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FROM THE INTRODUCTION: Nathan Coppedge, previously the author of such collections of marvelous poetry as The Old Incantations: Sorcery in the Dark, and Poems by God, here describes an extended series of methods which ought to be of utility to the ambitious young poet. Someone with a little lightning, and a little philosophy in their blood. Someone who has eeked after the most fabulous things. And, whether flummoxed or not, has fastened him or herself upon the narrow or not so narrow techniques of modern poetry and rhyme. Here, unlike almost anywhere else, the mind feels free to roam onto new fields of epiphany, and draw straws about the nature of reality... In Nathan's view, poets should afford philosophy, yet not when it mandates an end to the infinite, sometimes bitter imagination which modern existence affords. This is a journey into the dimensions of poetry... Poets should learn not only from example, but from methods, styles, and observations on beauty. This is in keeping with the classical tradition, but it is also accommodating of modern styles, and in particular, modern conditions of nature and urbania. Embracing urbania is, in my view, embracing Zen. Zen anticipated the coming age of civilizations. But that is not the only mentality. New mentalities will spring up with equal importance to Zen. Zen is to the future of urban and outer-space poetry what Cubism was for the development of abstract art. With that mentality in mind, I will write a few words on my first experiences with professional poetry.
Nathan Coppedge developed works of an astonishing variety, encompassing fourteen or more sub-styles, inspired by M.C. Escher and Abstract Expressionists. Working with a roller-ball pen and calligraphy ink, as well as acrylic and watercolor, he produced over 1400 works during a period of intense creativity. For the first time, his works are available in a large 8.5 X 11 volume, the first section with full color illustrations: over 400 pages. Viewers have said that Nathan's work "locks together like a trap." This edition has been updated with additional paintings.
Nathan Coppedge, the poet of this collection, considers this his middle period, a kind of dark age in which he produced his most meaningful work. The earlier period may be more authentic, and the later period more classical, but during this period the two were combined. In these poems, covering themes from love to lightning, and occasionally rhapsing Dickinsonian, Coppedge captures some of the enigma and powerful significance of being a poet. Like the title suggests, in at least one of these poems you will literally get the sense of calling down lightning. Nothing is quite the same without Nathan Coppedge. And it is certainly weird when he is here. These poems evoke immortality, but they also come from a voice which is in some ways more than ordinary.
FROM THE INTRODUCTION This book is inspired by an excellent day in which I decided to change my mind about nearly everything! I would adopt an attitude in which I banished all negativity that surrounded my presence! As you might not expect, my object was to accomplish this through magical means! In the process, I would become a powerful wizard! You may not believe this, but the beginning of the process involved changing the sky into the most beautiful periwinkle blue! It was a very optimistic start. But, what else will surprise you, is that many of the magical effects I had already done myself ("Around the house, on my own time..."). So, I immediately set out to write this book to inspire the world about magical wizardry! The tricks are intuitive as magic goes, so I have full confidence that you will pull off more than one of these tricks before you are even done reading this book! It's inspired magic, and it's inspired magic that's good!
Coppedge began collecting descriptions of weird things while working as a writer. In this volume are collected such unique writings (often in the form of bulleted lists of weird things), such as Possible Secrets and Scary Possibilities and Unexplained Oddities of Human Existence. It is one of those books that covers things you might consider very weird, like that phenomena where you think you were abducted by an alien dinosaur, or that phenomena where you thought you grew gigantic warts on the back of your neck, or Cargo Cults for instance, or the phenomenon where Leibniz lived close to a hundred years before the grandfather clock was invented. Those sorts of observations. You never know quite whether it was a hallucination, but years later you start to wonder if other people have had these experiences. Well, Nathan has had a number of them, and also situates the debate in the context of a vast stockpile of historical memories and singular experiences. This is not the worst book on weirdness.
