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NOW

FOLLOWS SOMETHING INTERESTING HAPPENS TO THE WAY THE IMPROVISER PRODUCES MUSIC NOW THE IMPROVISER HAS THE CAPABILITY TO MAKE THE PERFORMANCE SEEM

“For example if we add a delay line (with sufficient delay time) instead of the amplifying electronics, for example as follows:
[diagram]
something interesting happens to the way the improviser produces music. Now the improviser has the capability to make the performance seem like a dialogue, but the dialogue is with oneself.”

Yadegari, Shahrokh. "The Radif as a Basis for a Computer Music Model: Union of Philosophy and Poetry through Self-referentiality." PhD diss., University of California, San Diego, 2004. p. 165.

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ATTEMPT TO GIVE THE RESULT TO THIS DEGREE OF ACCURACY WE KNOW NOW THAT THE LENGTH OF THE YEAR IS CHANGING IN THE SIXTH DECIMAL PLACE OVER A PERSON'S

“In describing Khayyam’s contributions to mathematics, O’Connor and Robertson report:
‘Khayyam measured the length of the year as 365.24219858156 days. Two comments on this result. Firstly it shows an incredible confidence to attempt to give the result to this degree of accuracy. We know now that the length of the year is changing in the sixth decimal place over a person’s lifetime. Secondly it is outstandingly accurate. For comparison the length of the year at the end of the 19th century was 365.242196 days, while today it is 365.242190 days.’”

Yadegari, Shahrokh. "The Radif as a Basis for a Computer Music Model: Union of Philosophy and Poetry through Self-referentiality." PhD diss., University of California, San Diego, 2004. p. 6.

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EVENTS THAT NOT A TIME CAN BE TAKEN FOR STATES OF INTUITION MAY BE ONLY SUDDEN NOW IS A BLINDING INSTANT ONE SINGLE EXPLOSION BUT SOMEHOW SOME PART

“‘Understanding’ is used to apply discovery of a term of affirmation but what of not entering
Happinessess are not events that not a time can be taken for
States of intuition may be only sudden
Now is a blinding instant of one single explosion but somehow
some part of it gets accentuated…”

Hejinian, Lyn. Happily. Sausalito, CA: Post-Apollo Press, 2000. p. 27.

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Litmus Press

DERIVATION FROM THE LOWER ANIMALS MADE HIM SOMETHING THAT IS NOW NOT ANIMAL IT MEANS THAT MAN IS JUST AS MUCH AN ANIMAL TODAY AS WERE HIS PREHUMAN

“Probably no one zoological item has influenced me more than the perception that the evolutionary interpretation of man does not mean that man’s derivation from the lower animals made him something that is now not animal. It means that man is just as much an animal to-day as were his prehuman ancestors. The truth is exactly stated by saying that when the transformation took place by which man came into existence that transformation was from a lower to a higher stage of animal life.”

Ritter, William Emerson. An Organismal Theory of Consciousness. Boston, 1919: Gorham Press. p. ll.

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Google Books

LEGAL AID MOVEMENT NEVER CLAIMED THAT THE NEEDS OF THE POOR WERE FULLY MET NOW WE HAVE AT HAND THE TOOLS WITH WHICH TO PROVIDE SERVICES IN AN

“For years the bar responded to the need for legal services for the poor through legal aid, but even the most ardent supporters of the legal aid movement never claimed that the needs of the poor were fully met. Now, we have at hand the tools with which to provide those services in an organized and more complete way.”

Marshall, Thurgood. “Law and the Quest for Equality.” Washington University Law Review 1967, no. 1 (Winter 1967). p. 9.

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Washington University Open Scholarship

BY THE LIFE LESSONS OF SUBSISTENCE ECONOMIES BUT WHAT CAN WE NOW MEAN BY THE WORDS WILD AND FOR THAT MATTER NATURE LANGUAGES MEANDER LIKE

“Cultures of wilderness live by the life and death lessons of subsistence economies. But what can we now mean by the words wild and for that matter nature? Languages meander like great rivers leaving oxbow traces over forgotten beds, to be seen only from the air or by scholars.”

Snyder, Gary. The Practice of the Wild. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1990. p. 7.

