"An organism is a stratified memory constructed of superimposed suppressions, somewhat like geological formations. An analysis of these layers-think of a tree trunk and its rings-can yield a reconstruction of the phylogenesis and ontogenesis of an organism. The surface layers that envelop an organism accumulate the external and internal influences that have suppressed the organism over the course of its life, and these layers form what is called character armor. Among humans, these influences are largely cultural and they are sublimated into our musculature. What is known as "personality" is therefore a matter of muscle cramping and individual posture. The more tense the cramp, the stronger the personality, and the release of a cramp-be it coincidental or by means of a deliberate massage ("individual psychoanalysis")--can thus lead to the release and dissolution of one 's personality. Beneath the character armor there are layers in which ageold influences on the genetic constitution of an organism have been preserved. These are memories of the evolution of life: the Jungian "collective unconscious," but extending far into our protozoan past. An organism, then, is a phenotypic manifestation of these genotypic suppressions. It is a bomb, laden with potential energy, in which the sum of pressures, accumulated over the course of one life and over the course of the entire development of life, has been stored. An organism is a ball of bioenergetic force that explodes when the cramp-which is life itself-is released."
—Vilém Flusser and Louis Bec, Vampyroteuthis Infernalis













