Category: Music


I wrote this blog 8 years ago but I think it’s more topical now than ever. I was trying to get to grips with what it means to be an online teacher and with studying at a distance. This is the new normal these days. Though I say it myself, I think the video is pretty good.

CALM WITH HORSES directed by Nick Rowland (UK -Ireland, 2019)

220px-calm_with_horses_poster “I’m told I was a violent child” is the opening line in a  voiceover in this bold and bruising tale of toxic masculinity.

The narrator is Douglas ‘Arm’ Armstrong , an ex-boxer, now employed as an enforcer for an unscrupulous criminal family.  The setting is rural Ireland in a claustrophic community where conflict and violence are the accepted ways of life.

Douglas is a physically imposing presence, lumbering from scene to scene like a wounded beast. His handler is the manipulative Dymphna (Barry Keoghan) who plies him with drugs much as a dog owner might seek to placate a doberman pinscher. Continue reading

Einstein, imagination and IELTS

einsteinI am currently doing online language lessons to a group of university students  who are preparing for the IELTS exam.

Last week I set them the writing task (at least 250 words) of considering to what extent they agree or disagee with this quote attributed to Albert Einstein: “Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”

I thought of this question without considering  how I would answer it myself.  Before correcting their work, therefore, I  wrote my own version which I submit here for your evaluation:

Before considering the correctness of this provocative statement, it is necessary to reflect on what Albert Einstein meant by the words and concepts of ‘imagination’ and ‘knowledge’.

Given the reputation of the celebrated physicist, this quote cannot simply be dismissed as a throwaway remark. In other words, it should not be viewed in the same way as the sound bites of politicians and celebrities which are designed merely to gain publicity rather than to enlighten the populace.

We should therefore assume Einstein was in earnest when praising the role of imagination in thinking. The suggestion is that creativity allows a greater scope and depth to our thoughts that are not possible when they are restricted to facts alone. In this regard, it is worth reflecting on what is commonly understood by the word ‘knowledge’.

The gaining of knowledge can be defined as the accumulation of facts and information which enable us to make rational decisions. Rationality and logic are key concepts here; these place a high value upon reason. Following instincts or ‘gut reactions’ to events or situations is implicitly frowned upon. Following such a philosophy rigidly appears to leave little space for creativity.

The danger of sticking solely to fact-based responses comes when applying this knowledge to complex problems or unexpected events. Innovative thinking usually requires taking a more lateral approach and this entails imagining less conventional options.

This is, in my view, the essence of what Einstein was recommending. His provocative remark should not be viewed as a dismissal of knowledge but rather as a reminder that sometimes we should give ourselves permission for the heart to rule the head. By imagining other ways of being and doing our minds are open to infinite possibilities.

In conclusion, I would agree with Einstein that knowledge tends to narrow down our options leading to blinkered thinking and predictable responses. With imagination in full flow, the world is our oyster.  (322 words)


What grade would you give me (from 0 to 9.0)?

 

 

Burial tunes for a broken world

BURIAL – Tunes 2011-2019 (Hyperdub, 2019)
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“The world is falling to pieces, but some of the pieces taste good”. So wrote Adrian Mitchell in his poem ‘Peace Is Milk’, first published in his ‘Out Loud’ collection in 1968.

This remains an accurate statement even though the world is a very different place from half a century ago. Technology and technocracy have made even digital natives long for an analog age they have no direct experience of.

Allied to this is an entrenched pessimism towards the shapes of things to come. By and large, the consensus among Science Fiction writers and filmmakers is that there is little to gain from imagining what the future will be like when the present is already dystopic enough. 1984 has been and gone and the Brave New World is here and now. The plots of Black Mirror are no fiction. As William Gibson, the creator of Neuromancer, noted “The future is already here – it’s just not evenly distributed.” Continue reading

Screen shot 2019-12-31 at 18.08.08Since 2013 I have set myself a challenge of reading 50 books a year and then I track my progress on Good Reads.

I fell three short in the first year but have hit my target ever since. This year I gave the maximum five star rating to six titles: Continue reading