Thursday, November 22, 2018

CCXXIV - describing Messi

I don't believe it is possible to describe Messi in a way which would do him justice. To be fair, it is not easy to do that for just about any thing at a deep enough philosophical level, but in Messi's case, I think you would pardon me for waxing just a little more so. Many have tried, at all levels, and to a man all admit failure, having come up with varying degrees of dumbness, shaking of heads, and hand, or hands, clasped to the skull. But after all, what is so difficult about describing one man, one left foot, and one ball, one field, one goal, one teammate after another? Well, the difficulty is that Manet also had one easel, Socrates, one voice, Newton, one apple, the Christ, one cross, etc. Let us perhaps say that Messi is super-phenomenal. I suspect it is easier to describe the ideal of a certain kind of football, exemplified by say the rondo that Barça practices, than it is to describe how Messi expresses his vision of football. That is itself an unbelievable statement, but it is true. Messi is simply bigger than a concept. Even by slow-motion video replay, it is impossible to re-capture what he senses, re-perceive what he sees, re-create what he creates. To be Messi. I do not believe anyone can even be said to be Messi-like.

The hilarious thing is that one's first impression of Messi, is like, oh, he's probably just a misplaced tourist, or a cook, or a tv-man, or something. They don't make statues out of little men, and this one's tiny - they once called him La Pulga, or The Flea. Oh, do not doubt it, Messi is hilarious - appalled laughter comes naturally to one ill-accustomed to watching him un-man, with contemptuous, consummate, consumptuous ease, other men. And these are grown men, first-rate defenders.

It may however do some justice to the idea of Messi to reproduce here a few of my favourite quotes about him:

"Messi is the only player who runs faster with the ball than he does without it."
- Jorge Valdano

Comment: This is impossible. This is true. Both statements are correct. Messi is the middle space in the diagram of two circles.
"The ball, to use the old cliché, really does seem to be tied to his feet. He doesn't even seem to kick it most of the time: like a faithful dog, it just runs alongside him."
- Sid Lowe

Comment: What Lowe means is that next to Messi, the ball is the smartest dog taking the sensiblest route with the steadiest feet and the softest nose and the slightest bark.
"There's a special part of Messi's brain allowing him to see the split-second chaos of football in his own personal super slow motion."
- Carles Puyol

Comment: This is a self-evident truth, such as those Jefferson preferred: all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
"We can talk for hours about schemes and organization. But games are won by players. If you have Messi you almost start 2-0 up."
- Max Allegri

Comment: This is a slight understatement - three-nil (which is probably closer to the truth) is not almost two-nil.

Monday, November 5, 2018

CCXXIII - on reading

I have written here a little ode and quatrain to what reading is, because I find that not a lot of people like to do it anymore, or something along the lines of reading is just not a habit they take after much nowadays. Or they cannot put together the two mental bits of focus it takes to sit down and read a book. I think that's a terrific, shambolic, disdainful shame. I love, dreadfully love reading. I would not regret dying, but that I had not read all the books I would have. Well, this is what I mean when I say, reading.

What is it to read? I mean, what is it?

To read is to look at a written script and to recognise individual symbols which physically group up into collections which we call pictograms (when in spatial juxtaposition) or words (when linear), each pictogram or word representing an idea, however little, and ideas by themselves, or more commonly, when strung together in grammatical structure, forming meaningful pieces of information. We take the data, whether spartan 1s and 0s, or Chinese flowing calligraphy, and we have this little box in our minds which parses the bits, reconstruct the thought, re-orient the idea, and piece together the whole thing in the mind, constructing, conjuring, conceiving a living, growing, mental framework, this framework which sets not only the rules for perceiving ideas, but also rules for accommodating them in a coherent understanding. Then the lot is stored somewhere in the box, to re-surface sporadically if the brain can muster it. Thus we make sense of etchings. We read.

And then of course we ask, well, why do we read?

I think we read because we desire information. At its core, we think information is valuable. And very often, it is. For example, it is extremely valuable to know that a and b makes c, and along those lines we are able to pay our taxes. We read because it entertains us, to follow a tale or some sort of account. It is an interesting thing to ask why we even started writing in the first place, "we" as in the great Mediterranean sailors and traders, the Phoenicians (ancient men of Lebanon) - and it is probably because oral transmission, occult and intriguing as it doubtless is, is not a fair record of truth in the majority of circumstances. It is controversial, and not many can be expected to tell their version of the truth, at any good and proper extent, when things of value are involved. So we learnt to put the important things down. And to be useful, the things which are put down must somehow be able to come back up. So the power of visual symbols (and to a lesser extent, tactile symbols) became a bedrock, an organising force in reliable human communication.

Well, that is all very well and good, but how do choose what to read?

