Weltanschauung. German roots, Welt (world) Anschauung (view): refers to a comprehensive conception of the world and human life.
Weltanschauung, formed from the German Welt (world) and Anschauung (view), speaks to the wide lens through which a life is understood — a total vision of existence, its structure, its questions, its contradictions. These writings are the scaffolding of thought, the bones beneath belief.
School of God Thought
This is my most important essay. It describes a methodology of thought, which is required before reading any of my essays, recommended before any of my art, and vital to living in a true reality.
“A Tutelary’s Tots’, cont.
A continuation of my previous essay, now highlighting that it is okay to be angry, or critical of other people, even in the knowledge we are all one.
“Passion”
“Crazy”
A sister to my important essay. It describes the dangers of employing the methodology, and how to stay safe in a crazy world.
“Enlightened Chumps”
An essay on why philosophizing is life’s disposition. Not a meaning, but an occupation of life.
“A Tutelary’s Tots”
A pantheistic essay aiming to prove that God is everything, and everything is God.
“Man-God”
An essay on how one should observe the phenomenom of “great art”, and how to apply it to ones own work.
An exploration of why we make art, and what the true goal of art is.
Spike represents the quiet strength beneath thought — the part of the self that endures, observes, and holds its shape. Lean and dust-worn, he carries a patient clarity, a steadiness that anchors wandering ideas.
“Spike, Snoopy’s brother, is a beautiful example of images evoked by a location: we know he lives with the coyotes outside Needles, and that’s about all we know. There is about him, with his thin, faintly exotic mustache and soulful eyes, an air of mystery that is totally foreign to what Snoopy is.”
“Snoopy’s thin and stoic brother, (and the only one with a mustache) Spike lives in the desert outside of Needles, California. He prefers a quiet, solitary life. His closest friends are the cacti and tumbleweeds. Spike is thoughtful, and at times, melancholic. When his loneliness becomes too much he makes the trip to visit Snoopy and the rest of the gang. He loves his brother, and enjoys spending some time with his friends, but he is soon reminded of why he prefers to live alone in the desert.”