Topic: Dump topic for stuff thecatamites/bonzi_buddy/etc. might like (Read 281341 times)

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Well I think humans are fairly flexible in what they are capable of (truly) understanding, but... the problem is that we don't tend to actually do it until we hit a situation where we really need to, and then it's kind of traumatic, like breaking through a wall in your mind (or else you've spent a long, long time soaking it in) and until then, yeah, I think what the mind does is more like recounting the details of a story it's been told than making a perception about reality
 
I mean I think there IS something to what the dude is saying, but it's probably something like: You might assume things like bias and delusion and other forms of "broken" perception are a pure disadvantage weakening and destroying us, like cancer or a crippling addiction, but it should be understood that while dangerous they are also a necessary part of the evolutionary toolbelt.  .....Doesn't sell as well though
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Well I think humans are fairly flexible in what they are capable of (truly) understanding, but... the problem is that we don't tend to actually do it until we hit a situation where we really need to, and then it's kind of traumatic, like breaking through a wall in your mind (or else you've spent a long, long time soaking it in) and until then, yeah, I think what the mind does is more like recounting the details of a story it's been told than making a perception about reality
 
I mean I think there IS something to what the dude is saying, but it's probably something like: You might assume things like bias and delusion and other forms of "broken" perception are a pure disadvantage weakening and destroying us, like cancer or a crippling addiction, but it should be understood that while dangerous they are also a necessary part of the evolutionary toolbelt.  .....Doesn't sell as well though
 
there was an article somewhere (linked from here?) that supposedly shrooms etc. slow down your brain rather than make it more active? Like your brain is working less hard to 'filter' things
http://djsaint-hubert.bandcamp.com/
 
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he's right when he says everything is basically in our minds; a famous example is the "morning star" and the "evening star", both of which are actually the planet Venus. people originally thought them to be different objects, and conceptualized them in to be distinct from one another. today we know they're the same celestial body. this was an important point of debate especially in early linguistics—what constitutes an object, what's a "reference" to an object, etc.
 
the article is hard for me to understand tbh but I'm not convinced he can make a "mathematical model of consciousness" because how can you even define consciousness in a non-arbitrary way
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oV1TlyOhXMs
 
if it was the 'z' key it'd kinda be too perfect
Last Edit: May 05, 2016, 01:59:34 pm by Ragnar
http://djsaint-hubert.bandcamp.com/
 
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All this talk on reality and our perception got me thinking about Flatland.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mfglluny8Z0

The movie adaptation is so-so but it gets the point across.
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oh yeah for the record I guess I /can/ taste colors, but it must correspond/be directly linked to the age I was when the game boy color was around. Those specific kind of pastels combined with how clear the screen was compared to anything I had seen otherwise at the time. Maybe that's why I think steven universe is kind of phony, cause it almost achieves that effect with these super-specific color shades but doesn't quite get it???? And without that effect it just kind of feels like throwing JRPG tropes around at random 2 me
Last Edit: May 06, 2016, 08:32:02 pm by Ragnar
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not saying that u would have to have synesthesia or whatever or although it does feel like a weird inside joke to me that you could /get/ or not... but like if the color palette wasn't so super-specific in the first place I don't think it would bother me as much that it falls short for me
Last Edit: May 06, 2016, 08:48:36 pm by Ragnar
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not saying that u would have to have synesthesia or whatever or although it does feel like a weird inside joke to me that you could /get/ or not... but like if the color palette wasn't so super-specific in the first place I don't think it would bother me as much that it falls short for me
 
Yeah, it's weird alright. It's not like they intended to make Steven Universe to generate that sensation for you specifically, but because that's how you perceive the relationship between those kinds of colors, you get the impression that that's what the show needs to do for you, and find disappointment in how it falls short of achieving that effect fully in your own mind.
 
