Dinesh's photos with the keyword: copied

Photography ~ Daugerreotypy

12 Feb 2014 1 202
www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/topic_display.cfm?tcid=51 The first photograph was an image recorded on a pewter plate by a Frenchman, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, in 1826. It showed the view from an upper story window in his home. Great strides in photography would not take place until the next decades, when Louis Daguerre created images on silver-plated copper, coated with silver iodide, which developed with mercury. In daguerreotypes, the images seem to float above the highly polished silver. At first, there was no agreement about what to call the process of capturing an image. Among the terms bandied about were daugerreotype, crystalotype, talbototype, colotype, crastalograph, panotype, hyalograth, ambrotype, and hyalotype. Ultimately, a new word won out—photography, which means writing with light. Daugerreotypy was a cumbersome and time consuming process. The biggest problem was that it was impossible to duplicate daguerreotypes. But by the end of the 1850s, the daugerreotype had been replaced by a new method of photography known as the wet plate process. A British photographer named Frederick S. Archer discovered that a glass plate coated with a mixture of silver salts and an emulsion made of collodion could record an image. The image had to be developed immediately, before the emulsion dried. But it was now possible for the first time to make unlimited prints from a negative. It was also possible for photographers to take pictures outside of a studio. (Excerpt from the above link)
20 Aug 2013 165
As perception becomes habitual, it becomes automatic….. In this process, ideally realized in algebra, things are replaced by symbols….. Habitualization devours work, cloths, furniture, one’s wife, and the fear of war. “If the whole complex lives of many people go on unconsciously, than such lives are as if they had never been.” And art exists that one may recover the sensation of life; it exists to make one feel things, to make the stone stony. The purpose of art is to impart the sensation of things as they are perceived and not as they are known. The technique is to make objects “unfamiliar” …… Art removes objects from the automatism of perception. ~ Victor Shklovsky ( Russian Formalist critic)

Gauthama

15 Jul 2013 146
americanveda.com/ Buddhism and Vedanta-Yoga have interacted and overlapped intimately in the lives of American practitioners, many of whom have drawn liberally from both. Each has helped to legitimize the other, smoothing the way to mutual acceptance in the West. Their compatibility makes sense, given the Buddhism is part of Vedic legacy. Siddhartha Gautama, the man we call Buddha, was brought up in northern India and became classic renunciate – a yogi, if you will. He was a reformer, much as Jesus was a reformer of the Hebric tradition, and the religion that developed in his name stands in relation to Hinduism as Christianity does to Judaism. Also like Christianity, Buddhism entranced in foreign lands even as it faded in its place of origin. ~ Page 4 (Introduction) American Veda by Philip Goldberg
14 Apr 2015 617
Aboutness is one of several concepts that may be grouped together, by a sort of family resemblanc, under the larger concept of teleology. Aboutness, functionality, representation, intentionality, value and meaningfulness are all teleological terms, That is they involve some telos (plural: tele), some end, goal, or purpose. ~ Page 10 "Nature is Enough" Author Loyal Rue

Walden cabin - sounds

The Time Paradox

28 Apr 2014 139
“The Three Little Pigs” is a story about the need to prepare for the future. the first little pig builds a house of straw. The big bad wolf huffs and puffs and blows the house down. He then eats the first little pig. The second little pig builds a house of sticks. It construction takes more planning and work than the first pig’s house of straw, but the wolf still manages to blow the house down. The wolf then eats the second pig. The third little pig, however, has more foresight and is more assiduous than his brothers. He builds a house of brick. The wolf can’t blow the house down. In more recent versions, the first two pigs are not eaten but instead move in with the third pig. In a commercial version, they kill the wolf and sell his fur. ~ Page 44