Showing posts with label bornstein marguerita. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bornstein marguerita. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Hume argued that “reason alone can never be a motive to any action of the will.” Desire, for example, “arises not from reason.”


photo by marguerita

Hume was most concerned with the nature of knowledge, morality, causality
.

The Nature of Ideas

In this part, first David Hume divides all perception into ideas and impressions. He then argues that the simple impressions cause simple ideas, and from simple ideas form complex ideas, either restricted to the same order of the corresponding complex impressions (which are memories) or re-arranged in a new form (which is imagination). Descartes claimed that the only cause to the idea of God must be God himself, but according to Hume, God is a complex idea formed from simple ideas caused by simple impressions. Therefore, the idea of God neither requires God nor proves his existence.

Then Hume argues that general ideas are nothing but particular ideas attached to a certain word that gives it a wider application and makes it recall other individuals that are similar to it, for example we first see a particular man, then have an idea of this particular man, attach a word to this idea and then recall it when we see something similar (another man). Hume defends this view by 3 arguments - one of them is that the mind cannot think of a certain quality without the degree of that quality, such as a line without a length attached to it. Hence all ideas must have their particular degrees of qualities that therefore must be particular.

According to Hume it is through thinking of the resemblance of something with something else different in other aspects, for example we can consider the color of something only by thinking of the resemblance it has with something else of a different shape. Hume gives the example of a white marble globe and a black marble globe, one can think of the distinct shape by thinking of the resemblance between these two marble globes.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Treatise_of_Human_Nature#The_Nature_of_Ideas

About :

This book is a treatment of human cognition. It includes important statements of Skepticism and Hume's experimental method. Part 1 deals with the nature of ideas. Part 2 deals with the ideas of space and time. Part 3 deals with knowledge and probability. Part 4 deals with skeptical and other systems of philosophy, including a discussion of the soul and personal identity.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/07/opinion/07zaretsky.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=hume&st=Search

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Baudelaire et Moi: Paysage - Les Fleurs du Mal

drawing by marguerita
Je veux, pour composer chastement mes églogues,
Coucher auprès du ciel, comme les astrologues,
Et, voisin des clochers écouter en rêvant
Leurs hymnes solennels emportés par le vent.
Les deux mains au menton, du haut de ma mansarde,
Je verrai l'atelier qui chante et qui bavarde;
Les tuyaux, les clochers, ces mâts de la cité,
Et les grands ciels qui font rêver d'éternité.
II est doux, à travers les brumes, de voir naître
L'étoile dans l'azur, la lampe à la fenêtre
Les fleuves de charbon monter au firmament
Et la lune verser son pâle enchantement.
Je verrai les printemps, les étés, les automnes;
Et quand viendra l'hiver aux neiges monotones,
Je fermerai partout portières et volets
Pour bâtir dans la nuit mes féeriques palais.
Alors je rêverai des horizons bleuâtres,
Des jardins, des jets d'eau pleurant dans les albâtres,
Des baisers, des oiseaux chantant soir et matin,
Et tout ce que l'Idylle a de plus enfantin.
L'Emeute, tempêtant vainement à ma vitre,
Ne fera pas lever mon front de mon pupitre;
Car je serai plongé dans cette volupté
D'évoquer le Printemps avec ma volonté,
De tirer un soleil de mon coeur, et de faire
De mes pensers brûlants une tiède atmosphère.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Descartes and Moi:Les passions de l'âme,body,mind,emotions and spirit

drawing by marguerita

In the treatise Passions of the Soul (Les passions de l'âme), the last of Descartes' published work, completed in 1649 and dedicated to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia, the author contributes to a long tradition of theorizing "the passions." The passions were experiences often equated with or labeled as precursors to what are commonly called "emotions" in the Modern period. However, significant differences exist between what a passion putatively was and what an emotion allegedly is. For example, the passions, as suggested by the etymology of the word, were passive in nature; that is to say the experience of a passion was always caused by an object external to the subject. An emotion, as it is commonly rendered in both contemporary psychological discourse as well as popular culture, is usually explained as an event internal to, or taking place within, a subject. Therefore, an emotion is produced by the subject while a passion is suffered by the subject.

