high each time you do a portfolio rebalance.  

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Round Up #28

Aphorisms/Shorts
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"Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire."  Gustav Mahler

Tribe-D signals its concern for working conditions at Amazon, but actively tries to facilitate migrant workers on mega farms. . .   In both cases, it refuses to starve either system of capital by practicing the noble art of doing without.

Saying, "TV shows like the Good Place, Bojack Horseman, and Rick and Morty demonstrate that studying moral philosophy leads to good stories" is not that far from proving that moral philosophy is only good for telling stories.

Telling me I have to vote in a psuedo-democracy like ours is akin to encouraging an arranged marriage with a prostitute, who will not stop being a prostitute in the marriage, and at no point will show me a moment of real affection.

I wonder how many neo-reactionaries cannot see that Trump was elected by vulgar, mob-ocractic forces?  I wonder how many small-d democrats cannot realize that Biden is an attempted restoration?

 Most of the developed world has worked to make the lives of families better.  In the U.S. we marketed "family values" and then called it a day.

"Do unto others 20% better than you would expect them to do unto you, to correct for subjective error." - Linus Pauling

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Research and Links
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I am glad to have seen this cartoon.

Gorgeous use of color to make water shimmer. So much so that the nudity is forgivable.  It just captures the golden hour.  I would never go out to New Zealand to see it, but it must be something person.

I recently saw some blowhard here in the Age of Disinformation going on about how since cities are terrible and cause stress, people live longer in rural areas.  Rural versus urban life expectancy is in fact something that is measurable and measured [and more recent].  Never occurs to these people to look, does it?

I finally got around to reading the Gospel of Thomas.

My, such a world of literary blogs exist, starting with me finding this one.  I knew they had to exist, but figured it would be quite difficult to find what I was looking for using mere internet search -- too many blogs spammed out reviewing new and bad books.

Doctors are less likely to undergo intense end-of-life treatments.  They know better.

Grew interested in just how many people live in failed states and what life was like -- you know, just asking . . . for a friend.  Here's a start. And some more.

I had high hopes for the search term "maya versus bullshit."  I am interested in a thoughtful discussion comparing and contrasting the two terms, especially putting bullshit through Frankfurt's take on the matter. It might be out there, but not in the first few pages of a search.  The term "buddhism maya versus bullshit" didn't help.  Might be something I write one day.  Not today.

Piece by Ian Welsh on reading to acquire knowledge contains this money quote:
 You cannot think with knowledge you do not know, and you cannot even look up most Knowledge, because you have to know what you don’t know. The more you know, the more you know what you don’t know.
If I'm the last one to be exposed to the band Baby Metal, my apology for bringing it up. -- Oh my god, the lyrics translated makes it even better.

I'm proud enough of this response on Reddit to this.

Also, continuing the theme of being a guy on the internet saying the internet is not going to last.

Prime Curious! -- this sort of thing is my bag, baby.

Mmm.  That's some good writing on societal transition.

A reflection on the how what the world needs now is a negative capacity -- the capacity to do nothing.

Stuff About Wheat Production

Started as an answer to a question on Reddit.

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I did some investigating, and it looks like I should update some of my thoughts on world grain production. I'll share that below, but first wanted to honestly answer your question about where I got the idea.
Well, to be honest, my understand went back quite a while to a book I no longer remember the title of, but what it pointed out was that the US won the Cold War and faded the threat of Japan (if you'll remember they were once considered our greatest threat, before their stock bubble burst and their demographic pressures caught with them). It made it seem like US grain exports were a key factor. Though the situation has changed in Russia to a shocking degree, as I will show below, I did some more digging and it turns out that claim was not lacking in merit.
Beginning with the 1972-73 crop season, the Soviet Union imported more wheat than any nation had ever taken. In 1984-85, takings were 55.5 million tonnes of both wheat and corn, a record for a single country to take in one year.
But, it looks like some updating needs to be done. According to this source, wheat production goes
  1. China 2. India. 3. Russia 4. US 5. France
I am shocked by Russia's turn-around. It really goes to show that famines are often political in nature and that collectivized farming was not a great idea. (Side note: France is also amazing. The country is around the size of Texas -- smaller, in point of fact).
But if you are a "bread basket" you can't just eat up all the grain you produce; you need to export it to get leverage. Go to this source for exports, and behold!
  1. Russian Federation: $8.4 billion, 20.51% of world exports
  2. Canada: $5.7 billion, 13.87% of world exports
  3. United States of America: $5.5 billion, 13.27% of world exports
  4. France: $4.1 billion, 10.04% of world exports
So, yes, Canada can consider itself a great exporter. I think I might have to amend down how important US grain is to it's continued ability to screw everyone else by holding the world reserve currency. Man. . . it really might be military or bust at this point.

