View allAll Photos Tagged Potentiality

the most precisely articulated national purpose in recorded history. Not only is it a famous statement of purpose: it is also an admirable statement of purpose. Prior to July 4, 1776, the national purpose of nations had been to dominate... The American national purpose was the opposite: to liberate from domination; to set men free. All men are created equal.

We not only have a national purpose; we have one of such aspiration, such potentiality, such power of hope that we refer to it — or used to — as the American Dream :-)

Archibald MacLeish, in LIFE, "Eloquent Guides to America's National Purpose," 1960

 

Truth Matters! Character Matters!!

 

waterlily, j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, raleigh, north carolina

A break of light during golden hour reveals a rainbow after a sodden day of rain.

Every being in the universe has the potentiality of transcending the senses. Even the little worm will one day transcend the senses and reach God. No life will be a failure. There is no such thing as failure in the universe. Sri Sathya Sai Baba

 

~happy fence friday~

Some of the real demons in this upside down world are those which we carry within.

From early childhood they grow within silently... abandonement issues, abuse and anger fuel their growth, increase their power and consume us year after year.

By the time we are fully grown they have reached there full potentiality, tearing us apart from within and destroying anything good within and around us.

They distort our perception and darken our world with sorrow and pain.

In the end we percieve reality through the eyes of that tiny child and all alone and afraid we cling to any light looking for salvation, love and kindness.

For some of us it never arrives and even when it does by destiny, chance or fate... once again our our demons have there way and once again we are all alone with them . ~ Ra

 

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Hola my friends and followers

 

This is my first Colaboration with my always beautiful and amazing friend and fellow blogger Ruby Darksoul. I had so much fun and with help from Corvinus Dankworth and Zabrina from her family.. i ended up with this beautiful shot.. Much love to everyone there. <3

© 2008ChristinaB ~~ Explored!!!!

The man of character finds an especial attractiveness in difficulty since it is only by coming to grips with difficulty that he can realize his potentialities.

 

~Charles de Gaulle

  

Excerpt from rbg.ca:

 

Hearing the Song

 

Artist: Marianne Reim, Canada; installed in 2017

 

Hearing the Song uses the most inflexible of materials, stone. Drill marks are placed in such a way that the split stone has two surfaces with identical rows of musical staffs.

 

“These mirror images, side by side, are divided by a negative space. The negative space is not absence, but rather the presence of potentiality. Each viewer/seeker, who comes to this work can bring their own song and can honour what they hear.”

Merton distinguishes two aspects of wisdom: . . . metaphysical and speculative, an apprehension of the radical structure of human life, an intellectual appreciation of man in his human potentialities and in their fruition. . . . moral, practical, and religious, an awareness of man’s life as a task to be undertaken at great risk, in which tragic failure and creative transcendence are both possible . . . a peculiar understanding of conflict, of the drama of human existence, and especially of the typical causes and signs of moral disaster . . . beyond the conscious and systematic moral principles which may be embodied in an ethical doctrine and which guide our conscious activity. Wisdom also supposes a certain intuitive grasp of unconscious motivations, at least insofar as these are embodied in archetypes and symbolic configurations of the psyche.

-The future of wisdom : toward a rebirth of sapiential Christianity / Bruno Barnhart ; foreword by Cynthia Bourgeault ; afterword by Cyprian Consiglio.

As late fall gives way to early winter there is an incredible quiet and peaceful feeling that comes over the rural Illinois landscape. Why this should be so is hard to explain. The trees in the timber have lost their leaves and stand like charcoal gray silhouettes in the background. The sounds of summer which are usually filled with the busy chatter of birds gives way to a silence disturbed only by the wind whistling through nearby objects. The grain harvest is all in except for a few end rows left to feed the wildlife. People are staying inside more and migrating and hibernating animals have disappeared from the scene. Insect activity too has come to a halt. Peaceful? Absolutely. I think it is because there is a sense now that the hustle and bustle of spring and summer with all of it’s implied potentiality is long gone and it gives way to a sense of not having so much to think about and do. A person can actually slow down now just as nature has done and get a little much needed rest. I absolutely love this time of year. I’m all about peace and rest. Soak it in. Revel in it if you like. Slow down and relax. There will be time for busyness again come spring. Cheers.

Timberline Meadow. © Copyright 2022 G Dan Mitchell.

 

A timberline meadow with small trees is bounded by a granite bench.

