Author: flyagaric23

  • W.B Yeats and Avision

    Snipped from the NATION:

    Think back to the autumn of 1917. Stuck in the Ashdown Forest Hotel, her four-day-old marriage a disaster, George began (by her own admission) to “fake” automatic writing in order to entertain her despondent husband: she then felt her hand seized by an unseen power. Willy described what happened next in the revised edition of A Vision (1937), the esoteric account of all human history and personality that the automatic writing ultimately made possible:

    What came in disjointed sentences, in almost illegible writing, was so exciting, sometimes so profound, that I persuaded her to give an hour or two day after day to the unknown writer, and after some half-dozen such hours offered to spend what remained of life explaining and piecing together those scattered sentences, “No,” was the answer, “we have come to give you metaphors for poetry.”

    Over the next several years, Willy and George produced more than 3,600 pages of script, his questions, her answers. This is their most intimate exchange, and it is almost never referred to in the actual letters Willy and George wrote to each other.
    The first few days of automatic writing have not been preserved (the remainder having lately been transcribed and edited by George Mills Harper and a fleet of assistants), so there is no record of Yeats being assured that the spirits had contacted him, through his wife, to further his poetic career. George remembered the initial contact differently: “What you have done is right for both the cat and the hare,” she scribbled, confident that her husband would understand that the hare was Iseult Gonne and the cat was herself, which he did. In the approximately 450 sessions of automatic writing that followed, the intimate sex life of George and Willy Yeats looms as prominently as metaphors for poetry (though Willy would go on to write great poems about sex). “What is important,” says one spirit through George, is “that both the desire of the medium and her desire for your desire should be satisfied.” Willy is advised to keep up his strength by making love to his wife more than once a day: “it is like not taking enough exercise & a long walk exhausts you.” “You mean,” asked Willy, “by doing it once I will lose power of doing it twice.” Yes, came the answer, “& then of doing it once.”
    The automatic script ranges widely over innumerable topics; it is often tedious; it calls on vast reserves of esoteric knowledge. But one theme is constant: if the conversations are to continue, the medium (or “interpreter,” as George preferred to be called) must be satisfied. And when the interpreter is not satisfied, the script shouts it out loud and clear:

         I dont like you
         You neglect me
         You dont give me physical symbols
    to use

     Despite the aura of possible chicanery that inevitably surrounds such an enterprise, George emerges from it as the same brilliantly capable person who managed her husband’s career while also raising two children and electing to spend her summers in a castle with no electricity, no indoor plumbing, jackdaws nesting in the chimneys and a first floor that regularly flooded to a height of two feet.
    http://www.thenation.com/article/160781/imperfect-life-george-and-wb-yeats?page=0,1

  • Seaflow and me against the LFAS navy

    During my time living in America I frequented a number of meetings with the ‘marine mamal protection agency’ called seaflow based in Marine county, California. I enjoyed listening to the presentations, in particular the bioacoustician ‘Michael stocker’ who touched on some areas of biology and science first bought to my attention by Dr. John Lilly M.D.

    As both a swimmer and a musician I have always found a fascination with Dolphin and whale songs for many reasons, and have always felt in agreement with the well known cliche’ ‘save the whales’ and furthermore often wondered why ‘saving whales’ came to be used as a term used in conjunction with new agers and hippies who simply cared for the natural environment and its inhabitants, as well as having compassipon for human beings. ‘Tree huggers’ is another case in point here.

    My thoughts on ‘saving the whales’ that are in line with some of those echoed at ‘seaflow’ correspond with the worlds ‘sea based’ military industrial complex, or the weapons, sonor and other acoustic technologies interfearing with the biological ecosystem and individual physiological systems, I mean to say that the Navy and/or oil and gas explorers are often responsible for cases of beached whales and dolphins around the world.

