Log24

Saturday, March 28, 2026

The Emmanuel Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 2:39 am

Friday, June 13, 2025

Beltane Morning 2024: The Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 9:19 am

Saturday, February 1, 2025

A Symposium for Plato

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , — m759 @ 5:03 pm

From the previous post

"Presented by invitation at the Symposium for Combinatorial Mathematics,
sponsored by the Office of Naval Research…."

— and from a post last night:

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Scream with your T?

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 5:16 pm

Monday, August 5, 2024

Trick

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 11:59 pm

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Walpurgisnacht Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 1:01 am

Monday, July 29, 2024

Taking the Bull by the Nose . . .

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 10:16 am

Continues . See other posts now tagged
The Emmanuel Bride.

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Walpurgisnacht Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 1:01 am

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

“The Big Nothing” Presents . . .

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 12:04 pm

From https://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/25/
arts/art-review-artists-who-just-say-no-to-everything.html

. . . .

''The Big Nothing'' presents an engraved invitation to Klein's ''Void,'' which I gather is now a very expensive and rare commodity. Klein would no doubt have appreciated this twist of commercial fortune. The invitation is presented alongside various photographs and ephemera from Andy Warhol's similar exhibition at the institute in 1965, which also had nothing in it except a mob of fans jamming the opening. Ms. Schaffner calls Warhol ''the Elvis of nothing,'' writing that his work, in ''an era of compliant consumer culture,'' was like ''a mirror facing a vacuum.'' Warhol appears in another photograph in the show, posing in 1985 beside a pedestal with nothing on it, a work he titled ''Invisible Sculpture.''
. . . .

— Michael Kimmelman, June 25, 2004

This nihilist meditation is from Carl Rakosi's date of death.

Rakosi appears here  in posts tagged "Inner-Outer."

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

The Invitation Script

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 11:51 pm

Annals of Philosophy: Savoir “La Différance”

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , — m759 @ 1:01 pm

August 26, 2022, was the opening date of
the Nathalie Emmanuel film "The Invitation."

Discussing Megalopolis

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , , — m759 @ 3:30 am

See as well Emmanuel here  on Walpurgisnacht 2024
in "The Invitation" (2022) —

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Walpurgisnacht Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 1:01 am

From the end credits for "The Invitation" —

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Walpurgisnacht Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 1:01 am

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Review

Filed under: General — m759 @ 7:28 am

Some background for a recent photo
by Josefine Lyche:

The Boys from Uruguay and Witch Ball.

Friday, October 20, 2023

Artfield Invitation

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 7:47 pm

Last night's touching dialogue on "Loki" between Victor Timely and
Miss MInutes suggests a review of a recent rather one-sided conversation
of my own —

Thus far, there has been no reply.

The "Loki" dialogue above took place in Chicago, a town repeatedly
described by novelist Willard Motley as a "blue-black panther."

Perhaps the email addressee has in mind the sage advice of
Ogden Nash . . .

"If called by a panther, don't anther."

Monday, September 4, 2023

The Dark Corner Continues: Invitation for Gamers

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 6:23 am

Windows lockscreen, 6:08 AM ET, Monday, Labor Day, Sept. 4, 2023 —

"Come discover hundreds of new games
that are free to play whenever you want!"

Saturday, June 4, 2022

Old Dog, New Trick

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 3:04 am

Affine transformation of 'magic' squares and triangles: the triangle Lo Shu

Friday, October 15, 2021

Slack for Mathematicians

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 11:32 pm

Any professional mathematician interested in trying out Slack
at the new workspace mathnex.slack.com ("Mathematics") can request
an invitation by sending an email (from his or her .edu address) to …

membership-requests-aaaaey3utm5icm42ujxnz2alza@mathnex.slack.com .

Click the image below for a discussion of Slack use among academic
colleagues within a department.  The new Mathematics workspace is
intended for communication within subject areas , not departments.
This is made possible by Slack's channels… Separate channels can
easily be set up for separate subject areas: analysis, group theory, etc.

