Saturday, August 18, 2012

JARRY SIGHTINGS

I have lived in the North Beach section of San Francisco for many years and have experienced plenty of unexpected things during that time, but none quite so suggestive of the utterly weird doings of the universe as an unnerving, sneaky feeling that I have run into Jarry...or his spooky Doppelganger...or his actual ghost...on several occasions during the past few weeks. Maybe it has something to do with just having finished reading his bio...something to do with a renewed interest in 'Pataphysics...the gods of the Science smacking me in the face with the results of an experiment not yet even conceived. Who knows. But I swear its him hanging about in all the notorious dives around the neighborhood screaming Merdre!



And then a friend shows up with two astonishing photographs...the first, a well known one taken outside City Lights Bookstore in 1965...seemingly showing Jarry on the extreme left...



...the other taken outside Cafe Vesuvio, across the alley from City Lights, this past week...





































I, of course, accused my friend of fakery. Insults were exchanged. Finally, we agreed that, given his imaginal power, Jarry has possibly built a time machine based on his specifications...and is using it...


Thursday, August 16, 2012

EXTENDED DIGRESSIONS...

“I would like to write a Book which would drive men mad, which would be like an open door leading them where they would never have consented to go, in short, a door that opens onto reality.”
  Antonin Artaud   

"Reality is what you can get away with."
  Robert Anton Wilson



The Tao of Physics: An Exploration of the Parallels Between Modern Physics and Eastern Mysticism is a book by physicist Fritjof Capra, published in 1975 by Shambhala Publications of Berkeley, California


According to the preface of the first edition, reprinted in subsequent editions, Capra struggled to reconcile theoretical physics and Eastern Mysticism and was at first "helped on my way by 'power plants'" or psychedelics, with the first experience "so overwhelming that I burst into tears, at the same time, not unlike Castaneda, pouring out my impressions to a piece of paper."

(This was written before Castaneda's work was "exposed" as fiction. Not that that matters...at all, at all...to us...) CW

Capra later discussed his ideas with Werner Heisenberg in 1972, as he mentioned in the following interview excerpt:

I had several discussions with Heisenberg. I lived in England then [circa 1972], and I visited him several times in Munich and showed him the whole manuscript chapter by chapter. He was very interested and very open, and he told me something that I think is not known publicly because he never published it. He said that he was well aware of these parallels. While he was working on quantum theory he went to India to lecture and was a guest of Tagore. He talked a lot with Tagore about Indian philosophy. Heisenberg told me that these talks had helped him a lot with his work in physics, because they showed him that all these new ideas in quantum physics were in fact not all that crazy. He realized there was, in fact, a whole culture that subscribed to very similar ideas. Heisenberg said that this was a great help for him. Niels Bohr had a similar experience when he went to China. – Fritjof Capra, interviewed by Renee Weber in the book The Holographic Paradigm

As a result of those influences, Bohr adopted the yin yang symbol as part of his family coat of arms when he was knighted in 1947.
Wikipedia


And from Scoop Nisker in CRAZY WISDOM…

“Out of the imagination of some early-twentieth-century artists came a madcap, multidimensional demigod known as Dada, which bears an uncanny resemblance to the Tao. The Dadaist movement was founded in Zurich during WW I by the French poet and self-proclaimed “literary terrorist” Tristan Tzara. Although Dadaist poetry and manifestos often sound like a takeoff of the Tao, we have no evidence that Tzara or other Dadaists were acquainted with Taoist writings. Perhaps a mysterious transmission took place.

“Dada is a quantity of life in transparent, effortless and gyratory transformation.”
Tristan Tzara, 1918

“Tao never does anything;
Yet through it all things are done.”
Lao Tzu, 5th Century B.C.

“Logic is a complication. Logic is always false.
DADA suggests 2 solutions: NO MORE LOOKS!
NO MORE WORDS! Stop looking! Stop talking!”
Tristan Tzara

“Those who know don’t talk.
Those who talk don’t know.”
Lao Tzu




“The acts of life have neither beginning nor end.

Everything happens in a very idiotic fashion.

That’s why everything is the same.

Simplicity is called dada.”

Tristan Tzara



Maybe a sequel to The Tao of Physics should be offered entitled The Dada of Physics...



The "TOE" in The TOE of 'Pataphysics does not refer to God's Big Theory Of Everything, of course. It refers to Jarry's Big Theater Of Everything...or...his Towers Of Ethernity...