Saturday, April 26, 2008

Spring


The spring fascinating me,i long to get there..there is soil breath,i can feel it,its the mental feeling touched..the tree attached flowers,the soil attached rock..everything in my eyes alive; the aesthetics told us the scene of beautiful is enough for us,just digged it..we can discover alots strange things..it is not plant in our body,just grow in our soul..purify mind..the spring arrival, enjoy it.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

世界的一天(One Day Of World)

当我沉迷于物理世界的时候,我还算已经成人了,十七岁是一个值得骄傲的年岁.在众多自然科学的伟瀚海洋里,我以接近最为真实的世界为荣,我很喜欢量子力学和空间物理以及天体物理学,在我为之自豪的几年中,我甚至扩展了人工智能的领域;相信有一天(我总是这样信誓旦旦)我将迎来这个智能化的世界,能自我思考的世界,一个交织于神经网络的世界.我爱你我的思想.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Philosophy Theory PART I

The people who want close the original thing what we called "Meaning",is powerful things i have ever thru meditation;we can knit matter use our mental motional states which could le-ad to us forget what we think inside me.the exsit of our own reason put everything orderly.
the philosophy give us special skill & thinking mode told human's survival for.

——the routing day crushing!

An Open Book

An open book lie on my desktop,inside it,the profound putrid page which the script my signatur-ed.i can draw my memory to past day-it's loathe、sweared,no one can jump over it.i remember haikus i wrote afternoon for Creative writing:

"Dust floating sky
Anyone who wanna die
Last all sunk sleep quiet"

——The End Page Oath

Sunday, April 13, 2008

我正在找寻那一棵银杏

我在想你的时候
栽种过一棵银杏树
我让她贪婪的吸取雨水
我可是在等待秋天
心形的叶子
随时间远离?





24/4/2008
Li GangYong

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Encryption

when I click this words on net pages,it will give me eccentric feeling,the day life might be boring for tomorrow moring;everything look so funny;especially to my sensitive info;
maybe right now,i could lock my packet..no one can look it.
just a little complaint.HAHAHA

Monday, April 07, 2008

I Can Survive in my mind (以心智求得生存)

Every night when i was looking inside among star group;it's wonderful things i have ever admired.what meaning for life?it's no reason for that i has responsbility to discussion about what we should know or how we doing.when i was younger,much of reflection for our world changed a lot;the ancient wisdom told us there is must be a sacrifice ;we are arrogant.

Why i lost sense to touch somethings,i think that is not important problem.the mind in our head get a lots of pressure;form physical body;this is source.okay

i wanna make change in this world.not reality but the immaterial state.

i can survive in my mind.condemn it!

Friday, April 04, 2008

道德美德(Morality & Virtue)

美德是一种德行,她植根于人性的灿烂渲染中;我们讨论心智的同时,深切感受到一些吸引我们崇高伤害的事例当中;我们不是世俗的牺牲品,相反我们突显在现实的前沿;我们倘若不能就脱离虚无的理性进行义无返顾的追求;那必然在精神的世界,我们将迷失我们自己.将最富有的思想和道德容为一体,"我将自我诠释自己",以无比接近道德的鄙下的思想,这是绽放美德的唯一方式.

Thursday, April 03, 2008

What Every American Should Know About the Middle East

By Daniel Miessler on March 30th, 2008

1 Arabs are part of an ethnic group, not a religion. Arabs were around long before Islam, and there have been (and still are) Arab Christians and Arab Jews. In general, you’re an Arab if you 1) are of Arab descent (blood), or 2) speak the main Arab language (Arabic).

2 Not all Arabs are Muslim. There are significant populations of Arab Christians throughout the world, including in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Northern Africa and Palestine/Israel.

3 Islam is a religion. A Muslim (roughly pronounced MOOSE-lihm) is someone who follows the religion. So you wouldn’t say someone follows Muslim or is an Islam, just as you wouldn’t say someone follows Christian or is a Christianity.

4 Shia Muslims are similar to Roman Catholics in Christianity. They have a strong clerical presence via Imams and promote the idea of going through them to practice the religion correctly. Sunni Muslims are more like Protestant Christians. They don’t really focus on Imams and believe in maintaining a more direct line to God than the Shia.