In the Passions of the Soul, Descartes defines these phenomena as follows: "perceptions or sensations or excitations of the soul which are referred to it in particular and which are caused, maintained, and strengthened by some movement of the spirits." The "spirits" mentioned here are the "animal spirits" central to Descartes's account of physiology. They function similarly to how the medical establishment now understands the nervous system. Descartes explains that the animal spirits are produced by the blood and are responsible for stimulating the body's movement.

By affecting the muscles, for example, the animal spirits "move the body in all the different ways in which it can be moved." from Wikipedia

P.S En passant, I remember watching an interview with Artur Rubinstein by Jim Lehrer on Channel 13,many years ago,when Jim asks the pianist,how much he practices and his thoughts about contemporary musicians: " I hardly practice,when I play make many mistakes, but I play avec l'âme" was his response.

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/aboutus/bio_lehrer.html


Saturday, April 23, 2011

Daohugou Spider Found,while checking out birth certificates,tsunamis and etc

drawing by marguerita

Nephila are large, conspicuous weavers of orb webs composed of golden silk, in tropical and subtropical regions. Nephilids have a sparse fossil record, the oldest described hitherto being Cretaraneus vilaltae from the Cretaceous of Spain. Five species from Neogene Dominican amber and one from the Eocene of Florissant, CO, USA, have been referred to the extant genus Nephila.
Here, we report the largest known fossil spider, Nephila jurassica sp. nov., from Middle Jurassic (approx. 165 Ma) strata of Daohugou, Inner Mongolia, China. The new species extends the fossil record of the family by approximately 35 Ma and of the genus Nephila by approximately 130 Ma, making it the longest ranging spider genus known.
Nephilidae originated somewhere on Pangaea, possibly the North China block, followed by dispersal almost worldwide before the break-up of the supercontinent later in the Mesozoic. The find suggests that the palaeoclimate was warm and humid at this time. This giant fossil orb-weaver provides evidence of predation on medium to large insects, well known from the Daohugou beds, and would have played an important role in the evolution of these insects.
http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2011/04/16/rsbl.2011.0228

The Daohugou Beds are a series of fossil-bearing rock deposits located in northeastern China, with the type locality around Daohugou village of Ningcheng County south of Chifeng, Inner mongolia, but extending into southwest Liaoning. The rocks are grey, finely bedded, lacustrine, sandy mudstones mixed with tuffaceous mudstones formed from the intermittent ashfall of volcanic events. The beds probably date from between the late middle Jurassic (168 million years ago) and early Late Jurassic[1] Period (164-152 million years ago).http://daohugou-beds.co.tv/

• Geology
• Scientific studies
• Fauna of the Daohugou Beds
◦ Amphibians
◦ Arthropods
◦ Dinosaurs
◦ Lepidosaurs
◦ Pterosaurs
◦ Synapsids
• References
• See also
Geology
The geology of the Daohugou Beds is confusing because it is complex and does not conform; meaning that elements and layers of rock of different ages are mixed up together by folding and erosion and by volcanic activity. Liu et al. (2006) concluded that the rocks that bear the Daohugou Biota also include the Tiaojishan and Lanqi Formations. They demonstrated that the Jiulongshan Formation is older (middle Jurassic), and that the Tuchengzi Formation is younger (Late Jurassic).
Fieldwork published in 2006 has also found that the beds are consistent over a large area; from western Liaoning into Ningcheng county of Inner mongolia (Nei Mongol).[2] The age of the Daohugou Beds has been debated, and a number of studies, using different methodologies, have reached conflicting conclusions. Various papers have placed the fossils here as being anywhere from the middle Jurassic period (169 million years ago) to the Early Cretaceous period (122 ma).[3]

