I may sound stupid, but i was visualizing a graph! Hehe! On the Y! axis, i have a scale which moves from "Actual to conceptual to Ideal" and on the X axis i have series of "Life events"! Well the funda is funny! We strive the ideal, absorb in conceptual till we realize the actual and work back on every life event! So...ideal demands dreaming, visualizing the most perfect aspirations, to achieve this we engage conceptually (plan, execute, list, decide, be practical etc). Many times we refuse to accept the actual (real pain which exists within us, deprived feelings within ourselves, inability to perform simple tasks, inability to love, devote, getting tired etc.)So mostly we are engaged between ideal and conceptual till we are deprived of basic things like food and water! Managing this fluctuation consciously (not by being lost) becomes our daily challenge! If we include actual in our tackling of life events, we may be merrier! I know its funny! I will stop here.........
I don't know! :-) But i know they do create. Look at a hammer. What 'intents' does it create when a child encounters it? or For a normal guy? and for a carpenter? Hammer is not designed for children, but still they are able to hold it and bash up things around them! For a normal guy, the form to an extent may communicate the function to hit a nail or a pull a nail and the intent is created. For a carpenter, its a routine of repeated use and may be of a deep association or a memory or an attachment or even hatred sometimes.....For a normal guy it may give some initial ideas, may trigger some use and later fizzles out since he has no need of it. Anyways...the point is, how do objects like tools create intents of use to different people? Intents are important to accomplish purposes. What intents are triggered to an early user of a cricketing site? What other purposes does he have? How does the nature of use set into routine?
Is not "Need" a silent sensation ? Need to see some one, need to play, need to sing, need to earn, need to satisfy a craving, need to feel safe, need to feel close, need to know information....so on We mostly respond to this sensation, we react and we choose to act. We either tune ourselves sometimes ( eg. let me not act now, i may not need it..) or most of the times we act using our senses choosing ideas which have affordances to satisfy the need. They could be any external stimuli - nature, people, objects, systems. Then we try, fail, follow, invent, copy some ways (processes) to 'use' these props to satisfy the needs. Something funny happens then. Either you forget what you were up to and jump to some another need, else you nurture your experience, you want to remember it and build on it. Your clever mind searches for 'benefits' of the experience - grow monetary, efficiency, pleasure, play or experiment, invest newer meanings, connections and so on. N...
Comments