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My pareidolia knows no bounds.
10 years 1 month ago #6509
by rderosa
Replied by rderosa on topic Reply from Richard DeRosa
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Larry Burford</i>
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Richard - if this is acceptable to you I'll accept it as well. But I recommend he be required to word it differently.
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Larry, in all honesty, I didn't take Fred's comment as an insult to me, but rather as what he thought about Ayn Rand. So, no apology was needed (on my part).
rd
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Richard - if this is acceptable to you I'll accept it as well. But I recommend he be required to word it differently.
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
Larry, in all honesty, I didn't take Fred's comment as an insult to me, but rather as what he thought about Ayn Rand. So, no apology was needed (on my part).
rd
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10 years 1 month ago #22625
by rderosa
Replied by rderosa on topic Reply from Richard DeRosa
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Marsevidence01</i>
<br />The problem you are having here frankly, is that you are still looking for an image that resembles a car or a familiar "thing". Shame really as anything that looks potentially artificial, you pass right on bye. You need to both open your eyes AND your mind.
But the dissonance you are experiencing is a super safety net of sorts and is quite understandable.
Malcolm Scott
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
If you had something of value, everybody would know about it, and there would be no discussion.
As it stands, I'd have to say you haven't produced anything of substance yet.
What it seems like to me, and probably most people, is that you have built yourself somewhat of a "Catch-22" argument. You're claiming that we have to know the formula (so to speak) for seeing the mysterious stuff you're producing, rather than just <b>look at it, and see what it is.</b>
I'm not buying it, and I doubt if anyone else is, or quite frankly, you'd be famous.[]
rd
<br />The problem you are having here frankly, is that you are still looking for an image that resembles a car or a familiar "thing". Shame really as anything that looks potentially artificial, you pass right on bye. You need to both open your eyes AND your mind.
But the dissonance you are experiencing is a super safety net of sorts and is quite understandable.
Malcolm Scott
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
If you had something of value, everybody would know about it, and there would be no discussion.
As it stands, I'd have to say you haven't produced anything of substance yet.
What it seems like to me, and probably most people, is that you have built yourself somewhat of a "Catch-22" argument. You're claiming that we have to know the formula (so to speak) for seeing the mysterious stuff you're producing, rather than just <b>look at it, and see what it is.</b>
I'm not buying it, and I doubt if anyone else is, or quite frankly, you'd be famous.[]
rd
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10 years 1 month ago #22688
by rderosa
Replied by rderosa on topic Reply from Richard DeRosa
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by pareidoliac</i>
<br />It takes being a lying hypocrite to make any more money than one needs.<not equal to> "To lead- one must lie".
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">I don't know how much of Ayn Rand's non-fiction stuff you read, but I pretty much read it all, and money in her view is merely the end result of using one's mind to navigate the waters of the world.
I honestly don't see why you trouble yourself over those who have made a lot of it. I don't concern myself with what others have made, as long as it was made honestly through their own devices.
Now the second sentence is a whole 'nuther issue, because yes, most political leaders (like our present ones) lie through their teeth. In the words of Bob Dylan, "It's a wonder that they still know how to breathe." I'm not talking about them, though. I'm talking about the Bill Gates and Michael Dell's of the world, who one day said, "hey I can do that." And did it.
I tend to agree with Ayn Rand that they are noble, because they did it with their brain at nobody else's expense, and in doing so, raised the standard of living of uncounted thousands of people.
rd
<br />It takes being a lying hypocrite to make any more money than one needs.<not equal to> "To lead- one must lie".
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">I don't know how much of Ayn Rand's non-fiction stuff you read, but I pretty much read it all, and money in her view is merely the end result of using one's mind to navigate the waters of the world.
I honestly don't see why you trouble yourself over those who have made a lot of it. I don't concern myself with what others have made, as long as it was made honestly through their own devices.
Now the second sentence is a whole 'nuther issue, because yes, most political leaders (like our present ones) lie through their teeth. In the words of Bob Dylan, "It's a wonder that they still know how to breathe." I'm not talking about them, though. I'm talking about the Bill Gates and Michael Dell's of the world, who one day said, "hey I can do that." And did it.
I tend to agree with Ayn Rand that they are noble, because they did it with their brain at nobody else's expense, and in doing so, raised the standard of living of uncounted thousands of people.
rd
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10 years 1 month ago #22735
by rderosa
Replied by rderosa on topic Reply from Richard DeRosa
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by pareidoliac</i>
<br />I thought if I ever came up with something it would be appreciated. I did . You see the response I get. Some day people will see the value in pareidolia and how the money system hid it under me a old uneducated (artistically) so no one would find it.
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">One other point Fred. My wife and I recently bought some artwork for our walls. Mostly just prints of famous paintings, in nice frames. We favor the Impressionists and Post-impressionists of the late 19th century, like Paul Cezanne and Vincent Van Gogh.
My wife likes to read about the artist's life, and one of the first things you find out is that these guys were the quintessential "starving artists". They were paupers, never really making a dime during their lifetimes, and surviving on their wiles.
If they had any idea whatsoever the amount of money that their works fetch today, they would roll over in their graves.
