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Topic ClosedStripping a myth - the truth about ITCOTCK

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2014 at 18:26
Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by Progosopher Progosopher wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:



"In the Course of the Crimson King" is considered to be the first full-fledged prog album by many people. let me first make it clear that I don't believe such a claim can be made by any album. prog was, like any other musical form, something that gradually developed, and it makes no sense at  all to define a clear point for saying "this is where it all starts".


I fully agree with this. When we look at the historical development of movements, of which Prog is one, we find a continuum of small steps that lead up to something new and recognizable. Where it begins is a matter of interpretation, which is not always informed or clearly thought out. We can find all sorts of elements that went into Prog, many of which are not rock. ITCOTCK is one of the steps, and an important one, but certainly not the first.

Personally, I love the album and listen to it in its entirety as well. The long instrumental part of Moonchild is more intriguing to me than enjoyable. It also sets the stage for ITCOTCK: That first swell of the mellotron after so many minutes of rambling is sweet to my ears. I don't care if the album is Prog or not, much less the first. It is a great album, and surprisingly mellow, given the band's reputation. The only song that really rocks is 21st Schizoid Man. Nor is the album perfect, another categorization I do not care for.

Great analysis, BaldJean!


 
 
Well said Robert.....and I couldn't agree more.
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Yup I really enjoyed BaldJean's thoughts on this album as well.Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2014 at 19:39
Freak Out is either the first Prog album or Zappa is not Prog.

I don't agree with Bald Jean that I talk to the Wind is a Pop song. I don't agree that the difference between Pop and Prog is contingent upon song structure. I would agree that it is one possible indicator among many. I consider Genesis' short little song, Harlequin, more Prog than Nektar Recycled, which I definitely consider Pop, side-long length aside and very much irrelevant.

I agree with Bald Jean's essential point that ITCOCK was not the first Prog album and that Prog evolved. An FYI, for everyone, however. Saying that something is NOT SOMETHING is not a way of avoiding categorization. I agree with Deans general comments earlier on that matter. Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.

I think ITCOCK is a very strange and very dated animal. It was before my time, and I don't understand all of its appeal. I might if I was older than two at the time and was exposed to it properly in its historical context. It seems to have been very influential to some, Hackett included.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2014 at 20:01
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Freak Out is either the first Prog album or Zappa is not Prog.

I don't agree with Bald Jean that I talk to the Wind is a Pop song. I don't agree that the difference between Pop and Prog is contingent upon song structure. I would agree that it is one possible indicator among many. I consider Genesis' short little song, Harlequin, more Prog than Nektar Recycled, which I definitely consider Pop, side-long length aside and very much irrelevant.

I agree with Bald Jean's essential point that ITCOCK was not the first Prog album and that Prog evolved. An FYI, for everyone, however. Saying that something is NOT SOMETHING is not a way of avoiding categorization. I agree with Deans general comments earlier on that matter. Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.

I think ITCOCK is a very strange and very dated animal. It was before my time, and I don't understand all of its appeal. I might if I was older than two at the time and was exposed to it properly in its historical context. It seems to have been very influential to some, Hackett included.

I named structure as one of the parameters for deciding if certain music is prog; it was not meant to be the only one. I had not wanted to list all the defining parameters; for that go to the "what is prog?" page on this site. and I actually thought that was obvious.

as to "Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.": no. refusing to categorize is not another form of categorization, just as refusing to talk is not another form of talking


Edited by BaldJean - March 08 2014 at 20:07


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2014 at 21:25
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:





Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Freak Out is either the first Prog album or Zappa is not Prog.

I don't agree with Bald Jean that I talk to the Wind is a Pop song. I don't agree that the difference between Pop and Prog is contingent upon song structure. I would agree that it is one possible indicator among many. I consider Genesis' short little song, Harlequin, more Prog than Nektar Recycled, which I definitely consider Pop, side-long length aside and very much irrelevant.

I agree with Bald Jean's essential point that ITCOCK was not the first Prog album and that Prog evolved. An FYI, for everyone, however. Saying that something is NOT SOMETHING is not a way of avoiding categorization. I agree with Deans general comments earlier on that matter. Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.