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Stategic Idleness

In this wonderful meditation on the subject of idleness Neal Burton writes
In a few cases, ‘laziness’ is the very opposite of what it appears.
He then gives some examples of leaders using idleness through history to demonstrate that
 Adepts of this kind of strategic idleness use their ‘idle’ moments, among others, to observe life, gather inspiration, maintain perspective, sidestep nonsense and pettiness, reduce inefficiency and half-living, and conserve health and stamina for truly important tasks and problems. Idleness can amount to laziness, but it can also be the most intelligent way of working. Time is a very strange thing, and not at all linear: sometimes, the best way of using it is to waste it.
What a beautiful write up about what is so often missing in our dominate cultural narrative about work [1]. There is a very important negative capacity to living well.  It is also how most us do our best work, not just our only sustainable work (same thing over a long enough time frame).

Compare with the discussion in Locate the Minimum Effective Dose.

This is not to say the art of strategic idleness is easy to do well; it is not, as Burton's essay also acknowledges.  But it is worth it, if you are playing life for real and on your terms [2].


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[1] Incidentally, the piece goes on with many other great points.  I highly recommend the whole thing, but I have enough for my essential point.

[2] Too many people don't see through their own eyes, even with what you would think is the most important matters of all -- what to do and how to think in the only life they will ever have.

Copy of To make laziness work for you, put some effort into it

To make laziness work for you, put some effort into it
by Neel Burton

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We are being lazy if there’s something that we ought to do but are reluctant to do because of the effort involved. We do it badly, or do something less strenuous or less boring, or just remain idle. In other words, we are being lazy if our motivation to spare ourselves effort trumps our motivation to do the right or best or expected thing – assuming, of course, we know what that is.
In the Christian tradition, laziness, or sloth, is one of the seven deadly sins because it undermines society and God’s plan, and invites the other sins. The Bible inveighs against slothfulness, for example, in Ecclesiastes:
By much slothfulness the building decayeth; and through idleness of the hands the house droppeth through. A feast is made for laughter, and wine maketh merry: but money answereth all things.
Today, laziness is so closely connected with poverty and failure that a poor person is often presumed lazy, no matter how hard he or she actually works.

But it could be that laziness is written into our genes. Our nomadic ancestors had to conserve energy to compete for scarce resources, flee predators and fight enemies. Expending effort on anything other than short-term advantage could jeopardise their very survival. In any case, in the absence of conveniences such as antibiotics, banks, roads or refrigeration, it made little sense to think long-term. Today, mere survival has fallen off the agenda, and it is long-term vision and commitment that lead to the best outcomes. Yet our instinct remains to conserve energy, making us averse to abstract projects with distant and uncertain payoffs.

