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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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The Society of the Spectacle, “the shell as hard as steel” and false consciousness.
Guy Debord:
“The parallel between ideology and schizophrenia drawn by Joseph Gabel in his False Consciousness should be seen in the context of this economic process of materialization of ideology. What ideology already was, society has now become. A blocked practice and its corollary, an antidialectical false consciousness, are imposed at every moment on an everyday life in thrall to the spectacle ­­ an everyday life that should be understood as the systematic organization of a breakdown in the faculty of encounter, and the replacement of that faculty by a social hallucination: a false consciousness of encounter, or an “illusion of encounter.” In a society where no one is any longer recognizable by anyone else, each individual is necessarily unable to recognize his own reality. Here ideology is at home; here separation has built its world. “
 Weberian “Shell as hard as steel”or “the iron cage”:
“The habitation of a steel shell implies not only a new dwelling for modern human beings, but a transformed nature; homo sapiens has become a different being, a degraded being. A cage deprives one of liberty, but leaves one otherwise unaltered, one’s powers still intact even if incapable of full realization. A shell, on the other hand, hints at an organic reconstitution of the being concerned; a shell is part of the organism and cannot be dispensed with.”
#1 Guy Debord- Society of the Spectacle 
#2  Baehr, Peter. 2001. “The “iron Cage” and the “shell as Hard as Steel”: Parsons, Weber, and the Stahlhartes Gehäuse Metaphor in the Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism”. History and Theory40 (2). [Wesleyan University, Wiley]: 153–69.
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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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The kind of witchery I can get behind. 
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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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Please spread the word for anyone potentially affected by the ban !!!
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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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Mexico legalized same sex marriage too! #LoveWins
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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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We do not worship God. We perceive and attend God. We learn from God. With forethought and work, We shape God. In the end, we yield to God. We adapt and endure, For we are Earthseed And God is Change.
Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler (via conjurx)
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theinternetoftrees · 7 years
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HOLO
Graphic Design collection by Mike Murdock features possible interfaces for virtual reality.
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Alexander McQueen for Givenchy 1997 SS couture
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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@harnaamkaur and I are tired of your shitty gender roles. We shot this series for @theparallelmag to challenge what people are “allowed to do.” She has a beard due to a medical condition. She loves it and kills it! As for me, I just want to wear a skirt sometimes cuz I think it can look dope! The fact we socially relegate these fashion and styling attributes to certain genders just seems so frivolous and dangerous when you consider how aggressive people get when their confronted with these things that don’t fit into their understanding of how the world works. At the end of the day, just be yourself and love yourself and don’t judge others who are living that way. Think outside the parameters that we are lead to believe are absolute and see the world as it is! Much love to all of you! 📷: @sophieephotos 💄: @kateoffthewall 👔: @roxannechanelmurray
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Something No Man’s Sky makes me think about:
1) What happens when we get the capacity to colonize these worlds? (Perhaps that won’t be a feature in No Man’s Sky specifically, at least not a planned one., but perhaps exploring won’t content us.) 
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Sorry for the lack of posts recently - I’m on a No Man’s Sky vacation.
Here is the best looking planet I’ve found so far, Poqomarbenzam, in the Laeuscanse-Idas system (in case you were wondering ….)
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Gamification/commodification working in conjunction? 
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Meditation in virtual reality: it’s like French philosophy meets the Matrix
The cosmos swirls, wisps of purple, yellow and orange light flickering across the darkness of space, then across the visage of Buddha. An otherworldly plain fills the horizon, framed by the branches of a tree – the tree of enlightenment.
A familiar voice intrudes. “What or who is having this experience right this moment, right now?” Pause. “It is your own being. It is your innermost being that is having the experience, your true self.”
The voice continues. “Live here, with no regrets, no anticipation, no resistance, and you will be free. Freedom is always now. Being is now.”
Even if you enjoy psychedelic animation graphics you may struggle to live here, however, because visits last just 20 minutes and they are not real, not free and not quite now.
