Showing posts with label horse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horse. Show all posts

Sunday, March 31, 2019

Restore

4.7.19
Gabrielle Wilde

Restore
Fortune
恢复财富Huīfù cáifù
回復フォーチュン 
Kaifuku fōchun
ps126

When leadership restored fortune,
we were like those who received our portion.

We felt like those who dream while still awake.
There was the distinct feeling that this fortune wasn't fake.

Our mouth was filled with laughter.
It was like starting again after a climatic chapter.

The rider and the fighter were twins in the sky.
They fought for the standard to know how and why.

They released many captives from the burden of plight.
The captives were freed with the capacity for flight.

Courage watched leadership rise with his word.
Reason was challenged to struggle with the absurd.

The hunter drank in the storm faint though it had been.
He stalked the prey that he had yet to win.

The rider rested with his horse
in the investigation of the state of the forest.

Wildness preceded the primitive me.
Food and water have been granted to proceed.

Our tongues lifted sound above vocal cords.
Our joy was profound. Our bliss was adored.

Restore fortune with the cosmic sorter for order.
Grow us flowers plentiful as stars in the heavenly quarters.

Give us fertility instead of ashes.
Let water pour down while the lightening crashes.

Let oil be squeezed from olives or vegetables.
Let want be appeased, not made miserable.

Let the mantle of praise lift up the weakness of spirit.
Feel the energy of love before you hear or go near it.

Augurs of chance read spirits instead of birds.
Test your statements for the truth of the words.

Righteousness is based on faith with grace.
Redemption with Christ places destiny over fate.

Great things have been done for us in the strength of this time.
The length of light grows as sublimely prime.

Those who managed labor throughout the last year
made a memory to transcend the feeling of fear.

Celebrate the presence of the essential essence.
Gratitude for service beats sacrifice as penance.

Those who sowed seed with the toil of their tears
will reap joy with the music of love in the heavenly spheres.

The deluge washed the mass of seashells.
Polish was added to the shine of cells
and bells.

Those who went weeping to water their seeds
will return with shoulders of sheaves to fulfill basic needs.

This voice is like that of the cry in the darkness
unbroken in facing the strength of the starkness. 

Restore our fortune. Transform the harm of the past.
Let us have our portion. Give us confidence to last.

Making continual reparation for misdeeds from the past isn't a policy that will make fortune last. Liberals made the public pay for legal reform, then they make us pay for damage caused by the storm from the reform.

----------------------------

Psalm 126
In convertendo

1 When the Lord restored the fortunes of Zion, *
then were we like those who dream.
2 Then was our mouth filled with laughter, *
and our tongue with shouts of joy.
3 Then they said among the nations, *
"The Lord has done great things for them."
4 The Lord has done great things for us, *
and we are glad indeed.
5 Restore our fortunes, O Lord, *
like the watercourses of the Negev.
6 Those who sowed with tears *
will reap with songs of joy.
7 Those who go out weeping, carrying the seed, *
will come again with joy, shouldering their sheaves.

-------------------------

Isa. 43:20
The wild animals will honor me.
The jackals and ostriches will be grateful
for I give water in the wilderness;
rivers in the desert
to give drink to my chosen.

----------------------------

Wildness preceded the primitive me.
Food and water have been granted to proceed.

=====================

Phil.3:8
I have suffered the loss of things in order to gain Christ
not having a righteousness of my own, but one that comes through faith,
the righteousness from God based on faith.

----------------------------

Righteousness is based on faith with grace.
Redemption with Christ places destiny over fate.

=====================

John 12:8
'You always have the poor with you, but you do not always have me.'

----------------------------

Celebrate the presence of the essential essence.
Gratitude for service beats sacrifice as penance.

=====================

Gemini - twins
Taurus- bull
Orion - hunter
Mars - courage
Jupiter - leadership
Mercury - reason
Venus- beauty
Castor - rider
Pollux - fighter
Neptune - water, storm

Gemini is Latin for "twins," and it is associated with the twins Castor and Pollux in Greek mythology.
https://www.greekmythology.com/Myths/Zodiac/Gemini/gemini.html

The twins were Castor and Polydeuces (Pollux). They were known as the Dioscuri. Their sisters were Helen and Clytemnestra. They were the sons of Leda, Zeus and Tyndareus. Castor and Pollux were half-brothers.

Leda was married to King Tyndareus of Sparta. She was also seduced by Zeus, so the father's of both children were uncertain. The Discouri were inseperable and grew closer with age.

Castor was a famous horse tamer and Pollux, a superb boxer. When Castor was killed during a battle, Pollux was inconsolable and gave up his own life to be with his brother. Jupiter rewarded their love by placing their images among the stars. They shine side by side.

Majesty with Mercy
https://www.azquotes.com/picture-quotes/quote-however-many-and-however-great-and-burdensome-your-sins-may-be-with-god-there-is-greater-patriarch-tikhon-of-moscow-52-31-82.jpg

Tikhon of Moscow
b. January 31, 1865, Klin, Russia
d. April 7, 1925, Moscow, Russia

Klin
Russian Empire

Alexander II (1818-1881) was the Emperor of Russia from 2 March 1855 until his assassination on 13 March 1881. He was also the King of Poland and the Grand Duke of Finland. He emancipated the serfs in 1861. It was the first and most important of his reforms. The Emancipation Edict abolished serfdom throughout the Russian Empire.

There was an uprising in Poland in 1863. The land was stripped of its constitution and incorporated into Russia.

Alexander sold Alaska to the United States in 1867. He was afraid that the territory would fall into British hands in the event of another war.

Klin means 'wedge.' One of the towns by that name was located in the Toropets District of the Pskov Governate. Klin is located to the west of Moscow by about 85 km (55 mi.). It is south of St. Petersburg by about the same amount of distance. It is part of a basin that drains to the Baltic Sea.

Tikhon of Moscow

Tikhon was born as Vasily Ivanovich Bellavin in Klin, Toropets, Pskov of the Russian Empire on 31 January 1865.

Vasily studied at the Pskov Theological Seminary from 1878 to 1883. He graduated from the St. Petersburg Theological Academy as a layman at the age of 23 in 1888. He returned to the Pskov Seminary as an instructor of Moral and Dogmatic Theology.

