Solipsistic ramblings of my innermost thoughts

Crashing Waves: War. From “Making Waves: An Anthology of writings by and about Asian American Women”, 1989

Excerpt from Making Waves: An anthology of writings by and about Asian American women, 1989

Autobiolographical writings, short stories, poetry, essays about Asian American women. 1989Making Waves: An anthology of writings by and about Asian American women

The Scent of Time, a selection of essays on Time by Byung-Chul Han, 2009

From “Art and the Creative Unconscious” by Erich Neumann

From “Art and the Creative Unconscious” by Erich Neumann. Four essays translated from German by Ralph Manheim. 1959, Princeton University Press

Tradition and the Individual Talent, from T.S. Eliot's The Sacred Wood, essays on Poetry and Criticism, 1920

Excerpts from collected essays from the meeting of 21 researchers at the Papal residence to explore topics of common interest concerning Time, the creation of the universe, and God.

An interesting short article that uses Futurism, Abstract Expressionism, Neoclassicism as examples of aesthetic acorns that contain metaphysics of political movements, and in doing so are able to draw people who align with such politics.

Søren Mau, 2023

John R. Searle, 2010. This short treatise looks at how we construct a social reality from our sense impressions; at how, for example, we construct a ‘five-pound note' with all that implies in terms of value and social meaning, from the printed piece of paper we see and touch. In The Construction of Social Reality, eminent philosopher John Searle examines the structure of social reality (or those portions of the world that are facts only by human agreement, such as money, marriage, property, and government), and contrasts it to a brute reality that is independent of human agreement. Searle shows that brute reality provides the indisputable foundation for all social reality, and that social reality, while very real, is maintained by nothing more than custom and habit.

Famed art critic Boris Groys's thoughts on time and the contemporary

E-Flux Joyrnal's assembled these and writings by critics and curators

An absorbing and original examination that brilliantly argues that religion is a product of the society from which it springs—featuring illustrations drawn from a variety of primitive, ancient, and contemporary religions. In this book, Berger that religion is the "sacred canopy" which every human society builds over its world to give it meaning, expanding on theories of knowledge that he first explored (with Thomas Luckmann) in The Social Construction of Reality.

All the Real Indians died off and 20 other myths about Native Americans, Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz, 2016

Jillian Schwedler, Fifth edition, 2020

Bataille focuses on the visceral, the erotic, the relation of society to the primeval. 1985