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BeWild ReWild

SHRINKING DAY BY DAY CREATURES WHO HAVE TRAVELED WITH US THROUGH THE AGES ARE NOW APPARENTLY DOOMED AS THEIR HABITAT AND THE OLD OLD HABITAT

“Such are the lessons of the wild. The school where these lessons can be learned, the realms of caribou and elk, elephant and rhinoceros, orca and walrus, are shrinking day by day. Creatures who have traveled with us through the ages are now apparently doomed, as their habitat—and the old, old habitat of humans—falls before the slow-motion explosion of expanding world economies. If the lad or lass is among us who knows where the secret heart of this Growth-Monster is hidden, let them please tell us where to shoot the arrow that will slow it down."

Snyder, Gary. The Practice of the Wild. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1990. pp. 4-5.

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BeWild ReWild

LANGUAGE COMING THROUGH PAINTINGS OF LIONS AND BISON THIS IS NOW PART OF WHAT OUR PAST WILL BE THEN WE CAN WONDER WHAT IMAGES VOICES WILL

“We can try to hear their language coming through paintings of lions and bison. This is now part of what our past will be.
Then we can also wonder through what images our voices will carry to the people 10,000 years hence—through the swirls of still-standing freeway off-ramps and on-ramps?”

Snyder, Gary. “Entering the Fiftieth Millennium.” Profession, 1997. p. 40.

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JSTOR

FUNDAMENTAL DEMOCRATIC PROCEDURES OF HONEST DISCUSSION AND NEGOTIATION IT IS NOW AS ALWAYS OUR HOPE THAT DESPITE THE WIDE DIFFERENCES IN APPROACH

“The United Nations has been set up as the common meeting ground for nations, where we can consider together our mutual problems and take advantage of our differences in experience. It is inherent in our firm attachment to democracy and freedom that we stand always ready to use the fundamental democratic procedures of honest discussion and negotiation. It is now as always our hope that despite the wide differences in approach we face in the world today, we can with mutual good faith in the principles of the united Nations Charter, arrive at a common basis of understanding.”

Eleanor Roosevelt, “The Struggle for Human Rights” Speech at the Sorbonne, Paris, September 28, 1948, in Allida Black, The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers: Vol. 1: The Human Rights Years, 1945-1948, 900-905

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Columbian College of Arts & Sciences

BANKS OF SNOW AND WHOSE GREY RIPPLES SHOWED A SKY AS GREY NOW THE STREAM IS SEEN CLEAR AND AS GREEN AS ARE THE WILLOWS ON ITS BANKS FOR IT IS

“XXXIII

Stream that a month ago
flowed between banks of snow
and whose grey ripples showed
a sky as grey—
now the stream is seen
clear and as green
as are the willows on its banks
for it is May:
this stream was turbid, grey,
that now is clear and green—
for it is May!”

Reznikoff, Charles, edited by Seamus Cooney. “Autobiography: New York.” The Poems of Charles Reznikoff: 1918-1975. Boston: David R. Godine, 2005. p. 193.

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WorldCat

THE HORIZON COME THE WAVES THAT BREAK RHYTHMICALLY ON THE BEACH SOUNDING NOW LOUD NOW SOFT AS THEY DID LONG BEFORE I WAS BORN AND AS THEY

“At the horizon, where my line of sight touches the edge of the great globe itself, I watch ships slowly disappear, first the hulls and then the tall masts, bound on voyages to unknown ports 10,000 miles away. From beyond the horizon come the waves that break rhythmically on the beach, sounding now loud, now soft, as they did long before I was born and as they will in the far future.”

Revelle, Roger. "The Ocean." Scientific American 221, no. 3 (1969): 55. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0969-54.

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JSTOR

WE WERE BORN OF HER YAS CREATED FROM THE LANDS THAT INTERSECT WITH HER DEEP HASILTH SACRED ARE THE HA FROM WHERE WE CAME WE WERE DRAWN FROM

      - Line 1, Yeechesh Cha’alk, Alex Hunter and Eva Trujillo.

THIS PERSON COME FROM WHY HERE WHY NOW YOU WHO ARE MADE OF STAR-DUST ARE NOW STANDING ON A CLIFF GAZING AT THE STARLIT SKY PONDERING YOUR

“Where does this person come from? Why here? Why now? You, who are made of star-dust, are now standing on a cliff, gazing at the starlit sky pondering your own origins and your place in the cosmos.”

Ramachandran, V. S. The Tell-tale Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Quest for What Makes Us Human. New York: W.W. Norton, 2011. p. 292.

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W.W. Norton

WAVES THAT BREAK RHYTHMICALLY ON THE BEACH SOUNDING NOW LOUD NOW SOFT AS THEY DID LONG BEFORE I WAS BORN AND AS THEY WILL IN THE FAR FUTURE THE

“From beyond the horizon come the waves that break rhythmically on the beach, sounding now loud, now soft, as they did long before I was born and as they will in the far future. The restless, ever changing ocean is timeless on the scale of my life, and this also is a mystery.”

