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Thread: Non Sequitur

  1. #46
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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  2. #47
    Pièce de Résistance Scheherazade's Avatar
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    Coca Cola is celebrating its 120th birthday...

    Coca Cola quiz
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    "It is not that I am mad; it is only that my head is different from yours.”
    ~


  3. #48
    Lady of Smilies Nightshade's Avatar
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    Now that would be telling it, wouldnt it?
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  4. #49
    Oh No. A dissension? What aspect of good ol Coke could possibly elicit these words?
    As Kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame . . .


    Why disqualify the rush? I'm tabled. I'm tabled.



  5. #50
    Pièce de Résistance Scheherazade's Avatar
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    Profiles: Turner Prize nominees

    The shortlist for the Turner Prize 2006 has been revealed, with four artists competing for the £25,000 first prize.

    TOMMA ABTS


    This German artist, born in 1967, is nominated for her "intimate and compelling canvases", which "build on and enrich the language of abstract painting", according to the competition organisers.

    They have singled out her solo exhibitions at Kunsthalle Basel in Switzerland and London's Greengrassi gallery.

    Ms Abts insists everything she creates must measure 48 x 38 cm (19 x 15 in) and begins every piece with no idea of what she is about to do.

    Her work has been described as "disturbingly weird" by the Guardian newspaper, which noted that she finds the titles for each painting in a dictionary of German first names.

    PHIL COLLINS

    Phil Collins, 35, is based in Glasgow and specialises in creating videos and photographs of people in places of conflict.

    The organisers praised the way he encourages his subjects to "reveal their individuality, making the personal public with sensitivity and generosity".

    In Ramallah, he paid nine young Palestinians to take part in an eight-hour disco-dancing marathon for a piece called They Shoot Horses.

    He has also filmed Iraqis silently auditioning for a non-existent Hollywood film and invited people in a Basque region of Spain to undress in a luxury hotel as part of a discussion on democracy and beauty.

    MARK TITCHNER

    The 33-year-old from Luton creates paintings, light boxes, animations and sculptures that include slogans from evangelical literature, musical lyrics, political manifestos and advertising campaigns.

    He has made a series of giant billboards for the Gloucester Road underground station in west London.

    A separate project invited people to shout into a contraption that translated their sound waves into ripples on a tray of water.

    Organisers say Mr Titchner has worked across "a wide range" of media, and "continues to interweave a vast array of references from pop lyrics to philosophy".

    REBECCA WARREN

    She is nominated for her sculptural installations, which have been at the centre of solo exhibitions at New York's Matthew Marks Gallery and Galerie Daniel Buchholz in Cologne.

    Ms Warren has also contributed to the Tate Triennial exhibition in London, which celebrates new developments in the art world.

    Turner organisers say she combines "a wide range of sources with a strong formal awareness, injecting conventional materials with a sensual physicality to create something wholly new".

    Born in 1965, she studied Fine Art at Goldsmiths College at the University of London as well as the Chelsea College of Art.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4985456.stm

    Wondering if anyone has seen works of these artists?

    PS: It will be boring this year without any dunk or unmade beds.
    ~
    "It is not that I am mad; it is only that my head is different from yours.”
    ~


  6. #51
    Pièce de Résistance Scheherazade's Avatar
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    The Simpsons as philosophy

    The Simpsons is more than a funny cartoon, it reveals truths about human nature that rival the observations of great philosophers from Plato to Kant... while Homer sets his house on fire, says philosopher Julian Baggini. With the likes of Douglas Coupland, George Walden and Stephen Hawking as fans, taking the Simpsons seriously is no longer outre but de rigeur.

    It is, quite simply, one of the greatest cultural artefacts of our age. So great, in fact, that it not only reflects and plays with philosophical ideas, it actually does real philosophy, and does it well.

    How can a comic cartoon do this? Precisely because it is a comic cartoon, the form best suited to illuminate our age.

    To speak truthfully and insightfully today you must have a sense of the absurdity of human life and endeavour. Past attempts to construct grand and noble theories about human history and destiny have collapsed.

    We now know we're just a bunch of naked apes trying to get on as best we can, usually messing things up, but somehow finding life can be sweet all the same. All delusions of a significance that we do not really have need to be stripped away, and nothing can do this better that the great deflater: comedy.

    The Simpsons does this brilliantly, especially when it comes to religion. It's not that the Simpsons is atheist propaganda; its main target is not belief in God or the supernatural, but the arrogance of particular organised religions that they, amazingly, know the will of the creator.

    For example, in the episode Homer the Heretic, Homer gives up church and decides to follow God in his own way: by watching the TV, slobbing about and dancing in his underpants.

    Throughout the episode he justifies himself in a number of ways.