He took monastic vows and was given the name Tikhon in honor of St. Tikhon of Zadonsk at the age of 26 in 1891. Tikhon was consecrated Bishop of Lublin on October 19, 1897.  Bishop Tikhon was made Bishop of the Aleutians and Alaska on September 14, 1898. This made him the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in America.

He reorganized the diocese and changed its name from "Diocese of the Aleutians and Alaska" to "Diocese of the Aleutians and North America" in 1900. The peripatetic bishop visited emerging Orthodox emigrant communities in various American cities, including New York City, Chicago and the coal and steel-making cities in Pennsylvania and Ohio. While living in the United States Archbishop Tikhon was made a citizen.

He returned to Russia in 1907 and was appointed Bishop of Yaroslavl. He was transferred to Vilnius, Lithuania on December 22, 1913.

He was elected the ruling bishop of Moscow by the Diocesan Congress of clergy and laity on June 21, 1917. Archbishop Tikhon was raised to the dignity of Metropolitan of Moscow on August 15, 1917.

An election on November 5 of the same year named him as one of the three candidates for the Patriarchate. Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev announced that Metropolitan Tikhon had been selected for the position after a drawing of lots as the new Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church.

The Patriarch was widely seen as anti-Bolshevik during the Russian Civil War. Many members of Orthodox clergy were jailed or executed by the new regime. The 'prosecution' of clergy identified the socialist republic as anti-religious. Tikhon openly condemned the killing of the tsar's family in 1918 and protested the violent attacks by the Bolsheviks on the Church.

The Patriarch was accused of being a saboteur by the Communist government after the establishment of the USSR. He was imprisoned from April 1922 until June 1923 in Donskoy Monastery.

His public protest against nationalization of the property of the Church was used to incriminate him of criminal conduct. This persecution caused international resonance and was a subject of several letters to the Soviet government.

Patriarch Tikhon issued several messages to the believers under pressure in which he stated  that he is "no longer an enemy to the Soviet power." He continued to enjoy the trust of the Orthodox community in Russia despite his declaration of loyalty to the Soviets.

The Patriarch fell ill and was hospitalized in 1924. He served his last Divine Liturgy on 5 April 1925. He died two days later.

He was glorified a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989. This canonisation process is generally considered an example of the thaw in Church-Soviet relations in the Glasnost era. Tikhon's relics are kept at the Donskoy Monastery of Moscow.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriarch_Tikhon_of_Moscow
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/Tikhon.htm

Tikhon Bellavin
吉洪贝拉文
吉洪貝拉文

吉  Ji          lucky             吉 kichi   good luck       Te        て          テ               Ti   티   tea             
洪  hong    deluge            洪 ko       deluge            -hon    ぃほん  ィホン        hon 혼  spirit           
贝  Bei       sea shell        貝 bai      shellfish           Be       べ       ベ                  Bel  벨  bell             
拉  la          seize              拉 ra        Latin                ra        ら           ラ              la    라   la                 
文  wen      culture           文 bun     style                bin      びん      ヴィン        bin 빈  empty       

-----------------------------

The deluge washed the seashells
to add polish to the luck of cells
and bells.

=====================                     


Thomas Hill Green
b. April 7, 1836, Birkin, United Kingdom
d. March 1886, Oxford, UK

Birkin

Birkin is a village in the south of North Yorkshire. The population was estimated at 141 people in the 2011 census. The name was recorded in the Domesday book as 'Birchinge.' This and the present name indicate that the village was built in an area wooded with birch trees.

It is located about 290 km (180 miles) north of London. It is about 145 km (90 miles) northeast of Liverpool. It is about 48 km (30 miles) southwest of York.

A Royal Commission into the Poor Law recommended changes to the system of parish poor relief in 1832. Many of its recommendations were incorporated into the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834. This statute maintained outdoor relief (relief given outside a workhouse), but led to more central control of the system.

St Mary's Church is located at the southern end of Birkin and dates from around 1150. Thomas Hill Green's father was the rector of St Mary's in the 1830's.

Thomas Hill Green

Thomas Hill Green was born in Birkin on 7 April 1836. Thomas was brought up by a nanny following the death of his mother when he was only a year old together with his sisters and three brothers. He was home schooled until the age of 14. He entered the Rugby School and remained for 5 years.

Green went to Balliol College, Oxford in 1855. He came under the influence of Benjamin Jowett. Jowett had been one of the first to bring a set of Hegel's writings to England. It was through him that Green became enraptured by idealism.

He found a justification for his instinctive egalitarianism in Hegel. He became firm friends with other students who were sympathetic to his political radicalism, such as AV Dicey, John Nichol and Edward Caird. Idealism led him away from the skepticism of Locke expressed by Berkeley.
He was elected fellow in 1860. He began a life of teaching in the university. First he was a college tutor. He was Whyte's Professor of Moral Philosophy from 1878 until his death.

The lectures he delivered as professor formed the substance of his two most important works. The Prolegomena to Ethics and the Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation were published posthumously, but they serve as a basis for conjecture as to what he taught.

He criticized the limitations of natural history in empiricism of Hume with the theory of evolution in the Prolegomena to Ethics.

He wrote in the Natural Science of Morals (s.5) "It is no wonder, therefore, that the evolutionists of our day should claim to have given a wholly new character to ethical enquiries. In Hume’s time a philosopher who denied the innateness of moral sentiments, and held that they must have a natural history, had only the limits of the individual life within which to trace this history. These limits did not give room enough for even a plausible derivation of moral interests from animal wants...Thus it would seem that for the barren speculation of the old metaphysical ethics we should seek a substitute in a scientific Culturgeschichte; in a natural history of man conducted on the same method as an enquiry into any other form of life which cannot be reduced to the operation of strictly mechanical laws."

The Principles of Political Obligation was written to subordinate the citizen to the state.
He wrote, "I have entitled the subject of the course 'political obligation.' I mean that term to include both the obligation of the subject to the sovereign, of the citizen towards the state and the obligations of individuals to each other as enforced by a political superior."

