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octopus-4 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 12:46
Panta rei. It's a phylosopher who said it.
Curiosity killed a cat, Schroedinger only half.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 12:51
Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

It's so private for me. I don't want anyone to witness me listening to King Crimson's Islands. I don't want their opinion or reaction as to why Boz sounds cheesy singing "Beneath the winter waves" or their sarcastic comments about the music not fitting to the times we are now living in. A majority of people in society constantly place emphasis on that and it's annoying. What physically and emotionally fell into place on the day Boz recorded the vocals for Islands is timeless in it's own right. I must have a certain mind set to even hear it.  White Willow has the same affect lyrically and the listening pleasure must be private and isolated....because I've noticed most people cringing at the sound of it. It's as if you end up answering a thousand questions if you broadcast the music in your living room while friends are over, put into a position to defend it and judged. If my kids hear Art Zoyd or Univers Zero, they have an understanding that it is quite like Classical music and dismiss any reaction of fear influenced from the music. They realize that the sections which create a feeling of suspense sound like  my film compositions and they identify with the art somehow...even though they are too young to comprehend abstract thinking. When their friends sleep over and parents knock on the door to drop off their child...if Art Zoyd or Patricia Dallio are playing in the kitchen...it must stop immediately because if the parents hear the music they may find me questionable.

My greatest appreciation of the arts, is when i am alone. I find i like it best that way. I'm not totally against engaging with people when i listen to music, etc., but that full realisation of it is when i am alone.


Absolutely. I would not have it any other way. Maybe this is a large reason why I've been able to enjoy my own company all These years. Music listening has taught me so much. :) I'm with you on this one
Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 13:26
Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:

Panta rei. It's a phylosopher who said it.
A philosopher also said "Oh man, have I've got the munchies..." (probably)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 13:40
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I may not know much about philosophy but that is bloody terrible maths.
 
15.5/20 is 77.5% no matter how badly you do the sums.
 
Little wonder philosophers never achieve anything.

it was 38 years ago and i am still lousy in math, which probably makes me a moron in your eyes (i know I already was, Dean) but your ungracious comment about not achieving anything deserves a strong rebuke, as i am not a philosopher but a career restaurant industry businessman, so I do know how to count. I have 5 children and recently a grandfather, I think that is quite an achievement. Oh, and one last thing, I left chronic sarcasm behind a long time ago.....Embarrassed 
I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 13:49
Hey guys, wouldn't let me post in Get The Word Out section.

Would greatly appreciate it if you'd check out my Canadian Prog-Metal band that just launched!

Thanks a lot! :D http://www.facebook.com/ViaPulse

Edited by JoeFerguson - June 04 2013 at 13:49
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 14:07
Originally posted by tszirmay tszirmay wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I may not know much about philosophy but that is bloody terrible maths.
 
15.5/20 is 77.5% no matter how badly you do the sums.
 
Little wonder philosophers never achieve anything.

it was 38 years ago and i am still lousy in math, which probably makes me a moron in your eyes (i know I already was, Dean) but your ungracious comment about not achieving anything deserves a strong rebuke, as i am not a philosopher but a career restaurant industry businessman, so I do know how to count. I have 5 children and recently a grandfather, I think that is quite an achievement. Oh, and one last thing, I left chronic sarcasm behind a long time ago.....Embarrassed 

I read me original post to see where I made the mistake (and raising your obvious ire), The numbers were supposed to be =20 pts  and not 32. So at worst, I am prone to some light dyslexia or original typo syndrome. Oh well, another failed missile test Wink......So do we apologize to each other, Mr Forum Admin/moderator? I just did.....   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 14:26
Originally posted by tszirmay tszirmay wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

I may not know much about philosophy but that is bloody terrible maths.
 
15.5/20 is 77.5% no matter how badly you do the sums.
 