Scientific studies
A 2004 study by He et al. on the age of the Daohugou Beds found them to be Early Cretaceous, probably only a few million years older than the overlying Jehol beds of the Yixian Formation.[4] The 2004 study primarily used radiometric dating of a tuff within the Daohugou Beds to determine its age. However, a subsequent study by Gao & Ren took issue with the He et al. study. Gao and Ren criticize He et al. for not including enough specifics and detail in their paper, and also take issue with their radiometric dating of the Daohugou tuff. The tuff, Gao and Ren argue, contains crystals with a variety of diverse radiometric ages, some up to a billion years old, so using dates from only a few of these crystals cannot determine the overall age of the deposits. Gao and Ren go on to defend a Middle Jurassic age for the beds based on biostratigraphy (the use of index fossils) and the bed's relationship to a layer that is known to mark the Middle Jurassic-Late Jurassic boundary.[5]
Another study, published in 2006 by Wang et al., found that the Tiaojishan Formation (159-164 million years old, Middle-early Late Jurassic in age) underlies, rather than overlies, the Daohugou Beds. Unlike the earlier study by Gao and Ren, Wang et al. found an overall similarity between the fossil animals found in the Daohugou Beds and those from the Yixian Formation. The authors stated that
"vertebrate fossils such as Liaoxitriton, Jeholopterus and feathered maniraptorans show much resemblance to those of the Yixian Formation. In other words, despite the absence of Lycoptera, a typical fish of the Jehol Biota, the Daohugou vertebrate assemblage is closer to that of the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota than to any other biota."
Wang et al. concluded that the Daohugou probably represents the earliest evolutionary stages of the Jehol Biota, and that it "belongs to the same cycle of volcanism and sedimentation as the Yixian Formation of the Jehol Group."[2] However, a later study by Ji et al. argued that the key indicator of the Jehol biota are the index fossils peipiaosteus and Lycoptera. Under this definition, the earliest evolutionary stage of the Jehol Biota is represented by the Huajiying Formation, and the Daohugou Formation is excluded due to the absence of Lycoptera fossils.[6] Later in 2006, Liu et al. published their own study of the age of the Daohugou beds, this time using Zircon U-Pb dating on the volcanic rocks overlying and underlying salamander-bearing layers (salamanders are often used as index fossils). Liu et al. found that the beds formed between 164-158 million years ago, in the Middle to Late Jurassic.[1]

Fauna of the Daohugou Beds
Beautifully preserved fossils of dinosaurs, pterosaurs, salamanders, insects, other invertebrates, conifers, ginkgoes, cycads, horsetails, and ferns, and even the earliest known gliding mammal (Volaticotherium) and an aquatic protomammal (Castorocauda) have been discovered in these rocks. These organisms were part of the Daohugou Biota, which was the ecosystem of that Jurassic time. The tuffaceous composition of some rock layers show that this was a volcanic area, occasionally experiencing heavy ashfalls from eruptions. The landscape then was dominated by mountain streams and deep lakes surrounded by forests of gymnosperm trees.[7] Some authors have concluded that the Daohugou Biota is an early stage of the Jehol Biota, while recent work has demonstrated that the two are distinct.
The forests of the Daohugou biota grew in a humid, warm - temperate climate and were dominated by gymnosperm trees. There were ginkgopsids like Ginkoites, Ginkgo, Baiera, Czekanowskia, and Phoenicopsis. There were also conifers like Pityophyllum, Rhipidiocladus, Elatocladus, Schizolepis, and Podozamites. Also, Lycopsids like Lycopodites and Sellaginellities, horsetails (sphenopsida) like Equisetum, cycads like Anomozamites, and ferns (Filicopsida) like Todites and Coniopteris.[8]

Amphibians

Amphibians of the Daohugou Beds
Genus
Species
State
Abundance
Notes
Jeholotriton
J. paradoxus


Wang, 2000''
Chunerpeton
C. tianyiensis


Gao & Shubin, 2003
Liaoxitriton
L. daohugouensis


Wang, 2004
pangerpeton
P. sinensis


Wang & Evans, 2006

Arthropods
The following orders are represented in the formation; Ephemeroptera, odonata, plecoptera, Blattodea, orthoptera, Heteroptera, Homoptera, Neuroptera, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, and Diptera.