Even so, few people would choose to be lazy. Many so-called ‘lazy’ people haven’t yet found what they want to do, or, for one reason or another, are not able to do it. To make matters worse, the job that pays their bills and fills their best hours might have become so abstract and specialised that they can no longer fully grasp its purpose or product, and, by extension, their part in improving other peoples’ lives. Unlike a doctor or builder, an assistant deputy financial controller in a large multinational corporation cannot be at all certain of the effect or end-product of his or her labour – so why bother?
Other psychological factors that can lead to ‘laziness’ are fear and hopelessness. Some people fear success, or don’t have enough self-esteem to feel comfortable with success, and laziness is their way of sabotaging themselves. William Shakespeare conveyed this idea much more eloquently and succinctly in Antony and Cleopatra: ‘Fortune knows we scorn her most when most she offers blows.’ Other people fear not success but failure, and laziness is preferable to failure because it is at one remove. ‘It’s not that I failed,’ they can tell themselves, ‘it’s that I never tried.’

Some people are ‘lazy’ because they understand their situation as being so hopeless that they cannot even begin to think it through, let alone do something about it. As these people are unable to address their circumstances, it could be argued that they are not truly lazy – which, at least to some extent, can be said of all ‘lazy’ people. The very concept of laziness presupposes the ability to choose not to be lazy, that is, presupposes the existence of free will.

In a few cases, ‘laziness’ is the very opposite of what it appears. We often confuse laziness with idleness, but idleness – which is to be doing nothing – need not amount to laziness. In particular, we might choose to remain idle because we value idleness and its products above whatever else we might be doing. Lord Melbourne, Queen Victoria’s favourite prime minister, extolled the virtues of ‘masterful inactivity’. More recently, Jack Welch, as chairman and CEO of General Electric, spent an hour each day in what he called ‘looking out of the window time’. And the German chemist August KekulĂ© in 1865 claimed to have discovered the ring structure of the benzene molecule while daydreaming about a snake biting its own tail. Adepts of this kind of strategic idleness use their ‘idle’ moments, among others, to observe life, gather inspiration, maintain perspective, sidestep nonsense and pettiness, reduce inefficiency and half-living, and conserve health and stamina for truly important tasks and problems. Idleness can amount to laziness, but it can also be the most intelligent way of working. Time is a very strange thing, and not at all linear: sometimes, the best way of using it is to waste it.
Idleness is often romanticised, as epitomised by the Italian expression dolce far niente (‘the sweetness of doing nothing’). We tell ourselves that we work hard from a desire for idleness. But in fact, we find even short periods of idleness hard to bear. Research suggests that we make up justifications for keeping busy and feel happier for it, even when busyness is imposed upon us. Faced with a traffic jam, we prefer to make a detour even if the alternative route is likely to take longer than sitting through the traffic.

There’s a contradiction here. We are predisposed to laziness and dream of being idle; at the same time, we always want to be doing something, always need to be distracted. How are we to resolve this paradox? Perhaps what we really want is the right kind of work, and the right balance. In an ideal world, we would do our own work on our own terms, not somebody else’s work on somebody else’s terms. We would work not because we needed to, but because we wanted to, not for money or status, but (at the risk of sounding trite) for peace, justice and love.

On the other side of the equation, it’s all too easy to take idleness for granted. Society prepares us for years and years for being useful as it sees it, but gives us absolutely no training in, and little opportunity for, idleness. But strategic idleness is a high art and hard to pull off – not least because we are programmed to panic the moment we step out of the rat race. There is a very fine divide between idleness and boredom. In the 19th century, Arthur Schopenhauer argued that, if life were intrinsically meaningful or fulfilling, there could be no such thing as boredom. Boredom, then, is evidence of the meaninglessness of life, opening the shutters on some very uncomfortable thoughts and feelings that we normally block out with a flurry of activity or with the opposite thoughts and feelings – or indeed, any feelings at all.
In Albert Camus’s novel The Fall (1956), Clamence reflects to a stranger:
I knew a man who gave 20 years of his life to a scatterbrained woman, sacrificing everything to her, his friendships, his work, the very respectability of his life, and who one evening recognised that he had never loved her. He had been bored, that’s all, bored like most people. Hence he had made himself out of whole cloth a life full of complications and drama. Something must happen – and that explains most human commitments. Something must happen, even loveless slavery, even war or death.
In the essay ‘The Critic as Artist’ (1891), Oscar Wilde wrote that ‘to do nothing at all is the most difficult thing in the world, the most difficult and the most intellectual.’
The world would be a much better place if we could all spend a year looking out of our window.Aeon counter – do not remove

Neel Burton
This article was originally published at Aeon and has been republished under Creative Commons.