    I agree, in the spirit of good science and research that there are many other factors relating to  cases of beached whales and dolphins, from ‘social’ theories of a kind of ‘suicide’ among these creatures to electro-magnetic anomalies that confuse their sonor, and I am happy that research is going on into these areas, Great Britain has an entire organization following cases of stranded marine life around the UK coastline, but the threat from ‘low frequency active sonor’ seems to have been deemed a low priority for them, who knows? maybe they already have a campaign to inform the public about the dangers from ocean noise in general and the fact that the Navy are often the humans to blame for some of the beachings and cases of stranded marine life.

    Another strange thing happened just now when I went looking for seaflow’s web site, its gone, but  I discovered another company that uses the name seaflow, ironically its actually an underwater turbine system that claims to be a viable renewable energy source by its makers.  

    I’ll write up some more on this subject after reading a liitle more into it, in the meantime the message is ‘write to representatives about ‘low frequency active sonor’ and other ocean pollution that directly harms whales, dolphins and lots of other sea life too. Thanks, steve-fly

    Some links for further information:

    http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Seaflow

    http://www.nrdc.org/wildlife/marine/sonar.asp

    http://www.shephard.co.uk/news/rotorhub/marport-awarded-sonar-contract-by-selex-galileo/9005/

    http://www.marineturbines.com/6/background/14/seaflow/

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/may/20/humans-to-blame-whale-strandings   

  • FIENDISH PLOTS (RAW thought of the Month)

     FIENDISH PLOTS
    21 SHa`baan 1422 A.H.
    Fu who?
    — THE FIENDISH PLOT OF DR. FU MANCHU 
    Last night I looked at THE FIENDISH PLOT OF DR. FU MANCHU on TV, partly because it starred Peter Sellers as both Dr. Fu and his enemy Nayland Smith of Scotland Yard, and partly because I wanted to compare the epic battle between Fu and Smith with the current rumble between Dubya and Osama bin Laden.
    I have long regarded Dr Fu as both archetype and stereotype — the incarnation of British fear of Oriental revenge for imperialist invasions. Osama fits that role very well indeed, and the Dubya/Smith parallel came across with almost synchronistic shock:
    “The difference between Fu and me,” Smith sez, “is that I’m Good and he’s Evil.”
    Have Dubya’s speech-writers read the original Fu novels or just seen this film?
    Unlike the novels, the film does not portray Dr Fu as driven by “motiveless malignancy” [like Dubya explaining Osama: “He is a man who is an evil man.”] On the contrary, Fu has a personal grudge we can understand: as a boy he had to work in his father’s laundry at Eton, and starching all those white collars drove him bonkers. That makes more sense to me as a novelist than the unmotivelated malice of Osama, as portrayed by Dubya, CNN and the other corporate spin doctors.
    Fear not, O true believers: the film didn’t mention imperialism, any more than the novels — or Dubya’s speech-writers.
    Meanwhile, another of my favorite villians has resurfaced:
    THE FIENDISH PLOT OF MING THE MERCILESS
    Adapted from the Irish Times 5 Nov 2001
    The cannabis campaigner, “Ming the Merciless”, has been arrested in Dublin this afternoon in connection with posting what is believed to be cannabis too close to 300 politicians and journalists.
    He was detained while attempting to hand deliver a potted cannabis plant to the offices of a senior Government Minister,and taken to Pearse Street Garda station where he is being held under Section 4 of the Criminal Justice Act.
    Earlier today, several letters containing what is believed to be cannabis and addressed to politicians at their offices were discovered by officials checking the post following recent anthrax scares.
    “Ming the Merciless”, whose real name is Luke Flanagan from County Roscommon, is a well-known campaigner for the legalisation of cannabis. He ran in Galway West on a legalise cannabis ticket during the 1997 general election and also ran on the same platform in the European Parliamentary elections in the constituency of Connacht-Ulster.
    Every country gets the villians it deserves. And as Joyce would say, there’s lots of fun in Flanagan’s work.
  • Just Like “Finnegans Wake,” But With Charts – Senate Committee Issues Report on Financial Crisis

    http://blogs.forbes.com/timothyspangler/2011/04/16/just-like-finnegans-wake-but-with-charts-senate-committee-issues-report-on-financial-crisis/

    “When i read the court proceedings in Joyce’s wake around page’s 572-576, i instantly thought about the court hearing that will come concerning the banking turmoil and crash affecting all humanity, especially the poor and displaced peoples, due to the international global financial system in place in 2009.–Steve fly.

