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07 August 2007

Thoughts from Hume

There are plenty of complaints about Hume's adopted theory of ideas (not least that as a theory of mind it's homuncular). But his notions on association of ideas through adjacency, resemblance and cause are interesting in terms of how they function in a narrative sense. I was reminded of 'reading by the book' more than once. Also the distinction between impression and idea was resonant of the what I think is called the 'vivacity' of particular literary images in 'reading by the book'. Hume means the difference between an experiential perception and a remembered one. The narrative transplantation of the difference doesn't settle exactly cntiguously, but I'm thinking about how I noted the idea of 'fractal imagination' and Humes notion of simple or complex ideas. Narrative conjures with both, indeed revelling in the synthesis of unexpected ideas. It arranges these from several orders at once; from the descriptive to the symbolic and from all angles of voice and fictive perception. These complex or simple ideas are finally brought together in the rhetorical field, particularly into the transformative field of metaphor. I wonder what metaphor and 'complex ideas' n the Humean sense have in common?

Also thought about Hume's terminology of 'impression' and that idea is 'recast' as a 'copy'. This is clearly in the language of print (and of the Platonic mind as a wax tablet)- but more particularly  of print, as it takes the stereotype 'impression' to endlessly produce the inferior 'idea' in new combinations. McLuhan might have had something to say here about Hume's position vis a vis... well, positions. It's no accident that Hume works hard on free will when he reduces cognitive perception to the effects of the empirical typetray. Although this is capable of producing the Borgesian library of Babel, it produces a particular view of what cognition actually is. One I suppose I buy into a fair bit, through my interest in narrative.

04 April 2007

What I actually did today:

for Alex Itin's the library group on flickr:









and I bound the first copy of Turndust.






More of the same tomorrow.




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01 April 2007

for the stamps




work that informed the stamps.


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25 December 2006

Turndust is going to be digital

Having thought long and hard about it, I've decided to reverse my decision to make turndust a screenprinted book. I simply won't have time to do the work I'd need to to do the best possible job before April. However, I still mean to commit to this book and do it right. Moreover, I still intend to use silscreen more: but I simply haven't the time to pull this large project out in time. I'll post about my plans for the book shortly.

05 December 2006

version 3


Untitled-16, originally uploaded by aesop.

Turndust


Untitled-15, originally uploaded by aesop.

03 December 2006

turndust


Untitled-13, originally uploaded by aesop.

01 December 2006

From Turndust.

this is
a test

Courageous 2


Courageous 2, originally uploaded by aesop.

At 'Caffe Gusto' (sic) this lunchtime I got a free Croissant with my coffee and drew this boat.

Thinking about submitting a new book for the Embassy Gallery show 'Textual Healing'. More about that soon.

30 November 2006

slush machine at the library


slush machine at the library, originally uploaded by aesop.

coffeebreak today. I'm sure the woman at the café must've thought I was staring at her.

P.S. It's the Sand-Reckoner.

reading

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