Green was an advocate for temperance. He referred to the work of Spinoza, Hobbes, Locke and Rosseau, but he came down in favor of state limitation of the citizen's conscience. He held that the state should foster and protect the social, political and economic environments in which individuals will have the best chance of acting according to conscience.

He stated time and again that the state could legitimately curtail the individual's freedom to accept the slavery of alcoholism. This became a prohibitive action in the case of the Temperance movement.

This was an oppressive definition of the concept of sovereignty. No one wants to endorse alcoholism as a right, yet the prohibition of alcohol as a product for the market is preemptive in the prohibition of the disease.

Given the appointment of a special prosecutor by the House of Commons for the precipitation of profit from military action, it amounted to a perpetuation of Puritan aggression without the explicit endorsement of the Westminster Confession.

Green was involved in local politics for many years through the University, temperance societies and the local Oxford Liberal association.

He campaigned for the right to vote to be extended to all men living in boroughs even if they did not own real property during the passage of the Second Reform Act (1867). Green's position was more radical than that of most other Advanced Liberals, including William Ewart Gladstone.

The right to vote is an important civil liberty. The Public Schools Act of 1868 would remove public schools from any direct jurisdiction or responsibility of the Crown, established church, or government, establishing a board of governors for each school and granting them independence over their administration.

The Act led to development of the schools away from the traditional exclusively classics-based curriculum taught by clergymen to a somewhat broader scope of studies.  This meant an opening for Hegelian idealism in evolution for Green. It was a legislative enactment that supported increased expenditure for the  government to control the rights of the population. It was an endorsement to promote revolution through insurrection around the globe for liberals.

It was in the context of his Liberal Party activities that in 1881, Green gave what became one of his most famous statements of his liberal political philosophy, the "Lecture on Liberal Legislation and Freedom of Contract".

He presented an anti-capitalist perspective. He wrote, "we are right in refusing to ascribe the glory of freedom to a state in which the apparent elevation of the few is founded on the degradation of the many." He was also lecturing on religion, epistemology, ethics and political philosophy at the time.

Most of his major works were published posthumously, including his lay sermons on Faith and The Witness of God, the essay "On the Different Senses of 'Freedom' as Applied to Will and the Moral Progress of Man", Prolegomena to Ethics, Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation and the "Lecture on Liberal Legislation and Freedom of Contract".

Green died of blood poisoning at 45. Approximately 2,000 local townspeople attended his funeral in addition to friends from his academic life.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hill_Green
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/green/
https://history.hanover.edu/texts/green.html
http://fair-use.org/t-h-green/prolegomena-to-ethics/
https://web.archive.org/web/20050827091329/http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/green/obligation.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Schools_Act_1868

Thomas Hill Green
托马斯希尔格林
托馬斯希爾格林

托  Tuo     rest                       托  taku    requesting          To   と-  ト-        To   토  sat         
马  ma      horse                    馬  ba        horse                  ma  ま     マ        ma  마  hemp       
斯  si         this                      斯  shi       this                     su    す    ス         seu  스  switch           
希  Xi        hope                    希   ki         hope                  Hi     ひ    ヒ       Hil   힐   heel               
尔  er        you                       爾   ore       you                    ru    る    ル        Geu 그  that       
格  Ge       investigate           格  kaku   status                   Gu   ぐ    グ         lin    린  lin     
林  lin       forest                    林  rin        forest                  re   り-  リ-
                                                                                            n     ん   ン                           
---------------------------

The rider rested with his horse
in the investigation of the state of the forest.

===============

Sunday, March 3, 2019

Build

3.10.19

Jessica Biel

Build
Your Shelter
建立你的住房
Jiànlì nǐ de zhùfáng
あなたの避難所を建てる
Anata no hinansho o tateru
ps91

Shelter from the storm
protects the bodily form
and the ability to perform
despite alarm as the norm.

The reduction in the threat of destruction
provides room for production.

It is a refuge from the 'too much'
of 'that such'
that threatens malfunction
in your fluxion.

Education is more than the feel of the need.
There is protection in the direction you draw from relief.

Nothing to drink in the refrigerator?
The choice of what to buy makes you your own liberator.

Protection will deliver you from harm.
You won't have to 'buy the farm.'

A man sits on a horse to explain to his youth
how the growth of grain defends the truth.

The son of furrows is rich in the land.
His knowledge is worth what his labor demands.

Selection by election will keep you from falling to death by disease.
You will find your way to pray by degrees.

The body grows outside
the spirit it hides
except for the shine
that energy divines.

The ocean is the god of all to the cute girl who beholds it.
The wave is the stem of the scale in the rise and fall of known wit.

The more convenient way
to restrain the fire of desire is to make your play
resemble a temple as it stands in the day
as though it will last always
in the worth of what you have to say.

Nothing against the scythe of time can make sure defense
save the brave bearing to transcend the grave when he takes you hence.

Faithfulness beats fate.
You will not lose to hate.

Examine your love to support your respect.
Benefit that lasts is the characteristic to detect.

Fear results from the ignorance of cause.
Ignorance is a condition that signals the pause
to consider deliverance from that which gnaws
with or without claws.

The soul is ajar, secure and hospitable
to the spirit that seeks shelter that is formidable
against harmful agents that are visible or invisible.

Were the gods created by the experience of fear?
Consider the divine design of nature as dear.

We asked the LORD, the God of our ancestors,
to deliver us from the hard labor imposed by traders as oppressors.

We were delivered when slavery was outlawed.
The Constitution has become the lightning rod
for liberty in law with awe..

You will see light despite your anguish.
Satisfaction will be found in your knowledge of language.

You will be able to deal gently with the wayward
when you learn to treat weakness as though it were tailored.

Power is managed by those who are prepared
for the consequence of responsibility responsibly shared.

The hunter shoots for game
in the cosmic frame for fame.

He braves the primitive energy of the hunt
to fathom ancestral memory like a storm front.

Classical consciousness is written to reconstruct
power from the time the lightning struck.

Law enforcement is the will to power
in the field of experience with authority as the tower.

The dimension of mind in time
moves like a river through the un-thought forest of the sublime.

Learn from concepts derived from experience.
The concepts are elements that help you to discard the spurious.

The conviction of the heart forms speech.
The confession of faith helps the speech reach each.

