For those who have watched everything and are tired of the same old canonic movie top-something list.
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Keni
trying on a metaphor
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
ojovivo
Show & Tell
🪼
taylor price
art blog(derogatory)
sheepfilms
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sweet Seals For You, Always
KIROKAZE
cherry valley forever

@theartofmadeline
Not today Justin
hello vonnie
No title available
occasionally subtle
𓃗

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@tzal
For those who have watched everything and are tired of the same old canonic movie top-something list.
Westerhoff calls Nagarjuna's madhyamika "Global Relativism": inadequate categorization, yet he raises interesting issues. Dzongsar Rinpoche says, in a 2009 teaching, that he has been badly surprised by the views of some Oxford Scholars.
Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity (2004) (published in paperback as Free Culture: The Nature and Future of Creativity) is a book by law professor Lawrence Lessig that was released on the Internet under the Creative Commons Attribution/Non-commercial license (by-nc 1.0) on March 25, 2004.
"There has never been a time in history when more of our 'culture' was as 'owned' as it is now. And yet there has never been a time when the concentration of power to control the uses of culture has been as unquestioningly accepted as it is now." (pg. 28)
Dated Analogies
While translating Irving Fisher's Debt-deflation Theory of Great Depressions to Portuguese, a work in which I plunged without even knowing it was from the 30's, it seemed to me most of his analogies (boat capsizing, pendulum) were all from physics, with a few exception from medicine. It sounded dated, and it actually was (although it seems to be in vogue right now, because Keynesian theory don't seem to explain the present crisis). Curious about physics analogies for economic phenomena, I discovered Fisher had been a physics student before focusing on economics. The 30's were in love with physics, and physics was the main focus of analogies in many fields for maybe 40 years after that, depending on how hype was the field. Now biology, both evolutionary and ecology, seem to be the most hype fields to use analogies from. Still, things like complexity, self-organizing criticalities and things like that bring us some physics into the analogy zeitgeist--although it might sound a bit newagy.
César Schirmer twitted this today, it was quite a revealing reading. Didn't know about all those public and explicit references on genocide by Himmler.