CONCEPTS
JOURNALS
EXPLORE
Academic Commons
Chronicle of Higher Education
SFC NYC 2011
Larry Lessig, Harvard Berkman Klein
Jonathon Richter, Immersive Learning Research Network
Doug Blandy, UO Folklore
Mark Johnson, UO Philosophy
Antonio Lopez, John Cabot Univ.
Victoria Vensa, UCLA Art|Sci
Berkeley DMAX/BAMPFA
Berkman Center, Dana Boyd
Berkman Center Harvard Law
MediaBerkman Harvard Law
Bioneers Collective Heritage Institute
Cardozo Law, Susan Crawford
Complexity Digest
Cooperation Commons *
Digital Humanities UCLA
• welcome
Harvard Free Culture Computer Society
Santa Fe Institute
Intl. Society for Systems Sciences
New England Complex Systems Institute
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Tech
Kairos: Rhetoric, Tech, Pedagogy
MediaTropes
MIT CMS New Media Literacies
• NML Blog
MIT Center for Civic Media
Music Cognition Matters
New Media Consortium
Pressthink, New York University
On The Commons
Open Source Lab, Oregon State Univ.
Our (and Your) RISD
Regenerative & Permaculture Institutes
Creative Commons
Stanford Archeolog
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Stanford Humanities Lab
Stanford Metamedia
Stanford MetaverseU *
Stanford Open Source Lab
Stanford Philosophy Talk
Uplift Academy, Tom Munnecke
Contribute
There are 3 unlogged users and 0 registered users online.
You can log-in or register for a user account here. |
Friday, November 03, 2023 - 11:55 AM
Imaginify 'synchron'icity This happened by coincidence ! (0º) CLICK ABOVE IMAGINAL IMAGE
Imaginify 'synchron'ization This simply happened ! b> A HaloSim ray tracing calculation of the sky over Stockholm on April 21, 1535 Produced by Les Cowley, 25 February 2008, GNU Free Documentation license "Vädersolstavlan" ("The Sun Dog Painting") by Urban målare, 1535 Copy by Jacob Heinrich Elbfas at Storkyrkan in Stockholm, Sweden, 1636 1998-1999 restoration, Public Domain * First posted: December 31, 2007 Sunday, April 10, 2011 - 02:40 PM
Saturday, February 14, 2009 - 02:00 PM
"Autumn Treasures" by Trixi (CC) Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic "Re Ordering" by Trixi (CC) Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic Monday, September 29, 2008 - 06:40 PM
"Zoe and Styrobot, Looking Back - Rice University Art Gallery" Source: Flickr • Photo by Mr. Kimberly (CC) Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 “Ironically, the robots actually critique the very culture of which they are byproducts . . . Every time something ships there’s a piece of Styrofoam to keep it safe and sound . . . I really look at these pieces as being mechanical and robot in nature. The result is a pretty poignant statement about what we buy . . . and what we throw away.” - Michael Salter, Associate Professor Department of Digital Arts, University of Oregon Time-lapse of "Art from Excess" at the San Jose Museum of Art. Friday, August 08, 2008 - 08:00 AM
freeculture.berkeley.edu/Free_Culture_2008.html law.berkeley.edu/institutes/bclt/events_calendar.htm dmax.bampfa.berkeley.edu/blog/2008/09/free-culture-2008-international-conference-2 Friday, February 29, 2008 - 03:40 AM
"Loops got its name from the circular movements Merce could do with his wrists . . . sometimes Merce set the order of the Loops sections by chance operations . . . The 2008 version [an abstract digital portrait of Merce Cunningham that runs in real time and never repeats] is open source, part of the Loops Preservation Project. The project addresses cultural memory as endangered by the computer age — an age that perhaps offers a solution . . ." - The OpenEnded Group
". . . we’re trying to change the eco-system of digital art and performance . . . how digital art is taught and thought about . . . the very thing that we are trying to address in this “preservation project”: that is preservation itself . . . what if performance (or installation) of an artwork counted as distribution?" - The OpenEnded Group "loops-twenty-1202233329111-00002.jpg" "Loops is opened up completely" "Loops" by Merce Cunningham solo dance choreography : CC 3.0 license "Loops" by OpenEnded Group digital artwork : GPL license, v3 "FIELD" by OpenEnded Group development environment : GPL license, v3 Thursday, October 18, 2007 - 10:29 AM
the idea that technology (codes) and techniques (modes), affect human perception, understanding, feeling, and value; and how our interaction with media facilitates or impedes our chances of survival." - Integration of definitions by various Media Ecologists * + *** "the postindustrial and the postmodern, & the preliterate and prehistoric." - Lance Strate, Professor, Communication & Media Studies, & Co-Founder, Media Ecology Association, Fordham University. "the medium (figure) operates through its context (ground)" ** Enhancement (figure) : What does the (new) medium improve or enhance, amplify or accelerate? Obsolescence (ground) : What is driven out of prominence, obsolesced, pushed aside by the (new) medium? Retrieval (figure) : What earlier action or service is brought back into play or recovered by the (new) medium? What older, previously lost ground is brought back and becomes an essential part of the (new) medium? Reversal (ground) : When pushed to its limits or extremes, of its potential, the (new) medium will reverse what was its original characteristics. What is the potential reversal of the new form? **** * Image: "Media Tetrad" under GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 ** Image: "The Resonating Interval: Exploring the Process of the Tetrad" by Anthony Hempell, Communication 453, Simon Fraser University American Society for Information Science and Technology "Parts of this web site may be reproduced freely if not for profit ©" *** Video: "A Vision of Students Today" by Michael Wesch Digital Ethnography, Mediated Cultures, Kansas State University 2007 Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. **** Image: "Tetrad" is Public Domain. Recycle Sunday, July 29, 2007 - 08:30 PM
Image: "The Flammarion woodcut" (Recoloured 1998) - anonymous, wood engraving (wikipedia) Link: "Sogno ad Occhi Aperti (Daydream) PART 1" by Giovanni Sollima. Friday, May 18, 2007 - 05:08 PM
"Kurt Gödel's (1906-1978) monumental theorem of incompleteness demonstrated that in every formal system of arithmetic there are true statements that nevertheless cannot be proved. The result was an upheaval that spread far beyond mathematics, challenging conceptions of the nature of the mind."