Over twenty incredible, exclusive stories from the past, present, and future lives of Nathan Coppedge: the text includes two sections. The first section is called 'The Self, ' and is devoted to Nathan Coppedge's interesting incarnations as a 'cave boy, ' 'the urchin of Ur, ' one of the Eight Chinese Immortals, the Egyptian god of Astonishment, the burner of the Library of Alexandria, the inventor of the book, a child who names himself the end of humanity, Pippin son of William Tell, Pharisee the Fakir, Marie d' Antoinette, the spy Aaron Burr, the self-made Rip Van Winkl, someone who believed himself to be Euler, a homeless bum named the Burgher King, a soul inside a super-computer, Eucaleh or Nathan Coppedge and a number of quasi-devilish future lives. Section Two is called 'Others, ' and is devoted to a variety of personalities which Coppedge feels influenced history---all of them concocted with a faculty for creative invention. This is alternate history-in-the-making, all from the standpoint of a self-described 'potential novelist.' Coppedge is something of a genius, and these stories stand out for their color and realism, in spite of the ma
This is a manual on aesthetics. The thesis of this book is that Hyper-Cubism exemplifies what is called high art. The text includes two important, mercifully short essays on the subject of art. The ambitious aim of the book is to protract in the mind of the reader an idealistic vision: the vision of a visual arts that is perfectible. It sets out to do this in the best possible way: by direct illustration. The author is a Hyper-Cubist par excellance, one of the members of an emerging avant-garde which aims to replace Cubism with something more complex and codifiable. Here are the secrets of one of art's greatest movements, work which one viewer said 'locks together like a trap that won't let me go'.
Many people undergo a critical process of inquiry during the course of their lives. Whether a person is wise or foolish, brave or timid, pioneering or lazy, people touch on many of the same themes as they undertake development. The goal of this text is NOT to provide abstract tools for reasoning with, but instead, to explain many of the factors that each person eventually experiences in his own mind, in order to make it much easier to tolerate. Thus, the goal of this book, like previous books in the series, is a psychological one. And, it is also a meaningful one.
Previously the author of similar 'Guides' on poetry, young adulthood, and child development, here the author addresses a topic dear to his heart: philosophy. Those unfamiliar with the topic are likely to find many reasons either for or against it in this entertaining and reasonably deep guide to the subject. From the author of the Dimensional Philosopher's Toolkit and numerous other books, including his largest magnum opus yet, Systems Theory (Formal-, applied-, rubric-, etc.).
Gathering together some of the most inspired advice on various themes, this work was collected over a number of years, and is designed to be a recondite mixture between several other works including The Critical Body, the Wisdom of Nathan Coppedge, and a work on the Deaths of Disciplines. In spite of that, this work stands on its own as a special example of advice giving in a time in which wisdom seems hard to find and in which students feel betrayed by their educators. Covering numerous up-to-date themes like A.I. and the state of society, the work also includes references to some advanced themes from Coppedge's own philosophy and some approaches to problem-solving and the state of the world.
The advice in this book is aimed to assist in remaining mentally alert, and uncovers some of the gritty, seedy aspects underlying real-life scammers. The author gives advice relating to luck, success, and especially, how to avoid scams, in this short text. The author has a real success story which he leaves on the margins of this book, which is that he found the ONLY real business man in South Africa, and used the arrangement to become a more successful author, and someone who, it may be said, knows how to avoid scams.
This text contains many unique quotations, newly formulated by the author to explain missing gaps in intellectual history, and with an eye towards the gestalt side of knowledge. Coppedge has been hailed as "[A] philosopher of this present age," and in this work many aspects of his genius are reflected. In addition to being a collection of aphorisms, an appended section includes concepts from critical theory.
From the Intro: Modeled in the abstract on antebellum style emotions the Pre-Post Movements or Preposts for short, is a group of writings which are vaguely golden age in nature, yet with an undertone of systematic decay or conceptual aging.Each of these concepts has an earlier, younger self which is somehow more innocent and youthful, as well as an older self which has gained a kind of infinite wisdom or special tactfulness. Included are interestingly, four 'movements' which represent the current four major arms of the TOE Thermo diagram: Coherence, Perpetual Motion, Immortality, and Magic, as well as a number of other themes which are also of historical and personal interest including the Prepost Imagination (it seemed obligatory to include something vaguely Platonic), and also the Prepost TOE which was the original founding writing for this type of construction.
Finding its sources originally in psychology and alchemy and the belabored coherence project from circa 2017, Nathan Coppedge a renaissance man known as philosopher, artist, inventor, poet sought repeatedly to unify life into a consistent dialectical process, a process which continued during and after the development of a coherent TOE. This unifying process had many good results, and serves as a record of important thoughts, each of them serving as an example of a kind of profound unification. However, as of now the process remains incomplete. Perhaps the project was too lofty a goal even for the Theory of Anything, however it stands as a record of an ambitious, concise, clear, and profound process of discovery.