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Palindromes, MEDs, and Duchamp's Fountain

This started as one of my Round Up posts, but then I realized it was converging to a theme, so I popped out the content to make a separate post.  I'm too lazy to change the prose style, but I will add a picture:



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Photo Attribution By Coldcreation and Marcel Duchamp - Own work and Marcel Duchamp, File:Marcel Duchamp, 1917, Fountain, photograph by Alfred Stieglitz.jpg, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74694278

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I) From Palindrome's to Taste

Extensions of the palindrome "A man, a plan, a canal -- Panama!"
  • "A man, a plan, a cat, a canal – Panama!"  
  • "A man, a plan, a cat, a ham, a yak, a yam, a hat, a canal – Panama!"
  • "A dog, a plan, a canal: pagoda!"
  • "A dog, a-panic in a pagoda!"
  • "A car, a man, a maraca!"
If you ever want to try your hand at making palindromes, there is an online checker program because, well, of course there is.

This brings up an aesthetic point: super-long palindromes aren't good.   I don't know that we can ever improve on "A man, a plan, a canal -- Panama!" because 1) it has meaning, 2) it tells a story, and 3) it has great rhythm.

"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away." -- Antoine de Saint-ExupĂ©ry,  #minimumEffectiveDose

II) Math to Marcel

As I start working more and more on math, and become drawn to a beauty that is very hard to communicate to others, I think about how after Marcel Duchamp released a few masterpieces, he focused on chess most of his life, somewhat abandoning art.
The man who saw a urinal and called it a work of art -- and so it was! -- said “I am still a victim of chess. It has all the beauty of art – and much more. It cannot be commercialized. Chess is much purer than art in its social position.”

Perhaps we should see Duchamp's path as another example of a minimum effective doses: he made a definitive piece of Cubism/ Cubo-Futurism, definitive pieces of Readymades -- Bicycle Wheel and Fountain, a definitive piece of Dada and then . . .

. . .

At the very least, very much empty space.

. . .

III) Marcel's Metaphorical Fountain

During his chess years, Duchamp hung out with a lot of artists that were coming up, and that leads to debates about influence, but for this paragraph I am thinking more about life-style.  Duchamp hung out with artists, got to be part of their stunts, such as playing chess with a naked woman in an art gallery (see "glossy-style" piece above) but virtually everyday he pursued his own craft which he found more beautiful, and more pure than what we call art.  And sometimes he got to do so with naked women.

This brings us to John Cage, the composer who wrote (?) a 4 minute 33 second piece of silence -- really an invitation to notice ambient sound.  He saw himself importing in Zen Buddhism into art.  He hung out with much the same scene as Duchamp.  Furthermore, Cage
is considered a co-inventor of “happenings” and performance art; the Fluxus movement essentially arose from classes that Cage taught at the New School, in the late nineteen-fifties. (One exercise consisted of listening to a pin drop.) Cage emulated visual artists in turn, his chief idol being the master conceptualist Marcel Duchamp. [emphasis added]
Who deserves more credit?  Probably Cage, but I cannot really say.  I only called this section Marcel's Fountain because I like the pun.  Yes, I could almost certainly have come up with a Cage pun, but I had already put in a picture of "fountain" and everything.

I am interested in how both artists explored negative space.  I am also interested in the dynamics of creative groups.  And the creative group of the time, this John-Marcel Cage-Fountain, however it may have flowed, was important to the development of many artists.

