Monday, March 26, 2012

numb.

 In Understanding Media, McLuhan wrote that our tools end up “numbing” whatever part of our body they “amplify.” When we extend some part of ourselves artificially, we also distance ourselves from the amplified part and its natural functions. When the power loom was invented, a weaver could manufacture far more cloth during the course of a workday than they’d been able to make by hand, but they sacrificed some of the manual dexterity, not to mention some of their “feel” for the fabric. Their fingers, in McLuhan’s terms, became numb. Farmers, similarly, lost some of their feel for the soil when they began using mechanical harrows and plows. Today’s industrial farm worker, sitting in his air-conditioned cage atop a gargantuan tractor, rarely touches the soil at all—though in a single day he can till a field that his hoe-wielding forebearer could not have turned in a month. When we’re behind the wheel of our car, we can go a far greater distance than we could cover on foot, but we lose the walker’s intimate connection to the land.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

sir ken robinson, on creativity, the linear chokehold the second wave has on our lives and education and the multidimensional non-linear nature of us - "a three year old is NOT half a six-year old..."

at every level of reality is a slumbering spirit (or a strange attractor, if you wish), and the more things stay there, the more they risk the spirit waking up and once it does, that reality stratifies and remains so.

we don't know what comes if we invest in your element.  knowing one thing leads to another (school leads to college leads to career)is  linear thinking  and is faulty.
we must trust in organic development.
blooming plants, not machines

Friday, March 02, 2012

in nature, there is no hierarchy - no up and down, all are equal, and growth is sideways and not up.
this is a better way of thinking