I think ITCOCK is a very strange and very dated animal. It was before my time, and I don't understand all of its appeal. I might if I was older than two at the time and was exposed to it properly in its historical context. It seems to have been very influential to some, Hackett included.
I named structure as one of the parameters for deciding if certain music is prog; it was not meant to be the only one. I had not wanted to list all the defining parameters; for that go to the "what is prog?" page on this site. and I actually thought that was obvious.as to "Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline
exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes
and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.": no. refusing to categorize is not another form of categorization, just as refusing to talk is not another form of talking


You're not refusing to categorize. You're making definitive negative assertions:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

I only mention it for my argument why ITCOTCK is not a full-fledged prog album.


Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

what the post is chiefly about is the impossibility to say "this is the first prog album". this music gradually emerged, and any kind of pointing to a certain album and saying "this is the beginning" makes no sense at all and is totally arbitrary.


Categorization is always arbitrary, that's how we get different languages/different grammars, for instance. It occurs to me though that you might be using a different sense of 'arbitrary', to refer to a lack of internal consistency. So, you might be saying that someone who does classify ITCOCK as the first Prog album is using a classification that relies on stipulations that are not consistent with such a person's own categorization. On that matter, I believe I've articulated some support.

Edited by HackettFan - March 08 2014 at 21:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 08 2014 at 21:42
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:





Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Freak Out is either the first Prog album or Zappa is not Prog.

I don't agree with Bald Jean that I talk to the Wind is a Pop song. I don't agree that the difference between Pop and Prog is contingent upon song structure. I would agree that it is one possible indicator among many. I consider Genesis' short little song, Harlequin, more Prog than Nektar Recycled, which I definitely consider Pop, side-long length aside and very much irrelevant.

I agree with Bald Jean's essential point that ITCOCK was not the first Prog album and that Prog evolved. An FYI, for everyone, however. Saying that something is NOT SOMETHING is not a way of avoiding categorization. I agree with Deans general comments earlier on that matter. Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.

I think ITCOCK is a very strange and very dated animal. It was before my time, and I don't understand all of its appeal. I might if I was older than two at the time and was exposed to it properly in its historical context. It seems to have been very influential to some, Hackett included.
I named structure as one of the parameters for deciding if certain music is prog; it was not meant to be the only one. I had not wanted to list all the defining parameters; for that go to the "what is prog?" page on this site. and I actually thought that was obvious.as to "Furthermore, even if you want to say that there are no hardline
exclusionary definitions, you would still be in the world of prototypes
and exemplars, which is still a manner of categorization.": no. refusing to categorize is not another form of categorization, just as refusing to talk is not another form of talking


You're not refusing to categorize. You're making definitive negative assertions:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

I only mention it for my argument why ITCOTCK is not a full-fledged prog album.


Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

what the post is chiefly about is the impossibility to say "this is the first prog album". this music gradually emerged, and any kind of pointing to a certain album and saying "this is the beginning" makes no sense at all and is totally arbitrary.


Categorization is always arbitrary, that's how we get different languages/different grammars, for instance. It occurs to me though that you might be using a different sense of 'arbitrary', to refer to a lack of internal consistency. So, you might be saying that someone who does classify ITCOCK as the first Prog album is using a classification that relies on stipulations that are not consistent with such a person's own categorization. On that matter, I believe I've articulated some support.

you seem  to have overlooked this:

let me first make it clear that I don't believe such a claim can be made by any album. prog was, like any other musical form, something that gradually developed, and it makes no sense at  all to define a clear point for saying "this is where it all starts".

anything else I wrote has to be seen in the light of this initial statement. so I clearly refuse to make categorizations



Edited by BaldJean - March 08 2014 at 21:45


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 00:01
you seem to have overlooked this:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

let me first make it clear that I don't believe such a claim can be made by any album. prog was, like any other musical form, something that gradually developed, and it makes no sense at all to define a clear point for saying "this is where it all starts".

anything else I wrote has to be seen in the light of this initial statement. so I clearly refuse to make categorizations

I know of no evolutionary process that does not result in categorizations. Of course it's a different sort of system. You don't tally up numbers of similarities. You categorize according to shared innovations. In biology it's called Cladistics. In linguistics it's called "The Comparative Method".

