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Monthly Archives: January 2011

Photographers with Passion

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I interview architectural photographer Andrew Doran on a cold January morning. When we got to his house in Squamish he invited us in and straight away we both notice the model helicopters that dominate the room. As you will see in this video, this is Andrew’s technique to get unique aerial shots for real estate agents and developers. Delving deeper into Andrew’s abilities we find out that he enjoys landscape photography. Squamish has always been an inspiration to him, and he sees beauty in things that people would pass by each day.

http://www.youtube.com/user/WhistlerShaw#p/a/u/0/tbfXfD3eOyA

Check out his work at http://andrewdoran.com/phoblography/

Is apperseptive mass our issue?

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Architectural Ingenuity – Creative houses from reclaimed stuff

Apperseptive Mass: The apperceptive mass was part of theory of psychic mechanics proposed by Johann Friedrich Herbart (1776-1841) to account for the workings of the mind. Herbart believed that the basic units of the mind are ideas. He agreed with the empiricists that they come from experience. He departed from their view concerning what happens once ideas enter the mind. Herbart claimed that at that point ideas have a life all of their own, and thereafter are never destroyed or completely forgotten. Moreover, ideas strive for conscious expression through a process he referred to as psychic mechanics. At any given moment, similar ideas attract and form an apperceptive mass in consciousness. Ideas incompatible with the mass are repelled by it (repression). The repressed ideas are relegated to the unconscious mind where they remain, either until a more compatible apperceptive mass emerges, or until enough there are enough similar repressed ideas to form their own apperceptive mass. Herbart used the term limen to refer to the border between the unconscious and the conscious mind. Aiming to do for the mind what Isaac Newton (1642-1727) had done for the physical world, he tried to express mathematically the relationships among the apperceptive mass, the limen, and the conflict of ideas.

Explanation taken from: http://psych.athabascau.ca/html/Glossary/demo_glossary.cgi?mode=history&term_id=755&color_id=3

I found this great TED talk on the blog of a local photographer Andrew Doran. His eclectic portfolio features architectural gems, heli-ski adrenaline shots, and personal moments. It’s his use of light, and ability to see beauty in the smallest of moments that makes his work stand out. More on him in next blog post…..

The Sea Captain’s Wife by Beth Powning

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“Often, she paused on the porch and looked out at the blue line of Nova Scotia and the silver gleam in the southwest where the bay widened to the Gulf of Maine: the sea spread before her, thundered in her ears; and sometimes she loathed it, since Nathaniel was at its mercy. At other times, she closed her eyes, tossed back her bonnet and breathed deep of the world’s size.”

I am a sucker for historical fiction, throw a bit of swashbuckling romance in there and I’m hooked. When I imagine sea voyage back in the 1800’s I must admit to conjuring up images of impressive vessels smashing their way across the oceans, with grandeur and glamour that can’t possibly of existed. The real stories, like the one that Beth Powning relates in her latest novel The Sea Captain’s Wife, showcases the more realistic side to seamanship – illness, solitude, risk, and the heartache that inevitably follow a life amongst the waves.

Read on here….

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