Showing posts with label Beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beauty. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Climbing

An interesting side-effect of the idea of Social Mobility is that we start to visualise a ladder. 'Upper', 'Middle' and 'Lower Class'. Once you are a Cultural Billionaire, that is actually bizarre. When you close your eyes for a nights rest, being able to sleep soundly is as good as it gets. There isn't first class sleep. A ranking of sleep. It's not a competition. There are several ways to fill the hours of your day with deeply fulfilling things to do. It is only when we choose to do restricted things that scarcity makes us feel envious.

You can't buy a better view. You can climb the mountain though. Free.

One reason we like climbing is recognition. Austin Kleon argues we should enjoy obscurity. Once you are known for something, it becomes an expectation. As you wake up from that incredibly expensive bed, each hour of your day becomes set. Your moves monitored. Your words scrutinised. When you are obscure, you can experiment. You can make mistakes. You can learn. Once you break from obscurity, you can break into time poverty.



The idea of progress is a strong motivator. I am here. I want to be there. Every move has its costs and benefits. In order to be there, there will be things that you give up. Hegel was a big fan of history. Progress is messy. There may be bits we did better, or questions we asked more beautifully, that were obscured by other things that were unpleasant. The same of different times in our lives. 

We need to be careful of being seduced by success. It can take us away from things that require competence rather than brilliance. Some of the greatest pleasures, most fulfilling activities, and worthwhile treasures are on the bottom rung of the ladder. All we need to do is make time. All we need to do is add space.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Ironing Out The Ugly

Some thoughts. Some things. Some people are beautiful. It is not a question of proving or disproving this. There are elements of beauty like rhythm, consistency, symmetry or the emotional response they cause that can let you discuss whether you think something is beautiful or ugly - but it is a sense. Unless you are looking for marks based on a rule based techniques - you can't be right or wrong. You can have ideas or make something that doesn't subscribe to the rules of a certain type of beauty, that may work for another kind. One kind of beauty can have conflicting rules. Problems that the leaders of that school of beauty iron out as the school evolves.

Some thoughts. Some theories. Some predictions are interesting. Science is an example. It was Karl Popper who said that if you can't state something in a way that it can be proved false, it isn't Science. A Scientist should always be able to state all their beliefs in such a way. That is what makes the belief interesting. Science doesn't have schools of thought. If two ideas conflict, at least one is wrong. Sorry.

Artists, Musicians, Priests and Poets don't have to risk being wrong. But they can also evolve - they can also iron out the ugly. They can also have reformers, revolutionaries and visionaries who push us to see the world in a new way.

Both beautiful and interesting things aren't static.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Cape Town's Beauty

In my `ode to Canada'... I mentioned but immediately hesitated in saying that Vacouver's beauty rivals Cape Town's if you take away the mountain and the beaches.

How you would do that I am not sure.

But, I think the difference is Vancouver is amazing, but Cape Town just takes your breath away. The beaches of Cape Town, and the power of the mountain just seem to dispell any logic that you might use to discount your attachment to it.

Cape Town remains my favourite city in the world.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Beer Goggles

Beer Goggles are real!:

Researchers ... randomly assigned 84 heterosexal students to consume either a non-alcoholic lime-flavoured drink or an alcoholic beverage with a similar flavour. ... After 15 minutes, the students were shown pictures of people their own age, from both sexes. Both men and women who had consumed alcohol rated the faces as being more attractive than did the controls ... The effect was not limited to the opposite sex - volunteers who had drunk alcohol also rated people from their own sex as more attractive.
Hee hee, no post today, I am off to hand out free beer