Saturday, 23 November 2019

Hyborian Bridge 88


Another CL Moore story, The Code, is as confusing as anything I’ve read even if it contains a neat description of parallel realities Tales of Faith 12
The mutability of genes and genesis of body in the story become almost infinite, branching into parallel lines of reality – and it all hinges on the Einsteinian idea that “Time doesn’t exist” (Pictorial 17
); it’s an invention of the mind.
(page 584)
Here, Moore is saying that mind affects body – and vice versa. Yes, but where you have affect there are circadian and other wider rhythms that transmit the affect. Time is not a mental phenomenon, it is a powerful physical reality of wheels-within-wheels. Because acolytes think logically, they tend to identify easily with computer-time (certainty) and not with intersecting rhythms that are actually how the body functions (bones, lungs, breathing, singing, eating, sipping).
This leads to the conclusion that time does not exist organically, even though in order for an ear or a throat to develop (in the watery womb) they can only do so rhythmically.
Moore’s story, which imagines a parallel reality of development, can be taken as an idea of what might happen in a universe where time functioned like clockwork, or like computer-switches (or an exchange).

But that’s exactly how organic time doesn’t work! If you replace “temporal idols” with “physical idols”, these are very powerful and archetypal shapes that have symmetry and proportion.
Sirius the dog-star (Earth-myth)
Have you ever wondered why all dog breeds are fairly cutely proportioned? That’s why. It’s not temporal, it’s archetypal. Archetypal forms have strong rhythms; they’re irrational forms and not based on temporal certainty.
Acolytes crave certainty – their ego-logic – and archetypal rhythms are uncertain. In the story, when Moore imagines the genesis of this guy Rufus, rearranging in time, it’s predicated on time being a certain factor, one that can branch into different avenues.
But the archetypal forms are constructed of intersecting rhythms that are uncertain and that – together – form something unique, such as a dachshund. We can trace figures in the sky because they have primordial shape (power, ability to hunt, leap, prowl). So, when Moore talks of the genes rearranging, genesis rearranging, she’s talking of the certainties of DNA, and not the uncertainty of rhythmic form.
What follows from that is that the science of DNA has no connection with rhythmic form, yet rhythmic form is the ultimate source of health. CL Moore’s story, even though I think it’s wrong, is also very convincing because a wrong rhythm can be convincing (disturbing, weird).
It’s also very dark so, in the sense that it accurately mimics the mindset of science, that’s its strong feature. Accuracy and certainty are dark because they are so convincing – and so wrong that they enter a parallel dimension.

The parallel dimension is the product of certainty, like the mirrored reptile-helix of DNA. In there, everything is certain, but also indescribably wrong. The wrongness is the certainty itself, since the easy thing is to attach DNA to AI, thus bypassing organic rhythm itself.
More words from the tongue of acolytes

Savage splendour, uncertain silence
In that respect, the “wrongness” is also that of the symbiot of Heir Apparent; the “improper geometry” of Kiss of the Black God. In the latter, Jirel is shrived as she faces some anti-moral force that harbours hell itself. Reptilian form that is attached to a brain gone mad. A brain that cannot sail the seas of destiny with soul intact.
The delicate song, the lusty fantasy – Howard’s writing has the sensual meaning of both.
Conan #90