Ancient schema and technoetic creativity

Technoetic Arts 4 (1):3-14 (2006)
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Abstract

Ancient schematic systems originating in the Jewish and Chinese traditions that demonstrate dynamic integration of human consciousness with the material world offer fresh insights into the process through which technoetic art forms are created at the intersections of art, science, technology, and culture. Kabbalah is Judaism's esoteric tradition that reveals the deep structure of biblical consciousness through a symbolic language, conceptual schema, and graphic model for exploring the creative process. The Tree of Life schema is a network of 22 pathways linking 10 nodes (sephirot) that represent stages in the creative process. The first three sephirot represent the artist's undifferentiated intention to create and the cognitive dyad in which a flash of insight begins to crystallize into a viable idea. Two affective dyads, largess/restraint and success/gracefulness, are balanced by the sephirah (singular for sephirot) of Beauty, the aesthetic heart of the entire process. The ninth sephirah funnels the integrated flow of intention, thought, and emotion into the world of physical action that is the tenth sephirah. The Kabbalistic schema is used to trace the process of creating Inside/Outside: P'nim/Panim, a technoetic moist- media artwork in which a biofeedback imaging system forms a feedback loop between changing mind/body processes and corresponding changes in digital self-portraits.

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Halakhic man.Joseph Dov Soloveitchik - 1983 - Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America. Edited by Lawrence J. Kaplan.
Reason in art.George Santayana - 1905 - New York: Dover Publications.
Halakhic Man.Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik - 1984 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (2):165-167.

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