Seek peace and pursue it, but defend your self.
Stand your ground to hallow it. Tend the place where you dwell.

Wisdom denotes the pursuit of the best end by the best means.
That action is best which promotes happiness for all who can be seen.
That action is worst which engenders the most misery.

The notion of rightness looks to find the universally good.
The good news of salvation serves you as it should.

The prestige of majesty builds fortune as shelter in experience.
Investigate the seniority of love to reject the deleterious.

Who is the founder of the city?
Defense of settlement became the case for propinquity.
The Author of benefit from settlement wrote the motive for this nitty gritty.

You will steer clear of the fear of terror by night.
You won't have to fight or take flight
when you play it right.

The attack that comes by day
will have to go away.

The malady that stalks in the darkness
won't leave you heartless.

The sickness that strikes at mid-day
won't cause you to stray.

The right of possession and redemption is yours.
The great outdoors implores you to score for what you adore.

A thousand will stand by your side.
Ten thousand will supply a high with peptides
inside where you reside.

Do not put the LORD your God to the test.
Seek perfection only to let excellence lead you to your best.

Accepting goodness allows you to rest
and to avoid being obsessed.

Good work is your treasure. Be ready to care.
Show the world that you know how to share.

Build a foundation that won't shift where you stand.
Your plan to expand will find that it can.

The angels are angles that show you the light.
They shine for your mind to see what is right.

You will use your own hands
to decipher your plan.

Mountain Trail

You will not break if a rock
gives you a shock.

Cottonmouth

You will keep your distance from venom
to maintain your plenum.

Alligator

You will respect Mr. Gator
like an instant crusader.
He's not a good grader.

Live a good life.
Love is your husband or wife.

Learn from the strong.
Sift right from wrong.

You will be remembered long
for singing your song
to please the whole throng.

Abstraction moves from the particular to the general.
It is a movement where the particular is parental
to a kind, not an abstraction for perceptual burial.

The discovery of properties
warrants application to productive qualities.

The division of labor divides for function in production.
Machine learning for a particular quality in the product involves transduction.

Induction forms a judgment for deductive application in the stage for material injunction.
These are the ineluctable modalities for reproduction.

The sound of jewels came down from the mountain.
The dance of stones sprang from the jungle fountain.

The reconstruction of classical consciousness
requires a center for cognitive consonance.




91 Qui habitat

1 He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High, *
abides under the shadow of the Almighty.
2 He shall say to the Lord,
"You are my refuge and my stronghold, *
my God in whom I put my trust."
3 He shall deliver you from the snare of the hunter *
and from the deadly pestilence.
4 He shall cover you with his pinions,
and you shall find refuge under his wings; *
his faithfulness shall be a shield and buckler.
5 You shall not be afraid of any terror by night, *
nor of the arrow that flies by day;
6 Of the plague that stalks in the darkness, *
nor of the sickness that lays waste at mid-day.
7 A thousand shall fall at your side
and ten thousand at your right hand, *
but it shall not come near you.
8 Your eyes have only to behold *
to see the reward of the wicked.
9 Because you have made the Lord your refuge, *
and the Most High your habitation,
10 There shall no evil happen to you, *
neither shall any plague come near your dwelling.
11 For he shall give his angels charge over you, *
to keep you in all your ways.
12 They shall bear you in their hands, *
lest you dash your foot against a stone.
13 You shall tread upon the lion and adder; *
you shall trample the young lion and the serpent under your feet.
14 Because he is bound to me in love,
therefore will I deliver him; *
I will protect him, because he knows my Name.
15 He shall call upon me, and I will answer him; *
I am with him in trouble;
I will rescue him and bring him to honor.
16 With long life will I satisfy him, *
and show him my salvation.



Deut. 26:6-7
When the Egyptians treated us harshly and afflicted us by imposing hard labour upon us, we cried to the LORD, the God of our ancestors; the LORD heard our voice and saw our affliction, our toil and our oppression.

-------------------------------

We asked the LORD, the God of our ancestors,
to deliver us from the hard labor imposed by traders as oppressors.

We were delivered when slavery was outlawed.
Constitutional law has become the lightning rod.

==================

Romans 10:10
One believes with the heart and is so justified. One confesses with the mouth and is so saved.

-------------------------------

The conviction of the heart forms speech.
The confession of faith helps the speech reach each.

==================

Luke 4:9,12
Then the devil took him to Jerusalem and placed him on the pinnacle of the temple, saying to him, 'If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down from here...

Jesus answered him, 'It is said, "Do not put the LORD your God to the test."'

-------------------------------

Do not put the LORD your God to the test.
Seek perfection only to let excellence lead you to your best.
Accepting goodness allows you to rest and to avoid being obsessed.

==================

Aurelius Augustine of Hippo
City of God
426 CE
Text

"I have undertaken its defence against those who prefer their own gods to the Founder of this city,—a city surpassingly glorious, whether we view it as it still lives by faith in this fleeting course of time, and sojourns as a stranger in the midst of the ungodly, or as it shall dwell in the fixed stability of its eternal seat, which it now with patience waits for, expecting until "righteousness shall return unto judgment," and it obtain, by virtue of its excellence, final victory and perfect peace. A great work this, and an arduous; but God is my helper. For I am aware what ability is requisite to persuade the proud how great is the virtue of humility, which raises us, not by a quite human arrogance, but by a divine grace, above all earthly dignities that totter on this shifting scene. For the King and Founder of this city of which we speak, has in Scripture uttered to His people a dictum of the divine law in these words: "God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble.""

-------------------------------

Who is the founder of the city?
Defense of settlement became the case for propinquity.
The Author of benefit from settlement wrote the motive for this nitty gritty.