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Zen in Cuernavaca

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 2:05 pm

Also from Terebess

https://terebess.hu/zen/mesterek/dtsuzuki.html

From Larry A. Fader, “D. T. Suzuki's Contribution to the West,” 
in A Zen Life: D. T. Suzuki Remembered , ed. by Masao Abe, 
John Weatherhill, Inc., 1986, pp. 95–108 —

In contrast to Jung's approach is the humanistic psychology of Erich Fromm. Fromm was also influenced by Suzuki, but in different ways. Whereas Jung dealt with Zen Buddhism as an aspect of his psychological thought, Suzuki's influence touches closer to the core of Fromm's thought. Fromm organized an influential workshop on Zen Buddhism and psychoanalysis in Cuernavaca, Mexico, and incorporated many concepts which resemble Suzuki's interpretation of Zen into his psychoanalytic writings.

The Cuernavaca workshop of 1957, held at Fromm's Mexico home, brought together eminent psychologists expressly for the purpose of exploring Zen Buddhism and psychoanalysis. As such, it marks an important point of contact between thinkers in the field of psychology and D. T. Suzuki's interpretation of Zen. Suzuki addressed the gathering, and his speeches were later published as “Lectures in Zen Buddhism” together with Fromm's address entitled “Psychoanalysis and Zen Buddhism” and that of Richard DeMartino entitled “The Human Situation and Zen Buddhism,” in a volume which Fromm edited and called Zen Buddhism and Psychoanalysis.

Fromm organized the Mexico meeting and issued the invitations to its participants as a result of his feeling that psychotherapists—and in particular, psychoanalysts—were at that time “not just interested, but deeply concerned” with Zen. This “concern,” Fromm believed, was a new and potentially important development in the attitude of psychologists. His own address to the workshop, reformulated, as he says, because of “the stimulation of the conference,” includes language and ideas that may be traced to Dr. Suzuki's Cuernavaca lectures.

See as well Fromm and  Frère Jacques, Cuernavaca  in this  journal.

Monday, January 30, 2017

Devotional Space

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:16 pm

Quotations by and for an artist who reportedly died
on Sunday, January 15, 2017 —

"What drives my vision is a need to locate
a 'genetically felt' devotional space
in which a simultaneous multiplicity
of disparate realities coexists."

— The late Ciel Bergman, in her webpage
     "Artist's Statement"

"Once a registered nurse who worked in a hospital
psychiatric ward, Ms. Bergman was a struggling
single mom of two when she couldn’t resist the pull
of her art. In 1969, she entered a painting in the
Jack London Invitational, an art contest in Oakland,
and won first prize. This compelled her to enroll at
the San Francisco Art Institute, where she earned
her master of fine arts with honors in painting."

Sam Whiting in the San Francisco Chronicle

See also Oakland in this journal and
"Only a peculiar can enter a time loop."

"The peculiar kind of 'identity' that is attributed to
apparently altogether heterogeneous figures
in virtue of their being transformable into one another
by means of certain operations defining a group,
is thus seen to exist also in the domain of perception."

— Ernst Cassirer, quoted here on
     Midsummer Eve (St. John's Eve), 2010

Monday, October 24, 2016

Princeton Space

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 12:00 pm
 

From the Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016, Daily Princetonian —
The opening paragraphs of an article by Andie Ayala,
"In Pursuit of Space":

The ever-elusive “space” is a word spoken into a great expanse of hopes and fears and delusions: “safe spaces,” “inclusive spaces,” “open spaces,” “green spaces,” “learning spaces.” In this space, words float around abstractly, almost effortlessly, seemingly without the weight of any gravity; appearing to be a distant glimmer of an idea, a once bright and assuring light, which— without much definition— easily fades into obscurity.

Coming to Princeton, it’s tempting to feel as though the rhetoric surrounding the term “space” stretches the word out, magnifies it, and tacks it onto well-designed brochures and anonymous invitations. Yet the question remains— how do you comfortably situate yourself within the incredibly abstruse concept of “space,” especially when you happen to exist in a territory that has been occupied and claimed by an endless sea of others, and which has been upheld by an impregnable and deeply rooted history?