From the already cited Big Think piece:
In the end, Larson’s Where the Heart Beats: John Cage, Zen Buddhism, and the Inner Life of Artists provides a fascinating new lens through which to see the whole course of modern American art. Where many see Pop Art as devoid of philosophy and purely as the use of the detritus of commercialism, Larson suggests seeing Andy Warhol, for example,  as modern Zen master. The sometimes maddening lack of answers from the enigmatic Warhol thus becomes the strategic silence of the teacher of Zen desiring the student to discover the answer for him or herself. Warhol’s 8-hour film Empire (1964) capturing subtle changes in the Empire State Building in real time becomes an extended moment of Zen.  (emphasis mine). 
My critique of an 8-hour film of the Empire State building is similar to that of Palindome's that go too long -- you out-run the human observer and make something gaudy, meaningless, just in bad taste.  It can only be glossed over, or ignored.

I don't know if this then leads to a critique of Zen or of Americans messing Zen up inside of the context of art as profession -- I hope the latter, but it shows the importance of having concepts of sufficiency, dosage . . . dao.

I imagine Zen has a relationship between master and student, where the master at least attempts to build up a sequence of practices to move the student along.  Warhol's "Empire," on the other hand drops you into 8 hours with no regard for your prior experiences or preparation.  Caveat emptor.  There is the extra layer that an artist like Warhol down the flow of the fountain (or trapped in the cage) exposes the absurdity of unequal financial results -- but that wears pretty thin after the most minimal of repetitions [1].

But 4 minutes and 33 seconds of silence seems like a better amount of time to get people to step out.  After all, they might actually do it, not just talk about the implications of some one else doing it, and then laughing at people who don't get the thing the professional has done.

Another way to step out is to examine other beauties, outside of certain social warpings. Perhaps a game of chess, a math problem set, or recreational linguistics -- Panama! Ricercar!


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[1] At least for those not at the top.  Much of the joy in Modern Art is of course the gas-lighting.  I'm not endorsing it, but it is evident. 

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Dude, check this palindrome out.
(See also a maker's commentary).

Quotes from Preparing for Instituonal Collapse [2008]

There's always a better Doomer.  All of this holds up

Letting go of one’s illusions is a difficult process that takes a long, long time, but I am just about there.  From a young age I have been a believer in public services and benefits as a way of providing some measure of assurance for other people, people I rely on every time I purchase a good or service, of a decent life regardless of one’s personal income or standing.  After all, I initially chose public service as a career.  And I have been a defender of the public institutions when compared with those who were only concerned with their own situation and preference put in less, or get out more, as if the community was a greedy adversary to be beaten in life rather than something one is a part of.  Now, however, I see that it is probably hopeless.  

. . .

It isn’t just that those who have skillfully obtained “good deals” for themselves in the past are “grandfathered” and get to keep them.  Worse, those who already have such deals take more and more every year.  Like a bad parasite, the political class and its supporters feel so needy, so entitled, that they cannot help but kill their host.  They will just keep grabbing and grabbing until government institutions collapse.

. . .

In fact for those without connections we may, as a nation, be heading back to the pre-progressive era in public services and benefits.  But not in taxation.  The money older generations have promised themselves, and promised to the wealthy and those in other countries in exchange for more benefits for less taxes for themselves, mean the federal, state and local governments will be coming after us for more and more money even as public services disappear and the poor are left to fend for themselves.  Indeed, they will be coming after the poor for taxes.  So it’s no use becoming a conservative or Republican, because they will be in favor of collecting those taxes too someday -- after the fiscal collapse, when they can’t borrow anymore to hand out favors those who matter to them.

Mind, you should give this more weight because it was predictive.  The money quote:
Here is the dilemma. Our social institutions, in government and business, are in the hands of a self-perpetuating group of self-interested people. The more ordinary people put in to government and business institutions -- in taxes, hard work, savings and investment -- the more those people take out for themselves and their supporters. I’ve argued for years that the institutions need to be revitalized, taken back, because we need them. I now suspect that we may have to do without them, whether we need them or not.
How do you accept that without getting pissed off or depressed, let alone move to a place of compassion?  It is a challenge.  But I do have a lot of time on my hands.