C. Jung, 1958-1979, vol. 10, p. 12

- Just as the human body represents a whioe museum of organs, with a long evolutionary history behind them, so we should expect the mind to be organized in a similar way…We receive along with our body a highly differentiated brain which brings with it its entire history, and when it becomes creative it creates out of this history - out of the history of mankind…that age-old natural history which has been transmitted in living form since the remotest times, namely the history of the brain structure.

Zoe Crossland - Materiality and Embodiment - pg 393

-the conception of the distributed person was anticipated in the late nineteenth century by pragmatist philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce, whose semeiotic approach allows a way to think through the lived experience of the body in relation both to the dead and to the phenomenological lifeworld. Peirce rejected the inherited foundationalism of relationalism and positivism. Instead, he argued that thought takes place through signs, and signs are neither internal mental phenomena nor wholly external objects, but rather relational entities constituted through and within the sensuous world of experience.

07/14/2025

that I am a memory and a moment

an idea of what I may become

or who I was but a dream

a child of limitless sky

not with elements and energies

carnal wants to feed an aching need

to scratch wanton aggitations

lucid and flowing

timeless boundless

wishing for not towards a sunless moon

of pulsating spired stars escelating towards

unknown

yet, who am I to assume?

to read the endless sky

of a needle sewing light

a sun

a moon

an eye