You will see that I am coming closer to the How and the How Should, but first let us deal with the What. The basic formula is simple enough - generally, we select what we read by determining and selecting only the information which in our estimation is worth more than the time and energy expended to obtain that information. But as all worth is relative, there are some general themes of value we adhere to. Science is perhaps the clearest example. With each bit of additional information, we refine theories to describe phenomena known to us, and to predict the results of real interactions. In our history it has generally been found that theoretical science is often able to provide practical science. Thus we map scientific knowledge, we better understand our ignorance, and we improve our conditions with technology - from agrarian reform to space travel. But the sublime, unscientific things are also valuable. The essences of human communication, body language, aural perception, emotional response, why, all sorts of things which must escape dry and quantifiable description, subjective experiences which cannot be placed in a court of scientific scrutiny, all these are intrinsically and exceeding valuable. We read what teaches us about the World and all that is in it.

Of course, at some point we will run out of juice. So we try and ask, well, given that I will surely get tired before I collect and parse all the relevant information, what can I choose which is material and which has good weight, and how can I best get the structure of the story before my eyes? So that my mind can fill in some of the blanks, be reguided by useful data points if I should conceptualise wrongly, and always suffer being led down strange and wonderful paths by pure prose, clear articulation and splendid script? And so we favour reading which from the start provides a nice map of things, a size of the forest before the trees, a coherent structure which intuitively leads one to try colouring within the lines, and at the same time gives breathing room to visualise new blends, new textures, new shapes. Then the reading must provide good evidence of its claims, core examples of what it is trying to say, to illustrate its principles. Thus, for example, Archimedes claims that with a long enough lever and a place to stand on, he can move the earth. As much as he was referring to the leverage a physical force has, calculated by reference to a fulcrum and a base, one naturally also grasps the concept of mental leverage, that a man with an idea, and good premises, can move the world.

And How do we read?

Well, comfortably! of course. It would be best to do so as a matter of habit and taste. There is no substitute for a good lounging deportment, a firm yet pliant resting seat, a warm, soothing beverage (not sweet), a light murmur in the background, nice, subtle smells of wood and brew, and a warm, cheerful, steady light. Style is inconsequential - nothing fashionable or required to be so can stand in the way of the pursuit of knowledge. It would be absolutely preferable to have a physical copy of the book, in as immaculate condition as possible, allowing for careful handling while reading through. There is nothing quite like holding a book, feeling its heft, admiring its proportions, and flipping the page. Thick or thin, all books are read the same way, one page at a time. And time, of course. One must ask for time, time above all else, and uninterrupted time even more so. It is an absolute necessity.

Yet How Should we read?

I was certainly hoping to get to this question, but it is of course necessary to have explained the more basic premises first. Come now, How Should we read? Well, in my view, it is quite necessary to accept the author on his or her own terms. Which is to say, to believe in good faith that the whole of the writing is meant to be taken as indeed a whole, from first to last, and in so doing it shall organically and purposively present its shape, flavour and texture to the reader. The reader must trust that the author is an intelligent man or woman who believes more or less wholeheartedly in the enterprise, the spur of writing that has produced, through trial and error, the written article that sits in your hands. The reader must grasp intuitively the motive force that the author is inspired by, and the voice with which the author instructs the reader to listen. Of course, there is no real, aural voice, so one must engage it in the creative imagination - a Speaker, whether avuncular or matronly, whether feverish or passionate, whether reserved or oblique, whether simple or minimalist, whether airily or haughtily, and whether cheekily or sardonically. It takes all kinds of styles to produce all kinds of works, and it does one no good to reject a piece because of the hue and colour it is styled with. The reader must take on the work as it stands, and subject it not merely to the cold light of day, but also to the warmth of gentle hands and an eager heart. Yes, the reader must learn to be sympathetic. For how else can the reader inhabit the world of the writer, and if that is not the aim of reading, then how little can the words capture the imagination! Yes, imagination. One must learn to read with, amongst all else, imagination. So do not let the words sit on the page in flat ink, no, they must stand, they must glide, they must soar in one's spirit. It does no good to one to simply read, no, one must equally reflect. So stew upon the words, ruminate upon the ideas, behold them in one's mind and recreate them in as good a light as one can, and then re-engage them, and scrutinise whether they stand up in logic, good sense, rationality, keen spirit, and prescient illumination.