Insects of the Daohugou Beds
Genus
Species
State
Abundance
Notes
Ahirmoneura
A. neimengguensis[9]
Inner mongolia

A tangle-veined fly
Archirhagio
A. striatus[10]


Archisargid flies
A. zhangi[11]
Inner Mongolia

Archisargus
A. spurivenius[10]


Archisargid flies
A. strigatus[10]


Calosargus
C. (Calosargus) antiquus[10]


Archisargid flies
C. (C.) bellus[10]


C. (C.) daohugouensis[10]


C. (C.) hani[10]


C. (C.) tenuicellulatus[10]


C. (C.) validus[10]


C. (Pterosargus) sinicus[10]
Inner Mongolia

Daohugocorixa
D. vulcanica[10]


A water boatman
Fuyous
F. gregarious[10]


A mayfly
Eoplectreurys
E. gertschi[12]

1 Specimen
A plectreurid spider
Jurassinemestrinus
J. orientalis[10]
Inner Mongolia

A Nemestrinoid fly
meoslova
M. daohugouensis[10]


An archisargid fly
mostovskisargus
M. portentosus[10]
Inner Mongolia

Archisargid flies
M. signatus[10]
Inner Mongolia

shantous
S. lacustris[10]


A mayfly

Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs (including birds) of the Daohugou Beds
Genus
Species
State
Abundance
Notes
Images
Epidendrosaurus
E. ninchengensis
Inner mongolia
One specimen
A scansoriopterygid probably synonymous with Scansoriopteryx heilmanni

Epidexipteryx
E. hui
Inner Mongolia
One specimen
A scansoriopterygid
''pedopenna
P. daohugouensis
Inner Mongolia
One specimen
A primitive paravian
scansoriopteryx
S. heilmanni

One or two specimens
A scansoriopterygid. Exact provenance of type specimen unknown, most likely from the Daohugou Beds[2]

Lepidosaurs

Lepidosaurs (lizards and relatives) of the Daohugou Beds
Genus
Species
State
Abundance
Notes
Images
Unnamed lizard[13]

Inner Mongolia
One specimen
A new lizard with relatively short forelimbs
Unnamed lizard[13]

Inner Mongolia
One specimen
A new lizard with long hind limbs and a narrow body

Pterosaurs

pterosaurs of the Daohugou Beds
Genus
Species
State
Abundance
Notes
Images
Jeholopterus
J. ninchengensis
Inner mongolia
Several specimens[14][15]
An anurognathid

pterorhynchus
P. wellnhoferi
Inner Mongolia
One specimen[14]
A rhamphorhynchid
Wukongopterus
W. lii
Liaoning
One specimen[16]
A rhamphorhycnhoid

Synapsids

synapsids of the Daohugou Beds
Genus
Species
State
Abundance
Notes
Images
Castorocauda
C. lutrasimilis
Inner mongolia
One specimen[17]
Aquatic docodont

Volaticotherium
V. antiquum
Inner Mongolia
One specimen
A gliding mammal

References

See also
• Yixian Formation
• Jehol Biota
• List of fossil sites (with link directory)



Saturday, April 9, 2011

Sweet &Funky series : Life is a Splendorous Thing

drawing/collage by marguerita
currently at the http://www.kentlergallery.org/pages/11Benefit/2011benefitArt.html



By ratnaveera

Owl Butterfly

Blue Morpho


Amazon rainforests are the home for more than 25 millions of different species of insects. Warm climate with heavy rainfalls result into abundant vegetation in most part of the region make favorable conditions for the growth and reproduction of millions of species of insects. It is estimated that one acre of Amazon rainforest contains more than 70,000 species of insects. Even a single tree of the forest may contain about 50 number of different species of insects. The 100 million year old rainforest is the reason for being most biodiverse on the earth.http://hubpages.com/hub/SOME-IMPORTANT-SPECIES-OF-INSECTS-IN-AMAZON-RAINFORESTS
http://www.learnaboutbutterflies.com/Amazon%20-%20Cithaerias%20phantoma.htm

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Oil in the Name of Love: War!

drawing by marguerita
Hillary Rodham Clinton found herself juggling the inconsistencies of American foreign policy in a turbulent Middle East.
She criticized the foreign minister of the United Arab Emirates for sending troops to quash protests in Bahrain even as she pressed him to send planes to intervene in Libya.