5 People from Iran are also known as Persians, and they are not Arabs.

6 Arabs are Semites. We’ve all heard the term anti-Semitism being used — often to describe Arabs. While antisemitism does specifically indicate hatred for Jews, the word “Semite” comes from the Bible and referred originally to anyone who spoke one of the Semitic Languages.

7 According to the Bible, Jews and Arabs are related [Genesis 25]. Jews descended from Abraham’s son Isaac, and Arabs descended from Abraham’s son Ishmael. So not only are both groups Semitic, but they’re also family.

8 Sunni Muslims make up most of the Muslim world (roughly 90%). 1

9 The country with the world’s largest Muslim population is Indonesia.

10 The rift between the Shia and Sunni started right after Muhammad’s death and originally reduced to a power struggle regarding who was going to become the authoritative group for continuing the faith.

The Shia believed Muhammad’s second cousin Ali should have taken over (the family/cleric model). The Sunni believed that the best person for the job should be chosen by the followers (the merit model) and that’s how the first Caliph, Abu Bakr, was appointed.

Although the conflict began as a political struggle it now mostly considered a religious and class conflict, with political conflict emanating from those rifts.

Here’s how the various Middle Eastern countries break down in terms of Sunni vs. Shia and whether or not they are predominantly Arab. Keep in mind that these are generalizations; significant diversity exists in many of the countries listed.

  • Iraq Mostly Shia (roughly 60%), but under Saddam the Shia were oppressed and the Sunni were in power despite being only 20% of the population. Arab.
  • Iran Shia. NOT Arab.
  • Palestine Sunni. Arab.
  • Egypt Sunni. Arab.
  • Saudi Arabia Sunni. Arab.
  • Syria Sunni. Arab.
  • Jordan Sunni. Arab.
  • Gulf States Sunni. Arab.

Aesthetics

Originally Posted by Copyright © 1994-2002 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Aesthetics also spelled Esthetics, theoretical study of beauty and taste constituting a branch of philosophy. The term aesthetics, derived from the Greek word for perception (aisthesis), was introduced by the 18th-century German philosopher Alexander Baumgarten to denote what he conceived as the realm of poetry, a realm of concrete knowledge in which content is communicated in sensory form. The term was subsequently applied to the philosophical study of all the arts and manifestations of natural beauty.

The nature and scope of aesthetics
Aesthetics is broader in scope than the philosophy of art, which comprises one of its branches. It deals not only with the nature and value of the arts but also with those responses to natural objects that find expression in the language of the beautiful and the ugly. A problem is encountered at the outset, however, for terms such as beautiful and ugly seem too vague in their application and too subjective in their meaning to divide the world successfully into those things that do, and those that do not, exemplify them. Almost anything might be seen as beautiful by someone or from some point of view; and different people apply the word to quite disparate objects for reasons that often seem to have little or nothing in common. It may be that there is some single underlying belief that motivates all of their judgments. It may also be, however, that the term beautiful has no sense except as the expression of an attitude, which is in turn attached by different people to quite different states of affairs.

Moreover, in spite of the emphasis laid by philosophers on the terms beautiful and ugly, it is far from evident that they are the most important or most useful either in the discussion and criticism of art or in the description of that which appeals to us in nature. To convey what is significant in a poem we might use such terms as ironical, moving, expressive, balanced, and harmonious. Likewise, in describing a favourite stretch of countryside, we may find more use for peaceful, soft, atmospheric, harsh, and evocative, than for beautiful. The least that should be said is that beautiful belongs to a class of terms from which it has been chosen as much for convenience' sake as for any sense that it captures what is distinctive of the class.

At the same time, there seems to be no clear way of delimiting the class in question—not at least in advance of theory. Aesthetics must therefore cast its net more widely than the study either of beauty or of other aesthetic concepts if it is to discover the principles whereby it is to be defined. We are at once returned, therefore, to the vexing question of our subject matter: What should a philosopher study in order to understand such ideas as beauty and taste?

Three approaches to aesthetics Three broad approaches have been proposed in answer to that question, each intuitively reasonable:

1. The study of the aesthetic concepts, or, more specifically, the analysis of the “language of criticism,” in which particular judgments are singled out and their logic and justification displayed. In his famous treatise On the Sublime and Beautiful (1757), Edmund Burke attempted to draw a distinction between two aesthetic concepts, and, by studying the qualities that they denoted, to analyze the separate human attitudes that are directed toward them. Burke's distinction between the sublime and the beautiful was extremely influential, reflecting as it did the prevailing style of contemporary criticism. In more recent times, philosophers have tended to concentrate on the concepts of modern literary theory—namely, those such as representation, expression, form, style, and sentimentality. The study invariably has a dual purpose: to show how (if at all) these descriptions might be justified, and to show what is distinctive in the human experiences that are expressed in them.

