The pitfalls of Ontological Nihilism ~ Tallis Steelyard

Reblogged from Jim Webster, aka Tallis Steelyard:

The pitfalls of Ontological Nihilism

One of the advantages of being a poet is that I am excused philosophy. Admittedly I have been challenged on this topic by a number of philosophers over the years. My response has always been to demand from them a score of decent rhymes for silver as a price for continuing the discussion. (Note that ‘bigger’, ‘dinner’, ‘kilter’, ‘killed her’ and ‘river’ do not count.)

Still I do occasionally get involved in the philosophical periphery, and my involvement came because I found Walmant Berkwit wandering on the streets of Port Naain looking for the University. Because I was going in that direction, I led him there. To be honest I felt that had I merely given him directions, he would never have made it. Indeed I introduced him at the porter’s lodge and he was marked down as my guest.

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Memory ~ Cheryl #writephoto

“Yup, it is a remarkable likeness.”

“I’ve always loved John Wayne.”

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More #Neolithic sites on #Orkney ~ Deborah Jay

Reblogged from Deborah Jay:

I promised more, and believe me, there’s plenty more!

First up is Unstan Chambered Cairn.

This is only a little way along the road from Maeshowe, and the second of 4 chambered cairns we explored. If you recall, I was a little apprehensive about going into Maeshowe, being somewhat claustrophobic. Having survived the experience and found it not too bad, I was feeling braver.

Just as well, as this entrance tunnel, although not as long, is markedly lower.

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Pareidolia: Memories in the Sky ~ Oluwatosin Okupa #writephoto

Pareidolia’ The kind of word that makes you suddenly become friends with your dictionary all over again, or makes you get into Google’s mind. ‘Pareidolia’ Hey! Don’t judge but it’s totally a new word to me, and it got me searching through Google’s broad mind.

Pareidolia: In simple English, means finding animals up in the sky, seeing objects in cloud formations, seeking out weird creatures from cracks in the wall, faces in the moon, rock/stone/mountainous formations that looks like a face; To sum it up, it means seeing faces in random objects.

Continue reading at  Tvab Indites

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Lion and Hare…

*

Lion lived in the forest.

Lion was invincible and the sole champion of the forest.

Whatever other creatures lived in the forest, Lion, killed and ate.

*

The animals of the forest came together and drew up a petition for Lion.

‘By killing us all at once you ruin your own interests.

We will send you one animal a day for your dinner.’

Lion agreed to this proposal.

*

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Memory ~ Trent P. McDonald #writephoto

Did I hear the wind whisper
Your name
As it sighed between trees and standing stone?
Did I see
Your shadow cross a threshold
Long buried beneath the empty, grassy plain?
Did I sniff the fragrance
Of your food
Wafted off of a hearth long turned to dust?
Do I taste the salt
Of your bitter tears

Continue reading at Trent’s World

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Fragments of history

Martyrdom of St Edmund, Pickering

Martyrdom of St Edmund, Pickering

Over the past month or so, we have been revisiting places in my local area in preparation for the April workshop we will be running here. There are so many wonderful sites that we would love to include, but time is limited and we have to choose only the most relevant to the theme of the weekend.

We have, over the years, found some amazing little churches around Buckinghamshire… the rural nature of the area has allowed the villages to preserve the buildings, many of which date back to Norman times.

Sometimes we are lucky enough to find someone in the church with knowledge to share and so find those hidden details we would not have otherwise seen and heard the stories that do not make it into the little guides many churches provide. While we usually prefer to have the places we visit to ourselves, there are times when the one person you really need to speak to just happens to be there. Churches, after all, are not just about the buildings, the art or even the faith but are part of the living history of real people. To meet the daughter of the verger who grew up playing in the tower, hear why an altar cloth was stitched from the grandson of the woman who made it, or have the hidden symbolism of a window explained by someone whose love for the subject is a passion… these are gifts.

