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This is from Philip K. Dick's essay How To Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later
TV viewing is a kind of sleep-learning. An EEG of a person watching TV shows that after about half an hour the brain decides that nothing is happening, and it goes into a hypnoidal twilight state, emitting alpha waves. This is because there is such little eye motion. In addition, much of the information is graphic and therefore passes into the right hemisphere of the brain, rather than being processed by the left, where the conscious personality is located. Recent experiments indicate that much of what we see on the TV screen is received on a subliminal basis. We only imagine that we consciously see what is there. The bulk of the messages elude our attention; literally, after a few hours of TV watching, we do not know what we have seen. Our memories are spurious, like our memories of dreams; the blank are filled in retrospectively. And falsified. We have participated unknowingly in the creation of a spurious reality, and then we have obligingly fed it to ourselves.
(via BoingBoing)
Posted by at September 19, 2004 09:52 PM | TrackBack"Time is speeding up. And to what end? Maybe we were told that two thousand years ago. Or maybe it wasn't really that long ago; maybe it is a delusion that so much time has passed. Maybe it was a week ago, or even earlier today. Perhaps time is not only speeding up; perhaps, in addition, it is going to end."
This of course reminds us of Terence McKenna.
Also see Terence's "I understand Philip K. Dick" at http://www.sirbacon.org/dick.htm
Let me contribute one of my super-short stories. It is about that which I envision will happen to us. It makes no sense but most of the stuff I write makes no sense.
http://www.spybreak.de/static/2004.9/on_words.jpg
ah, now i see why this essay of PKD's has been getting so much airplay lately. its one of my all time favorites and is what got me into PKD in the first place. i've been seeing it all over the damn place, but only now discovered that it was boingboing who broke it into the popular consciousness. thanks!
Posted by: tim boucher at September 30, 2004 10:25 AM