Saturday, February 27, 2016

The Mind is Simply Aware


“There is no ideal in observation.
When you have an ideal, 
you cease to observe, 
you are then merely
approximating the 
present to the idea, 
and therefore there
is duality, conflict, 
and all the rest of it. 

The mind has to be in the 
state when it can see, observe. 
The experience of the observation 
is really an astonishing state. 

In that there is no duality. 
The mind is simply - aware.”

- Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895 - 1986)

Friday, February 26, 2016

Not Things, but Light


“I almost never set out to photograph a landscape, 
nor do I think of my camera as a means of 
recording a mountain or an animal
unless I absolutely need a 'record shot'.
My first thought is always of light.”

- Galen Rowell (1940 - 2002)

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Through the Invisible


“The great truth, or the absolute truth,
makes itself visible to our mind
through the invisible.”

- Georges Vantongerloo (1886 - 1965)
Painter/Sculptor

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Spiritual Awareness


“To the vast majority of people 
a photograph is an
image of something within 
their direct experience:
a more-or-less factual reality.

It is difficult for them 
to realize that the
photograph can be the source 
of experience, as well as the
reflection of spiritual awareness 
of the world and of self.”  

(1902 - 1984)

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Invisible Organization of Energy


“Science shows us that the
visible world is neither 
matter nor spirit;
the visible world is the invisible 
organization of energy.”

(1939 - 1988)

Monday, February 22, 2016

Forms, Space, and Distinctions


“A universe comes into being when
a space is severed or taken apart… 
by tracing the way we 
[make such distinctions] 
we begin to reconstruct …  
the basic forms underlying linguistic,
mathematical, physical, 
and biological science.”

- G. Spencer Brown (1923 - )

Sunday, February 21, 2016

Between Something and Nothing


“Now, I am going to tell you something.
I don’t know what heading it comes under, 
and whether or not it is relevant here,
but it must be relevant at some point. 

It is not anything new, but I would like to say it. 

There is a beginning. There is no beginning of that beginning. 

There is no beginning of that no beginning of beginning.

 There is something. There is nothing. 

There is something before the beginning of something and nothing, 
and something before that. Suddenly there is something and nothing. 

But between something and nothing, 
I still don’t really know which is something and which is nothing.  

Now, I’ve just said something, 
but I don’t really know whether I’ve said anything or not.” 

- Chuang-Tzu (4th century BC)