So, keep the faith. I'm convinced you've tapped into something very important, and sooner of later the world is going to know about it. Unfortunately, you might not be here when they do.
rd
<br />I thought if I ever came up with something it would be appreciated. I did . You see the response I get. Some day people will see the value in pareidolia and how the money system hid it under me a old uneducated (artistically) so no one would find it.
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">One other point Fred. My wife and I recently bought some artwork for our walls. Mostly just prints of famous paintings, in nice frames. We favor the Impressionists and Post-impressionists of the late 19th century, like Paul Cezanne and Vincent Van Gogh.
My wife likes to read about the artist's life, and one of the first things you find out is that these guys were the quintessential "starving artists". They were paupers, never really making a dime during their lifetimes, and surviving on their wiles.
If they had any idea whatsoever the amount of money that their works fetch today, they would roll over in their graves.
So, keep the faith. I'm convinced you've tapped into something very important, and sooner of later the world is going to know about it. Unfortunately, you might not be here when they do.
rd
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10 years 1 month ago #22627
by pareidoliac
Replied by pareidoliac on topic Reply from fred ressler
Ayn Rand was given to in the time of the great anti-communist wave of fear while at the same time the people causing the fear (the east coast establishment) was secretly embracing and infiltrating Russsia. The left and the right are two sides of a dialectic game given to us to control us and think they are different. This Franfurt school of supposed Maxrist rhetoric is taught thru the University system today centered in Columbia University. If Walter Benjamin had lived this might have all been different. Out language is pure idealism. Nothing is anything. Work is great if one fails to see the other sides of money and what ones taxes go for. I realized when i got out of school than taxes would go to kill people. Pure idiocy. Leaders all corrupt and in cahoots. Breeding and manipulating the herds. Taking 40% of everyone's life for openers.
Thank god i'm an untimely meditation to use Nietzsche's term and statement that if you communicate within a hundred years of your death you are not really appreciated fully. One must be 100 years ahead of his time to be real. My photographs already look like stodgy old museum pieces to me. Look at a live moving shadow. That is the gift given to me that others will look at the beauty of flowing shadows compared to art. The important thing is showing the reversal of values and the way any person can capture this beautiful magical view into the unconscious art world that makes
Salvador Dali a lot less sur-real. This is one of the non-pyramidal things given to us. We all start out equal on many levels with pareidolia.
There is no concern for money with art and that's my main difference with Ayn. Money and everything of higher consciousness is 180% out of phase with the corrupt and heinous thing called money. Value given to an idea to enslave people back by the military. It's fine for the slave/ slave master system.
rd- ironic that you have shown great interest in pareidolia enough to actually do some. Thanks for your positive input. Interesting when Rembrandt depicted the king poorly he started to starve himself. Money killed god along with Ayn Rands view of this Judao- Christian so called privilege. Now it is also a Muslim privilege. It is really a rich privilege where people make human sacrifices of themselves and their children to get rich and kill others. "War is good for business. Invest your children. Smart people make money?
Please tell me again how 2 planes made three building classically implode on 9-11. Anyone who believes the official story of JFK and 9-11 is obviously in love with and blinded by money that overides their view of reality. Some one here is very stupid including me. God save us all.
Thank god i'm an untimely meditation to use Nietzsche's term and statement that if you communicate within a hundred years of your death you are not really appreciated fully. One must be 100 years ahead of his time to be real. My photographs already look like stodgy old museum pieces to me. Look at a live moving shadow. That is the gift given to me that others will look at the beauty of flowing shadows compared to art. The important thing is showing the reversal of values and the way any person can capture this beautiful magical view into the unconscious art world that makes
Salvador Dali a lot less sur-real. This is one of the non-pyramidal things given to us. We all start out equal on many levels with pareidolia.
There is no concern for money with art and that's my main difference with Ayn. Money and everything of higher consciousness is 180% out of phase with the corrupt and heinous thing called money. Value given to an idea to enslave people back by the military. It's fine for the slave/ slave master system.
rd- ironic that you have shown great interest in pareidolia enough to actually do some. Thanks for your positive input. Interesting when Rembrandt depicted the king poorly he started to starve himself. Money killed god along with Ayn Rands view of this Judao- Christian so called privilege. Now it is also a Muslim privilege. It is really a rich privilege where people make human sacrifices of themselves and their children to get rich and kill others. "War is good for business. Invest your children. Smart people make money?
Please tell me again how 2 planes made three building classically implode on 9-11. Anyone who believes the official story of JFK and 9-11 is obviously in love with and blinded by money that overides their view of reality. Some one here is very stupid including me. God save us all.
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10 years 1 month ago #6510
by pareidoliac
Replied by pareidoliac on topic Reply from fred ressler
Here is some new information (to me) on the brain and pareidolia published in the Journal of Neurophysiology. Thought you science guys might be interested.
http:xx//annotary.com/bookmarks/139971/selectivity-for-the-human-body-in-the-fusiform-gyrus
http:xx//annotary.com/bookmarks/139971/selectivity-for-the-human-body-in-the-fusiform-gyrus
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