Multimedia

Saturday, March 12, 2011

The Mind: Where are You?

drawing by marguerita Nondeliberate emotion, perception and intuition are much more important in shaping our lives than reason and will.....?

The main idea is that there are two levels of the mind,
one unconscious and the other conscious,
and that the first is much more important than the second in determining what we do.
It must be said immediately that Brooks has a terminological problem here. He describes the contents of the unconscious mind as “emotions, intuitions, biases, longings, genetic predispositions, character traits and social norms,” and later he includes “sensations, perceptions, drives and needs.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/13/books/review/book-review-the-social-animal-by-david-brooks.html

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Of DeProfundis,Soul ,a Monologue d'apres Wilde



photos by marguerita

I, and such as I am, have hardly any right to air and sun. Our presence taints the pleasures of others. We are unwelcome when we reappear. To revisit the glimpses of the moon is not for us.

Our very children are taken away.

Those lovely links with humanity are broken. We are doomed to be solitary, while our sons still live.
. We are denied the one thing that might heal us and keep us, that might bring balm to the bruised heart, and peace to the soul in pain. . .

.I must say to myself that I ruined myself, and that nobody great or small can be ruined except by his own hand. I am quite ready to say so. I am trying to say so, though they may not think it at the present moment.
Terrible as was what the world did to me, what I did to myself was far more terrible still.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Of Sex and Gropes and Tango Wrath

collage by marguerita

The reason is obvious in retrospect.

Vines can be propagated by breaking off a shoot and sticking it in the ground,or onto existing rootstock. The method gives uniform crops, and most growers have evidently used it for thousands of years.

The result is that cultivated grapes remain closely related to wild grapes,apart from a few improvements in berry size and sugar content, and a bunch of new colors favored by plant breeders.

Cultivated grapes have almost as much genetic diversity as wild grapes.But because there has been very little sexual reproduction over the last eight millenniums, this diversity has not been shuffled nearly enough. The purpose of sex, though this is perhaps not widely appreciated, is recombination, the creation of novel genomes by taking some components from the father’s and some from the mother’s DNA.

Thus merlot is intimately related to cabernet franc, which is a parent of cabernet sauvignon, whose other parent is sauvignon blanc, the daughter of traminer, which is also a progenitor of pinot noir, a parent of chardonnay.

This web of interrelatedness is evidence that the grape has undergone very little breeding since it was first domesticated, Dr. Myles and his co-authors report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The new combinations of genes provide variation for evolution to work on, and in particular they let slow-growing things like plants and animals keep one step ahead of the microbes that prey on them.

The grapevine fell extinct through much of Europe in the phylloxera epidemic of the 19th century. The French wine industry recovered from this disaster only by grafting French scions, as the grape’s shoots are called, onto sturdy American rootstock resistant to the phylloxera aphid.Despite that close call, grape growers did not rush to breed disease resistance into their vines.

One obstacle is that wine drinkers are attached to particular varieties, and if you cross a chardonnay grape with some other variety, it cannot be called chardonnay.

In many wine-growing regions there are regulations that let only a specific variety be grown, lest the quality of the region’s wine be degraded. More than 90 percent of French vineyards are now planted with clones — genetically identical plants — certified to possess the standard qualities of the variety.

The consequence of this genetic conservatism is that a host of pests have caught up with the grape, obliging growers to protect their vines with a deluge of insecticides, fungicides and other powerful chemicals.

This situation cannot be sustained indefinitely, in Dr. Myles’s view. “Someday, regulatory agencies are going to say ‘No more,’ ” he said. “Europeans are gearing up for the day, which will come earlier there than in the U.S., for laws that reduce the amount of spray you can put on grapes.”

At that point growers will have three options. One is to add genes for pest resistance, risking consumer resistance to genetically modified crops. A second is to go organic, which may be difficult for a plant as vulnerable as the grape. A third is to breed sturdier varieties.Breeding new grapes takes time and money.