Welcome – if you have the headset or appropriate app – to Deepak Chopra’s latest venture: virtual reality (VR) meditation.
The new age entrepreneur and self-help guru unveiled the simulation, titled “Finding your true self”, this week at the headquarters of Wevr, a VR firm in Silicon Beach, Los Angeles’ tech hub.
Chopra, who narrates the simulation, hopes to sell the experience via booths at airports, hospitals and other locations, and via phones and laptops enabled with VR platforms.
“In 20 minutes you get a journey to enlightenment. The goal is to feel grounded and understand yourself a little better,” he told the Guardian. The technology, he said, facilitated an understanding of consciousness which eluded even René Descartes, the 17th century French philosopher. “He was good for his time but didn’t have VR to take it to the next level.”
Read more here.
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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The Sound of Culture: Diaspora and Black Technopoetics (2015)
“The Sound of Culture explores the histories of race and technology in a world made by slavery, colonialism, and industrialization. Beginning in the late nineteenth century and moving through to the twenty-first, the book argues for the dependent nature of those histories. Looking at American, British, and Caribbean literature, it distills a diverse range of subject matter: minstrelsy, Victorian science fiction, cybertheory, and artificial intelligence. 
All of these facets, according to Louis Chude-Sokei, are part of a history in which music has been central to the equation that links blacks and machines. As Chude-Sokei shows, science fiction itself has roots in racial anxieties and he traces those anxieties across two centuries and a range of writers and thinkers—from Samuel Butler, Herman Melville, and Edgar Rice Burroughs to Sigmund Freud, William Gibson, and Donna Haraway, to Norbert Weiner, Sylvia Wynter, and Samuel R. Delany.”
By Louis Chude-Sokei
Get it  now here and leave a review if you can.
Louis Chude-Sokei is a professor of English at the University of Washington, Seattle. His essays have appeared widely in publications such as African American Review, Transition, and The Believer. He is the author of The Last “Darky”: Bert Williams, Black-on-Black Minstrelsy, and the African Diaspora, which was a finalist for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award.
[ Follow SuperheroesInColor on facebook / instagram / twitter / tumblr ]
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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The latest episode of Radiolab talks about the actual internet of trees: the mycelium of fungi! Basically fungi are acting as resource exraction and chemical communication infrastructure for the forest. Without them, the forest wouldn’t be what it is. 
A comparative study of the hidden underground chemical exchange networks of roots/mycelium and the channels of information moving around us 24/7 on wavelenghts imperceptible to the naked eye while exploring how humans embody the space between these systems and increasingly entangle them is an essay BEGGING to be written. .  
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Lewis Feuchtwanger - A popular treatise on gems - 1867 - via Smithsonian
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Günter Zamp Kelp (Haus-Rucker-Co), Protected Village (1970)
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Branching Paths
Upcoming documentary by Anne Ferrero explores the current independent gaming scene in Japan:
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The Japanese video game industry lead the world in creativity and innovation from the 1980’s to the mid-2000’s, but in recent years, Japanese studios had been unable to keep up with advancements in technology, and many have shifted focus away from risky projects and unique gaming experiences.
All around the world, many players long to play games like those that inspired and excited them in their childhood. For industry veterans and young talents who aspire to the pursuit of originality and creative freedom, going independent is the answer.
Japan has a history of independent creators building lively communities, even within industries where large media companies rule. Comic Market, and events like it attract more than 1 million attendees yearly.
For the last several years, the Japanese game industry has begun to recognize the power of independent creators and the momentum of the fledgling scene, and in 2013, the Tokyo Game Show created a pavilion to feature indie creators for the first time in its history.
But is the Japanese game industry really changing? What is the price of creative independence? Why is there no funding or support from the Japanese government? These are just some of the questions we examine, to understand not only this unique scene, but its roots in culture. The answers tell a story of a struggle, not only for creative expression, but for survival as well.
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theinternetoftrees · 8 years
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Landscape glitch
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