In the context, of the discussion here we would want to know what sort of innovation ITCOCK contained (or did not contain) that served to influence Genesis, Yes, and so on that is not attributable to the Moody Blues, the Nice, Frank Zappa and so on. We may not find any innovation uniquely attributable to KC's ITCOCK, and then we would say that ITCOCK was actually not the first Prog album. If we do find one or more innovations shared among ITCOCK and the subsequent Symph Prog groups, then there would be reason to place them in the same category, and then an arbitrary decision is needed as to whether to call the category Prog, Symph Prog, or whatever.

Incidentally, I identified Freak Out as the first Prog album, based on how it fits with most definitions of Prog, but under this other method of categorization, Freak Out had very little influence that I know of on British Symph Prog, so it is not likely to have much claim to being a Prog "ancestor" from that standpoint.



Edited by HackettFan - March 09 2014 at 00:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 00:23
The Nice were the first. In the Court is just the first great prog album. I Talk to the Wind and Epitaph are definitely prog, if not as much as the first and last tracks. At any rate, the album overall is far more prog than anything the Moody Blues did.

Freak Out isn't prog.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 03:55
Originally posted by Metalmarsh89 Metalmarsh89 wrote:

Aren't albums supposed to be rated on the quality of the music, not its importance in the history of the genre? I guess prog isn't exactly a genre anyway, but that's beside the point.

They are supposed to be rated how you feel like rating them. 'Feel' includes emotional feelings not just some intellectual cold detached mathematical approach ie 75% is good so I give only 4 stars. That just annoys me quite frankly. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 03:59
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

what never fails to amaze me is how many people give 5 stars to this album and make bad comments about the second part of "Moonchild". are they aware that this second part constitutes almost a quarter of the album? how can an album of which nearly 25% are bad be a 5 star album?

because the other 75% is amazing?

What I think is that its a very important album. It was a 'coming out' album. . Its a grand statement. Its a bunch of young incredibly talented guys doing something with style and panache.

Of course they didn't invent 'prog' so perhaps this is the crux of the issue. What they did was pull together a lot of ideas and present them in the most coherent way possible . They defined it rather than inventing it.

I think "defined" is the wrong term here, especially if you consider the Latin origin of the word, which means "to limit, to set bounds"

In a way it did exactly that though. The limits and boundaries were set but just a long way out. You have everything pretty much in this album that was called 'prog' over the next 4 or 5 years.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 04:18
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

you seem to have overlooked this:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

let me first make it clear that I don't believe such a claim can be made by any album. prog was, like any other musical form, something that gradually developed, and it makes no sense at all to define a clear point for saying "this is where it all starts".

anything else I wrote has to be seen in the light of this initial statement. so I clearly refuse to make categorizations

I know of no evolutionary process that does not result in categorizations. Of course it's a different sort of system. You don't tally up numbers of similarities. You categorize according to shared innovations. In biology it's called Cladistics. In linguistics it's called "The Comparative Method".

In the context, of the discussion here we would want to know what sort of innovation ITCOCK contained (or did not contain) that served to influence Genesis, Yes, and so on that is not attributable to the Moody Blues, the Nice, Frank Zappa and so on. We may not find any innovation uniquely attributable to KC's ITCOCK, and then we would say that ITCOCK was actually not the first Prog album. If we do find one or more innovations shared among ITCOCK and the subsequent Symph Prog groups, then there would be reason to place them in the same category, and then an arbitrary decision is needed as to whether to call the category Prog, Symph Prog, or whatever.

Incidentally, I identified Freak Out as the first Prog album, based on how it fits with most definitions of Prog, but under this other method of categorization, Freak Out had very little influence that I know of on British Symph Prog, so it is not likely to have much claim to being a Prog "ancestor" from that standpoint.

That is a perfectly valid point Todd, and a very important one.

We need to decide what we mean when using the figure of speech 'The first' in this context. Many people take this to be chronological, as in 'the first prog album in the history of popular music', and I believe this to be a mistake and an over simplification, others claim it to be 'the first influential prog album', which is probably closer to the mark but again, I believe this to be an over-simplification. 

