I haven't written much lately. I've been reallky busy with work and manically trying to read all these books that I really want to read before school starts again.
Speaking of good books, I finished Techgnosis a few days ago. It was really good. Erik Davis very clearly is a highly intelligent man who has spent much time studying and thinking about how technology and cyber culture fits into the framework of mystical/philosophical thought as it has existed for many years. It was refreshing to hear a balanced viewpoint of technology and how it affects human life. He wasn't saying that technology will lead to deliverance, but he also wasn't saying that it is a destructive force by its very nature. he obviously had his biases, as we all do, but I think he stayed as objective as one can hope to be. Or maybe I just agreed with him. Regardless, i recommend it to anyone who would be interested a book about technology and mysticism.
I've also been reading a collection of essays and poetry and fiction and speeches from the sixties. It's really compelling to read what was being wirtten at the time and get a sense of how confused and emotionally wrought a lot of people were. Especially since that decade has affected so much of our lives, and there is a bit of backlash against it, it's nice to read what people were actually saying instead of only getting seond hand points of view.
Speaking of good books, I finished Techgnosis a few days ago. It was really good. Erik Davis very clearly is a highly intelligent man who has spent much time studying and thinking about how technology and cyber culture fits into the framework of mystical/philosophical thought as it has existed for many years. It was refreshing to hear a balanced viewpoint of technology and how it affects human life. He wasn't saying that technology will lead to deliverance, but he also wasn't saying that it is a destructive force by its very nature. he obviously had his biases, as we all do, but I think he stayed as objective as one can hope to be. Or maybe I just agreed with him. Regardless, i recommend it to anyone who would be interested a book about technology and mysticism.
I've also been reading a collection of essays and poetry and fiction and speeches from the sixties. It's really compelling to read what was being wirtten at the time and get a sense of how confused and emotionally wrought a lot of people were. Especially since that decade has affected so much of our lives, and there is a bit of backlash against it, it's nice to read what people were actually saying instead of only getting seond hand points of view.
slate:
I am hoping the radical shift in thought that happened in the 60's will soon be repeated...as the country becomes more and more like the cold war 50's the children of today will truly have something to rebel against...
fallen1carus:
i agree with slate and said this in that journal too... i feel like there's got to be a breaking point. people will only take so much destruction and abuse of power. it's only a matter of time before the masses riot.