==================

George Berkeley
Principles of Human Knowledge
1710

"And here it is to be noted that I do not deny absolutely there are general ideas, but only that there are any ABSTRACT GENERAL IDEAS...wherein there is mention of general ideas, it is always supposed that they are formed by ABSTRACTION... Now, if we will annex a meaning to our words, and speak only of what we can conceive, I believe we shall acknowledge that an idea which, considered in itself, is particular, becomes general by being made to represent or stand for all other particular ideas of the SAME SORT. To make this plain by an example, suppose a geometrician is demonstrating the method of cutting a line in two equal parts. He draws, for instance, a black line of an inch in length: this, which in itself is a particular line, is nevertheless with regard to its signification general, since, as it is there used, it represents all particular lines whatsoever; so that what is demonstrated of it is demonstrated of all lines, or, in other words, of a line in general. And, as that particular line becomes general by being made a sign, so the name LINE, which taken absolutely is PARTICULAR, by being a sign is made GENERAL. And as the former owes its generality not to its being the sign of an abstract or general line, but of ALL PARTICULAR right lines that may possibly exist, so the latter must be thought to derive its generality from the same cause, namely, the VARIOUS PARTICULAR lines which it indifferently denotes."

-----------------------------

Abstraction moves from the particular to the general.
It is a movement where the particular is parental
to a kind, not an abstraction for perceptual burial.

The discovery of properties
warrants application to productive qualities.

=================

Adam Smith
Wealth of Nations
1776

The Division of Labor

"To take an example...the trade of a pin-maker: a workman not educated to this business... nor acquainted with the use of the machinery employed in it...could scarce, perhaps, with his utmost industry, make one pin in a day, and certainly could not make twenty. But in the way in which this business is now carried on, not only the whole work is a peculiar trade, but it is divided into a number of branches, of which the greater part are likewise peculiar trades. One man draws out the wire; another straights it; a third cuts it; a fourth points it; a fifth grinds it at the top for receiving the head; to make the head requires two or three distinct operations; to put it on is a peculiar business; to whiten the pins is another; it is even a trade by itself to put them into the paper; and the important business of making a pin is, in this manner, divided into about eighteen distinct operations, which, in some manufactories, are all performed by distinct hands, though in others the same man will sometimes perform two or three of them. I have seen a small manufactory of this kind, where ten men only were employed, and where some of them consequently performed two or three distinct operations. But though they were very poor, and therefore but indifferently accommodated with the necessary machinery, they could, when they exerted themselves, make among them about twelve pounds of pins in a day."

--------------------------------

The division of labor divides for function in production.
Machine learning for a particular quality in the product involves transduction.

Induction forms a judgment for deductive application in the stage for material injunction.
These are the ineluctable modalities for reproduction.

===================


==================

Reina Yokoyama 2.22.2001 Saitama, Saitama, Japan
横山玲奈
嘿呐哟叩亚嘛
Hello! Project
Morning Musume

嘿  Hei   hey         横  Yoko     width             Rei    れい  レイ       Lena  레나    Lena
呐  na     yell         山   yama   mountain       na      な       ナ        Yo       요      Yo                 
哟  Yo     oh         玲  Rei   sound of jewels   Yo      よ        ヨ        ko       코      nose
叩   kou  knock    奈  na         what?               ko      こ        コ       ya        야     hey                         
亚   ya     second                                            ya      や        ヤ      mai     마이   my               
嘛   ma    ah                                                   ma     ま         マ                   

-------------------------------

The sound of jewels came down from the mountain.
The dance of stones sprang from the jungle fountain.

The reconstruction of classical consciousness
requires a center for cognitive consonance.

==================

Saitama

Saitama is located 20-30 km (12.4-18.6 mi.) north of central Tokyo near the center of the Kanto plain. It is also located near the middle of Saitama prefecture. It is the capital city.

The prefecture has the 4th largest density and the 5th largest size in population in Japan. It has 40 cities.

Urawa, Omiya, Iwatsuki and Yono cities combined in 2001 to form Saitama city. Ageo rejected the proposal to merge.

The population for Saitama is approaching 1,300,000. It is the ninth largest city in Japan.

The average temperature in January is 3.6 C (38.5 F). The average temperature in August is 26.6 C (79.9 F).

Reina Yokoyama

Yokoyama Reina was born February 22, 2001 in Saitama.

She joined Hello Pro Kenshuusei in 2016 after she failed the audtion for Morning Musume for the year in August.

It was announced on December 12, 2016 that she would be in the 13th generation along with Kaeda Kaga.

She celebrated her 17th birthday on February 22, 2018 with a fanclub event. Her first photobook was released in April. She also celebrated her 18th birthday with a fanclub event on February 22, 2019.

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Enjoy

Vanessa Marcil

Enjoy
Freedom
自由を享受する
Jiyū o kyōju suru
Ps90

The afternoon breeze
blew through the trees
dispersing brown leaves.




The place away from danger is a refuge.
Refugees flee to find safety for their use.

Like wolves we chose to move even in the night
to escape certain death as our plight.

This has been true from one generation to another.
War has been against your fellow man as brother.
It has driven non-combatants to a place that is other
than the one in which we had taken succor.

Spoils and taxes have driven war against some  flutter
of threat created by news of some slaughtering snuffer.

War has to be limited to defense to be just.
The limitation will guide those who govern for us.

A thousand years in divine sight 
are like one watch within the night.

We had been swept away like a dream.
Like the grass in the morning, we were green
then, we lost the moisture to feed our need.
We withered brown by the evening due to heat.

We consumed too much in displeasure.
We took beyond the seasoned measure.

We lost our faith for fear of wrath.
We lost our health upon this path.

We didn't change to meet the challenge.
Iniquity prevented the savagery to manage.

Guilt from secret sins held movement in check.
Power as a motive had become a train wreck.

Destruction makes sure the days are gone.
Years are shortened before they grow long.

The span of life is eighty years.
It's more like ninety when we shed fears with tears.

The sum of life is labor and sorrow
when we don't build law with love for tomorrow.

The power of production replaces wrath with math.
This is the power that civilization has.




The pear blossom blooms in the early Spring.
The tree is seen as a beautiful thing.

Seek good, not evil, that you may live
as a model for living as one who gives.

Hate evil and love good for justice in the gate
to manage resources with patience in how to participate.

Who can be saved when judgment condemns the person?
Immortal strength selects statements that strengthen benign purpose. 

Knowledge is like standing on a chair to get closer to the moon.
A step back for perspective will produce a fall with a consequential tune.

Different frames for perception produce a race
for perspective on how to rule out what is not the case.