In the process of interviewing various members of the University, one thing has become clear; the question of space is an issue that is pertinent to all members of the Princeton community.

For greater depth on this topic, see the previous post.

For less depth, see a post of January 18, 2005.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Devil’s Gate Revisited

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 10:27 am

The revisiting, below, of an image shown here in part
on Spy Wednesday, 2016, was suggested in part by
a New York Times  obituary today for a Nobel-prize
winning Hungarian novelist. 

Note the references on the map to 
"Devil's Gate" and "Pathfinder."

See also the following from a review of The Pathseeker , a novel 
by the Nobel laureate (Imre Kertész), who reportedly died today —

The commissioner is in fact not in search of a path, but rather of traces of the past (more literally the Hungarian title means ‘trace seeker’). His first shock comes at his realization that the site of his sufferings has been converted into a museum, complete with tourists “diligently carrying off the significance of things, crumb by crumb, wearing away a bit of the unspoken importance” (59). He meets not only tourists, however. He also comes across paradoxically “unknown acquaintances who were just as much haunted by a compulsion to revisit,” including a veiled woman who slowly repeats to him the inventory of those she lost: “my father, my younger brother, my fiancé” (79). The commissioner informs her that he has come “to try to redress that injustice” (80). When she asks how, he suddenly finds the words he had sought, “as if he could see them written down: ‘So that I should bear witness to everything I have seen’” (80).

The act of bearing witness, however, proves elusive. In the museum he is compelled to wonder, “What could this collection of junk, so cleverly, indeed all too cleverly disguised as dusty museum material, prove to him, or to anyone else for that matter,” and adds the chilling observation, “Its objects could be brought to life only by being utilized” (71). As he touches the rust-eaten barbed wire fence he thinks, “A person might almost feel in the mood to stop and dutifully muse on this image of decay – were he not aware, of course, that this was precisely the goal; that the play of ephemerality was merely a bait for things” (66). It is this play of ephemerality, the possibility that the past will be consigned to the past, against which the commissioner struggles, yet his struggle is frustrated precisely by the lack of resistance, the indifference of the objects he has come to confront. “What should he cling on to for proof?” he wonders. “What was he to fight with, if they were depriving him of every object of the struggle? Against what was he to try and resist, if nothing was resisting?” (68) He had come with the purpose of “advertis[ing] his superiority, celebrat[ing] the triumph of his existence in front of these mute and powerless things. His groundless disappointment was fed merely by the fact that this festive invitation had received no response. The objects were holding their peace” (109). 

In point of fact The Pathseeker  makes no specific mention either of the Holocaust or of the concentration camps, yet the admittedly cryptic references to places leave no doubt that this is its subject. Above the gate at the camp the commissioner’s wife reads the phrase, “Jedem das Seine,” to each his due, and one recalls the sign above the entrance to the camp at Buchenwald. Further references to Goethe as well as the Brabag factory, where Kertész himself worked as a prisoner, confirm this. Why this subterfuge on the part of the author? Why a third-person narrative with an unnamed protagonist when so many biographical links tie the author to the story? One cannot help but wonder if Kertész sought specifically to avoid binding his story to particulars in order to maintain the ultimately metaphysical nature of the quest. Like many of Kertész’s works,The Pathseeker  is not about the trauma of the Holocaust itself so much as the trauma of survival. The self may survive but the triumph of that survival is chimerical.

Translator Tim Wilkinson made the bold decision, in translating the title of the work, not to resort to the obvious. Rather than simply translate Nyomkereső , an allusion to the Hungarian translation of James Fenimore Cooper’s The Pathfinder , back into English, he preserves an element of the unfamiliar in his title. This tendency marks many of the passages of the English translation, in which Wilkinson has opted to preserve the winding and often frustratingly serpentine nature of many of the sentences of the original instead of rewriting them in sleek, familiar English.  . . .

— Thomas Cooper

"Sleek, familiar English" —

"Those were the good old days!" — Applegate in "Damn Yankees"
(See previous post.)

