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- Message-ID: <224314Z17091994@anon.penet.fi>
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- From: an24218@anon.penet.fi (Charles Vartime)
- Date: Sat, 17 Sep 1994 22:41:15 UTC
- Subject: Visions of Fractals
-
- As a literary genre, the description of psychedelic experience is
- notoriously unfulfilling if not altogether unreadable. A few
- exceptions stand out. One of the better efforts is Alan Watts' 1962
- book _The Joyous Cosmology_, which somehow manages to capture the
- absurd beauty and incredible silliness that become manifest under the
- influence. Watts was known mostly as an expositor of eastern
- religions, so the book leans towards Buddhist and Hindu imagery. In
- terms of actual images, the book includes a good many photographs of
- natural patterns such as wood grain, the surface of a brain coral,
- butterfly markings, and the fractal pattern of veins on a leaf. This
- last image in particularly struck me while recently leafing (ahem)
- through the book. Apparently fractal imagery has always appealed to
- the drug-influenced mind, and this appeal predates the current
- mathematical interest. Some quotes from the book make this even
- clearer:
-
- "To make this book as complete an expression as possible of the
- quality of consciousness which these drugs induce, I have included a
- number of photographs which, in their vivid reflection of the patterns
- of nature, give some suggestion of the rhythmic beauty of detail which
- the drugs reveal in common things. For without losing their normal
- breadth of vision the eyes seem to become a microscope through which
- the mind delves deeper and deeper into the intricately dancing texture
- of our world." [form the Preface]
-
- "More and more it seems that the ordering of nature is an art akin to
- music -- fugues in shell and cartilage, counterpoint in fibers and
- capillaries, throbbing rhythm in waves of sound, light, and nerve...
- closed-eye fantasies in this world seem sometimes to be revelations of
- the secret workings of the brain, of the associative and patterning
- processes, the ordering systems which carry out all our sensing and
- thinking ... they are for the most part ever more complex variations
- upon a theme -- ferns sprouting ferns sprouting ferns in
- multi-dimensional spaces, vast kaleidoscopic domes of stained glass or
- mosaic, or patterns like the models of highly intricate molecules --
- systems of colored balls, each one of which turns out to be a
- multitude of smaller balls, forever and ever. Is this, perhaps, an
- inner view of the organizing process which, when the eyes are open,
- makes sense of the world even at points where it appears to be
- supremely messy?"
-
- I just find it interesting that someone with no scientific background
- was intuitively aware -- in an altered state -- of recursive geometry
- more than 30 years ago. Speaking of science, I find that writing like
- this, for all of its faults, captures far more of the *scientifically*
- interesting things about drugs than all that tedious chemistry. It's
- the mind, people, not the molecules.
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