 

I recall the time, quite a few years ago, when I first understood that the places in the natural world (and the human world, for that matter) that we identify with are not necessarily the most iconic, biggest, most classically impressive places. I was at the end of a moderately short backpacking loop out of Tuolumne meadows, within perhaps little more than an hour of the trailhead. It was a day of potential rain, and that potentiality became reality at this point. I stopped, put on rain gear and covered my pack, stepped off the trail, sat down, and leaned against a rock to watch the rain approach. Decades later I still remember that rock and consider it a thing worth visiting — although I’m sure that no one else would even notice it.

 

I passed by the spot in this photograph a couple of times during our August backcountry photography visit to the Eastern Sierra. There are, I’m certain, thousands of similar little meadows throughout the Sierra — most from a stream meandering through, green with meadow grasses, bounded by granite and small trees. But somehow this particular spot caught my attention and, I think, may have become one of “those places.”

 

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.

by artist Stevens Vaughn.

 

This beautiful work was on the pier at Lorne for the 2022 Lorne Sculpture Biennale.

The theme this year was "The Spirit of Place".

 

Many thanks for your visits, kind comments and faves, very much appreciated.

 

Explore #422

The ultimate motive which leads the believer to Mary is, as already said, the desire to be within the orbit of her holy life. The believer desires to dwell in her proximity, in the aura of her being, and in the intimacy of her mystery. The word mystery does not stand here for a riddle in the sense of something still unsolved. It conveys rather a quality, a potentiality, a sphere: the governance of God in man, the breath of eternal life. Here the worshipper wants to enter; here he wants to dwell, to breathe, to become quiet, and to receive comfort and strength to continue his life with renewed courage.

-The art of praying : the principles and methods of Christian prayer : formerly entitled Prayer in practice / Romano Guardini.

Vibrant entity

Verdant hue

Field of potentiality

By Ramesh Rai:

 

When the air stops to blow,

the flower stops to blossom,

stops to sprinkle its fragrance

the waves of ocean and seas

stops to come to its bank

the cloud stops to rain

the bee stops to sip

nectar from flower

all stars and planets

stop to function

  

the entire nature will pause

and shall stand still, be mute

like deaf and dumb

the whole lives will be stationary

and shall loose their potentiality

  

Then i will urge my poetry

to go and tell them not to stop

Human life on the earth

is being perished

 

I, on behalf of the Mankind

promise to make a good understanding

and sear not to harm the nature

please break the silence.

Hearing The Song by Marianne Reim found in Hendrie Park in the Royal Botanical Gardens located in the City of Burlington Ontario Canada.

 

Hearing the Song

 

Artist: Marianne Reim

Canada; installed in 2018

Hearing the Song uses the most inflexible of materials, stone. Drill marks are placed in such a way that the split stone has two surfaces with identical rows of musical staffs.

 

“These mirror images, side by side, are divided by a negative space. The negative space is not absence, but rather the presence of potentiality. Each viewer/seeker, who comes to this work can bring their own song and can honour what they hear.”

 

Dan Lawrie International Sculpture Collection

 

Royal Botanical Gardens National Historic Site of Canada

 

©Copyright Notice

This photograph and all those within my photostream are protected by copyright. They may not be reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written permission.

After being delayed for over a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 7th Lorne Sculpture Biennale saw many amazing artworks along the beachfront.

 

The theme ‘Spirit of Place’ asked participating artists to respond to 16 themes exploring Lorne’s histories and the beauty of its natural environment.

 

American artist Stevens Vaughn created “The Throne of Potentiality” a huge bronze throne containing many Australian icons. The throne sat at the end of the Lorne Pier.

Another view of a local mansion, also "tumbled" and colour enhanced. Taking a standard camera function and deliberately sabotaging its purpose to create these fragmented, cubist images digitally.

 

"Houses in Motion" ... a literal suggestion? Not with David Byrne I'm willing to bet. A metaphor? Perhaps. Aren't we all, as embodied beings, houses in motion?

 

The "TumbleWorld" series has the quantum proposition at its heart - many planes or dimensions, potentialities, all present simultaneously. When we 'chose' one, the others fall back into potentia and the one chosen becomes the view. In this way consciousness begets the world we see.

 

At the very least there's the fun of a hybrid Surrealist / Cubist view.