Monday, April 13, 2015

Unorthodox Easter

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 11:00 am

(A sequel to yesterday's Orthodox Easter posts)

This morning's Google News —

The New York Times  on the late Günter Grass —

"Many of Mr. Grass’s books are phantasmagorical
mixtures of fact and fantasy, some of them inviting
comparison with the Latin American style known as
magical realism. His own name for this style was
'broadened reality.'"

From p. xii of the 2005 second edition of a book discussed
in yesterday's Orthodox Easter posts —

(Click image to enlarge.)

Early editions of The Heart of Mathematics  include 
Gary Larson's legendary Hell's Library "Far Side" cartoon. 
Books in Hell's Library include Big Book of Story Problems ,
More Story Problems , and Even More Story Problems .

— Adapted from a review of the 2000 first edition

See also Mathematics and Narrative in this journal.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Michaelmas Texts

Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: — m759 @ 10:30 am

This morning’s previous post quoted a sort of
invitation to damnation
from Princeton University Press:

An alternative to damnation:

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Conclave

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 12:00 am

For the Garden of Good and Evil

(Click image for some backstory.)

Tim Robbins in 'Mystic River'

On Cambridge, Massachusetts:

"By all means accept the invitation to hell,
should it come. It will not take you far—
from Cambridge to hell is only a step;
or at most a hop, skip, and jump.
But now you are evading— you are
dodging the issue… after all,
Cambridge is hell enough."

— Great Circle , a 1933 novel by Conrad Aiken
(father of Joan Aiken, who wrote The Shadow Guests )

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Finnegans Kaleidoscope

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 8:28 am

IMAGE- Philip Kitcher and David Albert read Finnegans Wake

In appreciation of their essays in last
Sunday’s New York Times Book Review ,
a link for David Albert and Philip Kitcher

Finnegans Kaleidoscope.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Baudelaire, Your Shiny Friend

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 8:48 pm

Google Translate version of a recent Norwegian art review

Josefine Lyche show is working on the basis of crop circles occur in Pewsey, Wiltshire in England for exactly one year ago on 21 June. Three circulars forms of aluminum quote forms from the field in England. With this as a starting point invites Lyche viewer to explore the sacred shapes and patterns through painting, floor work and sculpture. In the monumental painting "Wisdom Luxury Romance" draws Lyche lines to both Matisse and Baudelaire in his poem "L'invitation au voyage ."

From the artist's website, JosefineLyche.com

Click to enlarge

http://www.log24.com/log/pix11B/110708-WISDOM_LUXURY_ROMANCE-500W.jpg

WISDOM LUXURY ROMANCE

From elsewhere—

http://www.log24.com/log/pix11B/110708-Alcoa_Logo.jpg

Related material

From Antichristmas 2002— Aluminum, Your Shiny Friend.

From Sept. 22, 2004— Tribute… in the context of
today's previous entry  and of the conclusion of the story
that later became Childhood's End

http://www.log24.com/log/pix11B/110708-ClarkeSm.jpg

Sunday, April 18, 2010

For Trevanian

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 8:00 pm

Where Entertainment Is God
(continued)

Google News at about 7:37 PM —

Image -- Google News, 'Dragon' Edges Out 'Kick-Ass' At Box Office

The Eiger Sanction, by Trevanian –

"Because CII men worked in foreign countries without invitation, and often to the detriment of the established governments, they had no recourse to official protection. Organization men to the core, the CII heads decided that another Division must be established to combat the problem. They relied on their computers to find the ideal man to head the new arm, and the card that survived the final sorting bore the name Yurasis Dragon. In order to bring Mr. Dragon to the United States, it was necessary to absolve him of accusations lodged at the War Crimes Tribunal concerning certain genocidal peccadillos, but CII considered him worth the effort."