It makes me think of my friend that gripes about how The Force Awakens was treated. Like in his mind, Star Wars as a setting invoked very specific feelings of discovery and nuance the very first time he watched it. Because of that, he was especially offended at how the newest movie never really tried to explore anything, takes risks, or introduce any new concepts. (He was also really into the narrative brought on by the previous novels that were "third trilogy canon" before George Lucas was bought out, but whenever he tries to explain the "plot" of it to me, I just see it as even more contrived and arbitrary than ANYTHING Abrhams could have come up with. Sure it means a lot to HIM, but in my mind I just see it as his own imagination reading far more into the text than was actually there... Despite me never actually READING the text firsthand)
TFA never really bothered me none, mainly because I always saw Star Wars as something not made for any one specific person, but rather deliberately appeals to what the largest number of people can connect and identify with. I don't think that's a bad goal for science fiction to have, but I can't help but be offended personally by how well it was accomplished. I always look to science fiction to be deliberately challenging to my own ideas and perceptions, and Star Wars constantly disappoints me at every level for failing to rise to that challenge. (The only vaguely interesting idea that setting ever offered was the idea of how "spirituality" might evolve parallel to technology if left going for thousands and thousands of years, but even that notion is so distilled and contrived that I find it even more insulting as a premise)
 
It's just funny because we both saw the series fail at one point or another to give us what we both had in common for wanting out of it, but the only difference is how we perceived that initial iteration of it, in terms of what it meant to accomplish for us personally, and how that initial impression colored our own perception of literally everything that came thereafter.
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hmm I guess I never even thought of Star Wars as sci-fi, more like fantasy that happens to involve space travel
 
also I may have watched Spaceballs first as a kid so what do I know
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I thought the scene where what's her name is exploring those ruins was surprisingly evocative for jjabrams star wars sequel but yeah that was like two seconds of the movie but I could see it being sort of ineffable experience if you were a kid.
 
was the show Fringe any good? cause that was jj abrams and kind of answer to the x-files I guess? I'd have to watch both but chris carter and jj abrams are good parallels because i never got the impression chris carter knew what he was doing/knew how to end series but was still effective anyway imo??? then again chris carter might actually believe his storylines to some extent?? (new x-files series apparently had a fake alex jones type character). yeah that's the impression i get jj abrams is a perfect rational logical dude trying to make wacky sci-fi storylines? and I don't think he takes it as more than being storyteller/is fairly talented at mystery aesthetic/making things that are 'mysterious' but it's just like he knows how to tickle that funny bone in people and doesn't have much to say??
 
maybe he's gotten better over the years but i think like Lost Cloverfield etc. when i hear his name
 
anybody ever watch any brian eno interviews? because I think he's hella good guy at creating atmosphere/mystery and doesn't seem inauthentic but he's hella articulate and seems like he could verbalize his entire thought process behind making music if he needed to?? Like he seems like the only weirdmusic dude ever to be that way/not acting on some instinct/impossible thought process
Last Edit: May 07, 2016, 02:49:36 am by Ragnar
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was the show Fringe any good? 
yes
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My main problems with E7 are the way the story tried to pack in plot beats from the entire original trilogy, making the film seem kind of rushed, and the way the villains were portrayed as some sort of angry remnant of the empire didn't quite match the level of threat the movie was trying to portray them as.
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was the show Fringe any good? 
yes
 
I don't remember much from watching it, but I do distinctly recall that I enjoyed whatever it was I saw. 
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I thought the scene where what's her name is exploring those ruins was surprisingly evocative for jjabrams star wars sequel but yeah that was like two seconds of the movie but I could see it being sort of ineffable experience if you were a kid.
anybody ever watch any brian eno interviews? because I think he's hella good guy at creating atmosphere/mystery and doesn't seem inauthentic but he's hella articulate and seems like he could verbalize his entire thought process behind making music if he needed to?? Like he seems like the only weirdmusic dude ever to be that way/not acting on some instinct/impossible thought process
RE Force Awakens, Yeah I thought literally in same beats, that the beginning scene was for a moment nice. The rest of the movie was pretty much JJ Abrhamas [sic]/modern movie stuff.
 
Im just gonna quote dat brian eno bit there as a reminder cos if ragnar likes him a bit then maybe i should give him more of a serious go. i'm like okay with his thoughts in general and interviews but it's nothing special afai seen.
 
