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from skateorcas.org

from skateorcas.org

"The invisibility and intangibility of that which moves us remained an unfathomable mystery for Thomas Browne too, who saw our world as no more than a shadow image of another one far beyond. In his thinking and writing he therefore sought to look upon eathly existencefrom the things that were closest to him to the spheres of the universe, with the eye of an outsider, one might eve say of the creator. His only means of acheiving the sublime heights that this endeavor required was a parlous loftiness in his language. In common with other English writers of the seventeenth century, Browne wrote out of the fullness of his eruditions, deploying a vast repertoire of quotations and the names of authorities who had gone before, creating complex metaphors and analogies, and constructing labyrinthine sentences that sometimes extend over one or two pages, sentences that resember processions or a funeral cortége in their sheer ceremonial lavishness. It is true, that because of the immense weight of the impediments he is carrying, Browne’s writing can be held back by the force of gravitation, but when he does succeed in rising higher and higher through the circles of his spiraling prose, borne aloft like a glider on warm currents of air, even today the reader is overcome by a sense of levitation. The greater the distance, the clearer the view: one sees the tiniest details with the utmost clarity. It is as if one were looking through a reversed opera lens and a microscope at the same time. And yet, says Browne, all knowledge is enveloped in darkness. What we perceive are no more than isolated lights in the abyss of ignorance, in the shadow-filled edifice of the world. We study the order of things, says Browne, but we cannot grasp their innermost essence. And because it is so, it befits our philosophy to be writ small, using the shorthand and contracted forms of transient Nature, which alone are a reflection of eternity."
- W.G. Sebald on Thomas Browne, The Rings of Saturn, 1995.
John Kittinger’s record breaking jump, 1960.

John Kittinger’s record breaking jump, 1960.

Screen capture from Myst, 1991.

Screen capture from Myst, 1991.

Bang & Olufsen BeoMaster 3000, 1985.

Bang & Olufsen BeoMaster 3000, 1985.

found on www.dogguy.us

found on www.dogguy.us