All posts filed under: be//LOG
Welcome to our special blog. We hope you enjoy reading it. Please drop by every now and then.
be//log consists of three sections:
Quotes
In this sections, we publish and look for innovative, inspiring and insightful quotes from all fields and times – again with short explanations.
We are happy to accept ideas and examples with short explanations and the author’s/contributor’s name. After editorial review, we may then publish them. Please send your contributions to: info@be-design.info
Stupid words and stupid sayings
Peculiar misunderstandings and, at times, terrible fashions have sneaked into our language, and, in so doing, determine our thoughts without us being really aware of it. The words are simply used, used up, as if they wouldn’t constitute a problem – but, thinking is very much rooted in discourse, and this discourse predominantly takes place in the form of language. This is why we need to think about these stupidities and buzzwords and why they should be published together with short reflections.
We are happy to accept ideas and examples with short explanations and the author’s/contributor’s name. After editorial review, we may then publish them. Please send your contributions to: info@be-design.info
Anagrams
Anagrams (originally from Greek ἀναγράφειν anagráphein = rewrite) are words formed by rearranging the letters of a different word. Surprisingly often, anagrams are like a mirror – or distorting mirror – in relation to the source word; sometimes as a paradox, other times as enlightenment. There is obviously something the old and the newly formed words have in common. Anagrams are a source of linguistic imagination, they engender associations and they are simply a great type of game.
The ‚Enlightenment’, which discovered the liberties, also invented the disciplines.
This is necessarily part of the dialectic of enlightenment. Whereby this disciplining in science as also claimed by the Enlightenment, is occasionally rooted merely in pragmatic reasons; this is very drastically explained in Kant’s “Dispute between the Faculties”. Here he … Weiterlesen
Nature – Ear Nut – a Tuner
Some people read only to avoid thinking
Certainly, as early as the 17th century and then during the Enlightenment, some of the authors hoped that reading their writings would stimulate thought and thus motivate an intensive social discourse. But many works make it clear that not every … Weiterlesen
Layout – Outlay
The details are not the details. They make the design.
The detail, indeed a loan word from the French, formulates per se small parts, in other words, minimized size.
So far, so good. But in fact, most people underestimate the true relevance of details in all areas, including everyday life … Weiterlesen
Image – Mega I
I’m writing for myself and strangers.
As much as one may imagine writing, one always writes for others or for certain processes and matters, so much one errs in this thought. For the motivation to write always corresponds first of all to an occasion that can … Weiterlesen
Happiness – Heap Snips
Peace to small facts, war on generalities
There is no better way to transform a revolutionary outcry (Georg Büchner’s “Peace to the huts, war on the palaces!”) into the present time with its (media) abstractions. In general, everyone agrees and means well, if only it weren’t for … Weiterlesen