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Tuesday May 20, 2008

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 1:06 pm
The Unembarrassed Peddler

(For readers of
the previous entry
who would like to
know more about
purchasing the
Brooklyn Bridge)


From yesterday’s New York Times, in an obituary of a teacher of reporters:

“He was a stickler for spelling, insisting that students accurately compose dictated sentences, like this one: ‘Outside a cemetery sat a harassed cobbler and an embarrassed peddler, gnawing on a desiccated potato and gazing on the symmetry of a lady’s ankle with unparalleled ecstasy.'”

Spelling Your Way
To Success

Chapter I:
“gnawing on a  
  desiccated potato”

From the website
Blue Star Traders:
How the ancient crystal skull Synergy came to the Western World…

This skull first came to light when it was acquired about two and a half decades ago by a European businessman and avid hiker, as he traveled around Central and South America.  He acquired the skull from a very old native man, in a tiny village in the Andes, near the borders of Peru, Bolivia and Chile. He was just passing through, and had come upon the small settlement while looking for a place to stay for the night.  He wandered into the village and was greeted with smiles and an invitation to share a meal.

This gentleman, George, speaks several languages, and he usually has at least a few words in common with most of the people he meets in his travels– enough to get by, anyway.  Although he didn’t speak the same language as most of the people in this isolated village, there was an instant connection between them, and they managed with the smattering of Spanish and Portuguese that a few of them knew. In need of shelter for the night, George was offered a spot for his sleeping bag, near the fire, in the dwelling of an elderly man.

After a peaceful evening in the old man’s company, George gratefully accepted a simple breakfast and got ready to take his leave.  As he thanked the man for his generous hospitality, the elder led George to an old chest. Opening the crumbling wooden lid, he took out the crystal skull, touched it reverently, and handed it to George.  Awed by an artifact of such obvious antiquity, beauty and value, yet uncertain what he was expected to do with it, George tried to hand it back.  But the old man urged it upon him, making it clear that he was to take it with him. 

Curious about the history of such a thing, George tried to find out what the villagers knew about it. One young fellow explained in halting Spanish that  the skull had come into the possession of a much loved Catholic nun, in Peru.  She was quite old when she died in the early 1800’s, and she had given it to the old man’s “Grandfather” when he was just a boy.  (Note: It’s hard to say if this was really the man’s grandfather, or just the honorary title that many natives use to designate an ancestor or revered relative.)  The nun told the boy and his father that the skull was “an inheritance from a lost civilization” and, like the Christian cross, it was a symbol of the transcendence of Soul over death.  She said that it carried the message of immortal life and the illumination that we may discover when we lose our fear of death.  She gave it to the boy and his father, asking them to safeguard it until the “right” person came to get it– and share its message with the world.  It had been brought to that land from “somewhere else” and needed to wait until the right person could help it to continue its journey. “Your heart will know the person,” she said. 

“What a strange story,” thought George.

From elespectador.com:

“… ‘Supercholita’  tiene sobre todo una clara vocación divulgadora de la cultura andina. No en vano Valdez recibió su primer premio por explicar mediante este personaje cómo se cocina el ‘chuño,’ una típica patata deshidratada muy consumida en el altiplano boliviano.”

Chapter II:
“gazing on the symmetry
 of a lady’s ankle”

From “Sinatra: A Man
and His Music, Part II”
(reshown. prior to
“It Happened in Brooklyn,”
by Turner Classic Movies
on Sunday, May 11, 2008):

“Luck, be a lady tonight.”

From wordinfo.info:

astragalo-, astragal-
(Greek: anklebone, talus ball of ankle joint; dice, die [the Greeks made these from ankle bones])

astragalomancy, astragyromancy
Divination with dice, knuckle bones, stones, small pieces of wood, or ankle bones which were marked with letters, symbols, or dots. Using dice for divination is a form of astragalomancy.

