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zhivkov wrote:Thank you so much for these images and photos. The Crowley 'cake of light' is great-actually enjoyed almost all of them. On edit I am going to have to spend some time with these- great work! Edit again the image below the capitol dome and the alternate solar system and the symbols image and those eyes!
cptmarginal wrote:Which Camus book is that? Just got Sisyphus today for 50 cents - perhaps a bit of a coincidence for me
Perelandra wrote:What is that last symbol? I like your images.
zhivkov wrote:Keep them coming OP ED-thanks for the new images too. I would love to know where the image below the capitol dome is from. I am also interested in the meaning of the sigil. If its not for the profane or private that is fine. Edit-I had not been aware that C.S. Lewis had written a sci-fi trilogy.
Yeah, me too. Read part of the trilogy years ago and have no real reason for picking the name, except it means Venus and is therefore not the real me. Screwtape was inspired, God superior at evil? It's been awhile, so perhaps will read again with a new mind. His names are fascinating, he was a linguist, as was Tolkien, as you know. I received a book Lewis authored on some favorite words and his opinions of the etymologies, but for some reason, I can't find it on Amazon and all my books are packed right now. Very good scholar and philosopher, even if you don't agree with his theology.OP ED wrote:C.S. Lewis did indeed write Sci Fi. Not really my thing, usually. I like Lewis' style, but his plots tend towards the predictable. Bad guys surround good guys, Darkness fills sky, all Hope is lost--Suddenly--Divine Intervention Ensues--Cue happy ending, etc. I prefer Screwtape, myself, insofar as he describes the reasons for my Amoralism. (God is winning not because he is "good" but because he is better at being Self-Serving, literally because he is simply superior at being "evil") One of my favorite books. I posted the picture first in one of 8bit's 911 threads, because I've always found Lewis' choice of "names" to be inspired. Perelandra made me think of it. (Btw Malacandra is the D.C. comics "martian language" name for Mars).
"The Mice are burying the Cat", a 1760s Russian lubok hand-coloured woodcut. It probably originally dates from the reign of Peter the Great, but this impression probably dates from c1766. Possibly a satire on Peter's reforms, or just a representation of carnivalesque inversion, "turning the world upside down"
zhivkov wrote:I love this thread-great to see it going again! If I wasn't such a dip I could try to post some images of mandalas I have drawn-but the stuff you and Perelandra have makes mine look postively boring anyway. I checked out the Girls with Birds thread-that is great too!
OP ED wrote:
(Tell me my future!!)
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