The wolf, Padbury

The wolf, Padbury

It astonishes us how many fragments of medieval wall paintings remain in these old places that never get a mention in the scholarly books on the subject. Possibly because what remains is fragmentary, not easy to understand or put in context. There may be a foot, a creature, a face… and the rest has gone, wiped away by time, damp and whitewash. Because they are incomplete and perhaps unrecognisable they are overlooked, as if beauty has to be a complete story that reveals itself all at once.

I’m not so sure that is true, though. Stuart and I love the mystery and the very incompleteness that allows us to think, debate, and speculate on meanings and symbolism.  A complete picture tells but one story, though you and I may read it differently. A fragment allows more freedom and engages all the levels of creativity and mind. Take the wolf of Padbury, for example… which looks to modern eyes more like a boar… It tells the tale of St Edmund whose head, once severed, was found and replaced by the wolf. Over the next arch is a fragmentary painting thought to be of another saint… though it is impossible to tell and there has been much debate. To me it makes sense that it would be St Edmund’s story told there, as these paintings read like comic books, scene after scene. That I could be wrong takes nothing away from what is there, beautifully painted over seven hundred years ago.

An unknown fragment, Padbury

An unknown fragment, Padbury

There are places where the paintings are beautifully and breathtakingly preserved… Pickering, North Yorkshire and Broughton in Milton Keynes, of all places…. Their colours are bright, their stories readable, their beauty intact. Yet should we dismiss the fragments because they are no longer whole? I do not think so.

We do not have the whole picture, but what remains holds its own beauty, a fragment of something that would otherwise have been lost. We have a window into another world, another time and place that is part of us. From each we carry away something that adds richness to our understanding. These fragments, like the events in our lives, show themselves often quite unexpectedly where we never thought to find them. Are we to be disappointed that we cannot see the whole picture in all its glory… or be glad and grateful that we have been gifted with even a fragment of beauty to treasure and for what we may carry away with us in our hearts and memory?

Perhaps when we look back we can see the trail of fragments from which understanding is born. Such things are never wasted. They stay with us, gifts of a moment in time that remain after their moment has passed, becoming part of the rich store of memory and experience that make us who we are. And maybe by cherishing the fragments we will be able to read the bigger picture when we are blessed with a chance to look upon it.

A Mother’s tears, St Mary’s, Thame.

 

Posted in Ancient sites, Books, Churches, England, Friendship, Heart of Albion, History, Life, Love and Laughter, medieval wall paintings, Photography, Spirituality | Tagged , , , , , , , | 20 Comments

Hide And Go Seek ~ Na’ama Yehuda #writephoto

It was the best place to play hide and go seek.

At least, that’s what they wanted him to think.

It was also the best place to go missing.

Not that they’d tell him. …

He had no reason to suspect anything was amiss. Not when the whole troop of them had ran together all the way to the weathered monoliths that dotted the small glens by the ancient cliffs. Not when the game had ensued with much merry running and grabbing and stone-circling.

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Lady-in-waiting #midnighthaiku

Bowed by frozen tears

Beauty hangs her head and smiles

Awaiting the sun

*

 

 

 

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Mae Clair hosts Craig Boyack on his new release, Grinders

Reblogged from Craig Boyack who is a guest of Mae Clair:

Welcome to the last week of February. Today my good friend C.S. Boyack has dropped by with his newest release, Grinders. I was fortunate to get a sneak peek of this highly imaginative novel and am enthralled by this one, folks. I asked Craig to share a bit about his AI creations (especially Cole) and holobarkers (a creation I’ve been in love with since he first introduced them in a short story by the same name). Here’s Craig to tell you more…


Book cover for Grinders, a speculative fiction novel by C. S. BoyackThanks for inviting me over today, Mae. I won’t go into a lot of detail that will show up in the blurb, this is a cyberpunk novel. That means extensive world building on par with fantasy, and part of that is artificial intelligence and robots. Those are my topics for today.

Grinders is set in San Francisco, so it’s already got a leg up on being colorful. However, that isn’t enough to make a story like this work. I took the concept of Siri, Alexa, and others then attached the jumper cables and threw the switch. Those devices are long since gone, having been replaced by robots, smart home systems, and holographic companions.

Continue reading at From the Pen of Mae Clair

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