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Articles: Malcom, A. Robert


Wednesday
April 5, 2006
Commentary
Ashes to Flames
by A. Robert Malcom
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A continuing iconoclastic history of Art... (Read more...)
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Wednesday
February 8, 2006
Commentary
Afterglow
by A. Robert Malcom
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The Roman era -  continuing series of an iconoclastic art history (Read more...)
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Tuesday
January 31, 2006
Commentary
On Art
by A. Robert Malcom
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     One of the problems in dealing with the issue of aesthetics is that, from the philosophical standpoint, it has been considered the least of the branches of philosophy - this, despite the fact that it is personal, that is to say, individualistic, not tribalistic, and thus really the most important of the sibling of... (Read more...)
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Friday
January 6, 2006
Commentary
On Spiritual Visualizing
by A. Robert Malcom
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     One of the things which have come to mean so much to me is the recognition that the purpose of an artist is far more than has generally been considered.   An artist is, by the fact of 'showing' that which is of importance to that artist, a Spiritual Visualizer, a person who has undertaken the responsibility of... (Read more...)
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Thursday
December 22, 2005
Commentary
The First Renaissance
by A. Robert Malcom
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The universe is, by its nature, dynamic. This is to say that everything of the universe is in motion, though of different speeds relative to each other. There is no beginning nor any ending, just an infinite series of evolving continuums. All actions have consequences, including those which have origins. What, then, ar... (Read more...)
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Sunday
November 27, 2005
Commentary
On the Origins of the Taking Syndrome
by A. Robert Malcom
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The psychology of the two kinds of worldview, the trading and the taking, were and are quite different from each other. The taking syndrome was tribalistic; its members were raised to consider themselves as parts of groups, a valued quality when it comes to matters of organized theft. (Read more...)
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Wednesday
November 9, 2005
Commentary
On the Origins of the Trading Syndrome
by A. Robert Malcom
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Among the ancient settlements uncovered by archaeological research, raiding was not the dominant means of interaction; plenty of evidence suggests that instead, bartering took place. Bartering is a form of trading, an exchange of "value for value," and, because of the likelihood of repeated encounters, was done without coercion. (Read more...)
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Thursday
September 22, 2005
Commentary
Two Worldviews - The Trader and Taking Syndromes
by A. Robert Malcom
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Jane Jacobs, in Systems of Survival, points out that there are only two methods of survival. In addition, she points out that humans are unique in possessing both -- all other animals have only one. These two methods of survival are, as Jacobs notes, fundamentally different outlooks on life. As such, they have profoundly different consequences. Originating in very different contexts, these outlooks each evolved into a set of syndromes that encompass a whole range of notions congruent with each particular view of the world. (Read more...)
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Wednesday
May 11, 2005
Commentary
The Issue of Evolution - Part Four
by A. Robert Malcom
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Evolution, as said, is progression.  How, then, did the shift to being aquatic apes induce progression to eventually become Homo sapiens?  What were the consequences to the aquatic apes of "showing off"?  (Read more...)
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Monday
May 9, 2005
Commentary
The Issue of Evolution - Part 3
by A. Robert Malcom
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In regards to galactic evolution, one can take lab performances and extrapolate principlewise to similar views seen on the galactic scale [see Lerner, pg. 47].  But what is to be served in the same manner to the evolution of humans? (Read more...)
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Sunday
May 8, 2005
Commentary
The Issue of Evolution - Part 2
by A. Robert Malcom
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The first thing which needs be remembered is that Reason is the absolute, the fundamental means of knowing reality - not believing, but knowing, a crucial distinction.  (Read more...)
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Saturday
May 7, 2005
Commentary
The Issue of Evolution
by A. Robert Malcom
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Perhaps no word has had so much controversy and mis-understanding as the word 'evolution' - largely because it was not being explained in terms of context, and oft considered through only one of its applications: biology.  To begin with, evolution is nothing other than the recognition that the universe is, by its nature, dynamic - and that aspects of the universe which involve measurable duration reflect changes as a consequence.  (Read more...)
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