t - in various ways every organism
> does this. The world is momentary structures that have always already been
> with us in a sense -
>
> Best!, Alan
>
> On Tue, Aug 27, 2019 at 7:39 PM Max Herman via NetBehaviour <
> netbehaviour@lists.netbehaviour.org> wrote:
>
Without this, he seems not to believe creativity can occur, only
repetition, yet it is something I often do far too little of!
Very best regards, and thanks for your generous replies,
Max
From: NetBehaviour on behalf of
Alan Sondheim via NetBehaviour
Sent: Tu
g sometimes;
> More when my leaves are falling like its own!
>
>
> --
> *From:* Alan Sondheim
> *Sent:* Tuesday, August 27, 2019 6:07 PM
> *To:* Max Herman via NetBehaviour
> *Cc:* Max Herman
> *Subject:* Re: [NetBehaviour] Goddess of Storms
my leaves are falling like its own!
From: Alan Sondheim
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2019 6:07 PM
To: Max Herman via NetBehaviour
Cc: Max Herman
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] Goddess of Storms and Alphabets
love this, only wanted to say that there was always alrea
love this, only wanted to say that there was always already grammar,
always already structure to being in the world, not " Early folk creating
grammar on the fly, far from learning it or being taught it. "
we were never, none of us in the world, nor animals, nor any, creating
grammar that
Again , great. Incredibly idiosyncratic ( thee & thou, for example ) and none
the worse for that . I always enjoy reading things you write Max but there’s
something about the discipline of verse that injects a huge amount of
confidence and grace... it’s feels a bit like literary tight rope
Take a pebble for instance, an item,
One of the few and many that can be picked up by hand.
Some are like this.
Some can also be instruments, sticks or stones, alongside the immovable
base-grounds.
Hence thou hast compositions, counting, forms, names, phrases, and such.
Early folk creating