Archive for category meditations

The tenets of my thesis on mental spaces

My goal for Themography.com is to craft a thesis on “mental spaces”. I presume others used that term in other contexts, or with different definitions, so I will define mental spaces to fulfill an objective of my thesis.

These positions* craft and characterize a themographic definition of mental spaces:

  1. That there is mental infrastructure and superstructure.
  2. These structural systems exist in and can be described by dimensions we have not yet mapped as a coordinated space.
  3. That mapping, diagramming, and scientifically and/or mathematically studying this dimensionality will yield a mental space which is a peer to physical space and time.

(Consider this an iteration on my article “Something akin to my treatise on mental spaces“.)

*Positions reflect that I posit these, I suggest these as basic concepts. The word choice, compared to “tenets” in the title, reflects that I believe they have staying power. Figure it out, test it as you go.

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Augmented Reality: A Direction Room

Today, I had an idea for coordinating the art and pictures we hang on our walls at home: a “direction room”. The essence of it is that we hang a picture on a wall oriented towards the direction where the subject of that picture is or was. This layers into the decoration of the room a sense of orientation augmented by representing the location of the subject – metadata of that subject.

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Generating generations and Generations

Some people say “next-gen” referencing a specific, named, defined, or bounded Generation. Other people say “next-gen” to describe something they think is on the cutting edge, representative of what is to come.

I stumbled upon the observations above while reading this HBR artilce: http://blogs.hbr.org/haque/2010/03/twitter_sxsw_and_building_a_21.html. It is an author-cum-interviewer humbling himself before the audience, whose power he realized after underwhelming them with his interview of Evan Williams, @ev, Twitter Founder.

Haque says, “That’s how next-gen organizations take on the challenge…” It seems you could interpret this as Haque declaring there is a Generation for Organizations – either somewhat here, on the cusp, which he defines here; or, already defined. Alternatively, you could interpret this as Haque putting chrome finish on another part of the vehicle he’s driving to make a point. I think he means it casually, but he might be using the latter, buzz-word, form.

Just like neuroscientists learn from studying brains that “don’t work like others”, so to speak, I learn from studying statements that don’t work like the others. This isn’t simply picking on a buzz-word used by an HBR author. It is the prelude to the curiosity of what I wondered next. Read the rest of this entry »

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Mind Games: Drawing spandrels into the conversation

A game of drawing conceptual spandrels*:

There’s a mind game like to play: I weave extra hints or messages or humor or sometimes oblique concepts into the statements I make; and, then, see who picks up on them. You score points by volleying a similar extra layer of meaning. Style points are awarded for the flavor of the volley: Is it thematically, stylistically, or structurally similar? Does it extend, engage the woven thread? Did it oppose or mock it? Did it trump or topple the original?

It’s always been odd to go through the day rarely meeting other people who play the game. Much less, finding people who are interested in it. Sometimes those who play a little will catch on and go a few rounds with you. Sometimes you meet players who are too different in style, structure, content for it to be a complete game.

This is my favorite sport. And, yet, there’s no league for it. It’s all pick-up games. In some places, you get labeled a witch for talking and thinking with such powerful cleverness.

* I borrow Stephen Jay Gould‘s biology term “spandrels” for it’s ingenuity and uniqueness. Read the rest of this entry »

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