In destinies sad or merry, true men can but try. – Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
In scientific prognostication we have a condition analogous to a fact of archery—the farther back you draw your longbow, the farther ahead you can shoot. – Buckminster FullerBirthdays are generally just that, even “major” birthdays, like my most recent one, my 70th. They are an occasion for a celebration, perhaps a modest one, perhaps not quite so modest – our house was crowded with dinner guests for my father’s 50th birthday – perhaps even extravagant. I’ve never been to an extravagant birthday party. Birthdays may also be a time for reflection, but by no means necessarily so.
But in my experience birthdays rarely correspond to major life events. What’s a major life event? Getting married, whether at a small civil ceremony before a judge or an elaborate wedding with 100s of guests into the church and out to the reception where a great band – like me and my colleagues in The Out of Control Rhythm and Blues Band – performs for hours of dancing, that’s a major life event. Climbing a mountain you’ve trained for over a period of years, that’s a different kind of major life event. Graduating from school, or completing basic training in the military, passing the bar exam, all major.
Years ago, in my early 20s, I was in a rock band called “St. Matthew Passion.” It was our last gig, the sax player and I were jamming a whacked out intro to “She’s Not There” and suddenly it all disappeared, me, the musicians, the room, the world, all into a brilliant, but soft, white light. Only the light and the music. It lasted what, half a second, a second, two seconds? Whatever. Those few moments challenged me for years, changing my sense of myself and the world.
Major life events come in all forms and durations, but they rarely coincide with a birthday. Birthdays simply mark the passage of time.
And so it set out to be on Thursday, December 7, 2017, when I turned 70. I woke up, cruised the web, made four posts to New Savanna, had breakfast and then, and then I decided to go out and take some photos, including some of that green platform pump I’ve been having so much fun photographing.
That was a bit unusual because I generally write in the morning, and perhaps I was motivated by my birthday to do something a bit different. But that’s all it was, a change in routine. It’s no big deal; I do it all the time.
But then I realized, sometime in the afternoon, that this birthday IS a big deal, and that I really can make it a big deal. How? By finishing my working paper, Calculating meaning in “Kubla Khan” – a rough cut. Why is that important, major milestone important? Because I’ve been working on it almost 50 years, all my adult life.
Teaser: Calculating meaning in “Kubla Khan”, 2017
This image likely makes little sense. Don’t worry about it. There are two more images that won’t make much sense. Don’t worry about them either. Just look at them as you would displays in a museum or gallery and move on.Not that paper, no, not that. It’s the poem, “Kubla Khan”, by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, that I’ve been tracking all my adult life. I’ve been working on it since the spring of 1969 when I read it in Earl Wasserman’s class in my senior year at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore – where my father had gone to school. To have completed a project that framed one’s adult life, that is indeed a major event. Not completed, not in the sense that it’s all over and done with – for it isn’t, but in some deep and fundamental sense, things have changed. I’ve got a new understanding, and new obligations to go with it.
Let me explain. Perhaps then you will understand why I expect the next decade to be the most productive one of my life. And not just my intellectual life. There is the Bergen Arches Project as well. And who knows what else? I wonder if Rita Moreno is available for salsa lessons?
The road to “Kubla Khan”
As William Wordsworth observed at the beginning of the 19th century, the child is father to the man, so let’s go back to my childhood.
When I was seven or eight I received a toy. The toy came in a box. And the box fascinated me. On the top of the box was a picture, and in the picture was a boy. In the boy's hand was a box. And on the cover of that box was a picture. In that picture was a boy. And that boy was holding a box. And on that box was a picture. ETC. I would stare at that box and think, and stare, and think. For I perceived that the pictures of boys holding boxes went on and on and on. Only most of them were too small for me to see. But, though I could not see them, I knew that they were there.
At about the same time I had my first cosmological idea. It seemed to me that the entire world was but a motion picture which God projected onto a large screen for the pleasure of His Son, the Baby Jesus – they were big on the Baby Jesus in Sunday school; he was a very important little boy. Having figured that out, I was puzzled. If we were images on a motion picture screen, then how could we see one another, around one another? Motion picture screens were flat, and so were the images projected on them. But I was not flat. My friends and family weren’t flat. The house and yard wasn’t flat. The whole world didn’t seem flat. How’d God manage to do that and how could the Baby Jesus see it all?
