Conversations(2)_img1.gif Conversations
Checklist of patterns of behaviour and attitude inhibiting better dialogue:
Withholding relevant information to preserve advantage

Anecdotal distraction to attract attention inappropriately

Placement of irrelevant information in support of other agendas

Commitments made, possibly only for effect, that are readily forgotten

Uncritical belief in the meaningful convergence of the process

Inability to interrelate relevant perspectives

Time pressure on communication of relevant information

Misplaced concreteness obscuring subtler insights

Pressure of courtesy, protocol and due recognition -- undermining other content

Aesthetic attraction or repulsion inappropriately distorting the exchange

Remembrance of the past inhibiting emergence of the new

Enthusiastic focus on the new inhibiting ability to remember learnings of the past

Expectations of future advantage distorting effective engagement in the process

Inability to express meaningfully insights from other disciplines, languages, contexts, or modes of communication

Devaluation of subtler insights that briefly emerge, thus favouring dominance of the obvious

Inability to achieve reciprocity of pace and timing to ensure mutual entrainment in the dialogue process

Failure to appreciate significance carried by the symbolism of the moment

Frustration at priority accorded to other necessary perspectives

Impatience with the priorities of the moment and doubts regarding the opportunities of the occasion
The "Court" Jester and "Foolishness"
The fool, who was sitting beside the fire, heard these words, leapt to his feed came before the King, and skipped and danced for glee, saying I "Lord King", so God save me, your adventures now begin, and often you will find them perilous and hard ?
— Perceval, or the Story of the Grail
The court jester, the clown, the fool or the buffoon, is a mythic figure representing the inversion of the powers of the king (as the possessor of supreme powers) — or as his alter ego. He is therefore often the victim chosen in folklore as the substitute or foil for the king in rites whereby the people respond frankly and unceremoniously to such powers.
Court jesters were first recorded in the courts of the Egyptian pharaohs and were in vogue up until the 18th century in European courts, salons and taverns. They were often physically mishappen, if not also psychically disturbed. Ideally they were a powerful reminder of the distortion of the human condition — more immediate than the photographs disseminated via the media of today.
Additionally, due to the freedom front censure and responsibility for their actions which they were accorded, they were able to mirror! parody and mimic court situations in such a way as to bring out truths which would otherwise be collectively and carefully ignored. They were often masters of song and dance' and could be a dramatic foil to pomp, superficiality and falsehood of any kind. As an ambiguous and often an-drogynous figure, the jester could function as a powerful social catalyst—for good or for ill, depending upon the response of those by whom he was surrounded.
The fool is an enigmatic symbol of the point of crisis when the normal or conscious appears to become perverted or infirm, and in order to regain health and well-being is obliged to turn to the dangerous, the irrational, the preconscious and the abnormal. As such, the fool is to be found on the fringe of all orders and systems, outside all conventional categories, processes and social rules. He is the bridge between the conscious and the unconscious (and between the attributes of the right and left hemispheres of the brain) — a reminder that, after having failed in our effort to order and understand the universe in the hght of our intellect and instinct, there nevertheless remains another way.
Eliminating the jester from the covert Is as risky as allowing him to play his role. For. if "foolishness" is not given a channel through which to express itself, it seeks its own channel anyway. Parliamentary and international assemblies. particularly those in which each is conscious of the high purpose and seriousness of his role, run a considerable risk of incorporating distortion into their proceedings and results because of an inability to accept what a jester would reveal. (Political cartoons offer a partial remedy, but they lack the significance of being accepted as part of the proceedings and thus have little affect on them.)
It requires greater maturity on the part of all participants' especially the chairperson and principal speakers, to play their parts in the face of such instant feedback. In the absence of children at international assemblies, who can say whether our international emperors wear anv clothes?
Conversations(2)_img2.gif Phipp0
Introductions
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Conversations(2)_img3.gif Dialogue
Conversations(2)_img4.gif Shannon
Conversations(2)_img5.gif Jonathan Rowson
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Conversations(2)_img6.gif Yuli Hsu: Monkey King
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Story of the Monkey King
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Conversations(2)_img7.gif Chris Randle
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Conversations(2)_img8.gif Devon Lake
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Conversations(2)_img9.gif Victor
Conversations(2)_img10.gif Pedro Medina
Conversations(2)_img11.gif Natalie
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Conversations(2)_img12.gif Hobo's Little Helper
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Conversations(2)_img13.gif Yo
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Conversations(2)_img14.gif Kim
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Conceptual Art
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Facetnating
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Myles Duffy
Song- To the Men of England
by Percy Shelley
 
 
 
   
   
Men of England, wherefore plough
For the lords who lay ye low?
Wherefore weave with toil and care
The rich robes your tyrants wear?

Wherefore feed and clothe and save,
From the cradle to the grave,
Those ungrateful drones who would
Drain your sweat -nay, drink your blood?

Wherefore, Bees of England, forge
Many a weapon, chain, and scourge,
That these stingless drones may spoil
The forced produce of your toil?

Have ye leisure, comfort, calm,
Shelter, food, love's gentle balm?
Or what is it ye buy so dear
With your pain and with your fear?

The seed ye sow another reaps;
The wealth ye find another keeps;
The robes ye weave another wears;
The arms ye forge another bears.

Sow seed, -but let no tyrant reap;
Find wealth, -let no imposter heap;
Weave robes, -let not the idle wear;
Forge arms, in your defence to bear.

Shrink to your cellars, holes, and cells;
In halls ye deck another dwells.
Why shake the chains ye wrought? Ye see
The steel ye tempered glance on ye.

With plough and spade and hoe and loom,
Trace your grave, and build your tomb,
And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
England be your sepulchre!
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Brendan Miller
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David Borenstein
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Katie McKy
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Conversations(2)_img15.gif Neighbors
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Conversations(2)_img16.gif Roger Hyodo: The Word Made Flesh
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Conversations(2)_img17.gif Michael Krot
This is a visual timeline and cartography that starts with my first encounter with Michael and the web that was woven over time.
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"A map has no vocabulary, no lexicon of precise meanings. It communicates in lines, hues, tones, coded symbols, and empty spaces, much like music. Nor does a map have its own voice. It is many-tongued, a chorus reciting centuries of accumulated knowledge in echoed chants. A map provides no answers. It only suggests where to look: discover this, reexamine that, put one thing in relation to another, orient yourself, begin here...Sometimes a map speaks in terms of physical geography, but just as often it muses on the jagged terrain of the heart, the distant vistas of memory, or the fantastic landscapes of dreams."

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1/27
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2/14
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4/21
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5/3
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Conversations(2)_img18.gif Jody
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Conversations(2)_img19.gif Chris Aamot
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Conversations(2)_img20.gif Shakespeare Fellowship
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Conversations(2)_img21.gif Lisa Stefanac
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Conversations(2)_img22.gif Rafael Reyes