Harvard University "I am a Strange Loop" (2007), seeks to demonstrate how the properties of self-referential systems, demonstrated most famously in Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem, can be used to describe the unique properties of minds. - Douglas_Hofstadter, Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition Indiana University "Douglas R. Hofstadter: Analogy as Core, Core as Analogy" Glen Worthey, Humanities Digital Information Service (HDIS), Stanford University Libraries, 2006 "Is the core of cognition and animacy essentially only self-representation and self-reference (as in Bach, in our DNA and elsewhere)? Is it essential incompleteness (as in Gödel’s Theorem and elsewhere)? Is it strange loops and tangled hierarchies (as in Escher, in Hofstadter’s own book, I Am a Strange Loop, and elsewhere)? Is it in the patterns, puzzles, paradoxes, puns, poetry, and programming that we see throughout Hofstadter’s work? Or is it elsewhere? Elsewhere.... Perhaps it is precisely in analogy that we find the common thread of all these cognitive and creative phenomena, and thus the common element in the endeavors that make us human, and thus the core of our humanity..." "The Year of Mathemagical Thinking" Lev Grossman, TIME Magazine, March 15, 2007 Review: "A Reflection on The Loopy Self" Ben C. Burns, Harvard Crimson, April 27, 2007 “I Am a Strange Loop” sets out to probe the essence of the soul—in a philosophical, cognitive sense... Consciousness, soul, and “a light on inside” are all terms referring to the essential “I” which somehow composes an individual human self... ...is very self-referential, and that any explanation of the concept bends back onto the same concept again. The resulting loop, though, isn’t like most loops caused by self-reference, since there’s no feedback as in... an infinite corridor of TV screens on videotape. So consciousness isn’t a regular loop; it’s a strange loop. ..while presenting arguments of logic, clever bits of analogy here and there add up to reveal that the book itself is more than just a friendly essay: everywhere you turn, “Strange Loop” is drawing back on itself, too. For example, the book’s arguments are made almost entirely through symbols, analogies, and tales of personal experience. Appropriately, Hofstadter devotes much discussion to the reasons that symbols, analogies, and empathy (or, as he calls it, “Varying Degrees of Being Another”) actually work. This book is a work of art, unabashedly self-referential on every level..." "Trying to Muse Rationally about the Singularity Scenario" [Quicktime] [MP3] Singularity Summit, Stanford University, May 13, 2006 Abstract: "...And yet there are some basic ideas that we should not lose track of, and that should help to keep us from confusing wild speculation with grounded reality. In my talk, I will attempt to chart out a way of looking at the “singularity scenario” with one's feet on the ground, and I will try to give, using my moderate familiarity with a number of different scientific disciplines, a personal appraisal of what I see as the likelihood of our being eclipsed by (or absorbed into) a vast computational network of superminds, in the course of the next few decades." "The So-called Singularity: An Onrushing Tsunami, or Another Y2K?" [MP3] Artificial Life X: Tenth International Conference on the Simulation and Synthesis of Living Systems Bloomington Campus, Indiana University, June 3-7, 2006 Abstract: "In the past few years, a number of futurologists, extrapolating on the basis of many interrelated exponential curves such as Moore's Law, have come to the conclusion that computer intelligence is rising so swiftly that quite soon, it will inevitably reach and then surpass human intelligence, and that at that monumental juncture in the history of this planet, humanity will be eclipsed and replaced by its own creations. Within a few decades, these cyberprophets proclaim, we humans will be living among superintelligent entities that are just as incomprehensible to us as we are incomprehensible to bacteria, and the upward spiral will continue from there on without limit, resulting in entities "who" are literally billions of times more intelligent than today's humans are, and "who" will soon commandeer stars and then whole galaxies, finally turning the entire universe into one single inconceivably intelligent self-reflective organism akin to the Omega Point of the mystic Jesuit philosopher Teilhard de Chardin..." Saturday, October 07, 2006 - 12:28 AM
- Woody Guthrie, American folk musician, 1912-1967 - Synesthetic colors, described by; Alexander Scriabin, Composer, 1872-1915 |
GETTING STARTED
INTERNET ARCHIVE
WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION
PUBLIC LEARNING
OPEN COURSEWARE
OPEN DL, ML, & RL
       • Deep Learning OPEN FORGES
OPEN METAVERSE
       • Blender [3D Suite]
OPEN ACCESS
OPEN WEBCASTS
OPEN MOVIES
FREE CULTURE +
OPEN ACCESS TEXTS
Blog. Cliff Gerrish - Echovar
Blog. Solving For Pattern
Blog. PaulBHartzog
Blog. Dave Pollard
Blog. George Por
Electronic Frontier Foundation [EFF]
Free Software Foundation News
Login
Future of the Book
Groklaw
High Fidelity Dreams Scott Draves
H+ magazine
IFTF Future Now
Kolabora Collaboration
Make Magazine & Craft Zine
Nation of Makers
Neurotechnology Zack Lynch
NextNow Collaborative
Unconference.net
Valley Zen
Visual Complexity
Wikinews
WorldChanging
|