Information World
So what do we make of this? The end of the video concludes "Now You Know", but will the computers ever know? I guess not..
posted by jonathan even-zohar @ 21:49 7 comments
A strange compilation of genes, sensors, motological movement and traces of soul-emulation exists within my biosphere of bacteria, virusses, phenotypes, memes and pumping blood. I intend to survive in way that increases existential harmony, as it is recognised by I & I. I listen to music that depicts happyness, violence, love, hatred, compassion, depression, complexity, honesty, silence and shock.
News:
Google News
The Economist
Reuters
Israeli News
Arab News
Independent
Blogs:
Wasp Jerky
Crooked Timber
Duck of Minerva
Blog advertising
Cosmic Variance
Industrial Ecology
Think Progress
Machiruda
Trade Routes
Sporen
Under Progress
Super Sopraan
One Good Move
Dennis Fox
Suburban Guerilla
History:
Religion:
Photography:
Music:
All MusicExtra:
Me:
Jonathan Even-Zohar was born in 1982 in a hospital just outside of Tel-Aviv, the dune of spring. Already an intellectual at the age of five he amazed his mother and friends by pondering the meaning of life and death. However, being drawn towards Playmobil, television and computers he soon lost interest in these matters. It was after the Gulf War that his mother and boyfriend at the time decided to 'descend' from the Holy land and set sail towards The Hague, being the birthplace of Even-Zohars mother. Jonathan managed well in Grade school and High school, so the next logical step was the University, the infinite source of knowledge. After speculating on Industrial Design, Social Geography and Journalism it was the study of History at Leiden that turned out to be his decision. Now, four years into the study, matters have only become more complicated as this student advances towards World History; meaning the complete array of fields a historian may implement in explaining the entire past of the entire world to fellow men. It is especially the philosophical character of World History that attracted Jonathan. For him there is only one question that stands above all others like a lonely chuchtower in some Flemish village, which asks the cause of the Western Rise and the Industrial Revolution. Furthermore, the role of the European self- and worldimage throughout its history may explain the role of Europe in the Eurasian Human Web. Thus, the direct contact between Islam and Christianity is to be investigated. Were Muslims constantly on the verge of invading Europe? How did Arab people perceive the 'barbaric' Christians? How was Science spread and how did the West pick up knowledge form the Arabs or from further East? Europe and the Islam are still not at peace, certainly not in the mind.