Understanding Organizes

Something added
Sensuous manifold
Contingent conquest

Humans construct spatial order.

“When we undertake to found order, we regard it as contingent, if not in things, at least as viewed by the mind: of a thing that we do not judge to be contingent we do not require an explanation.” – Henri Bergson

Cuts Inert

Matter mass
Distinct bodies
Interest action

Illumination is a moving target.

“There is no doubt that life as a whole is an evolution, that is, an unceasing transformation.” – Henri Bergson

Wave Amplitude

Causes effects
Narrow entirety
Particular manifestation

Complex energy wave patterns are here a surface phenomenon showing luminous colors that change when seen from different angles.

“The vital order, such as it is offered to us piecemeal in experience, presents the same character and performs the same function as the physical order: both cause experience to repeat itself, both enable our mind to generalize.” – Henri Bergso

Reciprocal Extension

Element mechanism
Externalized by relation
Necessary determination

The sound side of the Outer Banks offers its own tension.

“Meaning is always only an opinion in the sense that it always stands in need of evidence that can never be given definitively.” – Edmund Husserl

Services

Entirely adaptable
Intellectual conceptions
Home on wheels

Seeking advice from random strangers found wandering around an unfamiliar town may not advance enlightenment.

“In a general way, reality is ordered exactly to the degree in which it satisfies our thought.” – Henri Bergson

Throw some Light

Moving actively
Undivided flux
Evidently correlative

The ocean sunrise sometimes back-lights breaking waves.

“Intellectuality and materiality have been constituted, in detail, by reciprocal adaptation.” – Henri Bergson

Distributed Convolutions

Divergent series
Manifold tendencies
Outward representations

A weathered storage trailer supports a folding ladder.

“Fabricating consists in shaping matter, in making it supple and in bending it, in converting it into an instrument in order to become master of it.” – Henri Bergson

Interdependence

Common origin
Fill the interval
Momentary spark

Commercial fishing vessels throw fish parts into the ocean that subsequently wash-up on shore.

“It is as if a broad current of consciousness had penetrated matter, loaded, as all consciousness is, with an enormous multiplicity of interwoven potentialities.” – Henri Bergson

Reciprocal

Car port
Interference patterns
Rather displaced

Timing and viewing position reveal complex moiré patterns that visibly shift around as environmental relationships dynamically maneuver.

“The resulting patterns can be thought of as a composite trigonometric graphs scenario, where we are adding graphs that are slightly out of phase.” – Murray Bourne

Compound Reflex

Outer effect
Simply intelligible
Reflect upon itself

Powerful forces are sometimes nuanced.

“Intuition may bring the intellect to recognize that life does not quite go into the category of the many nor yet into that of the one; that neither mechanical causality nor finality can give a sufficient interpretation of the vital process.” – Henri Bergson

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