The insect that lighted on the girl on a horse
was brushed away as an ordinary course.

Terrific thunder from the elder brother 
produced good fortune unique to each other.



We have a high priest who has passed through the heavens.
Salvation let's us hold fast to our confession.

Variance in production with instruction from time
makes the value of our products seem sublime.

Learn from experience to teach yourself measure.
It is the gold which life does highly treasure.

Replace the daze of affliction in adversity
with the ways of satisfaction in maturity.

Time turns mind back to the dust to say,
"Go back to earth like a child at play."

Who feels the power of your presence?
You are in the wonder of the divine essence. 

Who loves the real feeling of true power?
You are growing in strength by the hour.

Teach us to value time for our hearts in wisdom.
We will learn to see mission with our vision.

How long will you wait?
Get this goal straight.

Be gracious with your love.
It is the message that came from above with the dove.

Satisfy us with your kindness in the morning,
so we may weather storms as life's adorning.

Make us glad by the measure of the days 
in which we were afflicted in ways
that the endurance of adversity will be raised
as the emblem of virtue to be praised.

Show your work to your loved ones.
Your splendor will shine like the sun.

May your grace be with us.
The fruit of labor will be discussed.

We see that we saw the soul as one
in the products of our love.


Psalm 90 Domine, refugium

1 Lord, you have been our refuge
from one generation to another.
2 Before the mountains were brought forth,
or the land and the earth were born,
from age to age you are God.
3 You turn us back to the dust and say,
"Go back, O child of earth."
4 For a thousand years in your sight are like yesterday when it is past
and like a watch in the night.
5 You sweep us away like a dream;
we fade away suddenly like the grass.
6 In the morning it is green and flourishes;
in the evening it is dried up and withered.
7 For we consume away in your displeasure;
we are afraid because of your wrathful indignation.
8 Our iniquities you have set before you,
and our secret sins in the light of your countenance.
9 When you are angry, all our days are gone;
we bring our years to an end like a sigh.
10 The span of our life is seventy years,
perhaps in strength even eighty;
yet the sum of them is but labor and sorrow,
for they pass away quickly and we are gone.
11 Who regards the power of your wrath?
who rightly fears your indignation?
12 So teach us to number our days
that we may apply our hearts to wisdom.
13 Return, O Lord; how long will you tarry?
be gracious to your servants.
14 Satisfy us by your loving-kindness in the morning;
so shall we rejoice and be glad all the days of our life.
15 Make us glad by the measure of the days that you afflicted us
and the years in which we suffered adversity.
16 Show your servants your works
and your splendor to their children.
17 May the graciousness of the Lord our God be upon us;
prosper the work of our hands;
prosper our handiwork.

Amos 5:14-15
Seek good and not evil that you may live
so the LORD, the God of hosts, will be with you
just as you have said.
Hate evil and love good.
Establish justice in the gate.
It may be that God will be gracious
to the remnant of Joseph.

Hebrews 4:14
Since we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast to our confession.

Mark 10:26-27
They were greatly astounded and said to one another, 'Then who can be saved? Jesus looked at them and said, "For mortals it is impossible, but not for God. All things are possible for God.'

Night Sky
Close approach of the Moon and Jupiter 10.11

10.14.18
Close approach of the Moon and Saturn near Sagittarius, the Archer

Rising Order
PM Moon, Saturn, Mars
AM Mercury, Venus, Jupiter



We're like the man who climbed on a chair and declared he was a little closer to the moon.
— Hubert Dreyfus, What Computers Can't Do

Hubert Dreyfus 10.15.29, Terre Haute, Indiana
休伯特德雷福斯
休伯特德雷福斯
Obit.

休 Xiu       rest          休  yuu         rest                      Hi   ひ    ヒ       Heo 허  huh       
伯 bo        senior       伯 haku       eldest brother     -yu   ゅ-  ュ-       beo  버  bur
特 te         unique      特 tok          unique                  ba ば-  バ-         teu   트  the
德 De       kind           德 no kanji                               to   と     ト       De   드  de
雷 lei        terrific       雷  rai          thunder                 Do  ど    ド       le     레  re
福 fu        luck           福  fuku       good fortune         re   れ    レ       pwi   퓌 pup
斯 si        this            斯  kou        in this way             i     い    イ       seu   스 switch
                                                                                    fu   ふ    フ
                                                                                     a    ぁ     ァ
                                                                                     su  す    ス     

Terre Haute is a city in Vigo county Indiana. It is located along the Wabash River near the states western border with Illinois. The name "Terre Haute" is a French phrase meaning “highland." The name was coined by French explorers of the mid 18th century. They found a plateau-like area that adjoined the Wabash River.These highlands were considered the border between Canada and Louisiana at the time the area was claimed by the French and British.

Early Terre Haute was a center of farming, milling and pork processing. The business and industrial expansion of the city prior to 1860 developed largely thanks to transportation. The Wabash River, the building of the National Road (now US 40) and the Wabash and Erie Canal linked Terre Haute to the world.

The city's range of influence was broad. Pork processing was previously a major industry of Terre Haute. It greatly declined following the Civil War. Iron furnaces, foundries and rolling mills started up in and around the town with the discovery of coal in neighboring Clay County in 1867. These iron works were set up to meet the rising demands of the railroad companies. Vigo County became the third largest coal producer and the fifth largest iron manufacturer in the state by 1870.

The economy was based on iron and steel mills, hominy plants and, late in the 19th century, distilleries, breweries and bottle makers. Railroads supported the coal mines and coal operating companies, yet agriculture remained predominant, largely due to the role of corn in making alcoholic beverages and food items. The city was called the "Crossroads of America" due to the extensive rail and road network.

The increased labor population brought about by the factories introduced a tradition of strong union activity. The union activity caused many strikes, lockouts and bad relations between workers and employers.

Eugene V. Debs ran many times for president as the candidate of the Socialist Party. He was born in Terre Haute in 1871. He returned in 1921 and spent the last years of his life in that city.

The largest Ku Klux Klan rally ever held in Indiana took place in Forest Park on Saturday June 16, 1923 and through to the following dawn, five miles (8 km) north of Terre Haute.It was reported that Klansmen from throughout Indiana and surrounding states.

