Notes on Light: Difference between revisions
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"In a number of studies, she has found that changes in the ambient EM field (which surrounds us all the time) can dramatically affect human cognition and performance. In short, consciousness appears to be affected by subtle fields of light, or as quantum physicist Dr. Amit Goswami would say, "Consciousness prefers light." | "In a number of studies, she has found that changes in the ambient EM field (which surrounds us all the time) can dramatically affect human cognition and performance. In short, consciousness appears to be affected by subtle fields of light, or as quantum physicist Dr. Amit Goswami would say, "Consciousness prefers light." | ||
- relatable objects with abstract lighting | |||
"Harshly hallucinogenic, lights gleaming like the garish shine of a megametropolitan neon hell, duality puzzling the eye amid shots composed with a chilly nocturnal distance, Anne Lamb’s work induces severe headiness, but that headiness yields a moment of clarity: the oddity of flesh is laid plain as familiar animals and even the human body we so lust after suddenly seem alien; with even our own forms at such a remove, one is left to ponder matters of the body as an exoskeleton for the spirit, the biological curiosity of desire, and just how animal we are." |
Latest revision as of 15:56, 23 May 2015
"In a number of studies, she has found that changes in the ambient EM field (which surrounds us all the time) can dramatically affect human cognition and performance. In short, consciousness appears to be affected by subtle fields of light, or as quantum physicist Dr. Amit Goswami would say, "Consciousness prefers light."
- relatable objects with abstract lighting
"Harshly hallucinogenic, lights gleaming like the garish shine of a megametropolitan neon hell, duality puzzling the eye amid shots composed with a chilly nocturnal distance, Anne Lamb’s work induces severe headiness, but that headiness yields a moment of clarity: the oddity of flesh is laid plain as familiar animals and even the human body we so lust after suddenly seem alien; with even our own forms at such a remove, one is left to ponder matters of the body as an exoskeleton for the spirit, the biological curiosity of desire, and just how animal we are."