Revelle, Roger. "The Ocean." Scientific American 221, no. 3 (1969): 55. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0969-54.

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JSTOR

INSTRUMENTS IT'S TOO EARLY TO PREDICT WHAT THE NEW MUSIC WILL SOUND LIKE THE DOOR IS NOW OPEN FOR NON-WESTERN PRACTICES TO HAVE A PROFOUND IMPRINT ON

“This will engender an increasingly audible change in the music of the world. No longer will we hear tapes in which westerners invite non-westerners into the recording studio and later manipulate recordings of them playing their instruments. It’s too early to predict what the new music will sound like but it’s clear that the door is now open for non-western practices to have a much more profound imprint on electronic music than as mere source material.”

Puckette, Miller. "Max at Seventeen." Computer Music Journal 26, no. 4 (2002): 15. doi:10.1162/014892602320991356.

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MIT

CONVERSATIONS PEOPLE OF ALMOST ANY COMMUNITY ON EARTH CAN NOW RECORD THEIR OWN MUSIC WITHOUT THE HELP OF ANY MODERN BARTOKS AND PEOPLE

“Instead of heading out into the forest with a computer to record the local artists (as we of Eurocentric cultures have been doing at least since Bartok’s time) we can now initiate e-mail conversations. People of almost any community on earth can now record their own music without the help of any modern Bartoks. And people almost anywhere can or soon will be able to get hold of a computer and involve it in their music-making.”

Puckette, Miller. "Max at Seventeen." Computer Music Journal 26, no. 4 (2002): 14-15. doi:10.1162/014892602320991356.

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MIT

IN THEIR HISTORY THAT IS TO SAY WE GRANT THAT LITERATURE AS WE CAN KNOW IT NOW IN THE CONTINUING PRESENT NOURISHES OUR SENSE OF THE PAST HOW

“What does it mean for us, coming at our time in history, at once possessing and possessed by our sense of past and present, to say that literary works have as a necessary condition of their own intrinsic value the fact that they both implicate and are implicated in the conditions of the time and place in which they were created—in their history, that is to say. We grant that literature, as we know it now, in the continuing present, nourishes our sense of the past.”

Pearce, Roy Harvey. "Literature, History, and Humanism: An Americanist's Dilemma." College English 24, no. 5 (February 1963): 365.

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JSTOR

SHOULD APPEAL TO ONE GROUP RATHER THAN ANOTHER ALL EQUALLY ARE NOW IN PERIL IF THE PERIL IS UNDERSTOOD THERE IS HOPE THAT THEY MAY AVERT IT WE HAVE

“We shall try to say no single word which should appeal to one group rather than another. All, equally, are now in peril, and, if the peril is understood, there is hope that they may collectively avert it.”

Pauling, Linus. "The Social Responsibilities of Scientists and Science." The Science Teacher 67, no. 1 (January 2000): 29.

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JSTOR

IN PERIL IF THE PERIL IS UNDERSTOOD THERE IS HOPE THAT THEY MAY AVERT IT WE HAVE NOW HAS COME TO PLAY A SPECIAL PART IN SOCIETY IT IS HIS ROLE TO HELP

“The nature of the world has been changed so much by the discoveries of scientists—the food we eat, the clothes we wear, our means of transportation and communication, the means of waging war, all have been greatly changed—that the scientist now has come to play a special part in society. It is his role to help educate his fellow citizens about those aspects of great problems and smaller problems that involve science in an intimate way.”

Pauling, Linus. "The Social Responsibilities of Scientists and Science." The Science Teacher 67, no. 1 (January 2000): 28.

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JSTOR

YOU HEARING IT NOW WHAT IS THE SOUNDSCAPE OF THE SPACE YOU ARE NOW OCCUPYING HOW IS THE SOUNDSCAPE SHAPED WHAT MAKES A SOUNDSCAPE WHAT IS

“What is your favorite sound? How is it made? When can you hear it? Are you hearing it now?

What is the soundscape of the space you are now occupying?

How is the soundscape shaped? or what makes a soundscape?

What is the soundscape of your neighborhood?”

Oliveros, Pauline. “Listening Questions.” Deep Listening: A Composer's Sound Practice. New York: iUniverse, 2005. p. 56.