Wikipedia[1] qualifies it more succinctly: 'generally viewed as one of the first works to truly embody the progressive rock genre', which leaves the debate open for other albums to share the honour and, by replacing Jean's 'full[y]-fledged' with 'truly embody', allows for the "pop" tracks on the album to be included into whole thematically and stylistically. [That 'truly embody' clause would also exclude Days of Future Past and, together with 'generally viewed as' clause, Freak Out! I could expand on that, but won't].

As I said several pages back - it's a peg-in-the-ground reference point: It's not chronologically the first but one of them; it's influential but not the most influential; it's not fully-fledged but it truly embodies the genre; it's not proto-prog but a prototype.


What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 04:25
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

ITCOTCK is a masterpiece of rock music whatever sub-genre you want to put it in. 

I wholeheartedly agreeClap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 04:26
Excuse me but reading the above arguments I am convinced that a lot of us are very much on the continuum tag....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 06:06
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

you seem to have overlooked this:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

let me first make it clear that I don't believe such a claim can be made by any album. prog was, like any other musical form, something that gradually developed, and it makes no sense at all to define a clear point for saying "this is where it all starts".

anything else I wrote has to be seen in the light of this initial statement. so I clearly refuse to make categorizations

I know of no evolutionary process that does not result in categorizations. Of course it's a different sort of system. You don't tally up numbers of similarities. You categorize according to shared innovations. In biology it's called Cladistics. In linguistics it's called "The Comparative Method".

In the context, of the discussion here we would want to know what sort of innovation ITCOCK contained (or did not contain) that served to influence Genesis, Yes, and so on that is not attributable to the Moody Blues, the Nice, Frank Zappa and so on. We may not find any innovation uniquely attributable to KC's ITCOCK, and then we would say that ITCOCK was actually not the first Prog album. If we do find one or more innovations shared among ITCOCK and the subsequent Symph Prog groups, then there would be reason to place them in the same category, and then an arbitrary decision is needed as to whether to call the category Prog, Symph Prog, or whatever.

Incidentally, I identified Freak Out as the first Prog album, based on how it fits with most definitions of Prog, but under this other method of categorization, Freak Out had very little influence that I know of on British Symph Prog, so it is not likely to have much claim to being a Prog "ancestor" from that standpoint.


show me just ONE evolutionary process that did (except from a branch dying out; I refuse to use the word "species" because once again this is men-made and so-called species are constantly in the process of evolution). all these categorizations are men-made. evolution is a never-ending process; all "species" are permanently subjected to change. nature does not know cladistiics; they are men-made


Edited by BaldJean - March 09 2014 at 08:55


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 07:24
I agree in general with BaldJean's analysis of this album. It may be a highly rated album of great historic significance, but to my ears Ummagumma, which was released some two weeks later and recorded some three months earlier, sounds like a full-fledged prog album as well. I think the heavy usage of mellotron and the masterpiece opener make this album sound like mature prog. But Moonchild, even if the music fits in with the lyrics, seems to me the point where "Itchycock" is becoming poppycock, even without sounding poppy. Though I don't skip it, the ten minutes of playing with toys does not make this track a full-fledged prog epic for me. They just deprive this album of its masterpiece status.
To top it off with another heretic thought: I think that In the Wake of Poseidon was more or less an improvement.


Edited by someone_else - March 09 2014 at 07:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 11:36
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

There is no such thing. having to categorize everything is the eternal flaw of human beings. that was the original sin when we ate from the tree of knowledge
 
The original sin was wasting time categorizing human beings! NOT eating from the Tree of Knowledge which was added and translated later, so you and I could "not" learn what the white masters already knew, and we would have to be subservient to the religion that thought it up!
 
The tree of knowledge is for everyone, but religions don't want to feed you that, because it lessens their need and work!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 11:52
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

ITCOTCK is a masterpiece of rock music whatever sub-genre you want to put it in. 


You can't call it rock music, that is a category and categorization is the eternal flaw of human beings. In fact, you can't say "music,"  "masterpiece," "flaw," or "human beings" because those are all categories.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 12:16
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

ITCOTCK is a masterpiece of rock music whatever sub-genre you want to put it in. 


You can't call it rock music, that is a category and categorization is the eternal flaw of human beings. In fact, you can't say "music,"  "masterpiece," "flaw," or "human beings" because those are all categories.

it is in fact not easy to define what exactly music is. if 4'33'' by John Cage is music, and soundscapes (recordings of sounds that are around in certain environments and then arranged in some kind) are music, and many would argue they are, then where do we draw the line?