These are writings re-constructing the style and philosophy of Socrates. Since no completely direct sources exist, considerable imagination and thought was used to construct the debates. The author, Coppedge has been described as one of the "people of ideas" by historian Ulrich de Balbian.
FROM CHAPT 1: It has been shown recently in my work that golden ages have followed a particular path of inheritance from the Chinese concept of the dead ancestor and the venerated family member. Within Europe, Chinese knowledge was regarded with suspicion, and the concepts were treated as superstitions which had the power of philosophy. Religions converted the same dichotomy in the West into a division between the abstract and the material. Most of this text is a meaningful, exceedingly well-written, and systematic exposition on the concepts of exponential knowledge and exponential mechanics. And the first 52 pages were written in less than 10 hours with copyright retained.
While attending school in New Haven for a philosophy degree, Coppedge writes numerous books and quotations, creates hundreds of art works, and even thinks he has found the secret of perpetual motion. This text includes quotes, not only from his current life, but also reconstructed from his previous lives and alter-egos.
"Who is credited with 'the theory of perpetual motion' ? 'Several scientist (sic) has been credited for their theories of Perpetual Motion such as Isaac Newton, Nathan Coppedge, and Albert Einstein." ---KGB Answers Nathan Coppedge is renowned in the dubious field of theoretical perpetual motion machines. The book offers a perspective on Mr. Coppedge's notable scientific discoveries including the Nov. 10, 2013 over-unity experiment, and his July 3rd, 2014 discovery of a "master angle" purported to allow objects to roll upwards. It also includes other discoveries, in such areas as block constructions, balance, counterbalance, angularity, Newton's Laws of Motion, etc. The book promises relatively invigorating reading with many of the qualities of nascient scientific discovery.
This texts collects Nathan Coppedge's valuable writings on weird relationships such as quantum relationships including Coppedge's Key Work on Pareidolia, the phenomenon of mistaking one thing for another due to visual similarity (optical illusions). The text consists primarily of examples of correlative logic and quantum phenomena, 2-step relations, and many more. Likely to be a good read with applicability to projects like philosophy, social science, and reasoning.
96 Results of a Logical Permutation, elaborated to explain the logic of all known philosophical and mathematical systems. The product has been to find a context for other systems of equal importance to the categorical deduction, which is the only previously known method for formulating objective knowledge statements. The goal is to give each type of system equal treatment. Although typology is a major consideration in these systems, most typologies native to science are discarded as mere lists, or as lacking logical content. Such lists are encompassed in the term 'organization' rather than 'system' --- and thus do not meet the criteria. The 'broad strokes' approach sustains considerable scrutiny as to the implications of systems besides mathematics and coherency. Included are theories of coherence and correspondence, relativity and absoluteness, recursions, equations and conjunctions, and paradoxical, exceptional, demonstrative, and positivistic reasoning. Also included is a section on pure theory, including meaningful, ethical, methodological, and logical systems.
"First unlearning is eternal law....There is a secret in every birth, every boundary, each bifurcation, any diminution." In this text Nathan Coppedge addresses the subject of philosophy in the guise of a manifesto. The aim is to apply philosophy to all areas of life: dogma, experiences, methodology, and criticism are some of his subjects. A platform is provided for viewing categorical realism as a system of meaning which threads its way through all aspects of life. This is a philosophy of meaning, a form of applicationism, a borderline between truth and reality without compromising either. Writings on the metaphors of nature, the Modist and culture, technology, and other subjects, is interspersed with enigmatic quotations. This work precedes most other works of his philosophy. For example, it predates both the Dimensional Philosopher's Toolkit and Ninesquare Notebook. The publication of this work by Amazon provides an opportunity to collect yet another work by this prodigious philosopher.
FROM THE INTRODUCTORY NOTES: "Philosophy has not always been viewed in a purely symbolic manner. Most notably, recently, there has been a turn towards 'pure literature' and 'pure math' to explain reality. In this book, as a departure from the norm, philosophy defines itself almost exclusively through symbolism. The territory of symbolism is vast, and the methods that it entails are no less impressive. With considerate study, these aspects may even apply to the moderns in profound ways. The title of this book --- "Arche-Logos' is meant to suggest the eternity of philosophy, and the necessarily symbolic importance of this most magnificent study." Included in this text are ten major diagram methods invented by Nathan Coppedge: Quadra Trees (Nathan's Fork), Alchemy Diagrams, Amulet Diagrams, Analyptic Diagrams, the IEOCh Method, Vesselexts, AOLT-There Diagrams, Concise Atrixes, Apertures, and Temporal Map-Types.