As I grew older the questions changed. By the time I’d reached my early twenties the questions focused on language, the mind, and literature. And then I read “Kubla Khan”. Wham! That was it. I’d found a problem that absorbed me. Yes, that’s a reasonable word, “absorbed”. It was bigger than me; it took me in; it consumed me.
Explaining just how that was so, that’s not easy. It’s a technical matter. You need to understand the intellectual context, and this isn’t the place to explain that [1]. A crude analogy will have to do. The critical consensus is that the poem is a colorful chaotic painting by a mad man. Beautiful, but crazy. I’d discovered that, no, it was really an IMAX movie theater crafted with the intricacy of a jeweled Fabergé egg by a team of highly skilled artisans under the supervision of a master architect. Beautiful, intricate, coherent, grand.
Donald Trump commissioned this hotel and casino design from Martin Stern, Jr., a well-known Las Vegas architect. The hotel was to be called Xanadu [2].
The thing is, I could describe “Kubla Khan” from the outside, but I didn’t know what was on the inside holding it up and causing it to turn on its axis. The basic description was in place in my 1972 master’s thesis, which had been directed by Richard Macksey of the interdisciplinary Humanities Center at Johns Hopkins. A year later, in the fall of 1973 I went off to the State University of New York at Buffalo to get a PhD in English. I was also hoping to figure out the inner mechanisms of “Kubla Khan”.Cardinal points in “Kubla Khan”, 1972
Members of the English faculty read that master’s thesis and recognized that, yes, there was something there. But they couldn’t help me figure it out. A fellow graduate student, Ralph Henry Reese, introduced me to a professor in the Linguistics Department, David Hays, who was one of the founders of computational linguistics. Perhaps he could help me? Yes, he could, and did. I worked closely with him and his students and learned a great deal; it was perhaps the best learning experience of my life – well, next to years of informal tutelage by my father. We figured out a Shakespeare sonnet, “The Expense of Spirit”, but “Kubla Khan” remained an enigma.By that time I’d decided that “Kubla Khan” was my touchstone, the thing I used to test my knowledge and understanding of the human mind. For that’s what I was really interested in, the mind. Literature was but a way of investigating the mind.
My touchstone kept eluding me. I wrote articles on the brain, cognitive and cultural evolution, metaphor, music, and Shakespeare plays – some of them in conjunction with Dave Hays; we’d become fast friends and colleagues. I published a book on computer graphics and imaging – Visualization: The Second Computer Revolution (1989), coauthored with Richard Friedhoff. A decade later I wrote a book on music, Beethoven’s Anvil: Music in the Mind and Culture (2001). While working on that book I consulted closely with Walter Freeman, a pioneering neuroscientist. Then I decided to take another crack at “Kubla Khan” [3]. Much better, I thought, but not yet there.
“Kubla Khan”, 2003
That was 2003. I couple years later I joined the academic blogosphere and became a blogger at The Valve [4], a group blog about literature and philosophy. I posted up a storm, and when The Valve shut down, I moved here, to New Savanna, and continued posting. In 2010 or so I began gathering posts into working papers and posting them to the web [5]. I was now, in effect, self-publishing.I kept thinking about “Kubla Khan”, of course, and had become interested in animation after watching Disney’s Fantasia in connection with an aborted book project. My friend Tim Perper then introduced me to Japanese manga and anime – Cardcaptor Sakura, Metropolis (Tezuka’s manga, Rintaro’s anime), Azumanga Daioh, Ghost in the Shell, Spirited Away, Astroboy and others. I had extensive correspondence with the late Mary Douglas, DBE, FBA (Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire – I kid you not – and Fellow of the British Academy), who got me interested in ring-composition, which has become a central interest of mine. And that interest has recently converged on, you guessed it, “Kubla Khan”.
