tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9045422995411367820.post8927405450083562825..comments2023-09-19T20:46:08.807+07:00Comments on Amor Fati by Roy Voragen: the body as text: the deterritorialization of the selfRoy Voragenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09502421053874129926noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9045422995411367820.post-33629610246192918782009-02-14T23:13:00.000+07:002009-02-14T23:13:00.000+07:00It is said, probably wrongly, that the Greeks had ...It is said, probably wrongly, that the Greeks had a fear of the infinite. I know that our culture does. Just ask someone if they believe in the actual infinite or only the possible infinite as a limiting idea. Few believe the former and they find the idea somehow fearsome. It is vertigo. We are control freaks. Cyber space is supposedly composed out of the stuff of finite analysis. The digital realm cannot hold the infinite. But maybe sending all those digits out into the serene azure sky does place them there in the Infinite. And they become lost in its fearsomeness. The truth is that almost nothing of what is sent out gets read. Our will is paralyzed by the silent magic of the limitless. Or maybe there are angels out in the shining ether that somehow read it and remember it. And maybe the angels will read it back to us later.The Ontological Nexushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17950312080786100753noreply@blogger.com