The grower has to plant a thousand seedlings, wait three years for them to mature, and then select the few progeny that have the desired traits. But a new kind of plant breeding now offers hopes of an efficient shortcut.The new method depends on gene chips, like the one developed by Dr. Myles, that test young plants for the desired combination of traits. The breeder can thus discard 90 percent of seedlings from a cross, without waiting three years while they grow to maturity.


http://www.arlindo-correia.com/060904.html

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Blue and Snow d'apres Derrida



photos by marguerita



(dē'kən-strŭk'shən)
n.
A philosophical movement and theory of literary criticism that questions traditional assumptions about certainty, identity, and truth; asserts that words can only refer to other words; and attempts to demonstrate how statements about any text subvert their own meanings: "In deconstruction, the critic claims there is no meaning to be found in the actual text, but only in the various, often mutually irreconcilable, 'virtual texts' constructed by readers in their search for meaning" (Rebecca Goldstein).

deconstructive de'con·struc'tive adj.
deconstructionism de'con·struc'tion·ism n.
deconstructionist de'con·struc'tion·ist n. & adj.
Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/deconstruction#ix


Monday, December 27, 2010

Blue and Snow in New York



sculptures and photos by marguerita

“The world has not come to an end,”

Mr. Bloomberg said at a news briefing.New York was a city of apocalyptic silence in the morning. The choreography of traffic, commuter trains and pedestrian hordes was missing. In its place, a plow scraped by now and then and a car or two churned past on deserted thoroughfares. Cabs were a myth. Side streets were impassable, and people muffled to the eyes slogged over huge drifts and mountains of curbside snow, trying to keep their footing.

By late morning, the sun broke through and the skies cleared to pristine blue.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/28/nyregion/28snow.html?hp

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Of TEMPO,Time,Spent,Wasted,Thoughts in Search of Love, my Husband calls Convenience ?

drawing by marguerita


Sitting here alone, a curious flashback crosses my mind.TEMPO, an exhibit that was taking place in Rome ,years ago, when I had a chance to visit.I had missed my original destination,which was to see Hadrian's gardens in Tivoli.The day we got there was raining and my younger son,Jacob was cranky and crying.
The books that Marguerite Yourcenar wrote,I still may have, and not ever finished reading.Hadrian's Villa remains in Tivoli and in the book pages I keep looking at,on and off.
TEMPO,the exhibit I did not see,but I still remember the flavor of the coffee at the restaurant near the hotel we were staying.
TEMPO,that word devours me.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Of All We Need Is LoveandIt’s about going back to the roots of things, what we have in our bodies, the primitive Energy.

drawing by marguerita


d'apres Oncle Boonmee celui qui se souvient de ses vies du cinéaste thaïlandais Apichatpong Weerasethakul est une invitation
au voyage intérieur
et aux doux songes d’une nuit d’été.

Le spirituel est en nous et dans tout, semble nous dire Joe et il faut s’abandonner aux forces mystiques de la nuit

You must remember this
A kiss is still a kiss
A sigh is just a sigh
The fundamental things apply
As time goes by

And when two lovers woo
They still say, I love you
On this you can rely
No matter what the future brings
As time goes by

Moonlight and love songs
Never out of date
Hearts full of passion
Jealousy and hate
Woman needs man
And man must have his mate
On this you can deny

It's still the same old story
A fight for love and glory
A case of do or die
The world will always welcome lovers
As time goes by

Moonlight and love songs
Never out of date
Hearts full of passion
Jealousy and hate
Woman needs man
And man must have his mate
On this you can deny

You must remember this
A kiss is still a kiss
A sigh is just a sigh
The fundamental things apply
As time goes by


More lyrics: http://www.lyricsmode.com/lyrics/f/frank_sinatra/#share

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Of Life,of The Mind, Soul,Anger and Inner Peace and Bodhicitta

drawing collage by marguerita



"Let's say you're dealing with the development of patience.

