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THE ART & SCIENCE of NOTHINGNESS

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Consciousness & Connectivity panel by Roy Ascott director, Planetary Collegium SIGGRAPH August 1, 2005. THE ART & SCIENCE of NOTHINGNESS. How does the invisible realm impact us? Are there ways that technology can help us access this space?. Human Networks. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Consciousness & Connectivity panel by Roy Ascott director, Planetary Collegium SIGGRAPH August 1, 2005
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Page 1: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Consciousness & Connectivitypanel by Roy Ascott

director, Planetary Collegium

SIGGRAPHAugust 1, 2005

Page 2: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

THE ART & SCIENCE of

NOTHINGNESS

Page 3: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

How does the invisible realm impact us?

Are there ways that technology can help us access this space?

Page 4: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Human Networks

Page 5: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Tetrahedrons & hexagonscolors, intervals and soundwaves

Page 6: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Can the artist engage the science of the invisible in meaningful ways without becoming didactic or in

service of science?

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FEELING IS BELIEVING

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Feeling the invisible:

The principle of the Scanning Tunneling Microscope STM

A billion times larger

Where the real finger is the Eiffel tower, the atom a golf ball

Its mainly nothingness

Page 9: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

The finger: a fine needle terminated by a single atom

Page 10: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Feeling is seeing:

Buckminsterfullerine molecules

One nanometer across

We are looking at electron probabilities and waves here

It’s mainly empty space!

Page 11: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

What is the EMPTY space?Is there NOTHINGNESS?

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Meeting of media art, nanoscience and tibetan buddhism

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Monks arrive to James Gimzewski’s Pico Lab at the chemistry and

biochemistry department, UCLA

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Monks meet the nanoscientist – all this to access nothingness?

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Common goal: showing how every thing/one is interrelated

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How do we work all together towards this common goal when we all speak

different languages, use different methodologies?

Page 17: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Retreats in Malibu: HEART TO HEART

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Recreation of the mandala center

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Dispersal ceremony

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Page 28: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

CELL SOUNDS

Page 29: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

10 mYeast and Fibroblast Cellsmake tiny Sound Waves

life is mainly nothingInside the atomsis empty space

Page 30: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Gold atoms

Electron standing wavesAtoms make waves

Page 31: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Cell Ghosts in Seodaemon prison, Seoul, Korea

composition of tortured cells: Gimzewski

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Human body as point of Light

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Reducing the human body to a solid mass of neutrons and protons would result something that would be around 500 nm is length. i.e. around a hundredth of the thickness of a human hair. So one see how much space and nothing a human body contains

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Waves and Connections

• Quantum mechanics was developed using theories applied to musical instruments to describe the electrons as waves.

• string theory the elementary particles could be thought of as the "musical notes" or excitation modes of elementary strings.

• If string theory is to be a theory of quantum gravity, then the average size of a string should be somewhere near the length scale of quantum gravity, called the Planck length, which is about 10-33 centimeters, or about a millionth of a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a centimeter. the strings are way too small to see by current or expected particle physics

Page 35: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Waves and Connections

• Nanometer scale vibrations in living cells.

• Gimzewski’s group discovered this in yeast cells which vibrate in the audible spectrum. All cells contain molecular motors and that the metabolism of the cell needs there functioning so we know there is a lot of nano-motion in cells.

Page 36: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

The difference between waves and matter is that

waves connect to each other,

they are the result of energy and connection, the materialist view is

that things exist as objects.

Page 37: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS ON OUR MENTAL HEALTH

Page 38: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Depression is the fastest growing disease globally

Looking for connections to invisible negative vibrations

in our daily environmentKen Wells Media & Medicine group, UCLA

Page 39: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

To see the world in a grain of sand…

Page 40: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

Gimzewski’s meditations / calculations on a grain of sand

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• Its about the connections not the things themselves

• There a a billion times a billion atoms in a grain of sand

• The are many more possibilities in the way the atoms can be placed than there are particles in the entire universe

• Each sand grain is unique it cannot be reproduced exactly again

• The grain is mainly empty space

Page 42: THE ART & SCIENCE of  NOTHINGNESS

vv.arts.ucla.edu


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