Monday, November 2, 2009
Turn of the century centaur...
The zombies took considerably longer than 40 minutes- around 80-90, I'd guess.
(If I'd be only able to draw this in 40 minutes time, one of my goals for this blog would be complete! o.0)
I like them a lot :D
The pink girl in shorts however, is disastrous! :[
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well well, but not a very deep well ;)
ReplyDeleteguess I have my favourite now...
sowa
shallow wells are cool as well :]
ReplyDeleteby fovourite you mean the zombies or the centaur?
what a question, my dear.
ReplyDeletethere will be no fear, zombies rulez.
by the way, what stairs is she climbing?
hell's kitchen? hihi
it's a ladder :\
ReplyDeletespecial courtesy of Jacob and his vast collection ofclimbing accessories
:>
heh
you mean jakobs ladder: the film about experiments on soliders in vietnam?
ReplyDeleteinteresting... if not remarkable :D
i actually mean jacob from this one old book, but still- it's interesting how it all falls into place- everybody knows that experimenting on soldiers will give you zombies- 9 times out of 10
ReplyDeleteCollective unconscious is a powerful and unexpectedly accurate thing :]
I am now officially following your blog.
ReplyDeleteDoes it mean I am a follower?
I think this is a kind of collective memory, we are able to connect world wide issues even though we can not track them... are following me? ;P
yes, you are :)and I'm happy:)
ReplyDeleteand I'm following you, but I think the matter needs further discussing.
There can't be any "collective" memory as such IMHO. I personally perceive collective uncoscious, as the undeniable likeness of all people's minds. The process of thinking works more or less the same for all of us. If group of individuals would be presented with some facts, most of them would arrive at the same conclusion. Even if results may vary(because of an acquired knowledge or whatnot), the logical process would be similar.
And your subconscious/right brain hemisphere/whatever uses that to form some useful (or not) insights, which appear to come from nowhere. And that makes your left brain hemisphere/conscious self/whatever assume, that you share some part of your mind with society, what in turn strenghtens your conection with group...
..and I'm not sure what I'm talking about anymore :/
Is it me or is this well getting deeper?
o_0;
I agree with you, my dearest friend, however, collective memory is not contrary to what you are saying. It is something different to react to something subconciously, on the grounds of differences or similarities of human sense of mental perception, and by collective memory I mean parts of knowledge people have in common, regardless of their consciousnes about it, based on cultural and social sense of belonging.
ReplyDeleteThis well is getting deeper and deeper...
sink or swim :D
so, what you're talking about is knowledge, accumulated by mankind, and acquired by indiduals consciously or by means of the cultural osmosis.
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm thinking about process of utilizing those bits of information in a way that makes the individual more connected to the society, thus preserving the mankind in the form, that allowed it to gain all this knowledge in the first place.
Meaning- there may be no collective anything as such, but there indeed are some evolutionary mechanic, that would prove otherwise.
just like hegel wanted it o_0;
..jumping right in!
:D
I don't really remember, what hegel wanted. But he was German...
ReplyDeleteCome what may, cultural osmosis you suggest - I would prefer cultural infiltration.
I don't really get this part: if the collective does not exist as such, what kinds of evolutionary mechanics speak for i? The basic need to connect though being asocial (individualistic) from nature?