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iUniverse

HEARD BEFORE THIS QUESTION WHAT WILL YOU HEAR IN THE NEAR FUTURE CAN YOU HEAR NOW AND ALSO LISTEN TO YOUR MEMORY OF AN OLD SOUND WHAT CAUSES YOU

“5) Do you remember the last sound you heard before this question?”

6) What will you hear in the near future?

7) Can you hear now and also listen to your memory of an old sound?

8) What causes you to listen?”

Oliveros, Pauline. “Ear Piece.” Deep Listening: A Composer's Sound Practice. New York: iUniverse, 2005. p. 34.

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iUniverse

TO YOU ARE YOU LISTENING NOW ARE YOU LISTENING TO WHAT YOU ARE NOW HEARING ARE YOU HEARING WHILE YOU LISTEN ARE YOU LISTENING WHILE HEARING DO

"1) Are you listening now?

2) Are you listening to what you are now hearing?

3) Are you hearing while you listen?

4) Are you listening while you are hearing?

5) Do you remember the last sound you heard before this question?”

6) What will you hear in the near future?"

Oliveros, Pauline. “Ear Piece.” Deep Listening: A Composer's Sound Practice. New York: iUniverse, 2005. p. 34.

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iUniverse

ALWAYS IS IT MIDST OF MIDST IS THAT STOLEN IDEAS HOW TO LIVE IN THE HERE AND NOW IS STOLEN FROM ALL THE OTHERS IN STOLEN LIGHT OF GREW UP AROUND

“in the concept of two dennis and denise one has a tailfeather stuck on which one its so hard to find the cats eye and in the concept of two black gloss or gold light is the wings call to be all one and forget bread the light is stolen always is it midst of midst is that stolen ideas how to live in the here and now is stolen from all the others in stolen light of grew up around the grave.”

Notley, Alice. "Grave of Light." Chicago Review, Christopher Middleton: Portraits, 51, no. 1/2 (Spring 2005): 165.

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JSTOR

VIBRATIONS OF THE PINE NEEDLES NOW RISING TO A SHRILL WHISTLING HISS NOW FALLING TO A SILKY MURMUR THE RUSTLING OF LAUREL GROVES IN THE DELLS AND THE

“The profound bass of the naked branches and boles booming like waterfalls; the quick, tense vibrations of the pine needles, now rising to a shrill, whistling hiss, now falling to a silky murmur; the rustling of laurel groves in the dells, and the keen, metallic click of leaf on leaf—all this was heard in easy analysis when the attention was calmly bent.”

Muir, John. The Writings of John Muir: Sierra Edition. Vol. I. The Mountains of California. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1917. p. 282.

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Internet Archive

WITHOUT ANY CONSTRAINING CHANNEL THROBBING AND WAVERING NOW IN SUNSHINE NOW IN THOUGHTFUL SHADE FALLING SWIRLING FLASHING FROM SIDE TO SIDE

“Through this delightful wilderness, Cañon Creek roves without any constraining channel, throbbing and wavering; now in sunshine, now in thoughtful shade; falling, swirling, flashing from side to side in weariless exuberance of energy.”

Muir, John. The Writings of John Muir: Sierra Edition. Vol. I. The Mountains of California. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1917. p. 101.

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Internet Archive

REALIZATION THAT NO LIGHT WILL EVER LIGHT YOUR BODILY PRESENCE AGAIN NOW YOUR POEMS LIGHT IS ALL THE UNENDING LIGHT OF YOUR PRESENCE IN THE LIVING

“but revelatory light that is no light
the unending light of the realization
that no light will ever light your bodily presence again
Now your poems’ light is all
the unending light of your presence
in the living light of your voice”

Low, Jackson Mac. “32nd Light Poem: In Memoriam Paul Blackburn 9-10 October 1971." 22 Light Poems. Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press, 1968.

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thing.net

SPINOZA CAN BE REFUTED THEIR THOUGHTS REMAIN ASTONISHING WORKS OF ART NOW AS ART BECOMES LESS ART IT TAKES ON PHILOSOPHY'S EARLY ROLE AS CRITIQUE

“Paul Valéry, acknowledging the self-analytic tendency of philosophy, and wishing to salvage from it something of value, suggests that even if Plato and Spinoza can be refuted, their thoughts remain astonishing works of art. Now, as art becomes less art, it takes on philosophy’s early role as critique of life.”

Kaprow, Allan, and Jeff Kelley. “Manifesto.” Essays on the Blurring of Art and Life. Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press, 1993. p. 82.