 

******************************************************

 

Music Link: "Houses in Motion" - David Byrne, from his live tour "The Songs of David Byrne and Brian Eno" ( 2009 ). Great sound and video, with the video just slightly out of sync with the audio, but who cares? And what's with all those industry people standing at the side of the stage absolutely motion-LESS while this incredible piece of pure funk is going on in front of them? I know MY particular 'house' would definitely be in motion !!!

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVme7RpTypw

 

View Large on Black.

 

© Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ) - 2015. All Rights Reserved. This image is not for use in any form without explicit, express, written permission.

 

Transition from

State of potentiality

State of actuality

 

OlympusOmZuiko 21mmF3.5

"When I saw him look at me with lust,

I dropped my eyes but, in glancing away from him,

I caught sight of myself in the mirror.

And I saw myself,

suddenly,

as he saw me.

And, for the first time in my innocent and confined life,

I sensed in myself a potentiality for corruption

that took my breath away..."

 

-Angela Carter

 

Blog Post

sllorinovo.blogspot.com/2018/07/glam-affair.html

Form is actuality

Indeterminate substratum

Pure potentiality

 

Ilex-Oscillo-Paragon 75mmf1.9

Thanks for all your comments and faves, much appreciated as

always.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4o7i16cDxQ

Excerpt from www.bwst.ca/the-artists/flock:

 

Christopher Reid Flock began a ceramic mentorship with Canadian ceramist Kayo O'Young in 1997 followed by ceramic studies at Sheridan College School of Ceramic Design. In 1999, Flock moved to Japan initiating a self-guided cultural and studio emersion. Returning to Canada in 2009, Flock unpacked the ten years of study through numerous community activities, national and international exhibitions.

 

In 2014, Flock initiated a world first with Siemens Canada and Mohawk College in CT scanning a 6000BCE Jomon-yaki vessel. Employing traditional clay processes with rapid prototyping he questioned process and cultural engagement from a colonial perspective with historical clay artifact as institutional plaything.

 

A short-listed candidate for the permanent outdoor ceramic sculpture, Gardiner Museum, Recipient of the 2014 Winifred Shantz Award for Ceramics, the 2015 Founders Award at the Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition, through the support of three Canada Council for the Arts grants, and an MFA in 2022, Flock continues to push the clay envelope.

 

His work can be found in international private collections, the Canadian Embassy in Paris, France, the permanent collection at the Yingge Ceramics Museum, Taiwan, the Residence of the Prime Minister of Canada, Permanent collection at the Clay and Glass Gallery Waterloo, Canada, and the Art Gallery of Burlington, Burlington, Canada.

 

Artist Statement:

 

I have reified my notion of clay as a physical piece— a basking clay form linked to my malleable processes. Precarious in isolation, momentarily caught in a literal sense of materiality, this figurative gesture leans into vulnerability. I have reached into “potentiality” and trusted my grip. From that reach I present the chaotic as form. Here, I emulate creative play and the agency of possibility. This provides a visual and auditory context into how and where I am in the present. I see this as a reorientation of the self-conscious— steeped in an appeal to the phenomenal. Because it is phenomenal that I now stand here, in this place l as the next generation of what, where, and why we progress with(in). This line of process made me feel small. Not in a ferocious self-sabotage way, but because this creative act forced me to embrace vulnerability. Vulnerable to change in material, scale, and a general perception of things taken and others discarded. That our minds are capable, especially at a young age, to remove what you need and then discard (or turn away from) the rest I felt important to hit. And as a potter, as a human, this is how and where new ideas form. Above all, clay (land itself) has helped me to be malleable.

Anatomy of a otograph by Stefania Piccioni

 

The pre-production phase of my project is where all the planning takes place before the camera rolls. Whether its measured in minutes, hours or days, my planning phase sets the overall vision of my Project.

 

Can you explain us the idea or the story behind this image?

 

This photography is part of an all B/W series called “Still life part VII”. It can remind the theory of shadows of descriptive geometry, or something similar made with a camera or a smartphone, in substitution of a x-ray, with bottles instead of solids. I made this still life thanks to the morning light of the sun, which I used as the only bright source. The potentialities of light allow me to accentuate all the contrasts. I chose to use a white bottle both to highlight contrasts with the shadows and create an effect of positive/negative with the black background. This image represents a middle ground between a strict geometrical synthesis.

  

Tell us how it is taken from the most technical aspect.

