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THE
BEAUTY OF
THE COSMOS
Beauty surgery
takes place following methods and in places that are far from beautiful. Scarification,
detachment, filing, aspiration, injection, cutting, cauterising, piercing: all
these operations are part of our daily work.
They are also part of all destructive actions aimed at cancelling
out the classic values
(only to reinstate them as soon as they are assimilated)
and show the blood-thirsty taste of the surgeon, sometimes appeased,
other times exasperated by having to follow the rules.
In both cases, we take the toy to pieces in order to understand its structure.
The
surgeon who shapes the body following an idea
of beauty does so with means and in ways that are the
exact opposite of beauty, subject to the same paradox whereby the
actor must free himself of all emotion to produce emotions in his
audience, or the baker, who has to sell his bread to earn his bread.
On the other hand,
the greatest satisfaction for any creator, great or small, comes just from this
feeling of abnegation, more lasting and vibrant than any feeling produced by his
or her identification with the finished work, from which detachment will now follow.
Awareness always challenges and depresses the feeling of power.
What else can God have felt during the Creation?
Epidemides
showed that narcissism was inconclusive, with his examples on self-referentiality
that end in absurdity. For example, if I say that I make people
beautiful who cannot do so themselves, and I then ask myself whether
I can make myself beautiful: if I answer "yes" it means
that I can't make myself beautiful myself, while if I answer "no"
then I still must recognise that I cannot succeed in making myself
beautiful myself (1).
Those
who create beauty, suffering from the penalty of the above phenomenon
of "privation of the product"
are however very capable of maintaining the external gradient of
beauty at its highest levels, since they possess a capability to
perceive beauty in the infinitely small. In a word, they must be
capable of finding enjoyment in small things.
Writing
this diary is part of the sum of energy spent in extracting some
fragments of beauty from an activity that is without beauty. I have
tried to exemplify to the extreme, to stylise surgical techniques
and report them in the form of axioms, to extract the geometrical
rule from the technical
gesture and the model from the chaotic and bloody relationship between
doctor and patient.
When
one attempts to avoid wasting energy, one comes close to performing
a beautiful action. Economy, proportion,
intelligibility are qualities of beauty that recall the
world of formulas, the universal language of numbers, the equations
of physics and mathematics, which are universally understandable.
Physicists,
who are looking for the ultimate equation,
that of the unified field, are also convinced that it will be the
most beautiful of all, a sort of "Miss Universe" of equations.
A formula that, by unifying all forces acting in nature, it should
be possible to portray in a painting, to play on the strings of
a harp, to evoke in the silence of meditation like the Mantra of
mantras, to shout in the heat of battle or in the intoxication of
joy, in the ecstasy of the martyr like the Vowel of vowels.
The
diagrams I have used here are
part of a "domestic mathematics" with which the most varied
types of procedure can be described, and thus accelerated, from
cephalometric analysis to preparing home-made ice-cream.
In
The Scope of Mathematics (Oxford University Press, 1966) Holt and
McIntosh illustrate that kitchen recipes can be represented through
critical path analysis. These diagrams look like constellations
and, at a glance, represent the correct succession of operations
to be performed in the shortest possible time.
They are used
in building complex models such as aeroplanes or bridges, but can also provide
the housewife with irrefutable arguments for buying new electric appliances. However,
they damage the sacred tradition of handing down recipes by word of mouth.
If critical path
analysis draws constellations, tree diagrams to calculate probabilities look like
the trees of Mondrian and Euler-Venn's diagrams of set theory look like paintings
by Kandinsky, Delaunay, Kupka, Balla and others.
The
Taoists enclose the meaning of life within a diagram, the T'ai-chi
T'u, which means Diagram of the Ultimate Reality. It
represents the flow of existence in which the opposites, Yng and
Yang, periodically alternate.
The
diagram on page 82 shows the dominance of Plasticity
over the physical world. The Plastic Principle is thus subordinated
to the Ego, which has the power of intervening on the process of
continual transformation of reality (I avoid using the term Super-Ego
or Trans-Personal-Ego so as not to fall into the same non-sense
of self-referentiality of Epidemides, although I know this does
not worry the psychologists).
But there is more
to the diagram. The arrow in the direction of the Ego comes from the Super Power
that dominates the Cosmos, harmonises opposing energies, integrates body-mind
with space-time.
It is clear that we are talking here about the same force that the
physicists are looking for in the ultimate structure, the ultimate
equation. It is the idea of beauty, which at all levels transpires
from the project of the universe. The word Cosmos
derives from the Greek còsmos, which means beauty (hence
also the word cosmetic).
If
the idea of beauty were to inspire the actions of our lives, any
useless attempt at violence would be removed from us. Whoever is
inspired by the idea of beauty believes in the economy
of gestures, and prefers courteous behaviour (which requires
less energy expenditure) to coercive behaviour (which greatly increases
the entropy of the system).
The idea of beauty
is linked to proportions, to geometry, and it can teach us to use our body-mind
and the space-time surrounding us properly. If we take proper measurements in
our actions, we will perform beautiful actions.
The completed diagram
presents Beauty at the top, governing the Ego and the opposed forces that regulate
the physical world.
Guided by the idea of beauty, we will succeed in bringing the body-mind
into agreement with space-time, harmonising the opposed
forces that are inherent in all vital processes.
We should all
learn to recognise beauty in the various physical states of matter and in the
different conditions of existence. Beauty that does not repudiate ugliness but
recognises itself through its opposite.
Modulation of the
exchanges that take place between body-mind and space-time under the aegis of
harmony, of proportion and of rhythm, makes it possible to achieve perfect equilibrium
between opposing energies.
Knowledge of the
right quantity of thoughts, food and sounds that should enter and leave our body
will produce our well-being and that of the external environment.
Now that we know
that everything, our body and the entire cosmos, is subject to plasticity, we
need do nothing more than act guided by our sense of beauty, in kicking a ball
or giving a kick to a theory, sliding on the snow or slipping on an argument,
because tendons and neurons, balls and ski slopes, shape each other reciprocally
as a function of the right principle.
Note 1. The surgeon
perfectly fits the role of Bertrand Russel's barber, not least because both jobs
have the same origins.
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