Five thousand robed Klansmen paraded through the city at 9:00 pm. Tall crosses were burned on their return to the park six 30-foot (9.1 m). Fifteen hundred candidates were initiated into the Klan and 500 women joined the auxiliary.

Coca-Cola introduced its iconic green bottle in 1915. It was designed and manufactured locally at Root Glass Company. Authorities seized the largest moonshine still ever discovered in Vigo County on July 15, 1929 giving credit to the town's “Sin City” moniker.

Hubert Dreyfus was born on Oct. 15, 1929, in Terre Haute, Indiana, to Stanley Dreyfus, a businessman in the poultry industry, and Irene Lederer Dreyfus, a homemaker. He was the older of two sons.

Dreyfus attended Wiley High School in Terre Haute, where his success on the debate team paved his way to Harvard University. He majored in physics before switching to philosophy after hearing a lecture by American philosopher C.I. Lewis.

He was educated at Harvard University, earning three degrees there, with a BA summa cum laude in 1951, an MA in 1952, and a PhD in 1964. He is considered a leading interpreter of the work of Edmund Husserl, Michel Foucault, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and especially of Martin Heidegger.

He was an American philosopher and professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley. His main interests included phenomenology, existentialism and the philosophy of both psychology and literature. He is known for his work on the philosophical implications of artificial intelligence.

Dreyfus published "Alchemy and Artificial Intelligence" while teaching at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1965. It was an attack on the work of Allen Newell and Herbert A. Simon, two of the leading researchers in AI.

Dreyfus not only questioned the results they had so far obtained, but he also criticized their basic presupposition that intelligence consists of the manipulation of physical symbols according to formal rules. He argued that the AI research program was doomed to failure.

He spent time at the Rand Corporation while work on artificial intelligence was in progress in 1965. Dreyfus was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2001 and is a recipient of the Harbison Prize for Outstanding Teaching at UC Berkeley.

Erasmus University awarded Dreyfus an honorary doctorate "for his brilliant and highly influential work in the field of artificial intelligence, and for his equally outstanding contributions to the analysis and interpretation of twentieth century continental philosophy."



Greg Evigan 10.14.53, South Amboy, New Jersey
格雷格永恆
格雷格永恒
FB

格 Ge       grid            格  kaku     case           Gu  ぐ    グ      Geu  그  that           
雷 lei        mine          雷  rai         thunder      re   れ    レ      leg    렉  leg 
格 ge       grid             格  kaku     case           tsu  っ    ッ       E      에  on
永 Yong   always       永  naga      long           gu     ぐ   グ     bi      비  ratio
恒 heng   constant      恆 no kanji                   E      え   エ      geon 건  key
                                                                        -i     い    イ
                                                                        bi     び     ビ
                                                                        gan がん ガン

South Amboy is a suburban city in Middlesex County, New Jersey on the Raritan Bay. The Raritan River was the major drainage channel along the ice front throughout the Wisconsin glaciation. This was the most recent glacial period of the North American ice sheet complex. Perth Amboy is just across the river. The two locations are referred to as the Amboys.

The Leni Lenape tribe inhabited the region. They utilized a series of established trails through the area that would become Sayreville and the Amboys.These included the Matchaponix, Deerfield and the Minisink Trails which the Lenape used to cross the Raritan River each Spring and Fall at the Matokshegan.

Dutch and English ships traveled up the Raritan River for the first time in the Fall of 1663. Both had the intent to purchase land from the Lenape. What they found was a handsome and fertile countryside marked by salt marshes, meadows and forests of pine, oak, chestnut and hickory.

The Lenni Lenape cultivated fields of maize, beans and pumpkins. The Dutch named the large river they had explored for the Raritong tribe who they had encountered on the riverbanks.

The area around Perth Amboy was called "Ompoge" (meaning "level ground") by the Lenape. It became a key port for commerce between Lower New York Bay and Philadelphia. It was connected first by stagecoach and eventually by railroad.

The city was named New Perth in honor of James Drummond, Earl of Perth, in 1684. He was one of the associates of a company of Scottish proprietaries. The Algonquian language name was corrupted to Ambo, or Point Amboy. Eventually a combination of the native and colonial names was used.

Andrew Radford began to operate a ferry in 1684. The service ran between Perth Amboy, the capital of East Jersey, and South Amboy, then known as the “Outer Plantations” or “Detached Plantations” of Perth Amboy.

South Amboy became a port city of some consequence. It was a vital link to stagecoaches that carried travelers between New York and Philadelphia along Lawrie’s Road. This was a significant thoroughfare in the colony.

The Morgan family received a land grant of about 500 acres from the East Jersey proprietors in 1702. They settled in South Amboy along the banks of Cheesequake Creek where they built a mansion named “Sandcombe.” This entire area would take their family name.

The Morgan family established a kiln in 1775 at Cheesequake Creek where they produced pottery with local clay. Captain James Morgan (1734-1784) and his son, Major General James Morgan (1757-1822), both served and were briefly taken prisoner in the American Revolution.

The British ransacked their mansion during this time. They broke 23 windows, took everything of value and tossed their valuable kiln into Cheesequake Creek. Major General Morgan later served in the 12th US Congress and then the War of 1812.

One morning in July 1771, over 15 British ships of war appear on the horizon and quickly filled the waters of the Raritan Bay. The residents of the Amboys watched in awe as Admiral Richard Howe commanded a landing of over 900 troops on Staten Island.

Governor Livingston appointed Captain James Morgan to guard the south side of the Raritan Bay and River with a militia of 50 men. The 2nd Regiment, Middlesex County Militia was formed. It was comprised of local men and boys. They were charged with the duty of harassing and impeding Redcoats at any sign of movement.

Nighttime raids on the British ships anchored in the bay were frequent. Locals in small boats launched from the many rivers, inlets and creeks along the shore. The Ye Old Spye Inn on Cheesequake Creek was one place where raiding patriots sought refuge.

South Amboy's strategic location as a transportation hub acted to its detriment in 1918 and 1950 when the town was heavily damaged by military explosives. The 1918 explosions occurred during World War I at the Gillespie Shell Loading Plant just south of the town.

