I begin with the unspeakable, because the possibility of
its communication is the task of this research, and
because the unspeakable has many dimensions.
To argue about what reality is or isn’t, when
reality is the standard by which we decide
what is and what isn’t, is a slippery proposition,
as circular and self-referential as consciousness
attempting to study itself. And who is the Authority
on what is real? Is it a fundamental right of a conscious
being to say—this is what is real for me, at this moment in time,
subject to future revision? I expose my position as
a cognitive libertarian by posing these questions.
The bizarre combination of these fragile bodies
with fragments of memes from that volatile hyperspace
certainly taught me about the parallel narratives present outside of time,
and about art and how image and text can combine to evoke
emotions far bigger than what they represent
Perception, reflection, and projection are intertwined
faculties of consciousness that are implicated in reality-formation.
Extensions of perception are described as features of the invisible landscape.