While this is titled a 'serious joke book' this book is not a joke. It is designed as a creative reference and sounding board for patients and therapists alike, focusing on finding meaning in the midst of therapy and disability. Its knowledge-based approach, using diagrams, sheds light on nuances and terpitudes not found in other encyclopedias. It is the second volume of the Dimensional Encyclopedia, the only volume devoted exclusively to psychology. The majority of the text establishes bases for knowledge in areas surrounding therapy and mental health, including a Tractatus of Psychology, a dualistic profile method, psychological deductions, and a method of psychic prediction, as well as updated materials. The philosophical approach is meant as an alternative to the sleazy and often simplistic pop-psychology books. This is an updated edition with the original cover reinstated and several updated sections, including a piece on 'not going wilden, ' and the notorious 'poodle effect'. The D. Psy. T. is the second volume of the Dimensional Encyclopedia. The first volume is on philosophy.
This is a collection of thoughts noted for being quotidian and ordinary! The remarkable prodigy here is to produce a plethora of categories, where normally we are accustomed to very few. We are accustomed to seeing common-sense and worldly events as having a limited descriptive capacity. But here, it is different! That is not to say that it is not eloquent or insightful... It is the quality of boring thoughts which help us think... In this volume are hints of the Letters of Montaigne and the writings of Lichtenberg. However, efforts were made to offer something new, new to the point of madness... For after all, it must be ordinary...
A famous psychologist once said: "Money and sandwiches: the key to man and woman."This text begins with four exceptional chapters: (Exceptional Psychology, Expressionist Psychology, Multi-Mind, and Brokenality), the author sets out to boldly explore the nuances of function and dysfunction, optimism, and madness. A bold narrative in the tradition of Jungian psychology. Recommended for those studying functionalism, behavioral therapy, cognition, and schizophrenia. The author has experience with mental illness, and is the previous author of numerous psychological texts.
This is an extended sketch of some of the ideas that emerge in the process of leaving Plato's cave, a process I assume to be metaphorical, yet certainly deep, intelligent, and potentially wise. Many of the psychological states of prisoners, scientists, and intelligent children are evoked. This updated edition features a final section involving epiphanies about the higher dimension.
Provides descriptions of some of the missing gaps in dimensional critique, in particular major symbols and modes of progress within the field of dimensionalism, conceived both as philosophical and spiritual. It is a development of prior works by Coppedge, including Modal Dimensionism, Arche-Logos, and The Spiritual Writings.
So far the author is not a well-known scientist. Nonetheless, he has been able to attract occasional interest to his books on scientific topics, particularly because of his popular website on perpetual motion machines. This text gathers together his scientific theories---insights that may be important to science. It includes such areas as psychology, social science, physics of black holes and wormholes, mathematics, miscellaneous theories, and many other topics. It will be updated periodically to give the latest, most advanced and interesting scientific viewpoints advocated by the author. This text offers considerable depth of insight on a wide variety of subjects.
Constructed using the Technological Words of Power (with codes listed at the beginning), the Evolution of All Ideas is a deceptively naïve project carrying far more weight in wisdom and applicability than would ever be assumed by a mere title. This work, redone in many iterations using an initial benchmark painstakingly culminated from the true Theory of Anything, provides a model potentially more advanced than mere mathematics or mere functions. It represents technology expressed in various forms, technology which reads as literature, and which may hold the secret to future civilizations.
FROM THE INTRO: I had long expected to publish a near-comprehensive edition of these sublime ideas.I had not nearly expected to reach such completeness, or intellectual range so early (short though this text may paradoxically seem), least of all with such extreme degree of perception and perfection. Finally, this edition is complete, only after a short period of experimentation. These amazing conceptual contraptions are astonishing, elucidating, complex, and educational, with themes touching on not only original philosophy, but also calculus, education, perpetual motion inventions, economics, phenomenology, and many other areas. The primary contribution here is to the areas of dimensional knowledge such as the General Solution to All Paradoxes, though you will find these writings are highly esoteric and unique, and it also helps explain the psychology of genuine perpetual motion invention.
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