Time
Time is flat. There has never been more of it, but we have never been so busy. But we are busy with noise, moving along a timescale that is maybe just a little too fast!! Rushkoff argues that we have experienced narrative collapse.
kyla scanlon • Why We Don't Trust Each Other Anymore
Brian Wiesner added 5mo
This is the backdrop of the whole phone as an extension of arm thing. The way that we experience time is completely warped now. Time has been compressed to the past and present and future all at once as we interact with everything all of the time across every time period, as Douglas Rushkoff discusses in his (very good book!) Present Shock .
kyla scanlon • Why We Don't Trust Each Other Anymore
Brian Wiesner added 5mo
The hourglass is particularly interesting, since unlike most other methods of measuring time, it presents the present as between the past (sand collected in the bottom bulb) and the future (sand yet to flow through the neck). Compared to sundials, which calibrate a moment in time against an external reference point, this method creates a conscious ... See more
Control and Consciousness of Time Web
Brian Wiesner added 5mo
Incense has been used for timekeeping in China and Japan for centuries, constituting a different, olfactory way of experiencing time. Lighting a stick of incense when welcoming someone at the door is a gentle way to signal that one has (or has not yet) overstayed their welcome. The more intricate incense clock originated in China in the Song Dynast... See more
Control and Consciousness of Time Web
Brian Wiesner added 5mo
When Roman war hero Valerius Maximus Messalla brought back a sundial from Catania after capturing the city in 263 BC, the crowds cheered—but this symbolic triumph over the Sicilian city soon became an ironic triumph over the lives of Roman citizens. The foreign timekeeping device, installed in the Roman Forum, heralded many more that were soon erec... See more
Control and Consciousness of Time Web
Brian Wiesner added 5mo
Life is nothing more than a series of stages, one after another. Our problem is that we often enjoy a particular stage so much that we’re hesitant to move to the next one. Each chapter should be enjoyable, yes, but each chapter should also prepare you for a new chapter that you could only reach by experiencing your current one . And you do, at some... See more
Adios, Business School.
Brian Wiesner added 6mo
enjoying an experience doesn’t mean that you should stay there forever. The finiteness of everything is a feature, not a bug. It’s what makes it valuable.
Adios, Business School.
Brian Wiesner added 6mo
I dream of many different careers, many different lives, many different loves, many different renewals of my ‘self’ as if I was an immortal being who was able to experiment and explore across an endless timeline.
That Time When I Nearly Died- Diary, August 2013
Brian Wiesner added 6mo
I spoke about how I didn’t agree with James Dean when he famously said Dream as if you’ll live forever, Live as if you’ll die today . I prefer to contemplate life as if you’ll live forever . To follow desires free from the conscious limitations of time.
That Time When I Nearly Died- Diary, August 2013
Brian Wiesner added 6mo
You must become so ruthless with your time that it borderline pisses people off. Otherwise, all you are is a people pleaser.
Tim Denning • The Power of Deleting 99% of Your To-Do List
Brian Wiesner added 7mo
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