Earlier this year I began having a Twitter conversation with James Ryan, a graduate student working on computer games at the University of California at Santa Cruz. He became interested in the work I’d done at Buffalo on computational linguistics and poetry and invited me to give a presentation at a workshop he’d organized in Portugal. So I wrote a paper and delivered a presentation based on it early in the morning on Tuesday, November 14, 2017 [6]. As I couldn’t make it to Portugal I had to deliver the paper over the Internet via Skype. The time difference meant that I had to get up at 4:30 AM so I could shower, shave, and have breakfast in time for my presentation at 5:45 AM my time, but 10:45 AM in Portugal.
The presentation went well. In the question period Ryan asked me whether I planned to get back to “Kubla Khan”. I forget exactly what I said, but it was something like “maybe/I hope to/someday/yes”. Two days later I’d gotten back to the poem and decided that, yes, I knew how it worked. I’d had a glimpse of the mechanism. I could see the springs and gears.
More or less.
I quickly published some notes to the Internet (such as the Teaser above), place keepers. Then I went to work explaining those notes. I posted one draft on the web on November 29, The problem of form in “Kubla Khan”, in which I stated the problem, sorta’ [7]. I then set to work on another paper in which I intended to outline a solution. That paper grew and grew until I called a halt and decided to regrounp. I started working on the new document on the 5th or 6th, I don’t remember just when.
And this brings us back to where we began. On December 7, my 70th birthday:
I woke up, cruised the web, made four posts to New Savanna, had breakfast and then, and then I decided to go out and take some photos, including some of that green platform pump I’ve been having so much fun with. That was a bit unusual because I generally write in the morning, and perhaps I was motivated by my birthday to do something a bit different. But that’s all it was, a change in routine. It’s no big deal; I do it all the time.And that’s what I did. The fact is, I didn’t quite finish it that day. My brain was frazzled by six or seven in the evening, but I’d completed the guts of the paper, the part about “Kubla Khan”. I cleaned up the last details (about a contrasting poem) the next day, December 8, and posted it to the web [8].
But then I realized, sometime in the afternoon, that this birthday IS a big deal, that I really can make it a big deal. How? By finishing my working paper, Calculating meaning in “Kubla Khan” – a rough cut.
And so there it is, my life’s project, done. Well, sure, I’m going to have to write a book on Coleridge, and the book may not work out – it’s not done until it’s done. Still, as far as I’m concerned, I’ve taken this as far as I can. I’ve satisfied the hunger that sent me off to Buffalo over four decades ago. From this point on it’s up to others to take it farther – and it must be taken farther. When the book is written – it’ll take a year, maybe two depending on what else I’ve got to do, which is likely quite a lot – I will have fulfilled my responsibility to that quest.
What’s curious is that there are no concepts in the papers that I didn’t have at hand, say, five or even ten years ago. Why’d it take me so long to put the pieces together? I don’t really know, but I offer two observations: 1) One of the pieces is the mathematical idea of convolution, which David Hays and I had used in a paper we’d published in the mid-1980s. I’d seen it in recent work on “deep learning”, so it was newly relevant. 2) I was asked. A small group of people I hadn’t know about six months before wanted to know what I’d been doing back in the 1970s. If the world was now asking about my work, perhaps there was something there I hadn’t realized. I looked, and SHAZAAMM!!, I found that something.
What’s next? I can think of perhaps five academic books I could do, including the Coleridge book. But I’m not sure I really want to write all of them. I’ve got to do the Coleridge book, and there’s a book on cultural evolution I’ve got to do – as far as I can tell, no one else is in a position to do it. As for those other books, much of the material is already out there on the web in the form of working papers. Gathering those papers into books would allow me to tighten things up a bit, but it’s pretty accessible as it is.
And then there’s the notes I’ve done on attractor nets [9]. They need a lot of work, or I could simply abandon them. But I need collaborators to take that project farther, people with technical skills I don’t have. I’d like to find some suitable people and get on with it. And, frankly, I’d be interested in making that a commercial venture, though it would be a long shot.
But then there’s the Bergen Arches Project. That’s a different story; I figure it will take up a good deal of my time over the next decade. Before we get to it, though, you need to understand how Jersey City became my home.