 

I took this picture at 10am in the morning, when the sun was enough high to project the shadow of the bottle on the plan with the right grade, in a well defined way. I changed a bit the prospective by getting closer from to the bottom to the composition, thanks to wide angle.

 

What problems and challenges did you face when you took the shot of this image?

 

The most difficult thing to face was the speed of execution because of the sun, because it rotates rapidly, changing the conditions of light. We know well that we need time enough to focus every single detail of composition and light to make a good still life. Besides, I was conditioned by weather: if sun was covered, I could not work.

 

We are talking about the postproduction process. How do you get the final result?

 

I do my work in post-production with Adobe Photoshop. The first step was expanding the image, then I balanced the picture in a correct way, thanks to curves and other tools of Photoshop. Thanks to curves I also highlighted blacks and whites and this allowed me to obtain these contrasts in my picture.

Eija-Liisan Ahtila´s Instalation at Gösta Serlachius Museum in Mänttä, Finland

Substance and accident

Form and matter

Actuality and potentiality

 

Nikon Nikkor 55mmf1.2 Reversed

Another view from the Rockefeller Center's "Top of the Rock" observatory deck, midtown Manhattan. This time the view is looking south toward the tip of the island with Brooklyn off in the distant left.

 

Serendipitously, this shot captured human beings in ambiguous positions regarding planes. Are they on the deck, reflections or images on billboards?

 

An underlying theme of my work is the quantum view of reality being the result of choices we make out a forest of possibilities. With my fragmenting up of the picture plane I suggest the simultaneous appearances of several realities or potentialities all at once.

 

Perhaps this is how we see the world initially, but our brains are designed to make the one choice and eliminate perception of the others for the sake of our safe navigation.

 

*********************************************************************

 

View Large on Black.

 

© Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ) - 2015. All Rights Reserved. This image is not for use in any form without explicit, express, written permission.

 

The most fundamental characteristic of human existence is that we seek the fulfillment, the end or telos, of our nature. Any nature has potentialities or powers that demand to be actualized, and when those potentialities are actualized with excellence when they are brought to perfection, we say that the nature in question flourishes as it was meant to flourish.

-Beauty and Imitation

A Philosophical Reflection on the Arts, Daniel McInerny

I am not a terrorist. I am a victim.

  

I really share with you a difficult process .... the building of the serie ... from zero ... scanning the pictures, discovering their potentiality ... and your works nourish me so much ... some time I hate this distance I have ... I find my images so "straight in the face" .... without poetry ... maybe because I'd love to be neutral ... but this is impossible ... especially to me ! ;D ... but maybe this is necessary too, the distance ... and also I used many different films ... difficult to create an harmonious style for the serie ... and so many things to express at a time ... still didn't decide the final rendering ... and at the same I wish to respect the realism of the situation ... still don't know how to handle this ... maybe there are two series coming out parallely ... feel a little bit lost ! tomorrow it will be better ! ;p

   

Please, go and have a look on what it inspired to EXITOR and maybe participate ! ;p

www.flickr.com/photos/spingraph/852629389/

New paper published: www.scielo.br/j/icse/a/YDCsvyNgpjp9Nm5n5mbBdxN/?lang=en#

 

Novo artigo publicado: www.scielo.br/j/icse/a/YDCsvyNgpjp9Nm5n5mbBdxN/?lang=pt

 

Fruto da minha pesquisa de doutorado / from my doctoral research

 

Resumo

O artigo apresenta uma cartografia dos acontecimentos vivenciados em um curso durante a pandemia com estudantes e profissionais da área da Saúde, adaptado para o ensino a distância e tomando fundamentalmente os conceitos de presença e experiência. Envolvendo criatividade e meditação e tendo como metodologia a fotografia contemplativa, a atividade objetivou apresentar a potência das práticas contemplativas e do Círculo Narrativo na criação de um espaço de acolhimento e de ampliação da percepção, permitindo que o tema da humanização seja abordado experiencialmente. Por meio das narrativas dos participantes e por meio de imagens e palavras, apresentam-se os impactos e sofrimentos vividos, bem como a percepção das potencialidades das frestas, ou seja, das aberturas. Tais frestas, criadas ou descobertas, geraram experiências coletivas de acolhimento e afetos disparados pela imagem, permitindo que os acontecimentos se tornassem interpelativos e criassem sentidos em dias tão difíceis.

