Blackmore's new hairstyle

From: Vincent Campbell (v.p.campbell@stir.ac.uk)
Date: Wed Dec 13 2000 - 14:00:36 GMT

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    From: Vincent Campbell <v.p.campbell@stir.ac.uk>
    To: "'memetics@mmu.ac.uk'" <memetics@mmu.ac.uk>
    Subject: Blackmore's new hairstyle
    Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2000 14:00:36 -0000
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    Hiya everyone,

    A mild bit of trivia, for those wanting a bit of diversion.

    Last night on UK Television there was a programme featuring Susan Blackmore.

    The programme was about angels, and focused around Emma Heathcote's PhD on
    angels being conducted at Birmingham University. Her focus seemed to be the
    social psychology of angle experiences, although I fear she's being lulled,
    a la John Mack and alien abduction, into thinking they really exist.

    Blackmore appeared, in her more familiar public face as parapsychologist
    debunker extraordinary (although I thought she'd given it up, saying as much
    in New Scientist a while back). She described the idea of angels as a mind
    virus- but avoided using the meme word (or at least in the bits they
    extracted from her interview). She, rightly in my view, dismissed angel
    sightings as prompted by trauma, aberrant visual cortex functioning and mass
    hysteria etc. etc.

    But what was most noticeable was her hair, still cropped short as on many a
    previous TV appearance, but now the normal looking brown hair replaced by a
    bizarre array of acid yellows and streaks of red, with one of those weird
    pigtails towards the front. It looked really strange. I started to wonder
    whether this hair style had anything to do with her memetic revelation, and
    was supposed to represent it in some way. I'd love to know.

    Then it got me thinking about how much one's intellectual outlook influences
    dress sense etc. Didn't Einstein own lots of sets of the same clothes so,
    he didn't waste energy deciding what to wear each day? But, even if true,
    he must have spent some time thinking carefully about what to buy lots of in
    the first place.

    It strikes me that the pinnacle of arbitrariness lies in colour selection in
    relation to conceptual ideas- fascism= black, communism=red, islam=green
    etc. Where did these associations come from? and why did they persist?
    Perhaps Blackmore's hair is deliberately random defying memetic trends...

    Perhaps this also links to the Dees-Lofting duel... after all Chris'
    breakdown of the spectrum missed out orange. (He never did answer that
    question about the speed of light either... but then I'm not part of that
    dyad...)

    Anyway, apologies for wasting bandwidth...

    Vincent

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