6014716
9781556437007
From First Cycle: Museum of the Milky Way Galaxy A dragonfly is more advanced than a human being, in dragonfly terms. Its swift, surveillant flight, stopping and starting instantly, likewise turning on a dime, is well beyond what human motility can approachit is the evolutionary equivalent of language and philosophy. Plus, dragonflies have no use for speech or dialect; they are the mere embodiment of predatory flight. That is, they have nothing to say which they don't do. Any plane that tried to carry out dragonfly maneuvers would tear itself apart. Likewise, no Olympic muscleman, at scale of lifter to object, could out-press an ant. Not only would ants win the gold, the silver, and the bronze, but a crippled ant would finish well ahead of the most able Kazakhstani or Turk. It took millions of years of nonlinear flux via proteins and neural nets to render a beehive, a masterpiece of apian art as well as an archetypal object. It took millennia of stone tools, metallurgy, and cybernetics for humans to achieve its approximate simulacrum in a computer disk. For what it is and what it's supposed to do, a beehive is perfect. An anthill is also perfect: tunnels of habitable symmetry from white noise, a billion vortices underlying stacks of organized chaos. It is the coevolutionary partner of the ant, itssine qua non. A fish, exerting flaps against rods, enacts elegant design principlespropulsion approaching, even as it arises from, inertia. In the Metropolitan Museum of the Milky Way Galaxy, a spider web plucked from Earth in the eighth millennium B.C. hangs adjacent to an iPod Nano. One critic from the Pleiades deemed it aneven more exquisiterepresentative of Sol carbon craft. In this same exhibit hall, mites from Enceladus and Europa are exemplified by fractally pleated micro-fabrics. Titan is not just an unrefined "Earth"; it is a tabernacle of methane philosophy...Grossinger, Richard is the author of 'The Bardo of Waking Life' with ISBN 9781556437007 and ISBN 1556437005.
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