We all get angry and we all recognize that anger is terrible,, but people start with the premise that
"I'm angry, that's the way I am."
First of all you have to be interested in diminishing your anger, and then you analyze how monstrous it is, how that moment of anger that you recently experienced is so awful it made it impossible for you to sleep that night, and all the people around you really, really dislike you.

Looking at yourself calmly
makes you recognize how ugly anger is—and as we study the laws of cause and effect and the laws of karma, every moment of anger leads you to more anger. You're more prone to lose your temper as you let go of that muscle of patience. You can get angry more and more easily. It makes you unhappy, it makes your environment unhappy, it makes people not really want to be friendly with you. As the Dalai Lama says, your digestive system starts to go and all sorts of problems arise.

We cannot expect to control our anger when we are confronted, but we can work on it when we're calm. The development of the muscle in that situation enables us to actually restrain ourselves. Our threshold has been moved to another place.
We just don't get angry."


In India, you wait in line. There are often situations where you have to wait, and it's funny, it's life, you enjoy it, you have a cup of tea while you're waiting for something. And you come back to America and you see people incapable of waiting for things and you realize that by means of experience, you've become a little more patient. And if you can think about those little things, that in itself shows you that patience is not a given, but it's something we can actually work on.

Nicholas Vreeland

Monday, May 17, 2010

El todo y la nada y su absoluta razón de Ser

drawing collage by marguerita


"Aquí trato de mostrar a alguien que quiere sobrevivir en su mundo y que no quiere perder lo último que le queda: el amor".

Película molesta, película áspera y sin atisbo de concesiones que revuelve las tripas por la vía de los naufragios familiares y sentimentales, Biutiful es, según su director, "lo mismo que Babel solo que en un único lugar, una historia sencilla de la que

he tratado de extraer toda la complejidad posible, una historia donde

la noción de perdón es la clave de todo... porque es eso lo que nos falta en el mundo de hoy, el perdón, no hay más que ver el terrorismo, el odio con que se mata.
Y frente a todo eso, este personaje es todo lo contrario, está lleno de esperanza... creo que es mi película más llena de esperanza". ¿Esperanza?

"In this world we are living of twitting and e-mailing ... this film is a truly intimate experience," he said.

"And intimacy it's now the new punk — it's provocative, it provokes people."

Sunday, May 16, 2010

You Will Enjoy Razor Sharp Spiritual Vision Today

drawing collage by marguerita

El cerebro de Woody Allen permanece sin sombra de esclerosis, tan afilado y potente como siempre. También su comprensión de todos los anhelos, miedos, miserias, engaños y grandezas de la condición humana.

http://www.elpais.com/articulo/cultura/Woody/Allen/divierte/Mike/Leigh/conmueve/elpepicul/20100516elpepicul_2/Tes


Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Of Heartstrings, Orgasm,Drizzles and Of Substantive Views

watercolor by marguerita

inspiration to create Peabirus logo in Brazil


Marguerita Bornstein é a artista que criou a aquarela que sintetiza os objetivos
das redes de colaboração, conhecimento negócios do PEABIRUS. “Desde os meus tempos no Brasil, de fato desde meus anos de adolescente, já pensava em criar uma marca, uma grife MARGUERITA, em Moda, Cama e Mesa e etc. Só que preciso de um parceiro, um backer, para a administração comercial para implementar meus concepts e me ajudar no marketing.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Of,Frazzles,Thoughts about in the Wind, Sondheim,Emotions, Real World

drawing by marguerita

A ntidepressants and performance-enhancing drugs, from steroids to mental stimulants toViagra, are modifying human behavior. Replaceable body parts, plastic surgery and gender re-assignment

are

undermining the traditional idea of the individual as a being with a

singular identity and destiny. Hand-held devices have turned us into

robotic mobile power stations continually transmitting and receivinginformation in computer language that has seeped into pop songs.


These developments are profoundly antithetical to the dream of sadly


civilized enlightenment evoked by Mr. Sondheim’s songs.


In this emerging world, the truth of existence is rooted more in


quantifiable physical reality than in ideas and emotions.


Musically it is embodied in hard digital beats and in performances

staged as competitive sports events.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/01/arts/music/01sondheim.html?pagewanted=2&hpw