The 1950 explosions struck as Healing Lighterage Company dockworkers were transferring ammunition from a freight train onto barges. Both disasters killed dozens and injured hundreds of local victims, damaged hundreds of South Amboy buildings, required emergency declarations of martial law and scattered wide areas of ammunition remnants that continue to surface occasionally.

Greg Evigan was born in South Amboy, New Jersey on October, 14, 1953. He was the son of Ralph Milan Evigan, an electrician, and his wife, Barbara Elizabeth Evigan, a homemaker. He grew up in Sayreville, New Jersey. attended Sayreville War Memorial High School and graduated in 1971.

He is an American actor known for the television series B. J. and the Bear, My Two Dads, P.S. I Luv U and TekWar. He has appeared in many TV shows and films. He is notable for the charm that he has brought to his characterizations.



Vanessa Marcil 10.15.68, Indio, California
凡妮莎馬西爾
凡妮莎马西尔
FB

凡 Fan   ordinary       凡 Bon         mediocrity        Vu    ヴ    ヴ           Ba  바  bar 
妮 ni       cute girl       妮 no kanji                             a     ぁ    ァ           ne  네  yeah 
莎 sha    insect           莎 sha          nut grass            ne    ね   ネ            sa  사  four
马 Ma     horse           馬  uma       horse                  ssa  っさ ッサ       Ma  마  hemp
西 xi       west             西  nishi      west                   Ma  ま    マ            sil   실  room
尔 er      you               爾  ore         you                     shi  し    シ
                                                                                  e     ぇ    ェ
                                                                                  ru    る   ル

The word Indio is Spanish for Indian.

Indio is a city in Riverside County, California. It is located in the Coachella Valley of Southern California's Colorado Desert region. It lies 127 miles (204 km) east of Los Angeles and 148 miles (238 km) northeast of San Diego. It is about 98 miles (158 km) north of Mexicali.

The city was created as a railroad town. It sprung to life in 1876 as the Southern Pacific Railroad built lines between Yuma, Arizona and Los Angeles, California. Engines needed a place to refill their water. Workers needed somewhere to rest and recharge.

The Southern Pacific Depot Station and Hotel was the first permanent building that was erected.  The hotel hoped to attract and retain workers. It became the center of all social interactions in the railroad town. It was a place where one could find fine dining and Friday night dances. A welcome reprieve from life in the difficult desert terrain was created. It was a constructed as a civilized oasis.

The location had blossomed into a promising agricultural region by the turn of the century. Ingenious farmers irrigated the land first through wells and later by accessing the All-American Canal. The irrigation allowed crops such as onions, cotton, grapes, citrus and dates to thrive in the otherwise arid climate.

Indio began work as the home of the USDA’s Date Station in 1907. Scientists researched date cultivation. They learned the techniques of farmers from the Persian Gulf and Northern Africa, where the palm tree that produces the fruit is native. The data collected through this initiative bolstered date production in the city.

Today the area produces 41.4 million pound annual output. Date production has become more than an economic boon. It has become part of the culture. The National Date Festival is held every year. The Middle Eastern theme hearkens back to the crop’s roots.

The people in the area worked to establish more than a fading railroad town by the turn of the 20th century. Schools were built, the La Casita hospital provided medical services and families established roots. This was the start of the growth into a city. It was not going to die as a railroad town.

About one to two thousand year round residents lived in Indio by 1920. It could double to 2,500 to 5,000 during the winter months when it acted as a health resort for senior citizens and those with respiratory ailments.

The city currently has the largest population in Riverside County’s Coachella Valley. There are over 89,000 residents. Nearly 1.4 million people visit the “City of Festivals” every year to attend its world famous arts, food and music festivals such as the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival and Stagecoach Country Music Festival. It is ranked as one of the top emerging travel destinations in the country.

Vanessa Marcil was born as Sally Vanessa Ortiz in Indio, California on October 15, 1968. She was the youngest of four children. Patricia Marcil was her mother. She was an American herbalist of French and Italian ancestry. Peter Ortiz was her father. He was a contractor and self-made millionaire of Mexican descent.

Vanessa is an American actress. She is best known for her television roles as Brenda Barrett on General Hospital, Gina Kincaid on Beverly Hills, 90210 and Sam Marquez on Las Vegas.



Risa Yamaki 10.14.97, Tokyo, Japan
山木梨沙
丽莎雅克
Country Girls
Love is a Magnet

丽 Li      pretty          山  Yama   peak, crown                      Ri   り  リ     Ya  야  hey
莎 sha   insect           木  ki          tree                                    sa  さ  サ     Ya  야  hey
雅 Ya     graceful       梨  Ri         pear blossom                   Ya  や ヤ       ma 마  hemp
克 ke     restrain         沙  sa         one hundred-millioneth    ma  ま マ      ki    키  key
                                                                                               ki    き キ 

Tokyo Big Sight opened  in April 1996. The center is located in Ariake Minami district on Tokyo Bay waterfront. Big Sight is Japan's largest international convention venue.

The Kyoto Protocol was adopted in Kyoto, Japan on 11 December 1997 and entered into force on 16 February 2005. The Protocol is an international treaty which extends the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

The UNFCCC commits state parties to reduce greenhouse gas emissions based on the scientific consensus that (part one) global warming is occurring and (part two) it is extremely likely that human-made CO2 emissions have predominantly caused it.

Yamaki Risa was born on October 14, 1997 in Tokyo, Japan.

Risa-chan is a Japanese pop singer in Hello! Project. She is the leading member of Country Girls. She first joined Hello! Project as a Hello Pro Kenshuusei member in September 2013.

She wanted to join Hello Pro Kenshuusei because she wanted to join Hello! Project, but she only had eyes for Morning Musume. She didn't have interest in any other idols. She thinks of Morning Musume as artists.

It was announced on November 5, 2014 that Yamaki was added to Country Musume, now called Country Girls. She was selected along with Inaba Manaka, Morito Chisaki, Shimamura Uta and Ozeki Mai.

It was announced on October 3, 2018 that Yamaki had joined College Cosmos, an idol group made up of female university students as a joint project between Space Craft Group and UP-FRONT GROUP.