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 12:23
Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

ITCOTCK is a masterpiece of rock music whatever sub-genre you want to put it in. 


You can't call it rock music, that is a category and categorization is the eternal flaw of human beings. In fact, you can't say "music,"  "masterpiece," "flaw," or "human beings" because those are all categories.

it is in fact not easy to define what exactly music is. if 4'33'' by John Cage is music, and soundscapes (recordings of sounds that are around in certain environments and then arranged in some kind) are music, and many would argue they are, then where do we draw the line?


You reference numerous categories in this post. Quite hypocritical with reference to your view of categorization as an eternal flaw.

I can't help but wonder how you buy food. Do you go to a store that commits the sin of organizing things based on whether or not they are edible? Do you look at the labels on the packages to learn what category of food you are buying?

In your view, would it be better if stores just mixed all manner of goods together haphazardly rather than committing the sin of sorting them by category in a way that makes them easy to find?

I'll leave you with a quote from G.K. Chesterton's "Orthodoxy."

"Then there is the opposite attack on thought: that urged by Mr. H.G.Wells when he insists that every separate thing is "unique," and there are no categories at all. This also is merely destructive. Thinking means connecting things, and stops if they cannot be connected. It need hardly be said that this scepticism forbidding thought necessarily forbids speech; a man cannot open his mouth without contradicting it. Thus when Mr. Wells says (as he did somewhere), "All chairs are quite different," he utters not merely a misstatement, but a contradiction in terms. If all chairs were quite different, you could not call them "all chairs.""
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 12:30
Hi,
 
I'm thinking that the translation semantics are killing this thread.
 
So sad, because it has good points here and there, but the translation is simply not getting anywhere with people intentionally changing the meaning of the words to fit their own ideas, and not seeing the different point of view.
 
How well, I know this. It's so frustrating and disappointing!
 
I do think it is a nice point of view, but I am more starting to think that this whole thread is becoming more about a woman not possibly having a point about any point of view, and that is wrong!
 
Btw, the quote should say, that it wouldn't be a chair. It should say, you probably wouldn't sit on them, and negating the need to call them "chairs".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 09 2014 at 12:48
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by BaldJean BaldJean wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

ITCOTCK is a masterpiece of rock music whatever sub-genre you want to put it in. 


You can't call it rock music, that is a category and categorization is the eternal flaw of human beings. In fact, you can't say "music,"  "masterpiece," "flaw," or "human beings" because those are all categories.

it is in fact not easy to define what exactly music is. if 4'33'' by John Cage is music, and soundscapes (recordings of sounds that are around in certain environments and then arranged in some kind) are music, and many would argue they are, then where do we draw the line?


You reference numerous categories in this post. Quite hypocritical with reference to your view of categorization as an eternal flaw.

I can't help but wonder how you buy food. Do you go to a store that commits the sin of organizing things based on whether or not they are edible? Do you look at the labels on the packages to learn what category of food you are buying?

In your view, would it be better if stores just mixed all manner of goods together haphazardly rather than committing the sin of sorting them by category in a way that makes them easy to find?

I'll leave you with a quote from G.K. Chesterton's "Orthodoxy."

"Then there is the opposite attack on thought: that urged by Mr. H.G.Wells when he insists that every separate thing is "unique," and there are no categories at all. This also is merely destructive. Thinking means connecting things, and stops if they cannot be connected. It need hardly be said that this scepticism forbidding thought necessarily forbids speech; a man cannot open his mouth without contradicting it. Thus when Mr. Wells says (as he did somewhere), "All chairs are quite different," he utters not merely a misstatement, but a contradiction in terms. If all chairs were quite different, you could not call them "all chairs.""

not at all hypocritical. it is a flaw we can not escape. I don't question categorization per se; without it communication would be impossible, as you rightly point out. I just question unnecessary and arbitrary categorization.

country borders are a perfect example of that. we draw a line somewhere and say for example "this side of the line is Germany, the other side is France". this is totally arbitrary; the line could be drawn anywhere.

and my opinion is it is likewise with drawing a line and saying  "this is the first prog record"


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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