Hello My Friends —
This episode was unexpected and dropped into my lap — my favorite way for us to connect; it’s like air to a flame.
Did you know you have more than 3,000 receptors in your fingertips?
True or false: Science has combined human tissue with AI?
Last, do you think your answers are within or sourced outside or a combination?
Alright — you are ready for this week’s episode.
☕️ Enjoy it and let me know your thoughts in the comments. It will help inform where the next episode takes us.
Let’s stay curious about ourselves this week,
Keep Shining,
Kate
P.S. Link referenced in episode below with an additional link to a YouTube on the human hand.
“Maybe the desire to make something beautiful is the piece of God that is inside each of us.” — Mary Oliver
I highly recommend watching the video below, but first I learned a new term — wetware. Do you know it? I didn’t; I headed on over to a non-AI source on the Internet and pulled screenshots for you on the definition. Read them over before clicking on the YouTube below.
Here is another definition from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/wetware
Here is the reference video from the podcast on the marriage of human cells & technology:
Curious about the nerves in your hand? Watch this:
And for our humanity — Mary Oliver writing a poem on Franz Marc’s Blue Horses
Image citation: https://www.franzmarc.org/The-Tower-of-Blue-Horses.jsp
Franz Marc’s Blue Horses, by Mary Oliver
I step into the painting of the four blue horses.
I am not even surprised that I can do this.
One of the horses walks towards me.
His blue nose noses me lightly. I put my arm
over his blue mane, not holding on, just
commingling.
He allows me my pleasure.
Franz Marc died a young man, shrapnel in his brain.
I would rather die than try to explain to the blue horses
what war is.
They would either faint in horror, or simply
find it impossible to believe.
I do not know how to thank you, Franz Marc.
Maybe our world will grow kinder eventually.
Maybe the desire to make something beautiful
is the piece of God that is inside each of us.
Now all four horses have come closer,
are bending their faces toward me
as if they have secrets to tell.
I don’t expect them to speak, and they don’t.
If being so beautiful isn’t enough, what
could they possibly say?
Feed Your 🧠: Learn More About the Artist Franz Marc and how he created beauty against all odds
In the bleak winter of 1916, in the thickest darkness of World War I, several enormous canvases dappled in pointillist patterns of color appeared across the French countryside, …The painted tarps were military camouflage, designed to conceal artillery from aerial observation — the work of the young German painter, printmaker, and Expressionist pioneer Franz Marc (February 8, 1880–March 4, 1916), who had devoted himself to parting the veil of appearances with art in order to “look for and paint this inner, spiritual side of nature.”
🔗 https://www.themarginalian.org/2021/09/08/franz-marc/
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