Buckminster Fuller:
All universities have been progressively organized for ever finer specialization. Society assumes that specialization is natural, inevitable, and desirable. Yet in observing a little child, we find it is interested in everything and spontaneously apprehends, comprehends, and co-ordinates an ever expending inventory of experiences.
The most important part about tomorrow is not the technology or the automation, but that man is going to come into entirely new relationships with his fellow men. He will retain much more in his everyday life of what we term the naivete and idealism of the child. I think the way to see what tomorrow is going to look like is just to look at our children
found in Gene Youngblood's Expanded Cinema
formal rerouting of what was already heading that way anyways:
critical thought / subjective writing and images => wandyteeth.com/jeffsblog/
artistic output => ilikenicethings.com
and check out a new video of mine on I Like Nice Things, "Signal Modification"