Little wonder philosophers never achieve anything.

it was 38 years ago and i am still lousy in math, which probably makes me a moron in your eyes (i know I already was, Dean) but your ungracious comment about not achieving anything deserves a strong rebuke, as i am not a philosopher but a career restaurant industry businessman, so I do know how to count. I have 5 children and recently a grandfather, I think that is quite an achievement. Oh, and one last thing, I left chronic sarcasm behind a long time ago.....Embarrassed 
Confused Did you create that marking method or was it the education system? Since it was evidently the latter then my criticism was of the Candian school board that marked the paper, not of you. Since you are not a professional philosopher then my ungracious comment was clearly not directed at you either. Nor do I regard anyone as a moron, that is simply not something I would contemplate.
 
I have been berating professional academic philosophy for 14 pages in this thread, and many more in other threads over the past six years that I have been posting on this site, if this is seen as sarcasm then so be it.
 
Nothing I wrote was a criticism of you personally.
 
Originally posted by tszirmay tszirmay wrote:


I read me original post to see where I made the mistake (and raising your obvious ire), The numbers were supposed to be =20 pts  and not 32. So at worst, I am prone to some light dyslexia or original typo syndrome. Oh well, another failed missile test Wink......So do we apologize to each other, Mr Forum Admin/moderator? I just did.....   
Adding an arbitrary offset to make the numbers work is still an error on the part of the examiner (not you) - by this method a blank sheet of paper would get a 20% grade - they should have multiplied the original mark by five and left it at that, or they should have marked the paper out of 25 or they should have scored you 19.6/20. Sorry, but the grade should still be 77.5%
 
I don't believe there is anything here that either of us need apologise for, but for creating the misunderstanding that has ensued I do apologise for unreservedly. Hug
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 14:55
Actually this was the french school system (from France but in Canada) , marks were coefficient 4 plus 20, I just checked my files. So whatever mark , average like 12 was x 4  = 48 =20 which gave a logical 68% . That's how it was back in 1975 . It was done so as to reflect equilibrium with British/Canadian/Us method of %, in order to establish entrance scores for non-French universities. Not my invention, but typically Gallic. Vive la difference. Cool
You are correct about the blank piece of paper giving 20 , I guess it was points for attendance LOL Still failure which made you fall back a year and start all over again.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 16:21
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:


Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

...
Most people understand that the future that we encounter will be one of change. But change always begets change. It's exponential, really. Things will start changing quicker than we can even fathom at this point. It will be overwhelming.

 
Wait until you see your childrem, all of a sudden 35 years old or something like it!
 
It's not really "change" ... it's evolution! And sometimes I think this is what we don't "get" in progressive music ... it's not about "time changes" and what not (like rock'n'roll and a lot of jazz music IS!), but about the evolution of the music, be it a theme, lyrics or otherwise. And this applies better to all the music we love, than the word "changes" ever will!
That's interesting, moshkito, thanks.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 04 2013 at 16:23
Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

It's so private for me. I don't want anyone to witness me listening to King Crimson's Islands. I don't want their opinion or reaction as to why Boz sounds cheesy singing "Beneath the winter waves" or their sarcastic comments about the music not fitting to the times we are now living in. A majority of people in society constantly place emphasis on that and it's annoying. What physically and emotionally fell into place on the day Boz recorded the vocals for Islands is timeless in it's own right. I must have a certain mind set to even hear it.  White Willow has the same affect lyrically and the listening pleasure must be private and isolated....because I've noticed most people cringing at the sound of it. It's as if you end up answering a thousand questions if you broadcast the music in your living room while friends are over, put into a position to defend it and judged. If my kids hear Art Zoyd or Univers Zero, they have an understanding that it is quite like Classical music and dismiss any reaction of fear influenced from the music. They realize that the sections which create a feeling of suspense sound like  my film compositions and they identify with the art somehow...even though they are too young to comprehend abstract thinking. When their friends sleep over and parents knock on the door to drop off their child...if Art Zoyd or Patricia Dallio are playing in the kitchen...it must stop immediately because if the parents hear the music they may find me questionable.

My greatest appreciation of the arts, is when i am alone. I find i like it best that way. I'm not totally against engaging with people when i listen to music, etc., but that full realisation of it is when i am alone.