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University of California Press

CORRESPONDING TO THIS DOUBLE NATURE WHICH ONCE HAD A REAL EXISTENCE BUT IS NOW LOST THE PRIMEVAL MAN WAS ROUND HIS BACK AND SIDES FORMING A CIRCLE AND

“Aristophanes, on the other hand, said that the word ‘androgynous’ is preserved as a term of reproach, but that once, upon a time, ‘the sexes were not two as they are now, but originally three in number; there was a man, woman, and the union of the two, having a name corresponding to this double nature, which once had a real existence, but now is lost. The primeval man was round, his back and sides forming a circle; and he had four hands and four feet, one head with two faces, looking opposite ways, set on a round neck and precisely alike; also four ears, two privy members and the remainder to correspond.'"

Howe, Fanny. For Erato: The Meaning of Life. Berkeley, CA: Tuumba Press, 1984.

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MIT

BEING FOUNDERS OF THEIR OWN PLACE HEIRS OF THE PEASANTS OF EARLIER AGES NOW WORKING ON THE SOIL OF LANGUAGE DIGGERS OF WELLS AND BUILDERS

“This experience is shared by the readers of True Romances, Farm Journal and The Butcher and Grocery Clerk's Journal, no matter how popularized or technical the spaces traversed by the Amazon or Ulysses of everyday life.
Far from being writers—founders of their own place, heirs of the peasants of earlier ages now working on the soil of language, diggers of wells and builders of houses—readers are travellers; they move across lands belonging to someone else, like nomads poaching their way across fields they did not write, despoiling the wealth of Egypt to enjoy it themselves.”

Certeau, Michel de. The Practice of Everyday Life. Translated by Steven Rendall. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. p. 174.

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University of California Press

CRADLE OF OUR COMMON EARTHLY EXPERIENCE THE COSMIC PAGEANT NOW FAMILIAR THE MAGNITUDES BOTH LARGE AND SMALL FOR BOTH SPACE AND TIME WE

“We must calculate and recalculate, even though only approximately, to check and recheck our initial impressions until slowly, with time and constant application, the real world, the world of the immensely small and the immensely great, becomes as familiar to us as the simple cradle of our common earthly experience. The Cosmic Pageant. Now that we have become familiar with the magnitudes involved, both large and small, for both space and time, we must sketch what we know of the origin of the universe, together with the formation of the galaxies and the stars and finally of the planets which make up our solar system, so that we can outline the conditions under which life originated, either on earth or elsewhere in the cosmos.”

Crick, Francis. Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature. New York: Touchstone, 1982. pp. 28-9.

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ALL DESIGNATION DECLARATION HERE AS CLOUDS MOVE SO SIMPLY AWAY WINDOWS NOW LIT CLOSE OUT THE UPPER DARK THE NIGHT'S A FACE THREE EYES FAR FAINTER

"...small world this door frame back   
of me the panes of simple glass yet   
airy up sweep of birch trees sit in   
flat below all designation declaration   
here as clouds move so simply away.

*

Windows now lit close out the   
upper dark the night’s a face   
three eyes far fainter than   
the day all faced with light   
inside the room makes eye re-
flective see the common world...”

Creeley, Robert. “Helsinki Window.” Selected Poems of Robert Creeley. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1991. p. 346.

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University of California Press

NUMBER OF EXPERIMENTAL FACTS THE COSMIC RADIATION BACKGROUND NOW PERVADES ALL SPACE THE FAINT WHISPER OF CREATION JUST AUDIBLE IN RADIO TELESCOPES

“The picture is built up from our present-day knowledge of the fundamental particles of matter and radiation, together with a rather small number of experimental facts, such as the cosmic radiation background which now pervades all space—the faint whisper of creation just audible in radio tele- scopes. Such an imaginative synthesis is necessarily not entirely secure.”

Crick, Francis. Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature. New York: Touchstone, 1982. p. 30.

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APPEARANCE OF REGULARIZATION TO HUMAN TRANSACTIONS THROUGHOUT THE CULTURE NOW ALL OVER THE COUNTRY PEOPLE ARE BUYING AND SELLING THE SAME OR

“buying credit maybe its the same credit nationhood
is a formal celebration of the objecthood of language and
credit and what it attempts to do is give the appearance
of regularization to human transactions throughout the
culture
now all over the country people are buying and selling
the same or seemingly identical things and services and
notions at wildly varying prices”

Antin, David. “Real Estate.” Tuning. New York: New Directions, 2001. p. 64.

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New Directions Books