     James Joyce writes:
     

    “This, lay readers and gentilemen, is perhaps the commonest
    of all cases arising out of umbrella history in connection with the wood industries in our courts of litigation. D’Oyly Owens
    holds (though Finn Magnusson of himself holds also) that so
    long as there is a joint deposit account in the two names a
    mutual obligation is posited. Owens cites Brerfuchs and Warren,
    a foreign firm, since disseized, registered as Tangos, Limited,
    for the sale of certain proprietary articles. The action which was
    at the instance of the trustee of the heathen church emergency
    fund, suing by its trustee, a resigned civil servant, for the
    payment of tithes due was heard by Judge Doyle and also by a
    common jury. No question arose as to the debt for which vouchers
    spoke volumes. The defence alleged that payment had been made
    effective. The fund trustee, one Jucundus Fecundus Xero
    Pecundus Coppercheap, counterclaimed that payment was invalid
    having been tendered to creditor under cover of a crossed cheque,
    signed in the ordinary course, in the name of Wieldhelm, Hurls
    Cross, voucher copy provided, and drawn by the senior partner
    only by whom the lodgment of the species had been effected but
    in their joint names. The bank particularised, the national misery
    (now almost entirely in the hands of the four chief bondholders
    for value in Tangos), declined to pay the draft, though there
    were ample reserves to meet the liability, whereupon the trusty
    Coppercheap negociated it for and on behalf of the fund of the
    thing to a client of his, a notary, from whom, on consideration, he
    received in exchange legal relief as between trusthee and bethrust,
    with thanks. Since then the cheque, a good washable pink,
    embossed D you D No 11 hundred and thirty 2, good for the figure
    and face, had been circulating in the country for over thirtynine
    years among holders of Pango stock, a rival concern, though not
    one demonetised farthing had ever spun or fluctuated across the
    counter in the semblance of hard coin or liquid cash. The jury (a
    sour dozen of stout fellows all of whom were curiously named
    after doyles) naturally disagreed jointly and severally, and the
    belligerent judge, disagreeing with the allied jurors’
    disagreement, went outside his jurisfiction altogether and ordered a
    garnishee attachment to the neutral firm.” –
    JAMES JOYCE. FINNEGANS WAKE:
    Part:3 Episode:14 Page:575
     
  • Bit By Bit, ‘The Information’ Reveals Everything

    http://www.npr.org/player/v2/mediaPlayer.html?action=1&t=1&islist=false&id=134366651&m=134371366

    March 8, 2011

    The Information, written by James Gleick, covers nearly everything — jungle drums, language, Morse code, telegraphy, telephony, quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, genetics and more — as it relates to information, which he describes as the “fundamental core of things.” Information theory can now be seen as the overarching concept for our times, describing how scientists in many disciplines see a common thread to their work.

    Gleick’s book spans centuries and geographic locations, but one person stays throughout the story for almost 400 pages: Claude Shannon, an engineer and mathematician who worked at Bell Labs in the mid-20th century. Shannon created what is now called information theory, Gleick tells Robert Siegel on All Things Considered:

    “He was the first person to use the word ‘bit’ as a scientific unit of measuring this funny abstract thing that until this point in time scientists had not thought of as a measurable scientific quantity.”

    Bits are more commonly recognized as the 1s and 0s that enable computers to store and share information, but can also be thought of in this context as a yes/no, either/or or on/off switch. Gleick describes the bit as “the irreducible quantum of information,” upon which all things are built.

    Just like Isaac Newton took vague words like “force” and “mass” that had fuzzy contemporary meanings and turned them into specific mathematical definitions, “information” now can refer to a specific scientific definition similar to a bit.