    *"What's the big deal about going to some building every Sunday, I mean, isn't God everywhere?"
    *"Don't you think the almighty has better things to worry about than where one little guy spends one measly hour of his week?"
    *"And what if we've picked the wrong religion? Every week we're just making God madder and madder?"

    Homer's protests do not merely allude to much subtler arguments that proper philosophers make. The basic points really are that simple, which is why they can be stated simply.

    Of course, there is more that can and should be said about them, but when we make decisions about whether or not to follow one particular religion, the reasons that really matter to us are closer to the simple truths of the Simpsons than the complex mental machinations of academic philosophers of religion.

    And that's true even for the philosophers, whose high-level arguments are virtuosi feats of reasoning, but are not the things that win hearts and minds. They are merely the lengthy guitar solos to Homer's crushing, compelling riffs.

    However, being simple is not the same as being simplistic, which is one of the greatest crimes in the Simpsons' universe.

    We can see this when Homer's house catches fire, in what could be seen as divine retribution for his apostasy.

    But what actually led to the fire was not God's wrath but Homer's hubris and arrogance. Sitting on his sofa thinking smugly, "Boy, everyone is stupid except me," he falls asleep, dropping his cigar.

    What really caused the fire was thus a slippage from the simple into the simplistic. Homer's mistake was to think that because the key points which inform his heresy are simple, that the debate is closed and he has nothing left to learn from others. But this is being simplistic, not keeping things simple.

    Small dots, big picture

    Revealing simple truths about simplistic falsehoods is not just a minor philosophical task, like doing the washing up at Descartes' Diner while the real geniuses cook up the main courses.

    For when it comes to the relevance of philosophy to real life, all the commitments we make on the big issues are determined by considerations which are ultimately quite straightforward.

    A rich philosophical worldview is in this sense like a pointillist picture - one of those pieces of art in which a big image is made up of thousands of tiny dots (see Seurat image, right). Its building blocks are no more than simple dots, but the overall picture which builds up from this is much more complicated.

    Yet we need reminding that the dots are just dots, and that errors are made more often not by those who fail to examine the dots carefully enough, but those who become fixated by the brilliance or defects of one or two and who fail to see how they fit into the big picture.

    And the Simpsons certainly plays out on a broad canvas.

    Any individual or group is shown to be ridiculous when only their pathetic and partial view of the world is taken to be everything. That's why no one escapes satire in programme, which is vital for its ultimately uplifting message: we're an absurd species but together we make for a wonderful world.

    The Simpsons, like Monty Python, is an Anglo-Saxon comedic take on the existentialism which in France takes on a more tragic hue. Albert Camus' absurd is defied not by will, but mocking laughter.

    Abstract themes

    Another reason why cartoons are the best form in which to do philosophy is that they are non-realistic in the same way that philosophy is.

    Philosophy needs to be real in the sense that it has to make sense of the world as it is, not as we imagine or want it to be. But philosophy deals with issues on a general level. It is concerned with a whole series of grand abstract nouns: truth, justice, the good, identity, consciousness, mind, meaning and so on.

    Cartoons abstract from real life in much the same way philosophers do. Homer is not realistic in the way a film or novel character is, but he is recognisable as a kind of American Everyman. His reality is the reality of an abstraction from real life that captures its essence, not as a real particular human who we see ourselves reflected in.

    The satirical cartoon world is essentially a philosophical one because to work it needs to reflect reality accurately by abstracting it, distilling it and then presenting it back to us, illuminating it more brightly than realist fiction can.

    That's why it is no coincidence that the most insightful and philosophical cultural product of our time is a comic cartoon, and why its creator, Matt Groening, is the true heir of Plato, Aristotle and Kant.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4995624.stm
    ~
    "It is not that I am mad; it is only that my head is different from yours.”
    ~


  7. #52
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    I refuse to participate in threads where the title is written in a language other than English. Sorry.

  8. #53
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    The above post is a disclaimer; it should not be construed as "participation."

  9. #54
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    The above post is a clarification. Also not participation.

  10. #55
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    I don't even know what non sequitur means. Is it some kind of dance? Should I be doing the non sequitur as I type this?

  11. #56
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    Somebody has just sent me a private message informing me that a non sequitur is apparently some kind of hat. Shouldn't that have been explained at the beginning of this thread?? Hello?

  12. #57
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    (Thanks for the PM, Mililalil)

  13. #58
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    I was also informed that while sheep go to Heaven, goats go to Hell. Poor goats.

  14. #59
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    Is it true that in Europe they keep billy-goats on the roofs of the houses? I saw a picture of that once. Crazy!

  15. #60
    Johnny One Shot Basil's Avatar
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    You know, I bet if I hang out here long enough, someone will come along and offer me some tea. Tea. I despise tea.

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