2012.06.06 19:00 - Memory and Culture

    Version as of 04:29, 12 Jan 2025

    to this version.

    Return to Version archive.

    View current version

     

    The Guardian for this meeting was stevenaia Michinaga. The comments are by stevenaia Michinaga.

     

    druth Vlodovic, Santoshima Resident and Wol Euler joined me tonight

     

    stevenaia Michinaga: hi Druth
    druth Vlodovic: hi steve
    stevenaia Michinaga: how are things with you, we have a topic this week if it catches your interest... memory
    druth Vlodovic: yeah, I was just trying to remember why I play SL lol
    druth Vlodovic: hi san
    stevenaia Michinaga: lol, see
    Santoshima Resident: hi Druth and stevenaia :)
    stevenaia Michinaga: hi San
    Santoshima Resident: howdy
    stevenaia Michinaga: memory and reality, memory and time, or last night we tried "no memory"
    stevenaia Michinaga: harder to wrap your mind around that
    druth Vlodovic: "no memory"?
    druth Vlodovic: how does that work?
    stevenaia Michinaga: nods, not quite sure.. droping memory, observe what is there
    druth Vlodovic: ah, memory as noise
    stevenaia Michinaga: I suppose mindfulness is no memory
    stevenaia Michinaga: hi Wol
    Santoshima Resident: { whose little bird-like object? }
    Wol Euler: hello san, druth, stevie
    stevenaia Michinaga: Boxy
    Santoshima Resident: { oh }
    stevenaia Michinaga: it;s a penquin
    druth Vlodovic: hi wol


    --BELL--


    Santoshima Resident: hi Wol
    stevenaia Michinaga: can you add your thoughts to no memory Wol, you were here :)
    Wol Euler: hmmmm
    Wol Euler: I think the consensus was that "no memory" meant letting memories flow past you
    Wol Euler: like thoughts while meditating
    Wol Euler: not to hold on to them
    Wol Euler: not to be attached to them
    stevenaia Michinaga: watching memory
    Santoshima Resident: hmm, that doesn't make sense to me
    stevenaia Michinaga: like standing in the wind
    Santoshima Resident: having no memory isnt't the same as that
    Wol Euler: indeed
    Wol Euler: people who truly have no memory are in a bad way, often
    Santoshima Resident: yes
    Wol Euler: because identity has a lot to do with memory
    Wol Euler: (we thought)
    Santoshima Resident: sure
    Wol Euler: "no memory" is a kind of koan, a trigger for thought and experiment
    Wol Euler: like "no time"
    Wol Euler: people who say "no time" do still have diaries and calendars and pensions :)
    Santoshima Resident: mm
    druth Vlodovic: we were talking a while back about how our ancestors affect our identity, that requires buying in to a sort of historical memory
    Wol Euler listens.
    druth Vlodovic: some people think this is essential, while to others it is irrelevant
    stevenaia Michinaga: "buying"?
    stevenaia Michinaga: accepting?
    Wol Euler nods.
    stevenaia Michinaga: wouldn't not doing so deny past memories?
    stevenaia Michinaga: which are part of everyone
    Wol Euler: could you say that again without the double negative? :)
    Santoshima Resident: yeah, please
    stevenaia Michinaga: nods
    stevenaia Michinaga: would denying past memories deny a part of your makeup?
    Wol Euler: past as in "not mine"?
    stevenaia Michinaga: past as in ancestors
    Wol Euler smiles.
    stevenaia Michinaga: how can they not be yours
    Wol Euler: well, if it's true, then I have them and they affect me -- whether or not I believe in it
    stevenaia Michinaga: that;s how I feel
    Wol Euler: but I really wonder what that means, and how one could detect these ancestral memories
    Wol Euler: how to identify them?
    stevenaia Michinaga: look in the mirror
    stevenaia Michinaga: :)
    druth Vlodovic: by feeling the traditions that you absorbed into yourself as a child
    stevenaia Michinaga: they look back
    Wol Euler: or does it perhaps mean instinct, intuition?
    Wol Euler: oh, I see: culture as memory?
    Santoshima Resident: genetic makeup as memory
    stevenaia Michinaga: nods stories, fairy tales, history
    Wol Euler: hmmmmmmm
    Wol Euler: well, I suppose if you define "memory" loosely enough :)
    stevenaia Michinaga: or broadly enough
    Wol Euler nods.
    stevenaia Michinaga: collective memory
    Wol Euler: sec
    Wol Euler: back
    stevenaia Michinaga: wb
    Wol Euler: ty
    Wol Euler: I supose in that sense literature, history, culture … could all becalled "memory"
    Wol Euler: but I wonder if doing so doesn't make the word so hugely wide and sloppy as to be almost useless?
    Santoshima Resident: [ please excuse me ... work calls }
    Wol Euler: if you call that all "memory" then what is "that which I remember and which you do not"?
    Wol Euler: by e san, take care
    stevenaia Michinaga: bye san
    druth Vlodovic: cya san
    Santoshima Resident: bye ~ interesting ... see ya
    --BELL--
    druth Vlodovic: memory is partly interpretation as well, not simply facts brought forward
    stevenaia Michinaga: I find it amazing that billions of people all over the planet can even communicate and share in that memory (Human Culture)
    druth Vlodovic: I was reading an article that suggested that the emotional interpretation is the part that is stored most faithfully
    stevenaia Michinaga: in the individual or in the culture
    druth Vlodovic: so maybe interpreting the word "memory" too tightly makes it less useful
    Wol Euler: what is the benefit of stretching "memory" to include "culture"?
    Wol Euler: other than as an analogy?
    druth Vlodovic: "the past which still affects us"
    Wol Euler: … so why not use hte word "culture" for culture?
    druth Vlodovic: it's not all culture
    Wol Euler: nor is it all memory :)
    stevenaia Michinaga: allows new aslects of where it comes from to enter the definition, beyond the individual, so many things affects memory, wy cant those things be part of memory
    druth Vlodovic: I am different from many other people raised similarly to myself
    Wol Euler: of coruse
    Wol Euler: for instance, you have memories that htey do not
    Wol Euler: I do not remember your 7th birthday
    druth Vlodovic: but even the memories we share are different in our minds
    druth Vlodovic: and will change over time
    stevenaia Michinaga: like dreams
    Wol Euler: which is diffefrent then, I would say, to culture
    Wol Euler: Shakespeare is external to us, and permanent
    Wol Euler: your faulty memory of "Macbeth" does not make my memory faulty
    Wol Euler: and you could refresh your memory by consulting that external record
    stevenaia Michinaga: that is the nice thing about memory, it is rewriteable
    stevenaia Michinaga: or refreshab;e
    Wol Euler smiles.
    druth Vlodovic: "When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less."
    Wol Euler: then we could call it "eggplant" instead of "memory"
    Wol Euler: I'm sorry, I seem to be out of tune with the spirit of the session
    Wol Euler: excuse my pedantry :)
    druth Vlodovic: np
    Wol Euler: goodnight, I look forward to reading the rest of the discussion :)
    stevenaia Michinaga: I love eggplant
    druth Vlodovic: aww
    stevenaia Michinaga: night WOl
    druth Vlodovic: good night wol
    druth Vlodovic: and here I was just complaining to someone today how I dislike ambiguity
    stevenaia Michinaga: hehe, how do you live with yourself?
    druth Vlodovic: continuously :)
    stevenaia Michinaga: :)
    stevenaia Michinaga: ambiguity is the fuel of exploration
    stevenaia Michinaga: is my dress complete, I seem to be seeing white in my apha channels
    druth Vlodovic: "nothing is known for sure"
    druth Vlodovic: with your dresses i'm never sure of the definition of "complete"
    druth Vlodovic: it is relatively PG if that's what you mean
    stevenaia Michinaga: laughs, all the transparency appears white to me
    stevenaia Michinaga: what you see and what I see are different :)


