Monday, 17 June 2019

Combination of the Two (15)


Weird Tales, not only Howard’s special form of muscular heroism, but the lithe animal passions of CL Moore, of frolicsome manoeuvres in twilit vistas, represents a physical rebellion against the progressive thinking fashioned by Henry Ford and others around the turn of the century that equated happiness with material consumption

The 60s represented a further rebellion against the exact same ethic, and went much further in terms of popular culture (reaching the city of one million of Woodstock). So why did the rebellion fail to render any perceptible change? Why are things much worse now than in the 60s? For some of the reasons already compiled.

For a start, the material order is actually immaterial, comprising the electromagnetic universe (cars will soon all be electric). This universe is not only very convincing (a reflection) but is in the minds of acolytes or, more likely, their algorithms.

Not only that, but their minds are under a numerical/monetary compulsion (Hyborian Bridge 62/1). The more numerical they get, the more compulsive the minds – further convincing acolytes of the materiality of this universe of the head so that, the more immaterial the universe gets, the more convinced are the acolytes of its materiality!

The best example of this is Katie Bouman’s black hole (Hyborian Bridge 56). In purely physical terms this is a lewd image; but in the immaterial terms of radio telescopes it’s just a fact with no physical meaning. This is the exact opposite to the physical universe of the ancients, where figures and animal shapes are imagined to form the constellations of the sky. Physical meaning is everything, whereas in Katie Bouman’s case it means nothing, and so the head is almost trapped by its own physique (body).

In a universe of the body the exact opposite is the case, since figures are imagined to be there even if in “reality” apparently there’s nothing there. Yes, but the physical universe doesn’t rely on verifiable proofs; what is there is rhythm and shape and that is what you see (in the figures).

Similarly for the Roy Krenkel picture (C3
) of satyrs which aren’t “real”, but primal rhythm and shape and strength of animal form
 
The immaterial universe (of modernity!) only appears real; it’s convincingly real, too real since it supplies script without the primal rhythm of the physical universe (see prev.) That is, the physical rotation of Earth against the cosmos.
From that point of view, DNA is only a script for the physical universe - not for the immaterial one – it’s not per se anything in itself. Similarly, Hameroff (prev) sees consciousness as a thing in itself, independent of the physical universe of motion in the cosmos.
The universe of movement is simple, primal, strong and nothing evokes it better thanWeird Tales. Why? Because movement is a type of poetry, a Homeric rise and fall of sun and moon over seas of green, a subtle grandeur that no amount of obfuscation can evoke. Because it’s not information at all; it’s actually the cosmic power (ontology) of the Earth spinning in space.
So, both meaning (physique) and ontology (being) are ignored by the acolytes of the parallel universe of lenses (perspective and light Hyborian Bridge 56). A parallel universe can be very convincing but it doesn’t change the fact that a physical universe has meaning (epistemology) and power (ontology) in the cosmos.
The human physique and conscience (religion) in a landscape where honour exists (chivalry, see prev.) Where horses are not a thing of the past because their high spirited ways are not hygienic information of vast lots (Drama1) but physique and physical power in the world of dirt and cleanliness.
Physique is meaning and power (And God Created) and implicates pursuits that emphasize the sexuality of the body (see Fulling Hyborian Bridge 60). The formality of the pursuits (riding, threshing) and the free-expression of the body-in-motion. Just like classical ballet, actually.
Where the body-in-motion has meaning, you are in the world of classical structure (see prev on Claude Levi-Strauss).
Strength and love (life); blood (death) and physical desirability. Man is attached to the stars via his physicality as the Earth twirls in space. Poetic dance is one of the closest ways one can get to a cosmic destiny. Again, there are no verifiable proofs because we are now in a physical universe, not one of acolytes’ heads’ numerical compulsions.
This all smacks of folk-art since ballet is just a progression of folk-dancing; maybe why Russians with a Cossack tradition are naturals? Youths learn the folk styles (as Nureyev did) so that there is a continual link between youth and ancient folk-art (see prev on Howard and his mother).
The two elements of life are very interrelatable, and maybe can be lost sight of in a formal education. No lesser an authority than Madonna now says that life is now too exhausting for an artist to grow and develop normally!
Taking away the ability to grow full stop. Folk relates the youth to the cosmos, and this applies more to smaller countries like Estonia (maybe parts of the US). Just as Howard’s mother related him to the ancient spirits, Weird Tales was the folk/fairy tales of the 30s.
Opposed to the progressive immaterialism of autos (now electric) and TV (now streaming) was the ancient, animal, caveman physicality of the cosmos, where the primitive rules in triumph.
Tim Conrad art