 

Fotografia contemplativa; Meditação; Saúde; Ensino; Pandemia

 

Resumen

El artículo presenta una cartografía de los acontecimientos vivido en un curso durante la pandemia con estudiantes y profesionales del área de la salud, adaptado para la enseñanza a distancia, tomando fundamentalmente los conceptos de presencia y experiencia. Envolviendo creatividad y meditación y teniendo como metodología la fotografía contemplativa, el objetivo de la actividad fue presentar la potencia de las prácticas contemplativas y del Círculo Narrativo en la creación de un espacio de acogida y de ampliación de la percepción, permitiendo que el tema de humanización se aborde experimentalmente. Por medio de las narrativas de los participantes, utilizando imágenes y palabras, se presentan los impactos y sufrimientos vividos, así como la percepción de las potencialidades de las grietas, es decir, de las aberturas. Tales grietas, creadas o descubiertas, generaron experiencias colectivas de acogida y afectos, disparados por la imagen, permitiendo que los acontecimientos pasasen a ser interpelativos y creasen sentidos en días tan difíciles.

 

Fotografía contemplativa; Meditación; Salud; Enseñanza; Pandemia

 

Abstract

This study presents a cartography of the events experienced in a course during the pandemic, with health students and professionals, adapted for distance learning, using fundamentally the concepts of presence and experience. Involving creativity and meditation and using contemplative photography as a methodology, the activity aimed at presenting the potential of contemplative practices and the Narrative Circle in creating a space for welcoming and expanding perception, allowing the partakers to approach humanization in a experimental way. Through the participants’ narratives, using images and words, we could witness the impacts and sufferings they experienced, as well as the perception of the potentialities of the gaps, in other words, the openings. Created or discovered, such gaps generated collective experiences of acceptance and affection, triggered by images, transforming the events into questions and creating meanings in such challenging days.

 

Contemplative photography; Meditation; Health; Teaching; Pandemic

Another boyintree92 - J2P collaboration brought to you by the Inspiration Tree

 

I want to dedicate this one to Charlie. His potential is limitless. Charlie is an artist, a cook, a gardener, a writer, a student, a teacher, a friend and an inspiration. A friend recently said that Charlie had “a knack for getting at the essence of things.” How true that statement is. I look forward to his continued growth and experiencing more of life through his eyes. My mothering nature wants to protect Charlie from the sharp scrapes and gouges of life. I can’t do that for him anymore than I can for my own children. It is all part of that growth. Charlie, please remember, as your life continues to change, you are valuable. You have touched our hearts. We are better for it.

English

Location: Rome, Lazio Region, Italy – Sept. 2024

Camera: Nikon D2X + Nikkor 24-70mm F2.8

Adjusted in Adobe Photoshop

 

I recently purchased a 20-year-old lady I think can still surprise me. This picture shows one of the first shots I took to test the potentiality of my new (second-hand) Nikon D2X. I was shocked by the sharpness and flexibility of the raw file and amused by the shooting process, which is more similar to film photography than more recent digital cameras. I do not need to describe the beauty of the Roman aqueduct archeological park: a wonderful place in Rome, far from the most traditional tourist tours.

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without my explicit permission.

 

Italiano

Posizione: Roma, Regione Lazio, Italia – Settembre 2024

Fotocamera: Nikon D2X + Nikkor 24-70mm F2.8

Modificato in Adobe Photoshop

 

Ho acquistato di recente una signora di venti anni fa che penso possa ancora regalarmi delle sorprese. Questa foto mostra uno dei primi scatti fatti per testare le potenzialità della mia nuova (usata) Nikon D2X. Sono rimasto scioccato dalla nitidezza e dalla flessibilità del file raw e divertito dal processo di scatto, che è più simile alla fotografia su pellicola che alle più recenti fotocamere digitali. Non ho bisogno di descrivere la bellezza del parco archeologico dell'acquedotto romano: un posto meraviglioso a Roma, lontano dai più tradizionali tour turistici.

 

Per favore, non utilizzare questa immagine su siti web, blog o altri media senza la mia esplicita autorizzazione.

Thanks for all your comments and faves, much appreciated as

always.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4o7i16cDxQ

The title "Private Dreamer" suggests a deeply personal moment, where the subject is lost in their own thoughts or dreams, detached from the outside world. This evokes a sense of solitude and introspection, where the inner world of the dreamer takes precedence over external reality.