Chapter III:
“unparalleled ecstasy”


Bright Star —

Todo lo sé por el lucero puro
que brilla en la diadema de la Muerte

— Rubén Darío  

Bright Star and Crystal Skull

Image adapted from
Blue Star Traders


Related material:

The New York Lottery
  mid-day number yesterday–
719– and 7/19.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Monday July 9, 2007

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 2:35 am
Mystic River Song
continued from June 18:

From the Harvard
Math Department:

Noam Elkies of Harvard Math Department

From the late
jazz violinist
Johnny Frigo:

Johnny Frigo Summertime
(mp3)


From a film version
of Somerville…

A Stone for
Johnny Frigo

The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix07/070708-Mystic-stone.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Mystic River, 2003

Related material:

Human Conflict
Number Five
 
(Album title,
 10,000 Maniacs)

10,000 Maniacs, Human Conflict Number Five


This album contains
"Planned Obsolescence":

any modern man can see
that religion is
obsolete

piety
obsolete
ritual
obsolete
martyrdom
obsolete
prophetic vision
obsolete
mysticism
obsolete
commitment
obsolete
sacrament
obsolete
revelation
obsolete

Noam Elkies:

Folk are humpin'
And the chillun is high.
Oh yo' daddy's rich,
'Cos yo' ma is good lookin'

Conrad Aiken:

"By all means accept the invitation to hell, should it come. It will not take you far– from Cambridge to hell is only a step; or at most a hop, skip, and jump. But now you are evading– you are dodging the issue…. after all, Cambridge is hell enough."

Great Circle, a 1933 novel by Conrad Aiken (father of Joan Aiken, who wrote The Shadow Guests)

Monday, June 18, 2007

Monday June 18, 2007

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 2:00 am

 

Location, Location, Location:

Cambridge, Somerville, Charlestown

Mystic River and environs

Yesterday, Father's Day, was also the
anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill.

Bunker Hill Community College
was the site yesterday of the
New England Fine Arts Fair.

 
A 2006 collage from Log24:

Shadowlands Illustrated

Sources: Log24 on 12/31/02 and 10/30/05,
and wainscoting from "Mystic River."

Meanwhile in Cambridge we have,
at Harvard's math department,
Noam Elkies's "Slummerville"

Harvard mathematician Noam Elkies

Folk are humpin'
And the chillun is high.
Oh yo' daddy's rich,
'Cos yo' ma is good lookin'

"By all means accept the invitation to hell, should it come.  It will not take you far– from Cambridge to hell is only a step; or at most a hop, skip, and jump.  But now you are evading– you are dodging the issue…. after all, Cambridge is hell enough."

Great Circle, a 1933 novel by Conrad Aiken (father of Joan Aiken, who wrote The Shadow Guests)

Friday, May 9, 2003

Friday May 9, 2003

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:44 pm

ART WARS:
Invitation to the Dance

While checking the claim of art historian Anna Chave that “the veil is an age-old metaphor used from Plato through Hegel and Heidegger for the concept of truth as aletheia or unveiling,”  I came across the following essay:

“Taking the Veil,” by Jessica Kardon.

Kardon writes very well.  A related essay I particularly like is

“Invitation to the Dance.”

Today’s entry on Kardon is part of my “ART WARS” series of journal notes.  This title began partly as a joke, but it seems rather appropriate in light of Anna Chave’s claim that minimalism in the 1960’s was part of the “rhetoric of power.”  See my later entry today on Tony Smith at the National Gallery.

If we are in a war of art,

the essays of Jessica Kardon

are a powerful weapon.

Tuesday, January 28, 2003

Tuesday January 28, 2003

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 7:11 pm

State of the Communion

Relevant readings:

  • Definition of the communion of saints in the Catholic Encylopedia

    “In that communion there is no loss of individuality, yet such an interdependence that the saints are ‘members one of another’ (Rom., xii, 5)….”

  • Ephesians 4:16
  • “…the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth….”

  • A Game Designer’s Holy Grail —

    “Herman Melville described the exact process beautifully in his novel, Mardi:

    ‘In me, many worthies recline, and converse. I list to St. Paul who argues the doubts of Montaigne…'”

  • Invitation to the HipBone Games —

    “…man is seen as he is sub specie aeternitatis, an ‘immortal diamond.'”

  • Your Hip Bone Connected —

    “Now hear the word of the Lord” 

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