Blah.
I like erotica sometimes, like when I was twelve. Being a young man in America
meant finding a means to exposing oneself to pictures of provocative naked women
as part of experimentation. This wan't particularly romantic, it was a learning
experience. It seems much easier using the Internet. There is a large industry
around "romance", for example, it is a vertical media industry. By the time I
was twelve, I felt that I had read enough to have a general idea of what was
happening.
The Romantic period, which was about 150 years ago, was a movement that was in
some regards about decadence and perhaps moreso about the extremities of sense.
I think some of the republished writers, that have been available to read, from
that time are good.
There is a decent movie called "True Romance" but it's not Chinese.
Look, drawings of naked humans:
http://www.tiki-lounge.com/~raf/fractals/vortexboris.jpg
J. R. Molloy wrote:
> Greg Burch wrote,
> > This long history of stasis stands as the
> > most important counter-example to the kind of self-sustaining social and
> > technical progress that lies at the heart of modern Western culture.
>
> So, first they went for the dynastic model, then they fell for Marxism. Could
> it be they have a genetic predilection to mass socio-genic illness?
>
> Stay hungry,
>
> --J. R.
>
> Useless hypotheses:
> consciousness, phlogiston, philosophy, vitalism, mind, free will, qualia,
> analog computing
>
> Everything that can happen has already happened, and not just once, but an
> infinite number of times. This will continue forever.
False.
Ross
-- Ross Andrew Finlayson Finlayson Consulting Ross at Tiki-Lounge: http://www.tiki-lounge.com/~raf/ "It's always one more." - Internet multi-player computer game player
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Mon May 28 2001 - 09:59:44 MDT