Making Jersey City my home
When Dave Hays died in 1995 – lung cancer – I had to reestablish contact with the mid-1970s gang. One of them, Bill Doyle, was starting a new company, MetaLogics, and he wanted me to be part of the team. The company was to be based in Hoboken, NJ, so I moved to Jersey City, which bordered Hoboken to the south. When the company died in the dot-com bust of 2001 I decided to remand in Jersey City.
Late in 2003 I was attending a meeting of a seminar, Computers, Man, and Society, held at the Faculty House of Columbia University. Another member of the seminar, Takashi Utsumi, had brought a guest, Jerry Greenberg. Jerry explained a project he was working on, called World Island. The idea was to create a “permanent world’s fair, for a world that’s permanently fair” on Governor’s Island, in New York Harbor just off the southern tip of Manhattan. It was to be a combination of hotels, an ongoing trade show, restaurant row, an arts and crafts fair, museum, meeting place, and a whole lot more, with orchids woven throughout. Why orchids? Because, said Jerry, we know that “when the orchids go, we’re next.” I was entranced by the vision, scope, and poetry of the project.
I also figured it would be an opportunity for some interesting consulting money. I made appointment to meet Jerry at his office just off Union Square in Manhattan. It quickly became obvious that he didn’t have two dimes, well, quarters, to rub together, but that he had attracted the interest of people with real money. His presentation materials had been professionally produced and, as I said, the project was fascinating.
Jerry’s World Island Database
In the summer of 2004 I was scheduled to attend a conference in Chicago to deliver a plenary talk on “Music, the Mind, and Language”. I took a small point-and-shoot camera with me so I could take photographs of the newly opened Millennium Park [11], which seemed a useful model for some aspects of the World Island Project.
Millennium Park, Chicago
Now I owned a camera. I’d bought it for one specific purpose. Now what? Should I take more photographs? Of what, and why?I’d walk around the neighborhood taking photographs of this and that, including this:
It was right across the street from me. I thought it was pretty cool. I figured there must be more of that around here. I went looking.
And almost immediately I found this:
It was 18 feet wide, seven feet tall, and stood next to an active freight line. When trains went by the sound was deafening and it went on for five or ten minutes – these trains were long. The freight cars were covered with graffiti.
I decided I would document graffiti Jersey City. I bought a better camera and went to work, shooting hundreds and thousands of picture of local graffiti. It changed my life. It made Jersey City my home.
* * * * *
Jersey City is where I lived, I’d lived there since 1997 or 98. But living in a place doesn’t make it a home, home is something deeper. Home is about your soul, for want of a better word.
I was, and am, a bachelor. I’ve never been married, and don’t have any children. A wife and children create a home. They are more than you; your commitment to them extends your vital concerns beyond yourself. Moreover they will be involved in social circles other than yours; those circles – I’m thinking particularly of your children’s friends – commit the family to a physical place. Nothing committed me to Jersey City in that way.
I am an independent scholar. I write and publish books and articles; I hang out on the Internet and interact with scholars around the world. That’s where I am rooted, that is my (spiritual) home. All that stuff about “Kubla Khan”, and poetry and whatever else, that’s my soul, that’s the thing bigger than me that connects me to the world. I can participate in those activities no matter where I am physically located.
When I committed myself to photographing, to documenting graffiti in Jersey City, that commitment made Jersey City my home. It embedded my interests as a scholar and thinker in the physical infrastructure of the place where I lived. It was graffiti that brought me to attend a meeting of the Hamilton Park Neighborhood Association (HPNA), where I found out that many of my neighbors had a different attitude toward graffiti than I did. That’s understandable, and that’s OK.
I helped the HPNA with a small project to transfer the association’s papers to the local branch of the library. It was there that I saw a file of newspaper clippings about the Bergen Arches. What’s that, I thought, what’re they?
A bit later some graffiti writers told me about another graffiti site, “below Dickinson, near the Wall of Fame.” So I poked around and there it was:
That just HAS to be the Bergen Arches, I thought. Yes, there was graffiti there:
But there was also ‘nothing’, not really nothing, but no city.