 

The empty chair symbolises absence and potentiality, suggesting the presence of another person who might join the scene or the absence of someone who once did. The empty chair can be seen as a metaphor for unfulfilled potential, missed opportunities, or the inherent loneliness of human existence. It also creates a sense of balance in the composition, emphasising the isolation of the subject.

 

The reclined posture, with eyes closed and a relaxed demeanour, indicates a break from the daily routine, a brief escape into a private world of dreams and thoughts. This moment of tranquility is contrasted by the wild, unkempt grass surrounding the chair, suggesting that peace and quiet are found amidst the chaos of everyday life.

   

He is my friend and watching sunset at Khairabera. It is situated in Purulia District, West Bengal, India. Driving distance from Purulia to Khairabera Dam is 67 kms. This is an Irrigation Dam amidst hills and forest at Baghmundi. It is a beautiful and pleasant place with high potentiality to be developed as an attractive tourist spot.

 

Beautiful Bengal

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"Although strong emergence is logically possible, it is uncomfortably like magic. How does an irreducible but supervenient downward causal power arise, since by definition it cannot be due to the aggregation of the micro-level potentialities? Such causal powers would be quite unlike anything within our scientific ken. This not only indicates how they will discomfort reasonable forms of materialism. Their mysteriousness will only heighten the traditional worry that emergence entails illegitimately getting something from nothing." (Bedau 1997)

_____________________________________________________________________________

 

Source: Emergence || "Central Relatedness" or "RedPixel" or "Tat Tvam Asi" or "Αα" ||

  

The Montado Of Alentejo / Ribatejo by Daniel Arrhakis (2015)

 

For details :

 

www.flickr.com/photos/arrhakis/15831857994/sizes/k/

 

_______________________________________________

 

With the typical cante alentejano (singing), polyphonic, executed in a group and without music.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ph24cpUg89k

 

_______________________________________________

 

The number on the trunk (1) of the Cork Oak (Quercus suber) is the year that the last cork was taken out, in this case 2011 (next one only in 2020).

 

In Portugal agro-silvo-pastoral systems correspond to the mixed land use types characteristic of the region of Alentejo, in the southern part of the country.

 

There is a triple and complementary use of the land, adapted to the low potentialities of the soil and to the Mediterranean climate: open evergreen forest (oaks, olive and chestnut trees), grazing and cultivation. Due to their mixed characteristics and to the extensive form of exploitation, these systems constitute varied landscapes of high biological diversity.

 

It takes 25 years before a cork tree is old enough to harvest. Then you can only harvest once every 9 years and the 1st two harvests do not produce good quality cork.

________________________________________________

 

This time my next works will be a little different and about real nature.

 

This work is in AWAKE CHALLENGE # 3 - FORESTS OF OUR FUTURE (February 1 to 28 of 2015) :

 

www.flickr.com/groups/awakeartforacause/discuss/721576501...

 

_____________________________________________

 

A wonderful day dear friends ! Thank you for your comments, invitations and visit, much grateful ! : )

So sorry, i am a little away behind but i will try to catching up all of you !

The idea that the Supreme Principle is both Absolute Reality and, for that very reason, Infinite Possibility, can suffice unto itself, for it contains everything, notably the necessity for a universal Manifestation.

 

From a less synthetic point of view, however, and one closer to Maya, we may envisage a third hypostatic element, namely the Perfect Quality; being the Absolute, the Principle is thereby the Infinite and the Perfect.

 

Absoluteness of the Real, infinitude of the Possible, perfection of the Good; these are the "initial dimensions" of the Divine Order.

 

This order also comprises "modes": Wisdom, Power, Goodness, that is, the content or the substance of the Supreme Principle consists in these three modes and each of them is at once Absolute, Infinite and Perfect; for each divine mode participates by definition in the nature of the divine Substance and thus comprises absolute Reality, infinite Possibility and perfect Quality.

 

In Wisdom, as in Power and as in Goodness, there is in fact no contingency, no limitation, or any imperfection; being Absolute, these modes cannot not be, and being Infinite, they are inexhaustible; being Perfect, they lack nothing.

 

The Principle not only possesses "dimensions" and "modes”, it also has degrees, and this in virtue of its very Infinitude, which projects the Principle into Relativity and thus produces, so to speak, this metacosmic "space" which we term the Divine Order. These degrees are the divine Essence, the divine Potentiality and the divine Manifestations; or Beyond-Being, Being (the Creator) and the Spirit (the existentiating Logos) which constitutes the divine Center of the total cosmos.

