Topic
perception
8 essays follow this thread across the codex.
- 01 Art · June 2026 · 9 min
Why a Painting’s Edge Matters More Than Its Brushwork
A painting’s first and most violent decision is not what to put in but where to stop, and that severed edge, not the surface, is where its meaning is forged.
- 02 Literature · June 2026 · 9 min
The Hidden Trick That Powers the Modern Novel: Free Indirect Speech
A sentence can think a character’s thought in the narrator’s grammar — and that quiet fusion is the engine of the modern novel.
- 03 Literature · June 2026 · 14 min
Haruki Murakami and Magical Realism: Why the Impossible Feels True
Haruki Murakami keeps the brand-named surface of ordinary Tokyo scrupulously intact, then lets the bottom drop out of it while no one in the room appears to notice the floor is gone. The flatness is the whole art.
- 04 Music · June 2026 · 14 min
The Mathematics of Music: Why Some Sounds Move Us
How frequency becomes feeling — the small-integer ratios, the beating of nerves inside the cochlea, and the tempered compromises that turn vibrating air into Bach, Beethoven, and the last crashing chord of “A Day in the Life.”
- 05 Art · June 2026 · 8 min
Why Cézanne’s “Wrong” Mountains Are Truer Than a Photograph
A photograph captures an instant no one ever lived inside. Cézanne painted the mountain as it is genuinely known — over minutes, in motion, by a body with two restless eyes — and his distortions are the fingerprints of that truth.
- 06 Art · June 2026 · 9 min
Seeing Is a Skill, Not a Gift: How the Trained Eye Is Built
We call it “having an eye,” as if perception were a gift handed out at birth. But the trained eye is built, slowly and at cost — and it walks through a world the untrained eye cannot enter, by going blind to everything else.
- 07 Music · June 2026 · 9 min
Why Music Crosses Borders That Language Cannot
Translation taxes every other art at the frontier. Music alone walks through unsearched, carrying what no word can declare yet every listener somehow receives — and the carrying needs no key.
- 08 Technology · June 2026 · 6 min
Affordances: How a Door’s Shape Tells You to Push or Pull
An object’s shape gives orders no one hears spoken — and the highest design, from Gibson’s cliffs to Norman’s doors, is the kind you obey without ever noticing you were told.