Of course, I’d seen such places all my life, here and there. Growing up in Johnstown, Pa., my father would take me hiking in Stackhouse Park, in Westmont. We’d pull off the side of the road and enter through a parting in a wall of tall grass, bushes and trees. There we’d walk in a small ravine on ground cushioned by pine needles, the trees over head, and a small brook jumping from rock to rock. There was a similar place near our home on Luther Road, about a half mile away, near the mink farm (as we kids called it). Tall pines, cool shade even in the middle of summer. There was a more generous and more mysterious ravine near the YMCA summer camp I went to, but not forbiddingly large. I made a painting of it, though in a very abstract style. It hangs in my sister’s dining room:
Coleridge wrote about such a place in “This Lime-Tree Bower”, which he wrote at roughly the same time he wrote “Kubla Khan”. Here’s a passage:
They, meanwhile, Friends, whom I never more may meet again, On springy heath, along the hill-top edge, Wander in gladness, and wind down, perchance, To that still roaring dell, of which I told; The roaring dell, o’erwooded, narrow, deep, And only speckled by the mid-day sun; Where its slim trunk the ash from rock to rock Flings arching like a bridge;–that branchless ash, Unsunn’d and damp, whose few poor yellow leaves Ne'er tremble in the gale, yet tremble still, Fann’d by the water-fall! and there my friends Behold the dark green file of long lank weeds, That all at once (a most fantastic sight!) Still nod and drip beneath the dripping edge Of the blue clay-stone.Is it physically the same as those other places? How should I know, I’ve never been there. And those other places, Stackhouse Park, the mink farm, YMCA camp, they weren’t the same, physically. But the mood, the myth, the meaning, the same. All of them.
And yet the Bergen Arches wasn’t a natural formation. It had been blasted out of the Jersey Palisades with 125 tons of dynamite. It took five years. They laid four railroad tracks there, and those tracks took trains to the Hudson River into the early 1960s. And then three of the four tracks were pulled out – why not the fourth? – and the Arches were closed, abandoned, and forgotten.
But homeless people lived there, urban explorers trekked there, and graffiti writes got up (as they say) on the masonry walls of the arches. It was home to social networks running counter to mainstream society. In a sense, it was a foreign overlay on and intrusion into the urban environment of Jersey City.
* * * * *
There’s a site about a quarter of a mile away from the Arches where I found some first class graffiti. This site was also a do-it-yourself skate park. One day in October of 2007 I arrived at this site to find the floor slab broken up. The skate park was destroyed. On November 4, 2007, I saw this sign:
That set off the chain of events that would, almost a decade later, result in the Bergen Arches project.
The Bergen Arches Project
I decided to attend the meeting, more out of curiosity than anything else. I put on my banker’s suit and showed up. As I’d suspected, the meeting had been called by the young councilman, Steve Fulop. Only four skate-boarders were there, not enough to do anything. But they agreed to get more people out for a meeting two weeks later. That meeting drew 30 skateboarders plus parents and others. Fulop agreed to talk with the New Jersey Thruway authority to see if the City could build a park beneath the I78 extension through the City and I volunteered as liaison between the councilman and the skateboarders.
Without going into the details let’s just say that things didn’t work out, but the process got me thinking [12]. The result of that thinking was a proposal [13] to build a series of parks that spanned Jersey City roughly two miles from east to west, areas outlined in yellow in the following map:
See that long narrow strip extending roughly from the center of the map to the upper left? That’s the Bergen Arches. It’s about a mile long. I guestimated that the whole project would cost a quarter to half a billion dollars and could bring in 90 million a year in tourist revenue. I had no way of pursuing the project, not something that large, but I circulated the report among friends, gave a copy to the councilman, and put it online where the curious could find it.
Why did I write the report if I had no way of pursuing the idea? Because it was fun, serious fun. A way of playing around with possibilities for the future. Maybe I couldn’t pursue the project, but who knows? Others might.
Do you remember that crazy World Island project I’d been working on with Jerry, now Zeal, Greenberg? That’s where I got the idea for this two mile string of parks in Jersey City. That’s where I learned to think about a city as a coherent, if complex, object.