 

---

 

Frithjof Schuon

 

---

 

Quoted in: The Essential Frithjof Schuon (edited by Seyyed Hossein Nasr)

 

---

 

Image: Virgin of the Burning Bush - Holy Icon

It takes only a few minutes (if you can find the trailhead) to walk to the Devil's Kettle in the Blue Hills. I'm putting it on my list of places to visit after snowmelt!

 

My visit to the Devil's Kettle - wickeddarkphotography.com/2019/11/17/a-devilish-situation/

Para el grupo La Vuelta al Mundo en su tercer aniversario

{EXPLORE}

In the ancient Indian context, the number zero did not originally refer to nothingness or nullity. The Sanskrit word for zero is shunya, which means "puffed up, hollow, empty." The zero stands for emptiness suggestive of potentiality.

PLEASE CLICK L

The Etang de la Gruère Again. It's impossible to grow tired of this place and all the incredible potentialities it gives for photography.

Can you explain us the idea or the story behind this image?

 

This photography is part of an all B/W series called “Still life part VII”. It can remind the theory of shadows of descriptive geometry, or something similar made with a camera or a smartphone, in substitution of a x-ray, with bottles instead of solids. I made this still life thanks to the morning light of the sun, which I used as the only bright source. The potentialities of light allow me to accentuate all the contrasts. I chose to use a white bottle both to highlight contrasts with the shadows and create an effect of positive/negative with the black background. This image represents a middle ground between a strict geometrical synthesis and a constituent study

  

Tell us how it is taken from the most technical aspect.

 

I took this picture at 10am in the morning, when the sun was enough high to project the shadow of the bottle on the plan with the right grade, in a well defined way. I changed a bit the prospective by getting closer from to the bottom to the composition, thanks to wide angle.

 

What problems and challenges did you face when you took the shot of this image?

 

The most difficult thing to face was the speed of execution because of the sun, because it rotates rapidly, changing the conditions of light. We know well that we need time enough to focus every single detail of composition and light to make a good still life. Besides, I was conditioned by weather: if sun was covered, I could not work.

 

We are talking about the postproduction process. How do you get the final result?

 

I do my work in post-production with Adobe Photoshop. The first step was expanding the image, then I balanced the picture in a correct way, thanks to curves and other tools of Photoshop. Thanks to curves I also highlighted blacks and whites and this allowed me to obtain these contrasts in my picture.

“When we let ourselves shine, we eclipse the realms of ordinary. This light, this spiritual life-force, effortlessly radiates within us and to those around us, illuminating the potentiality of our soul's yearning--which is, in essence--the highest version of ourselves.”

 

― LaShaun Middlebrooks Collier

 

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Intuitive Forms should emerge from a concious consideration of the discovered environment, requirement and potentiality of the project

[...] within the capitalist system all methods for raising the social productiveness of labour are brought about at the cost of the individual labourer; all means for the development of production transform themselves into means of domination over, and exploitation of, the producers; they mutilate the labourer into a fragment of a man, degrade him to the level of an appendage of a machine, destroy every remnant of charm in his work and turn it into a hated toil; they estrange from him the intellectual potentialities of the labour process in the same proportion as science is incorporated in it as an independent power; they distort the conditions under which he works, subject him during the labour process to a despotism the more hateful for its meanness; they transform his life-time into working-time, and drag his wife and child beneath the wheels of the Juggernaut of capital. But all methods for the production of surplus-value are at the same time methods of accumulation; and every extension of accumulation becomes again a means for the development of those methods. It follows therefore that in proportion as capital accumulates, the lot of the labourer, be his payment high or low, must grow worse. The law, finally, that always equilibrates the relative surplus population, or industrial reserve army, to the extent and energy of accumulation, this law rivets the labourer to capital more firmly than the wedges of Vulcan did Prometheus to the rock. It establishes an accumulation of misery, corresponding with accumulation of capital. Accumulation of wealth at one pole is, therefore, at the same time accumulation of misery, agony of toil slavery, ignorance, brutality, mental degradation, at the opposite pole, i.e., on the side of the class that produces its own product in the form of capital.

 

Karl Marx, Capital, Vol 1: A Critical Analysis of Capitalist Production

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