20 setembro 2009






Uma ilha chamada ________ flutua no mar, feita inteiramente de coral. Não é coral natural, mas uma mutação biogenética de coral que produz o seu próprio oxigénio, uma bolha de oxigénio que torna possível a autosustentação da ilha. Nesta ilha não existe controlo, nem contrato social, nada. És livre de fazer o que quiseres. Mas no final da juventude, és convidado a ir para dentro de um buraco, no centro de ________ e atravessar o coral. Tens que descer 200 metros até à parte de baixo da ilha para sentires directamente, fisicamente, fenomelogicamente, a fragilidade do seu sistema. Finalmente, quando regressas, a continuidade desta existência baseia-se na consciência dessa fragilidade.

Nota a - 2005 ( história que me contou um australiano do qual não me lembro )

18 setembro 2009

Choosing Unknown Future Promises from a Present Singular Point


...Much light may be thrown on some of these questions by consideration of stability and instability. When the state of things is such that an infinitely small variation of the present state will alter only by an infinitely small quantity the state at some future rime, the condition of the system, whether it is at rest or in motion, is said to be stable; but when an infinitely small variation in the present state may bring about a finite difference in the state of the system in a finite time, the condition of the system is said to be unstable. It is manifest that the existence of unstable conditions renders impossible the prediction of future events, if our knowledge of the present state is only approximate and not accurate.. It has been well pointed out by Professor Balfour Stewart that physical stability is the characteristic of those systems from the contemplation of which determinists draw their arguments, and physical instability that of those living bodies, and moral instability that of those developable souls, which furnish to consciousness the conviction of free will. Having thus pointed out some of the relations of physical science to the question, we are the better prepared to inquire what is meant by determination and what by free will. No one, I suppose, would assign to free will a more than infinitesimal range. No leopard can change his spots, nor can any one by merely wishing it, or, as some say, willing it, introduce discontinuity into his course of existence. Our free will at the best is like that of Lucretius's atoms,---which at quite uncertain times and places deviate in an uncertain manner from their course. In the course of this our moral life we more or less frequently find ourselves on a physical or moral watershed, where an imperceptible deviation is sufficient to determine into which of two valleys we shall descend. The doctrine of free will asserts that in some such cases the Ego alone is the determining cause. The doctrine of Determinism asserts that in every case, without exception, the result is determined by the previous conditions of the subject, whether bodily or mental, and that Ego is mistaken in supposing himself in any way the cause of the actual result, as both what he is pleased to call decisions and the resultant action are corresponding events due to the same fixed laws... The subject of the essay is the relation to determinism, not of theology, metaphysics, or mathematics, but of physical science,---the science which depends for its material on the observation and measurement of visible things, but which aims at the development of doctrines whose consistency with each other shall be apparent to our reason... For example, the rock loosed by frost and balanced on a singular point of the mountain-side, the little spark which kindles the great forest, the little word which sets the world a fighting, the little scruple which prevents a man from doing his will, the little spore which blights all the potatoes, the little gemmule which makes us philosophers or idiots. Every existence above a certain rank has its singular points: the higher the rank the more of them. At these points, influences whose physical magnitude is too small to be taken account of by a finite being, may produce results of the greatest importance. All great results produced by human endeavor depend on taking advantage of these singular states when they occur.
    There is a tide in the affairs of men
    Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.
The man of tact says "the right word at the right time," and, "a word spoken in due season how good is it!" The man of no tact is like vinegar upon nitre when he sings his songs to a heavy heart. The ill-timed admonition hardens the heart, and the good resolution, taken when it is sure to be broken, becomes macadamised into pavement for the abyss. It appears then that in our own nature there are more singular points,---where prediction, except from absolutely perfect data, and guided by the omniscience of contingency, becomes impossible,---than there are in any lower organisation. But singular points are by their very nature isolated, and form no appreciable fraction of the continuous course of our existence. Hence predictions of human conduct may be made in many cases. First, with respect to those who have no character at all, especially when considered in crowds, after the statistical method. Second with respect to individuals of confirmed character, with respect to actions of the kind for which their character is confirmed. If, therefore, those cultivators of physical science from whom the intelligent public deduce their conception of the physicist, and whose style is recognised marking with a scientific stamp the doctrines they promulgate, are led in pursuit of the arcana of science to the study of the singularities and instabilities, rather than the continuities and stabilities of things, the promotion of natural knowledge may tend to remove that prejudice in favour of determinism which seems to arise from assuming that the physical science of the future is a mere magnified image of that of the past.


James Clerk Maxwell

17 setembro 2009

16 setembro 2009

15 setembro 2009

14 setembro 2009







M.Moniz 

Atrás do centro comercial, um dos muito velhos nunca sintoniza completamente o rádio que está sempre a ouvir. Quando fala, também não.

04 setembro 2009



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Christiania, Kobenhavn

03 setembro 2009



Daily violins

02 setembro 2009



PINÓQUIO



Hey, buy me a postcard...
What is it? Olhou para cima, pegou num cilindro de madeira, equilibrou-o no nariz e soprou numa harmónica aleatoriamente. A performance durou uns 10 segundos, antes da madeira cair-lhe na mão. Olhei para o postal e dei-lhe o euro. Na imagem reconheci o Sarphati Park. Ri-me da madeira equilibrada no nariz, virtualmente para sempre.