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Old January 12th, 2010, 01:39 AM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
Giles
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Default A fishing post - Catch Magazine

On Jan 11, 1:27*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Jan 11, 3:30*am, Giles wrote:





On Jan 11, 3:45*am, DaveS wrote:


On Jan 4, 7:28*pm, Giles wrote:
SNIP If you've got a lot more luck than brains, you may someday discover
that buying experience is in no way fundamentally different than
buying things.


SNIP


OK


If LUCKBRAINS --- EXPERIENCE NotDiffThan THINGS
Therefore
If LUCKBRAINS --- EXPERIENCE * * *DiffThan *THINGS
&
If BRAINSLUCK --- EXPERIENCE * * *DiffThan * THINGS


So f------ what?


How about the EXPERIENCE of THINGS? or the Experience of THINGness?


Look, I knew Mr Thingnessless
Mr Thingnessless was a friend of mine
And you ain't no Mr Thingnessless


And IMHO nor are but the tinyest portion of our life-form, either out
of necessity or by choice. We are literally Thinglings. Maybe how we
get things, or even make things ourselves is the more interesting
question.


I think maybe some of the THINGness is hardwired in humans by now, and
represents the movement of physical solutions, (like extensive
hairiness), transformed into a biochemical circuit which in some way
enables a material solution, (like pelt or textile), . . . to address
the need for the body to conserve heat for example. etc etc.


Dave


A fascinating hypothesis, but where are you gonna find volunteers to
test it?


g.
who doesn't know a lot of folks keen on the notion of having their
wiring messed with.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Details, mere details. ;+)

Dave


There's an old familiar expression that crops up even here sometimes;
"The devil is in the details." Personally, I prefer Mies Van Der
Rohe's take; "God dwells in the details."

Bu then, given that there's no end to details, I suppose there's room
for both.

giles