I continued to work with Zeal, with my writing, with my music – there was a Saturday afternoon jam session on the Upper West Side of Manhattan I went to for several years, and I continued photographing Jersey City graffiti. I moved to a different Jersey City neighborhood, Bergen-Lafayette, where my interest in graffiti led me to Greg Edgell at 51 Pacific Avenue. He curated a 5000 sq. ft. loft there and the alley behind the whole block.
I showed him that proposal, Jersey City: From a Skate Park to the World. He was skeptical, and properly so. My response: Yep, it’s crazy. But the world changes. I grew up during the Cold War and figured it would still be going when I died. And then the Berlin Wall came down. Shazam! The world had changed. Greg bought it.
We worked on a variety of projects over the next few years. Well, Greg worked; I advised and took photos. A block party on Pacific Avenue, an emergency mural at the Liberty State Science Center, campaign headquarters for Councilman Steve Fulop (who ran for mayor and won), murals and events all over the place. Green Villain – the name under which Greg and his floating crew of associates worked – was becoming established, not only in Jersey City, but New York City too.
The largest project involved turning a shuttered Pep Boys store into a temporary graffiti gallery, for a week (inside) and a month (outside) before the building was demolished to make way for new construction. We called it the Demolition Exhibition. It made the Wall Street Journal [14].
That was late summer of 2015. What next? It was Greg who asked the question and early in 2016 he came up with the answer: The Bergen Arches Project. This was out of that report I’d written – in a spirit of high ludic seriousness – back in November of 2007, the report I used to introduce myself to Greg, the report he thought was crazy, and I agreed. As Louis Armstrong sang, what a wonderful world, and Israel Kaʻanoʻi Kamakawiwoʻole (aka Brother Iz) sang it too.
It didn’t make sense to tackle the whole two and a half miles; for one thing, part of that strip had been in litigation for the last decade and a half. No, the Bergen Arches was quite enough. It was and is a single coherent piece of real estate. Greg contacted some architect friends of his; they had some design ideas and produced some renderings; and we launched a website in the late summer of 2016 [15]. We were live.
There’s no need to go into any detail about what happened next. It’s sufficient to note that we got a bit of buzz in Jersey City, we’ve talked with neighborhood associations, architects, activists, and city officials and politicians. We’ve assembled a small core team, including a young architect, Rahid Cornejo; a dyed-in-the-wool Jersey City activist; Dan Levine, and our lawyer, Judith O’Donnell. And we have formed a non-profit, Bergen Arches, a NJ Nonprofit Corp. We’re figuring it for a ten-year ride. However it ends – who knows? – it’ll be fun. And hard work.
What’s next?
That’s where I am as I head into my eighth decade. The way it looks to me, here and now as I write this early in the morning of December 18, is that I’ve got to phase out the intellectual work and devote more time and effort to other things, the Bergen Arches certainly, but also music, photography, and Charlie Keil’s projects – which I’ve not mentioned, but, whatever; they’re important too.
“Phase out” doesn’t mean drop it like a hot potato. What it really means is transmit the knowledge. While the world certainly has not rewarded me for the time and effort I’ve put into my intellectual work, it did somehow manage to afford me the time and resources to do it. I’ve got to repay that debt. I’ve got some more writing to do, just how much is not clear. But I’ve also got to create an institution of some kind, a modest one, that can carry on the intellectually independently of me – at the moment, I figure the academic world is a lost cause. Just what that will be, I don’t know, but that’s OK. It’ll come in time.
I have no idea what will happen with the Bergen Arches project. That too will come in time. And then there’s Rita Moreno. When she calls, I’ve got to have my dancing shoes on.
* * * * *
“We’re in one of those great historic periods… when people don’t understand the world anymore…when the past is not sufficient to explain the future.”
– Peter Drucker
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world; indeed it is the only thing that ever has. – Margaret Mead* * * * *
Concerning the image at the head of the article: The “70” is obvious enough. The white text is “Kubla Khan”, without punctuation and line divisions. The underlying photograph is a small shrine someone had placed in the Bergen Arches several years ago. Notice the greeting at the bottom: Welcome to Eden.
