FPAC

Foundation for Promotion of Academic Collaboration

The surrogate as hope

What's gone is gone, pretty much

by Prof Dr Norbert Pintsch, IPC

There is always a consolation to conceal the insignificance of existence: the weaknesses of man - forgotten as mortal sins - greed, avarice, ambition.

They help to fill life and to take oneself seriously, no matter what position or area the little person is in.

Organizing and making and doing gives the feeling of being more than an organic vegetable; this also applies to those who act seemingly freely in temples, palaces and town halls.

Preserving the intangible legacies, in the hope of permanence, but with a sense of insignificance, succeeds.

Thoughts, ideas and concepts began to be recorded on stones, then passed on through bound material, converting the analogue into the digital.


Information can be easily transported and is available for communication.

If a transfer from one planet to another is possible one day, it also contains the hope of preserving the analogue.

It is the wealth of a long, human-based chain that simultaneously represents the poverty. 

It is necessary to deal with it in the luggage of a means of transport and to find a way in existence.

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posted by S A J Shirazi @ 3:16 PM,

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