syn·site

sin.sīt
noun, verb

in pseudoscientific terms: A dynamic phenomenon which manifests in the compounding reconfiguration of fragments from selves, sites, and associations. It activates at the intersection of disparate elements, forming a crystallized, collaborative consciousness akin to a superposition state in quantum mechanics, where the specific and the abstract, the internal and external, the actual and the virtual, the organic and the synthetic exist simultaneously.

in pseudoscientific terms: A dynamic phenomenon which manifests in the compounding reconfiguration of fragments from selves, sites, and associations. It activates at the intersection of disparate elements, forming a crystallized, collaborative consciousness akin to a superposition state in quantum mechanics, where the specific and the abstract, the internal and external, the actual and the virtual, the organic and the synthetic exist simultaneously.

SYN (along with, at the same time | from Greek SYN, with | ~SYNTHETIC) + SITE (N: point of event, occupied space, internet address; V: to place in position | from Latin SITUS, location, idleness, forgetfulness | ~WEBSITE ¬cite ¬sight), cf. SITE/NON-SITE (from Robert Smithson, A PROVISIONAL THEORY OF NONSITES, 1968)

aerial perspectives aerial perspectives aerial perspectives aerial perspectives

It is comparatively easy to make computers exhibit adult level performance on intelligence tests or playing checkers, and difficult or impossible to give them the skills of a one-year-old when it comes to perception and mobility.

It is comparatively easy to make computers exhibit adult level performance on intelligence tests or playing checkers, and difficult or impossible to give them the skills of a one-year-old when it comes to perception and mobility.

It is comparatively easy to make computers exhibit adult level performance on intelligence tests or playing checkers, and difficult or impossible to give them the skills of a one-year-old when it comes to perception and mobility.

It is not the eye which sees but the body as a receptive totality.

It is not the eye which sees but the body as a receptive totality.

It is not the eye which sees but the body as a receptive totality.

Seeing is superseded by calculating probabilities. Vision loses importance and is replaced by filtering, decrypting, and pattern recognition.

Seeing is superseded by calculating probabilities. Vision loses importance and is replaced by filtering, decrypting, and pattern recognition.

Seeing is superseded by calculating probabilities. Vision loses importance and is replaced by filtering, decrypting, and pattern recognition.

...like a piece of sensitive photographic paper, waiting passively to feel the shock of impression. And then I was quivering like a leaf, more precisely like a mute hunk of appetitional plasm, a kind of sponge in which the business of being excited was going on, run through by a series of external stimuli: the lane, the man, the pale light, the lash of silver – at the ecstatic edge of something to be known.

...like a piece of sensitive photographic paper, waiting passively to feel the shock of impression. And then I was quivering like a leaf, more precisely like a mute hunk of appetitional plasm, a kind of sponge in which the business of being excited was going on, run through by a series of external stimuli: the lane, the man, the pale light, the lash of silver – at the ecstatic edge of something to be known.

...like a piece of sensitive photographic paper, waiting passively to feel the shock of impression. And then I was quivering like a leaf, more precisely like a mute hunk of appetitional plasm, a kind of sponge in which the business of being excited was going on, run through by a series of external stimuli: the lane, the man, the pale light, the lash of silver – at the ecstatic edge of something to be known.