I slept restlessly last night,
I dreamt of black helmets
Dark steel machines,
gliding over grey fall roads,
Bending, arching around
Long orange pail yellow
dead turns, nothing
The growl of the machine
the lean into the turn
the stillness of my hand,
Holding the throttle
I drifted into midnight
with this meditation
in my mind, Drifted,
Midnight meditation, mind
Black Helmets
Black Gloves,
Black Machine
The eve of winter with
Falls first frosts on
Tall golden grasses
Knatted with blowing
Leaves lurching into
Corners past cornfields
Windless wind, stillness
at steady speeds of
Racing yellow lines
blinking past my
eyes close into midnight
mindless sleeping resting
into turns, banking turns
The throaty tune thundering
behind me into the pale
frosty morning of
a fall day
A black helmet
A black Machine
Disclaimer: This blog is a place that I have dedicated to the practice of writing. I will warn you now that it is a raw and unfiltered stream of my own consciousness. I apologize in advance for the blatantly bad writing, here I hope to practice and improve. Thank you. - D
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Tools for Conviviality by Ivan Illich Chapter 1
I have started reading Tools for Conviviality by Ivan Illich, this time beginning with chapter one two watersheds. Illich’s main arguments
in this book seem to pertain directly to education and medi-care, both of which
exist, and are justified, as he argues, for their own sake by their own
bureaucrats. He also references the de-professionalization of medi-care in
china in the 70s and makes the argument that wholesale institutional change is
actually possible.
It is
possible to see that the education, and certification of medical professionals
is self-serving, and that those tools, which were previously used wholesale by
the society have been undermined and degraded. With specifically medicine
Illich talks how miracle cures have been valued more than healthier lifestyles,
the argument he is making I think is actually the argument that just treating a
symptom of lets say heart disease due to obesity will not fix the problem or
cure those who are ill, instead it usually just prolongs the suffering of the disease,
(pessimistic right now) Illich is arguing however that we look at the causes of
the diseases, like obesity and try to understand how it comes into existence,
as a result of our jobs not providing the cardio vascular exercise that we
need, or as a result of high carb high sugar diets as a result of the agro
industrial complex pumping out corn based corn syrup over sweet products for
mass consumption effectively fattening the entire population.
Illich
refers to each technology / or institution as having two watersheds, the first
is when the break through becomes a service to the general population, the
second seems to be when that institution or invention becomes a detriment.
Illich illustrates this concept with the automobile arguing first the it was
service, allowing us to cover a great distance in a short amount time, (here referring to the train/steam engine)
and then the car began to exist for its own sake. Where it created the new
distances to be traveled, for want of a highway.
Finally
to round off the argument Illich, on page 8, talks about the standard reaction
to a dissatisfaction with the system, or a failure for it work was the idea of
more “further technological and bureaucratic
escalation” if it didn’t work then lets do more of it, here is a quote
“While
evidence shows that more of the same leads to utter defeat, nothing less than
more and more seems worthwhile in a society infected by the growth mania. The
desperate plea is no only for more bombs and more police, more medical
examination and more teachers, but also for more information and research. The
editor-in-chief of the bulletin of atomic scientist claims that most of our
present problems are the result of recently acquired knowledge badly applied,
and concludes that the only remedy for the mess created by this information is
more of it. It has become fashionable to say that where science and technology
have created problems, it is only more scientific understanding and better
technology that can carry is past them. The cure for bas management is more
management. The cure for specialized research is more costly interdisciplinary
research, just as the cure for polluted rivers is more costly nonpolluting
detergents. The pooling of store of information, the building up of a knowledge
stock, the attempt to overwhelm the present problems by the production of more
science is the ultimate attempt to solve a crisis by escalation.”
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