Absolutely. I would not have it any other way. Maybe this is a large reason why I've been able to enjoy my own company all These years. Music listening has taught me so much. :) I'm with you on this one
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 08:12
Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

It's so private for me. I don't want anyone to witness me listening to King Crimson's Islands. I don't want their opinion or reaction as to why Boz sounds cheesy singing "Beneath the winter waves" or their sarcastic comments about the music not fitting to the times we are now living in. A majority of people in society constantly place emphasis on that and it's annoying. What physically and emotionally fell into place on the day Boz recorded the vocals for Islands is timeless in it's own right. I must have a certain mind set to even hear it.  White Willow has the same affect lyrically and the listening pleasure must be private and isolated....because I've noticed most people cringing at the sound of it. It's as if you end up answering a thousand questions if you broadcast the music in your living room while friends are over, put into a position to defend it and judged. If my kids hear Art Zoyd or Univers Zero, they have an understanding that it is quite like Classical music and dismiss any reaction of fear influenced from the music. They realize that the sections which create a feeling of suspense sound like  my film compositions and they identify with the art somehow...even though they are too young to comprehend abstract thinking. When their friends sleep over and parents knock on the door to drop off their child...if Art Zoyd or Patricia Dallio are playing in the kitchen...it must stop immediately because if the parents hear the music they may find me questionable.

My greatest appreciation of the arts, is when i am alone. I find i like it best that way. I'm not totally against engaging with people when i listen to music, etc., but that full realisation of it is when i am alone.


Absolutely. I would not have it any other way. Maybe this is a large reason why I've been able to enjoy my own company all These years. Music listening has taught me so much. :) I'm with you on this one
I agree and when I became interested in Prog..I was alone. I miss the company of an ole' friend that shared the common interest with me. She was deeply interested in the Gong mythology...spending time outdoors studying the lyrics and listening to the entire catalog every week  She also liked Henry Cow and mostly anything underground/obscure. Yet...another good friend who was introduced to underground European Progressive music through his uncle who traveled to the U.S.from Germany and handed him over 2000 import albums. All 3 of us would arrange an event ,, just sitting for hours listening to the Popol Vuh collection  and music I had no knowledge of. I miss having friends like that and observing the world engaging with friends within a personal , but common interest , whether it be sports or television is a let down. The reason I am faced with this abandonment today has to do with the dated times I lived in and how it is naturally..socially dismissed.. within the bloodstream of society. Passing the album cover around, reading the lyrics, sharing insight with each other about the music,..that doesn't seem realistic anymore. Why are we so outnumbered? Why can't people be curious, daring, and take chances?  Clinging on to Nosferatu and nothing else feels as precious. The decades pass and still nothing surpasses it That feeling of isolation is present in the Classical world where you have 1 particular composer looking back to the history of another for education and overall influence. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 08:29
Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

It's so private for me. I don't want anyone to witness me listening to King Crimson's Islands...

My greatest appreciation of the arts, is when i am alone. I find i like it best that way. I'm not totally against engaging with people when i listen to music, etc., but that full realisation of it is when i am alone.


Absolutely. I would not have it any other way. Maybe this is a large reason why I've been able to enjoy my own company all These years. 
I agree and when I became interested in Prog..I was alone... 
 
 
What interests me is the opposite: How a seemingly private activity like listening to music or watching a film, etc., is actually a *social* activity.
 
While everyone above says that music is best appreciated when alone, we're all here on a social network site, sharing and talking about the music we love (and don't love).
 
Why is it that when we love something, we *yearn* to share it with others? "Listen to this, it's great!," we'll say to our parents or friends or co-workers (and rarely do they share our enthusiasm, haha). Finding music we love is, in a way, an attempt at communication, an impulse to reach out.
 
According to Marx, in a capitalist society it is *products* which mediates social relations. For example, a family that does something together gathers around a television set or gathers around a movie screen or goes out to eat at a restaurant. Or the proverbial watercooler in the office...
 
That is to say, we don't relate to each other directly (even with our closest friends or family members), but rather through the products that are in between us. (Furthermore, these products take on a 'halo', as though they were not humanly manufactured, but rather are almost mystical, magical. They're imbued with an almost fetishistic vibe: we collect them, talk about them, write about them, practically obsess over them: for us, our favorite band, our favorite songs and albums, our vinyl collections, posters, autographs, whatever.)
 