    --BELL--


    stevenaia Michinaga: hmm, it's fixed for me now
    druth Vlodovic: yayy!
    druth Vlodovic: speaking of what wol was saying
    druth Vlodovic: I was reading a book by terry pratchett a while back, where a character was complaining about books
    druth Vlodovic: she was saying that most of them are written by dead people
    druth Vlodovic: so that would make reading them necromancy
    stevenaia Michinaga: hmm, strange perspective
    druth Vlodovic: lol
    druth Vlodovic: conflating the reading with interracting with the writer
    druth Vlodovic: since, in a way, it is a piece of their memory encased in paper
    stevenaia Michinaga: it is something that doesn;t really change, it jsut gets re-interperated
    druth Vlodovic: and the re-interpretations are often driven by culture
    druth Vlodovic: I'm sure I don't hear a play by shakespeare the same as a contemporary of his would
    druth Vlodovic: so even books change with time
    stevenaia Michinaga: es, with each now reader
    stevenaia Michinaga: new
    stevenaia Michinaga: or critic
    stevenaia Michinaga: just look at all the books that people wnat to ban
    druth Vlodovic: I was watching some retro cartoons on TV
    druth Vlodovic: amazing how different they look now
    druth Vlodovic: in some ways we're more open, and in some ways we have become rather strickter
    stevenaia Michinaga: nods, I neer knew "Mighty Mouse" was all opera sung dialogue until I was much older
    stevenaia Michinaga: *never
    druth Vlodovic: lol
    druth Vlodovic: a sneaky way to introduce culture to the masses
    stevenaia Michinaga: very smart
    druth Vlodovic: or maybe it is an indication that some things are eternal and we must learn to dislike them?
    stevenaia Michinaga: jsut not knowing what opera was in your youth, you miss things like that entirely
    druth Vlodovic: but in not knowing you were able to enjoy it
    stevenaia Michinaga: nods, and later enjoy it in new ways
    druth Vlodovic: if you've learned to like opera :)
    druth Vlodovic: I'm exploring an opinion quite opposite to my recent prejudices about art
    stevenaia Michinaga: I just learned what is was when I was young w/o a name
    stevenaia Michinaga: gets to "naming" things
    druth Vlodovic: and giving it a hostory
    druth Vlodovic: ah, the difference between "being" and "having an identity"
    stevenaia Michinaga: and a new memory
    druth Vlodovic: "identity" requires history, but "being" does not
    stevenaia Michinaga: nods


    --BELL--


    stevenaia Michinaga: I must be off .... thanks Druth, always a pleasure
    stevenaia Michinaga: waves

    Powered by MindTouch Core