References
[1] This is a biographical essay about how I became interested in “Kubla Khan”: Touchstones • Strange Encounters • Strange Poems • the beginning of an intellectual life, November 15, 2015, 10 pp., https://www.academia.edu/9814276/Touchstones_Strange_Encounters_Strange_Poems_the_beginning_of_an_intellectual_life
This paper is about the influence of Claude Lévi-Strauss, the French anthropologist, on my intellectual life. The fourth and the longest section discusses how my interest in Lévi-Strauss shaped my approach to “Kubla Khan”. Beyond Lévi-Strauss on Myth: Objectification, Computation, and Cognition, Working Paper, February 2015, 30 pp., https://www.academia.edu/10541585/Beyond_Lévi-Strauss_on_Myth_Objectification_Computation_and_Cognition
[2] Paradise Misplaced: The Xanadu Hotel Casino, A Virtual Exhibit from the UNLV Special Collections, http://gaming.unlv.edu/Xanadu/index.html
[3] “Kubla Khan” and the Embodied Mind, PsyArt: A Hyperlink Journal for the Psychological Study of the Arts, November 29, 2003, https://www.academia.edu/8810242/_Kubla_Khan_and_the_Embodied_Mind
[4] The Valve – A Literary Organ, http://www.thevalve.org/go
[5] Here’s a paper where I discuss my life online and, in particular, my online publishing: Personal Observations on Entering an Age of Computing Machines, Working Paper, November 2015, 51 pp., https://www.academia.edu/18791499/Personal_Observations_on_Entering_an_Age_of_Computing_Machines
[6] Here’s the workshop page: First Workshop on the History of Expressive Systems, November 14, 2017, at the International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling (ICIDS), Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, http://www.expressive-systems.org/hex/01/
My paper: Abstract Patterns in Stories: From the intellectual legacy of David G. Hays, https://www.academia.edu/34975666/Abstract_Patterns_in_Stories_From_the_intellectual_legacy_of_David_G._Hays
My presentation: Abstract Patterns in Stories: From the intellectual legacy of David G. Hays, https://www.academia.edu/35142428/Abstract_Patterns_in_Stories_From_the_intellectual_legacy_of_David_G._Hays
[7] The problem of form in “Kubla Khan”, Working Paper, November 29, 2017, 13 pp. https://www.academia.edu/35275862/The_problem_of_form_in_Kubla_Khan_
[8] Calculating meaning in “Kubla Khan” – a rough cut (Version 2), Working Paper, December 8, 2017, 18 pp. https://www.academia.edu/35379665/Calculating_meaning_in_Kubla_Khan_a_rough_cut_Version_2_
[9] If you’re at all curious, read this first: Attractor Nets, Series I: Notes Toward a New Theory of Mind, Logic and Dynamics in Relational Networks, Working Paper, 52 pp. https://www.academia.edu/9012847/Attractor_Nets_Series_I_Notes_Toward_a_New_Theory_of_Mind_Logic_and_Dynamics_in_Relational_Networks
If you want more, look at this, which is all diagrams, some with extensive annotation: Attractor Nets 2011: Diagrams for a New Theory of Mind, Working Paper, 55 pp. https://www.academia.edu/9012810/Attractor_Nets_2011_Diagrams_for_a_New_Theory_of_Mind
[10] You will find a set of three World Island documents online at https://www.scribd.com/lists/4378144/World-Island-A-permanent-World-s-Fair-for-a-world-that-s-permanently-fair
[11] There’s an online exhibit of these photos, Xanadu on the Lake: Chicago’s Millennium Park, http://csac.buffalo.edu/cwp/millennium/park.html
[12] I tell the story in more detail in The Jersey City SK8 Park Chronicles, November 18, 2012, https://www.scribd.com/document/113688794/The-Jersey-City-SK8-Park-Chronicles
[13] Jersey City: From a Skate Park to the World, Revised edition, July 2013, https://www.scribd.com/document/58300722/Jersey-City-From-a-Skate-Park-to-the-World
[14] Corinne Ramey, “Graffiti Artists and Developers Draw an Alliance”, The Wall Street Journal, June 26, 2015, https://www.wsj.com/articles/graffiti-artists-and-developers-draw-an-alliance-1435359107
[15] The Bergen Arches Project, http://www.bergenarches.com