- Ernst Mach (1838 - 1916)
Popular Scientific Lectures
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Repetition of Sensations
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Color Bridge
- Owen Barfield (1898 - 1997)
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Mind Over matter
- Marc Seifer (1948 - )
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Uncanny Witchery
- Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874 - 1942)
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Sunday, November 02, 2025
As Long as Autumn Lasts
I shall not have hands,
canvas and colors enough
to paint the beautiful
things I see.
- Vincent Van Gogh (1853 - 1890)
Wednesday, October 01, 2025
Sensations In The Mind
- George Berkeley (1685-1753)
A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge
Sunday, August 31, 2025
Dancing Soul
Monday, November 11, 2024
Curious Stillness of Autumn
swaying the branches of the trees,
and the windfalls dropped to
the ground with soft thuds.
Frost was in the wind,
and between gusts the curious
stillness of autumn."
- Richard Adams (1920 - 2016)
Watership Down
Thursday, November 07, 2024
Unfelt Motion
- Alberto Santos-Dumont (1873 - 1932)
My Air-Ships
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Full of Fire
- Edward Fredkin (1934 - 2023)
A New Cosmogony
Friday, November 17, 2023
Movement of Colors
In the picture, color creates the light."
Sunday, November 12, 2023
The Color Nearest the Light
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 - 1832)
Theory of Colours
Thursday, November 09, 2023
Observer-Centric Virtualities
Saturday, November 04, 2023
Mysterious and Unexplorable
Every leaf in the forest -
lays down its life in its season
as beautifully as it was taken up.
Tuesday, October 31, 2023
Flying Leaves of Autumn
They take their time and wander
on this their only chance to soar."
- Delia Owens (1949 - )
Where the Crawdads Sing
Saturday, October 28, 2023
Geometry of Color
- Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889 - 1951)
Remarks on Color
Friday, October 27, 2023
"Song for Autumn"
how comfortable it will be to touch
the earth instead of the
nothingness of the air and the endless
freshets of wind? And don’t you think
the trees, especially those with
mossy hollows, are beginning to look for
the birds that will come—six, a dozen—to sleep
inside their bodies? And don’t you hear
the goldenrod whispering goodbye,
the everlasting being crowned with the first
tuffets of snow? The pond
stiffens and the white field over which
the fox runs so quickly brings out
its long blue shadows. The wind wags
its many tails. And in the evening
the piled firewood shifts a little,
longing to be on its way."
"Song for Autumn"
Monday, October 23, 2023
Expanding Our Vision
- Eric Kandel (1929 - )
The Age of Insight
Sunday, September 10, 2023
Iceland's Immeasurable Boundlessness
- Dino Buzzati (1906 - 1972)
The Tartar Steppe
The passage above is taken from a novel of one of my favorite authors. Buzzati was trained as a journalist, but channeled his creative energies into creating a magical-realist-like (Kafkaesque, even Borgesian) surrealist world of fantasy just on the cusp of seeming "real." The Tartar Steppe is arguably his best known work. The "hero" of the story, Giovanni Drogo, is stationed at a fort in the desert that overlooks the vast Tartar steppe and told to await an invasion; one which, as we learn over the course of the novel, never actually comes. Among other things (e.g., a scathing rebuke of military life) it is a Camus-like Sisyphisian meditation on time, life, the specter of lost opportunities, and the perpetual - unquenchable - thirst for fulfilment. But, while all of these elements are fascinating on their own (and should prompt anyone with a penchant for Kafka and Borges who has not yet experienced Buzatti's writing to become acquainted with his work), I was reminded of another element of this allegorical tale while driving with my family around Iceland. Namely, its subtle depiction of the immeasurable boundlessness - the infinity - of space and and time.
Iceland is a curiously dynamic blend of physical, aesthetic, and spiritual contrasts that never do more than only hint at some unfathomable underlying "reality." Iceland's vast stretches of land and sea can be used as backdrops to Drogo's endless wait for something to happen. Seemingly infinite blocks of solidified magma and melting glaciers are omnipresent on the horizon; approachable, in principle (by inquisitive souls willing to risk flat tires or broken axles - or both - while traversing the unpaved roads trying to get to them) but perpetually just-out-of-reach. Measures of time and distance both loose conventional - indeed, any - meaning. Just as the Apollo astronauts had difficulty judging how far rocks and mountains were from them on the moon (in the moon's case, because of the lack of an atmosphere), my family and I often struggled to estimate how "near" or "far" anything was; or how "long" or "short" a time it would take to get somewhere. In our case, this was due not to a lack of an atmosphere (the ever-churning transitions from clear skies to moody clouds to thick unrelenting globs of wind and rain to clear skies again were constant reminders of Iceland's dramatic weather; unlike in Buzatti's novel - in Iceland things emphatically do happen!), but simply to how alien Iceland's landscape is compared to our calibrated norms. Everything In Iceland seems to be simultaneously so close as give the illusion of intimacy, and yet so remotely far, so incomprehensibly and immeasurably distant, as to be unapproachable, at least within a single lifetime (or, at least, during a single trip 😊





















