tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3782524545865091288.post4120300730142864080..comments2023-10-30T00:50:12.472-07:00Comments on MAGIC WITHOUT CARDS: R. Buckminster Fuller explains NeuroPersuasionBen Mackhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05759180467125362965noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3782524545865091288.post-38495406930654057552009-11-23T05:06:39.030-08:002009-11-23T05:06:39.030-08:00Great post, and Bucky's pirate version of hist...Great post, and Bucky's pirate version of history seems spot on. He described much of this in "Critical Path," which was a gamechanger read for me in college.<br /><br />Re circles, I love his analysis of pi and that Nature couldn't endlessly compute dimensions of bubbles every time the surf washed upon the shore. Our models of thought directly affect our observations and conclusions.<br /><br />I've probably absorbed some of his thinking re force vectors and the movement inherent in the geometry of Universe, and applied it to my thinking about brands, oddly enough. The static language of marketing -- positioning, barriers to entry, messages, vision -- seems so limiting and imprecise vs. seeing brands as constantly in motion, whether moving between users or traveling through spacetime.<br /><br />May the tetrahedron be with you!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3782524545865091288.post-10562768171053951292009-11-23T03:40:53.034-08:002009-11-23T03:40:53.034-08:00I can easily accept that education has limited our...I can easily accept that education has limited our abilities.<br /><br />With that assumption, I wonder if those with these limits can get through the blocks they have around words like "pirate"<br /><br />I would suspect that many won't get down to the circle explanation (or this comment).Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com