A Review

Betsy Calabaza
1 min readOct 5, 2024

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It dealt with how the writer’s audience has changed Along with the development of analysis regarding the makeup of human consciousness insofar as a consciousness is present in any given human action, the actions purport to be surfaces of deep ingrained crevices with depth challenging and resisting measurements; of images that reflect both an origin and an existential definition and limit of our characters. For example, the audience of Homer would have been compatriots. Today we know that writing for such an audience is propaganda. We then change our audience to include both insiders and outsiders. For example, the saint Thomas Aquinas. Traveling further along, the audience becomes more absurd. Either they’re ironically beneath us or superior to us. Thus we depart from an audience that even is said to exist. The audience is not yet because the author still lives. The author must die for the audience to exist. This introduces us to the conflict. The author is writing but without wanting to die and the audience is too distracted to even care or have an attempt at their life. The author’s psyche starts to feast on itself until it impregnates itself and give birth to himself. The audience never existing. Apart from that, it could have been shortened by 200 pages and it wouldn’t have hurt the message at all.

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Betsy Calabaza

blooms — crazy rants masked as abstract experimental philosophy. s/o CS Peirce