Conditional Landing Probabilities by Prospero2013 published on 2013-08-25T06:49:07Z It is not an entirely homogeneous or unitary concept. It lacks solid theoretical foundations, it is burdened with paradoxes. It has only a number of forms along a fuzzy continuum. K. draws analogies between probability and measure, an allusion to a mysterious hundred year old book which has never been found. Where or what is the origin of the outcome of a single experiment, something like tossing a coin? A random event is defined as a measurable set in a sample space, going back as far as occult Magick. Here the idea that thought creates reality is based on the probability of a random event. K. claims this to be the measure. Of course, this in an ancient philosophic concept: The Paradox of the Great Circle. Aliens land randomly on a perfectly spherical Earth. They will tend to land in hotter climates. But they tend not to have the extreme egoistic emphasis which K. finds in the great circle which has a measure zero, spuriously throwing it back into an unverifiable past. K. speculatively attests that this apparent contradiction in conditional landing probabilities could physically rearrange the particles of the universe. But these probabilities can not be rigorously calculated. Genre experimental Comment by Ant Dickinson Nice manipulation of sound..Nice track. 2013-08-25T08:51:53Z