Quote
It makes me think of my friend that gripes about how The Force Awakens was treated. Like in his mind, Star Wars as a setting invoked very specific feelings of discovery and nuance the very first time he watched it. Because of that, he was especially offended at how the newest movie never really tried to explore anything, takes risks, or introduce any new concepts. (He was also really into the narrative brought on by the previous novels that were "third trilogy canon" before George Lucas was bought out, but whenever he tries to explain the "plot" of it to me, I just see it as even more contrived and arbitrary than ANYTHING Abrhams could have come up with. Sure it means a lot to HIM, but in my mind I just see it as his own imagination reading far more into the text than was actually there... Despite me never actually READING the text firsthand)
TFA never really bothered me none, mainly because I always saw Star Wars as something not made for any one specific person, but rather deliberately appeals to what the largest number of people can connect and identify with. I don't think that's a bad goal for science fiction to have, but I can't help but be offended personally by how well it was accomplished. I always look to science fiction to be deliberately challenging to my own ideas and perceptions, and Star Wars constantly disappoints me at every level for failing to rise to that challenge. (The only vaguely interesting idea that setting ever offered was the idea of how "spirituality" might evolve parallel to technology if left going for thousands and thousands of years, but even that notion is so distilled and contrived that I find it even more insulting as a premise)
 
I see what you are hinting there mate. ;-) I think the problem is that sometimes nerds and really all ppl don't really know for sure what makes a good media... like what are the parts that make a movie specifically good in it's own specific way... but they can at least instinctually or generally feel when something is done right when they experience it... well, at least some portion of experiencers can.
 
for example, original trilogy certainly has some good shit going on in there (i won't go in too much about it here), but that doesn't mean the books got it right etc... just like how you vibed ur dude's take on the books.
 
it's very hard to articulate what makes a good movie (at least, what made that specific media in past so good as it is). I've gotten pretty good at it /to myself specifically/ but try as i might, i may never really convincingly explain what makes shit good as it is. it's also really wordy and cumbersome sometimes to analyze and explain out the specific parts, which already gives it a disavantage of " doesn't sound intuitive, ergo it's not correct most likely " - bias. for example, i'm already messing that part up!!!!!!!!! eff my life. *SPIT*
 
and yeah i sorta think SW (star wars or salt world...) was simultaenously a Indiana Jones - type of action movie, with some strong esthetic-exploration-mystery type of elements in there. Indiana Jones meets Dune or 2001. it does the latter better than dune or aliens etc tho, that was part of the strong draw of SW for me as a kid.
Last Edit: May 07, 2016, 10:30:54 am by bonzi_buddy
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Im just gonna quote dat brian eno bit there as a reminder cos if ragnar likes him a bit then maybe i should give him more of a serious go. i'm like okay with his thoughts in general and interviews but it's nothing special afai seen.
 
sorry I didn't mean he's the most articulate guy ever but in the realm of weirdelectromusicguys he kind of is? meanwhile there's that interview with autechre where the guy is picking his nose the entire interview
http://djsaint-hubert.bandcamp.com/
 
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Im just gonna quote dat brian eno bit there as a reminder cos if ragnar likes him a bit then maybe i should give him more of a serious go. i'm like okay with his thoughts in general and interviews but it's nothing special afai seen.
 
sorry I didn't mean he's the most articulate guy ever but in the realm of weirdelectromusicguys he kind of is? meanwhile there's that interview with autechre where the guy is picking his nose the entire interview
ahhaha well if you put it THAT WAY....
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hahaha "I don't know, it's like... sorta human sounding, or natural sounding, but totally synthetic at the same time..... :blush:​"
 
I'm not a huge knowledgable Brian Eno fan but I know he is all about his process and all of his albums that I've heard are driven by purposeful concepts. And he's one of those people who makes big elaborate games with silly rulesets to inspires creativity, like john zorn, which speaks to a designer's limit-pushing mindset. I hear when he recorded Lodger with Bowie he bugged everyone by constantly throwing curveball guidelines out mid-jam
 
edit: That's right, the Oblique Strategies.
http://stoney.sb.org/eno/oblique.html
 
it's a set of index cards with little suggestions that act as creative-block-breakers and lateral thinking aids.
Last Edit: May 07, 2016, 04:06:01 pm by Small Green Cicada
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yeah oblique strategies is great, I want to make something like that someday but more surreal
http://djsaint-hubert.bandcamp.com/
 
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jSeVOv84fS4
 
some serbian acquaintences have introduced me to serbian pop music. See e.g. this video, which seems to be some mixture of music, soft porn and advertisement for real estate in monte negro. Great 3D plane animation also. I should study and ask more before I say anything, but this kind of pop (turbo-folk etc) with a greek/turkish influence is apparently incredibly popular in the balkans. You can easily find more accordion 'n' bass with zillions of youtube views by looking at the related videos
Last Edit: May 08, 2016, 07:34:43 pm by A1A1inE8
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http://djsaint-hubert.bandcamp.com/