We don't have to agree with that. It's a way of seeing things though, in a different light,... which, like I said, I find rather interesting Smile


Edited by jude111 - June 05 2013 at 08:46
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 12:02
Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:

Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by progbethyname progbethyname wrote:

Originally posted by presdoug presdoug wrote:

Originally posted by TODDLER TODDLER wrote:


It's so private for me. I don't want anyone to witness me listening to King Crimson's Islands. I don't want their opinion or reaction as to why Boz sounds cheesy singing "Beneath the winter waves" or their sarcastic comments about the music not fitting to the times we are now living in. A majority of people in society constantly place emphasis on that and it's annoying. What physically and emotionally fell into place on the day Boz recorded the vocals for Islands is timeless in it's own right. I must have a certain mind set to even hear it.  White Willow has the same affect lyrically and the listening pleasure must be private and isolated....because I've noticed most people cringing at the sound of it. It's as if you end up answering a thousand questions if you broadcast the music in your living room while friends are over, put into a position to defend it and judged. If my kids hear Art Zoyd or Univers Zero, they have an understanding that it is quite like Classical music and dismiss any reaction of fear influenced from the music. They realize that the sections which create a feeling of suspense sound like  my film compositions and they identify with the art somehow...even though they are too young to comprehend abstract thinking. When their friends sleep over and parents knock on the door to drop off their child...if Art Zoyd or Patricia Dallio are playing in the kitchen...it must stop immediately because if the parents hear the music they may find me questionable.

My greatest appreciation of the arts, is when i am alone. I find i like it best that way. I'm not totally against engaging with people when i listen to music, etc., but that full realisation of it is when i am alone.
Absolutely. I would not have it any other way. Maybe this is a large reason why I've been able to enjoy my own company all These years. Music listening has taught me so much. :) I'm with you on this one


I agree and when I became interested in Prog..I was alone. I miss the company of an ole' friend that shared the common interest with me. She was deeply interested in the Gong mythology...spending time outdoors studying the lyrics and listening to the entire catalog every week  She also liked Henry Cow and mostly anything underground/obscure. Yet...another good friend who was introduced to underground European Progressive music through his uncle who traveled to the U.S.from Germany and handed him over 2000 import albums. All 3 of us would arrange an event ,, just sitting for hours listening to the Popol Vuh collection  and music I had no knowledge of. I miss having friends like that and observing the world engaging with friends within a personal , but common interest , whether it be sports or television is a let down. The reason I am faced with this abandonment today has to do with the dated times I lived in and how it is naturally..socially dismissed.. within the bloodstream of society. Passing the album cover around, reading the lyrics, sharing insight with each other about the music,..that doesn't seem realistic anymore. Why are we so outnumbered? Why can't people be curious, daring, and take chances?  Clinging on to Nosferatu and nothing else feels as precious. The decades pass and still nothing surpasses it That feeling of isolation is present in the Classical world where you have 1 particular composer looking back to the history of another for education and overall influence. 


Wow. You are lucky to have had those experiences with other people. I've never have had that and I love hearing about prog sharing like that. It is hard to be reminicient with prog in society these days. The only people I can talk to about the incredible depths of prog with only occur on this website for me. I am very alone in my prog world and it's taught me a lot.
It's nice to know, however, that their are many people including you (toddler) that feel the same way. I consider a lot of people my friends on this cite for the wonderful and insightful conversations we've had about the world of prog.
I am thankful for at least that.
Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 17:23
^right on! You people are meaningful to me, as well. My life has been enriched.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 17:38
Maybe that's the prog mind? 
Collective souls of sonic misfortune coalescing on the world wide web.
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 19:26
Oh no! Save us from the Prog hive-mind.
 
 
We Are the Porg
 
Renaissance is Futile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 19:31
LOL

WE ARE THE PORKStern Smile
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 20:22
^
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 05 2013 at 21:44
I'm laughing on the inside.
Gimmie my headphones now!!! 🎧🤣
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 06 2013 at 01:07
[QUOTE=Dean]Oh no! Save us from the Prog hive-mind.
 
 
We Are the Porg
 
Renaissance is Futile
[/QUOTE

....resistance is futile...
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