    “Binary yes or no choices are at the root of things,” Gleick explains. The physicist John Archibald Wheeler coined an epigram to encapsulate the concept behind information theory: “It from bit.” It described the idea that the smallest particle of every piece of matter is a binary question, a 1 or a 0. From these pieces of information, other things could develop — like DNA, matter and living organisms. The field of information theory, in addition to creating new meanings for words like “information,” also builds upon knowledge from other scientific disciplines such as thermodynamics, even though the result may be a little tough to understand.
    James Gleick also wrote Chaos: Making a New Science, which popularized the idea of the butterfly effect. His books have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award.
    Phylis Rose

    James Gleick also wrote Chaos: Making a New Science, which popularized the idea of the butterfly effect. His books have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award.

    “When Claude Shannon first wrote his paper and made a connection between information and the thermodynamic concept of entropy, a rumor started around Bell Labs that the great atomic physicist John von Neumann had suggested to Shannon, ‘Just use the word entropy — no one will know what you’re talking about, and everyone will be scared to doubt you.’ “

    Though it may be a difficult subject to conceptualize, entropy does have a deep connection to information science, Gleick says. Entropy is associated with disorder in thermodynamic systems, and analogously so in informational systems. Though it may seem paradoxical to link information to disorder, Gleick explains that each new bit of information is a surprise — if you knew what a particular message contained, there would not be information in it.

    “Information equals disorder, disorder equals entropy and a lot of physicists have been both scratching their heads and making scientific progress ever since,” Gleick says.

    In the everyday — not scientific — sense, an object like the moon only seems to contain information when we perceive it and develop thoughts about it, whether that’s the man in the moon, the moon being made of cheese or the moon driving people to madness. But Gleick says that even without our perceiving it, the moon is more than just matter — it still has its own bits of intrinsic information.

    “It sounds mystical, and I can’t pretend that I fully understand it either, but it’s just one of the many ways in which scientists have discovered a conception of information that helps them solve problems in a whole range of disciplines.”

    We can see now that information is what our world runs on: the blood and the fuel, the vital principle. It pervades the sciences from top to bottom, transforming every branch of knowledge. Information theory began as a bridge from mathematics to electrical engineering and from there to computing. What English speakers call “computer science” Europeans have long since known as informatique, informatica, and Informatik. Now even biology has become an information science, a subject of messages, instructions, and code. Genes encapsulate information and enable procedures for reading it in and writing it out. Life spreads by networking. The body itself is an information processor. Memory is stored not just in brains but in every cell. No wonder genetics bloomed along with information theory. DNA is the quintessential information molecule, the most advanced message processor at the cellular level—an alphabet and a code, 6 billion bits to form a human being. “What lies at the heart of every living thing is not a fire, not warm breath, not a ‘spark of life,’” declares the evolutionary theorist Richard Dawkins. “It is information, words, instructions. . . . If you want to understand life, don’t think about vibrant, throbbing gels and oozes, think about information technology.” The cells of an organism are nodes in a richly interwoven communications network, transmitting and receiving, coding and decoding. Evolution itself embodies an ongoing exchange of information between organism and environment.

    “The information circle becomes the unit of life,” says Werner Loewenstein after thirty years spent studying intercellular communication. He reminds us that information means something deeper now: “It connotes a cosmic principle of organization and order, and it provides an exact measure of that.” The gene has its cultural analog, too: the meme. In cultural evolution, a meme is a replicator and propagator—an idea, a fashion, a chain letter, or a conspiracy theory. On a bad day, a meme is a virus.

  • John Sinclair & Friends at 420 Cafe

    JOHN SINCLAIR AND HIS AMSTERDAM BLUES SCHOLARS

    ANNUAL BILL BARTH MEMORIAL CONCERT.

    23RD HIGH TIMES CANNABIS CUP

    John Sinclair (words)
    Steve Fly Agaric 23 (Drums)
    Vincent Pino (Guitars)

    John Sinclair & Friends at 420 Cafe, Nov 26th.

  • John Sinclair and His International Blues Scholars

    John Sinclair and His International Blues Scholars…

    John Sinclair (out of shot on left)
    Tom Worrel
    Leslie Lopez
    Steve ‘fly agaric 23’
    Vincent Pino
    Frenchy (Painting)

    In Amsterdam, August 2010.