Aug. 16th, 2016

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How many apps do you have on your phone,tablet,or PC?

Which app is your favorite?

Which app do you find the most useless?
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Taking a lunch break in my shift at the underground station targeting users of the retail outlets. Slow going really,but only two and a half hours to go.
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I took these whilst in Tonbridge yesterday late afternoon.







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If there is one maxim about interviewing in a busy public space it is that it is will be a bit of a slog, and so it was, although achieving 12 interviews over the six hour shift was quite good. It was all about the retail establishments at the station. At least the app for it was working fine on my smartphone.

So here are some pics -




Walking down Victoria Street this morning.





The location where i was.
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John Gray "The Silence of Animals : On Progress and Other Modern Myths" (Penguin)




John Gray maintains that science and myth are simply the human animal's way of dealing with chaos. His latest book strips away the comforts of science and religion, mere shelters from a world we can never know. In his latest book, Gray attacks the very notion of progress, a doctrine that cannot but fail to delude. As our forefathers put their faith in gods, modern man clings to science and technology. He cites a range of authors, from Conrad to Ballard who present worlds where chaos dominates over civilisation. If civilisation is natural, then so is barbarism.

Gray refuses to believe in so-called scientific advance, his mentors being Freud rather than Darwin, and Llewelyn Powys rather than Richard Dawkins. He quotes extensively from the little-known Powys, an atheist `adamant that rejecting religion meant renouncing any idea of order in the world.' Gray's bleak and nihilistic viewpoint echoes that of Beckett: God is a man-made phantom, a bastard who doesn't exist. Gray ends with a clarion call from Powys: `It is not only belief in God that must be abandoned, not only all hope of life after death, but all trust in an ordained order.'

This is a fascinating and wide-ranging account of myth in the comprehensive sense of the word. Gray cites a range of philosophers, economists, poets, theologians, anthropologists and social commentators, all of whom have found shelter in certainties. The fact is that man's dreams of progress are but makeshifts, stages in a perpetual cycle that has no purpose or meaning.
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What one kitchen utensil you cannot do without?

Do you have a signature dish?

How often do you defrost your fridge?
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I Must be fazed
A time shift in my perspective,
Thoughts congeal
Memory now selective.
I know things are hazier
An attack of aphasia
Breached in the emotive
Of cell degeneration
Sealed in the votive
Foreshadowing of days.

Jazzy D

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