Speculative fiction writer William Gibson, in his novel Pattern Recognition, wrote :
Astrologers use pattern recognition when attempting to predict the future. Future configurations of the planets, similar to configurations which have formed years, decades or centuries before, small patterns and huge ones, are basic ingredients of astrological prediction. Pattern recognition can aid astrological searchers in other ways too. There's an interesting except from Michael Ledo's book The Secret Astrology of the Bible
Snip (click on image for a bigger version). Read more at the link above:
As we watched a TV series, The Bletchley Circle via Netflix last week, the subject of pattern recognition came up.
The series' theme features four women who, during World War II worked together at a secret facility at Bletchley, England, to decipher German military codes for the British military. The series begins in 1952, nine years after the war. The first episode opens as Susan, one of the four, learns about a series of murders in the London area. She soon recognises patterns connecting the murders. This discovery encourages her to use her old code-breaking skills. She contacts her war-time colleagues for support, after unsuccessfully trying to convince the police to investigate her theories about the crimes. Thereby hangs the tale, completed in the first series. We have yet to watch season two's story.
Currently doing the rounds of movie theatres there's a big-screen, factual, story of code-breaking and pattern recognition. The Imitation Game. It hasn't reached our local cinema yet - probably never will. We shall patiently await its arrival to Netflix.
“We have no idea, now, of who or what the inhabitants of our future might be. In that sense, we have no future. Not in the sense that our grandparents had a future, or thought they did. Fully imagined cultural futures were the luxury of another day, one in which 'now' was of some greater duration. For us, of course, things can change so abruptly, so violently, so profoundly, that futures like our grandparents' have insufficient 'now' to stand on. We have no future because our present is too volatile. ... We have only risk management. The spinning of the given moment's scenarios. Pattern recognition”.
Astrologers use pattern recognition when attempting to predict the future. Future configurations of the planets, similar to configurations which have formed years, decades or centuries before, small patterns and huge ones, are basic ingredients of astrological prediction. Pattern recognition can aid astrological searchers in other ways too. There's an interesting except from Michael Ledo's book The Secret Astrology of the Bible
Snip (click on image for a bigger version). Read more at the link above:
As we watched a TV series, The Bletchley Circle via Netflix last week, the subject of pattern recognition came up.
The series' theme features four women who, during World War II worked together at a secret facility at Bletchley, England, to decipher German military codes for the British military. The series begins in 1952, nine years after the war. The first episode opens as Susan, one of the four, learns about a series of murders in the London area. She soon recognises patterns connecting the murders. This discovery encourages her to use her old code-breaking skills. She contacts her war-time colleagues for support, after unsuccessfully trying to convince the police to investigate her theories about the crimes. Thereby hangs the tale, completed in the first series. We have yet to watch season two's story.
Currently doing the rounds of movie theatres there's a big-screen, factual, story of code-breaking and pattern recognition. The Imitation Game. It hasn't reached our local cinema yet - probably never will. We shall patiently await its arrival to Netflix.
What we call chaos is just patterns we haven’t recognized. What we call random is just patterns we can't decipher.
~ Chuck Palahniuk