2. A philosophical study of certain states of mind—responses, attitudes, emotions—that are held to be involved in aesthetic experience. Thus, in the seminal work of modern aesthetics Kritik der Urteilskraft (1790; The Critique of Judgment), Immanuel Kant located the distinctive features of the aesthetic in the faculty of “judgment,” whereby we take up a certain stance toward objects, separating them from our scientific interests and our practical concerns. The key to the aesthetic realm lies therefore in a certain “disinterested” attitude, which we may assume toward any object and which can be expressed in many contrasting ways.More recently, philosophers—distrustful of Kant's theory of the faculties—have tried to express the notions of an “aesthetic attitude” and “aesthetic experience” in other ways, relying upon developments in philosophical psychology that owe much to G.W.F. Hegel, the Phenomenologists, and Ludwig Wittgenstein (more precisely, the Wittgenstein of the Philosophical Investigations [1953]). In considering these theories (some of which are discussed below) a crucial distinction must be borne in mind: that between philosophy of mind and empirical psychology. Philosophy is not a science, because it does not investigate the causes of phenomena. It is an a priori or conceptual investigation, the underlying concern of which is to identify rather than to explain. In effect, the aim of the philosopher is to give the broadest possible description of the things themselves, so as to show how we must understand them and how we ought to value them. The two most prominent current philosophical methods—Phenomenology and conceptual analysis—tend to regard this aim as distinct from, and (at least in part) prior to, the aim of science. For how can we begin to explain what we have yet to identify? While there have been empirical studies of aesthetic experience (exercises in the psychology of beauty), these form no part of aesthetics as considered in this article. Indeed, the remarkable paucity of their conclusions may reasonably be attributed to their attempt to provide a theory of phenomena that have yet to be properly defined.

3. The philosophical study of the aesthetic object. This approach reflects the view that the problems of aesthetics exist primarily because the world contains a special class of objects toward which we react selectively and which we describe in aesthetic terms. In effect, the existence of such objects constitutes the prime phenomenon; aesthetic experience should thus be described according to them and the meaning of aesthetic concepts be determined by them. The usual class singled out as prime aesthetic objects is that comprising works of art. All other aesthetic objects (landscapes, faces, objets trouvés, and the like) tend to be included in this class only because, and to the extent that, they can be seen as art (or so it is claimed).

If we adopt such an approach, then there ceases to be a real distinction between aesthetics and the philosophy of art; and aesthetic concepts and aesthetic experience deserve their names through being, respectively, the concepts required in understanding works of art and the experience provoked by confronting them. Thus Hegel, perhaps the major philosophical influence on modern aesthetics, considered the main task of aesthetics to reside in the study of the various forms of art and of the spiritual content peculiar to each. Much of recent aesthetics has been similarly focussed on artistic problems, and it could be said that it is now orthodox to consider aesthetics entirely through the study of art.

The third approach to aesthetics does not require this concentration upon art. Even someone who considered art to be no more than one manifestation of aesthetic value—perhaps even a comparatively insignificant manifestation—may believe that the first concern of aesthetics is to study the objects of aesthetic experience and description and to find in them the true distinguishing features of the aesthetic realm. Unless we restrict the domain of aesthetic objects, however, it becomes extremely difficult to maintain that they have anything significant in common beyond the fact of inspiring a similar interest. This means that we should be compelled to adopt the second approach to aesthetics after all. And there seems no more plausible way of restricting the domain of aesthetic objects than through the concept of art.

The three approaches may lead to incompatible results. Alternatively, they may be in harmony. Once again, it can only be at the end point of our philosophy that we shall be able to decide. Initially, it must be assumed that the three approaches may differ substantially, or merely in emphasis, and thus that each question in aesthetics has a tripartite form.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

在这个方向,虔诚的祈祷

我失魂落魄
在春日
像个马车的车夫
我将美神示意的方向
美与永恒趋向寒冷
缰绳拖曳在马头

在风中伫立
我把你归在我写的
对你爱慕的词中

这是我
在这个方向,虔诚的祈祷

2/4/2008