Gravity's Rainbow in depth on Studio 360
David Morris
fqmorris at gmail.com
Wed Mar 7 15:14:01 CST 2012
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia
Pareidolia ( /pærɨˈdoʊliə/ parr-i-DOH-lee-ə) is a psychological
phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or
sound) being perceived as significant. Common examples include seeing
images of animals or faces in clouds, the man in the moon or the Moon
rabbit, and hearing hidden messages on records played in reverse. The
word comes from the Greek para- ("beside", "with", or "alongside", in
this context meaning something faulty or wrong, as in paraphasia,
disordered speech) and eidōlon ("image"; the diminutive of eidos –
"image", "form", "shape"). Pareidolia is a type of apophenia.
On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 2:56 PM, Alex Colter <recoignishon at gmail.com> wrote:
> I would say 'tis Imagination. And we strive to impose order from one of
> several Vantage Points or Inconveniences.
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 11:15 AM, Paul Mackin <mackin.paul at verizon.net>
> wrote:
>>
>> On 3/6/2012 5:40 PM, John Bailey wrote:
>>>
>>> Read this a few days ago and it niggled at me in some way I couldn't
>>> understand...
>>>
>>> ...then I got to thinking how this scientist's conclusions re: GR are
>>> pretty much the opposite of mine.
>>>
>>> To me the novel shows how the human tendency to impose order is
>>> problematic at best, and more often terrible.
>>
>>
>>
>> Would you say this tendency to impose order is a definition of paranoia?
>>
>> I'm reminded of some lines in Michael Wood's review of GR.
>>
>>
>> " . . . . From Auschwitz we can get to Hiroshima, but how do we get to the
>> roots of either? We can’t bear this blankness, and so we invent roots,
>> social, psychological, racial, anthropological, archaeological.
>>
>> "All these inventions are paranoias, Pynchon is telling us, they create
>> connections where there are none, and he sets out, in Gravity’s Rainbow as
>> in V., to make elaborate, sympathetic, but devastating mockery of all such
>> enterprises . . . ."
>>
>>
>>
>> P
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>> Maybe his "living green" will lead to Imipolex G.
>>>
>>> On Wed, Mar 7, 2012 at 3:10 AM, Jordan Hunnicutt<antipusrises at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I don't know if this has been discussed yet, but here is a short story
>>>> about
>>>> a professor of biochemistry that goes in depth with Gravity's Rainbow.
>>>>
>>>> http://www.studio360.org/2012/feb/24/aha-moment-gravitys-rainbow/
>>>
>>>
>>
>
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