User:Emily/Thematic Project/Trimester 03/02

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Shadow
Dreamachine

"The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious - the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science." ― Albert Einstein

"They were only interested in machines and drugs which made people go to sleep." ― Brion Gysin

The dreamachine was a collaborative creation between Brion Gysin and Ian Sommerville, the classical collision and collusion of the artist and the scientist. Both men had read Grey Walter's The Living Brain and were corresponding on the subject in early 1960. It was Sommerville who came up with the plans for the original flicker machine mounted on a 78rpm record player. Gysin, residing by this time in the Beat Hotel in Paris, constructed his own version, replete with calligraphic art, and obsessively began to refine its design. By the middle of the year he had taken out a patent ((P.V. 868 281) and was hawking the idea around town. For all his later concern about the possible risk in commercial exploitation of a machine that opened up psychic centres, he was nonetheless open to mass-market production.
wikipedia definition: a stroboscopic flicker device that produces visual stimuli. Artist Brion Gysin and William S. Burroughs's "systems adviser" Ian Sommerville created the dreamachine after reading William Grey Walter's book, The Living Brain.
mind machine/brain machine, uses pulsing rhythmic sound and/or flashing light to alter the frequency of the user's brainwaves.
A mind machine is similar to a dreamachine in that both produce a flickering ganzfeld. The difference is that a dreamachine can be used by several people at once, but generally has fewer technical features than a mind machine.
work may related: SINN + FORM
what I might do with this piece is to lead to permutation in with image and sound extracted from existing movies.
"For Gysin the way of permutation was the ‘way out’, the means of transcending our physical existence. The dreamachine was a similar device, creating pattern after pattern within the brain itself, turning image upon image, light upon light until the infinite became possible. "

Loop??Reverse



The Thing

phenomenologist --> a philosopher of existence as it is perceived from a subjective position
what is perceived and what is 'real'
how do we know what an object truly is <-- experience it only within certain frameworks
what this thing is --> not how it appears to us, but what it actually is
abolition of all distance brings no nearness
remote, far-->picture on film or sound on the radio ; -->short distance is not in itself nearness, nor is great distance remoteness
nearness --> what if it fails to come about , repelled by the abolition of distance, fails to appear
abolition of great distance --> everything is equally far and equally near? --> without distance --> distancelessness
the terrifying places everything outside its own nature --> it shows itself and hides itself --> everything presences, namely, in the fact that despite all conquest of distances the nearness of things remains absent
immediate perception or a recollective representation
the thingly character of the thing --> what in the thing is thingly --> we shall not reach the thing itself until out thinking has first reached the thing as a thing
jug--vessel-->an object which a process of making has set up before and against us-->the jug's nature is its own is never brought about by its making
self-support--> from the product's self-support, there is no way that leads to the thingness of the thing
Plato--> everything present as an object of making
"what stands forth" --> twofold standing prevails--? 1. the sense of stemming from somewhere; 2. the made thing's standing forth into the unconcealedness of what is already present
the empty space--> this nothing of the jug, is what the jug is as the holding vessel
The vessel's thingness does not lie at all in the material of which it consists, but in the void that holds



From Wikipedia
Martin Heidegger
Two observation:

philosophy has attended to all the beings except for what Being itself is (Being and Time, with citation from Plato's Sophist)
the presence of things is not their being, but them interpreted as equipment (according to a particular system of meaning and purpose)
ready to hand --> authentic mode --> oversimplified reducing to possible future usefulness
philosophy and science since ancient Greece --> reduced to things to their presence --> superficial way of understanding them
Franz Brentano's treatise on Aristotle's manifold uses of the word "being" --> what kind of unity underlines this multiplicity of uses --> "history of being"(the history of the forgetting of Being)
Edmund Husserl( largely uninterested in question of philosophical history) -->all that philosophy could and should be is a description of experience ("to the things them selves")
Heidegger --> "intentional" consciousness(according to Husserl)
all experience is grounded in "care" --> basis of "existential analytic" developed in Being and Time
to describe experience properly entails finding the being for whom such a description might matter-->"Dasein", the being for whom Being is a question --> care
Dasein, who finds itself throuwn into the world amidst things and with others --> is thrown into its possibilities, including the possibility and inevitability of one's own mortality.

The marriage of these two observations:

concerned with time