Too much choice makes my brain hurt. Does it yours? The ancients were wise enough to realize the tradition of "ey just flip a coin" early but to them it was more than ludic. It was divine. From Greece to China (and the rest) the casting of objects to reveal random outcomes really revealed something greater. It was divine. From King Terry to the King Wen sequence, God speaks through random numbers. It is divine. Every casino is a cathedral. Who will cast out the dice-casting Monte Carlo money changer churchmen?
Directing lost, David Lynch did leave demonstrations like this:
The most cyberpunk thing you can do, as in the dystopian meaning of the word, is watching Bl*ck M*rror on N*tflix and then talking about it on R*ddit.
Posted at 2020/10/21, 19:55:51Post ID: 2709
[quote=King Terry]God speaks through random numbers[/quote]
Too much choice makes my brain hurt. Does it yours? The ancients were wise enough to realize the tradition of "ey just flip a coin" early but to them it was more than ludic. It was divine. From Greece to China (and the rest) the casting of objects to reveal random outcomes really revealed something greater. It was divine. From King Terry to the King Wen sequence, God speaks through random numbers. It is divine. Every casino is a cathedral. Who will cast out the dice-casting Monte Carlo money changer churchmen?
Directing lost, David Lynch did leave demonstrations like this:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEebyoRprvo[/youtube]
Now in the tradition of the cleromancer, and of The Dice Man (OH!), we even have someone choosing Lynch to direct his life:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djy0ZtrdLxg[/youtube]
This episode ends with Taleb
[quote]The tragedy is that much of what you think is random is in your control and, what's worse, the opposite.[/quote]
Do you see?