Saturday 16 November 2019

Hyborian Bridge 86


I don’t know if you recall the film Royal Kill (Ninja’s Creed) from C14? It has an oddly abstract air, which probably put off reviewers. The world we live in, though, IS fantastically abstract – we don’t hunt for food, we barely see the agrarian process, we’re attached to smartphones and detached from meaningful cycles of creation and destruction (Quetzalcoatl).
An abstract world has no acquaintance with death since it is essentially just words on paper, or marks on a screen; the emanations of the mind, or AI or a combination of the two. What if that world is a fantasy, and the kinetic grace of life and death is reality?
The film appears to be a game – which is a fantasy – and yet the story and the music belong with the game and not to the bland abstraction of the city-lights and sounds.
The things which make modern life real are abstract qualities of order and predictability (straight-line progress) – the very things which in nature are unreal! The physical reality of nature is life and death, much like the game played against Nadia, the ninja assassin in the film.
This reality turns out to be a fantasy, in that Adam (the protector and good guy) and Nadia (the assassin and evil) toward the end become one entity. At that point, Morita says, “Are you ready?” and Adam returns to his life as a security guard (for Morita).
That sequence in the film is the most lurid and cheapso visual effects of all, but if one is distracted by that one may miss vital clues. For instance, his flat is nothing ordinary in that there are hanging Persian (magic) carpets. He lifts one and underneath is a tome on an 11th century hero, the figure who appeared at the start.
The entire story of the princess you can then take as an 11th century fantasy that he plays out. He also says, the worst thing in the world is “an ordinary life”. At the conclusion, another American guardian (woman) and girl appear at the park, and so there is a circular plot a la Watchmen.
The real question is: is the abstract “reality” we live in fantasy or reality? In the film, the only way Adam can escape from mundanity is to imagine a fantasy world akin to Hyboria. But if our “reality” is false or fantasy, the Hyborian-style fantasy has more music and kinetic story – which makes it emotionally real.
This is played-out in the performances, with Lalaine’s (the girl/princess) anguished “Adam!?” as his conflicting nature is revealed. Is a “reality” which is emotionally and musically insipid actually NOT reality? (I often note that contemporary pop has an almost asexual nullifier!)
The real problem is one can’t “prove” anything because at the root of things – quantum physics – things are plumb weird. All one can do is go on a hunch and follow it through. Back in Hyborian Bridge 48 I did make an analogy between a reflection in a mirror (Alice Through the Looking Glass) and Relativity. In a reflection, everything is relative to the speed of light in that what you are looking at is simply beams of light (not physical reality).
Is it fair, then, to say that a reflection in a mirror is simply the most basic example of relativity? Secondly, any razor-sharp image we see on our smartphones is a reflection; it’s not inverted – as a mirror is – but all it takes is two mirrors reflecting eachother to see an image the right way round.
So, electronic images are just electronic reflections; there’s no difference. Thirdly, electronics is the medium of mathematics; ie. all the algorithms fed into computers. Hyborian Bridge 48  quotes Einstein..
"As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality."
..What that means is, if everything were mathematical it wouldn’t be reality (nature is not a product of reason, prev). IE mathematics is certain mathematically only.
The physical reality we live in is clearly not mathematical since it is proportionate, strong and virile, tigerish (like Nadia). The kinetic reality depicted in Royal Kill is more medieval or Hyborian than it is modern; there is dynastic loyalty and servitude, heroism.
The real point is that a pin-sharp image – whether we see it on a smartphone or via a radio-telescope – is not physical reality. It is a reflection. The black hole observed recently (Hyborian Bridge 56 Katie Bouman) was a combination of mirrors and algorithms. What “they” are observing is the universe seen through lenses – another type of mirror that reflects or refracts light.
In other words, a universe of reflections, that is relativistic, is also mathematical. Going by Einstein’s quote, that means it could be a fantasy. It’s not certain physically, only mathematically. Again, CERN is another example of a “hygiene-machine” (Pictorial 44) that sees things mathematically (only) so could be fantasy.
Whether you call it fact or mathematical data depends on your view (similarly, DNA is a one-sided view of an abstraction, rather than the life and death reality of the cosmos). Anything that is pin-sharp and super-accurate doesn’t exist in the physical sense of bone, stone, star.
When “they” say there is something called the “microcosm” (quantum physics) it cannot be seen without observing it mathematically. It’s a mathematical construct (Kari Hohne in The Mythology of Sleep says something very similar).
Therefore, then only physical world is the one that we see from the Earth, Midgard, strung midway between sun and moon. That is the unthinking world that – yes – one can apply math to, but it is far more, and introspective to the wanderer under the stars above. Unblemished by the thoughts of acolytes.

Here’e one visual example of that disparity. The mathematical world can appear very certain and resolved, like something on a microscope slide.
“where are we?” “Search me”
It’s all above board, except that it may lack the cosmic reality of the oceans and geography of the coast. What this is really getting to is that the physical world (of planets and moon and stars) allows for the moral or psyche. Starting from Newton’s experiments with refracting knives, we live in an inductive universe of experiment, and not in the physical universe that just is (C6 etc.)
The intense physicality of Weird Tales can be seen as a rebellion against the abstractions of a world built on light and electronics. A yearning for a physical sense that is not just sexual but cosmic.
The Weird Tales covers by Brundage are not merely sexy, they lust for more, they identify with idols. Idols are representations of cosmic forces and balances of Earth, man and woman.