Oh, this is all very high and mighty, and perhaps not every book will permit themselves to be so revealed. Yes, there are difficult works, confusing works, craggy and unscalable works. These of more erudite boffinry tend to snuff out the joy that follows the reader through more confident navigations. Well, to be perfectly honest, sometimes it takes time, and a little assistance. The reader should learn to recognise when it is happening before it wrings him or her out entire, and resist the temptation to quit, instead he or she may re-gather his or her wits and circle around for an easier sally. It is no good forcing one's way through linearly if all the words begin to pile up and hardly add to the register. Take if necessary a heuristic from someone who has already some sense of the work - but seriously take care not to rely wholly on another's view, for it is the mental pathways one creates, whether rightly or wrongly, which are the most valuable. Yes, whether rightly or wrongly, use and trust in that world building tool you have between your ears!

Where does the serious reader look to read?

I should dearly like to say, why, towards everything he or she wants dearly to read! But of course that is a long and tremendous journey that he or she must begin with his or her own hands. First and foremost I should think the serious reader should eschew light and frivolous writing, things absolutely unessential. I do not mean things mainly composed in humor, jest or troll - there is usually much sense in that, a kernel of truth in every exaggeration. Well, perhaps there is a case for light reading, something to while away idle, fleeting, abbreviated time, to set the mind at ease with some drivel. Other than that, which I should like to permit only as leisurely garden-variety entertainment, the reader must try to bring always a good physical copy of a book with him or her. Now, as a general guide, the older (or more prestigious) the field, and the more authoritative the author, the more is a book to be treasured. But take a little bit from all, the best bits if you can, and it will surprise you how much it all adds together, how wonderfully the threads run through history, how satisfyingly one can meld together the depth and extent of human understanding. Start with philosophy. Then read science. Fall in love with history. Cherish Latin American literature, embrace it with all your heart. Marvel over the illustrated novel, the parallels with mythology leap out of the page. Devour the sports writing. Dive into the exquisite world of Chinese literature, the wisdom of Chinese philosophy. Visit for the first time the local authors, and wonder at all that so much has been neglected. Select eclectically, choose from recommended lists, and listen to the passion rise in your friends' mouths as they speak about the books they read. Finally, as Jiminy Cricket would say, Always let your conscience be your guide.

Monday, October 15, 2018

CCXXII - 1440 orbits

It's hard to imagine that something, something hard, solid, real, could be hurled into the air with force enough to resist the eternal, unmovable, ubiquitous attraction of the entire earth's gravitational pull, go all the way around the world, horizon to horizon, span the bowels of space, and keep going, round and round.

(Imagine for a moment you're on a small planet with a diameter roughly the width of Singapore, about one-fiftieth the size of the moon*. There's Roberto Clemente, the consensus greatest outfield arm in baseball, next to you. By one account, he could "field the ball in New York, and throw out a guy in Pennsylvania". Clemente picks up a rock the size of two knuckles, and flat out sends it on an elevated axis into the heavens. With his arm, the little pebble shoots off, and just about makes it, comes around. That's it, that little rock is up there for all time, making the rounds. As befitting a man who can put things into orbit by force of will, Clemente stands proudly admiring his work.)

Well, sixty years ago, they did it. It was technical, theoretical, scientific, industrial, militaristic, nationalistic, ideological, poetic, and absurd, all at once. Thirteen years after the atomic and hydrogen bombs were built and detonated over Japan, here was a new vehicle capable of carrying such weapons over great continents, over vast, vast distances, in minutes, loud, but virtually unstoppable. Enter the cold war, and its legacy, the pervasive threat of massive, irretrievable destruction.
"After refueling, the rocket weighed 267 tons. And the mass of the rocket before the launch was amazingly beautiful. She all sparkled, covered with frost.
On October 4, 1957, at 22 hours 28 minutes Moscow time, the brightest burst of light lit the night steppe, and the rocket went up with a roar. Her torch gradually weakened and soon became indistinguishable against the background of the heavenly bodies.
The first cosmic speed, calculated by Newton, now, three centuries later, was first achieved by the creation of the mind and hands of men.
After separation of the satellite from the last stage of the rocket, the transmitters began to work and the famous signals "Bip ... beep ... beep" flew on the air. Observations on the first orbits showed that the satellite went into orbit with an inclination of 65 ° 6 ', a height of 228 km at perigee and a maximum distance of 947 km from the Earth's surface. For each orbit around the earth, he spent 96 minutes and 10.2 seconds. At 1 h 46 min on October 5, 1957, the satellite passed over Moscow."
(translated from the Russian)
http://www.lidorenko.ru/ns1.htm

* To throw a rock into lunar orbit from the surface of the actual moon, which is surprisingly not actually a small object, you'd need to launch it with an escape velocity of a staggering 8,500 kph (that's vertical, but assume it's got a vector sufficiently angled to go around). It's not small. Given that escape velocity varies proportionally with the radius of an object, assuming constant density, and assuming Roberto f'n Clemente can hurl it at 100 mph (160 kph), of course he wouldn't be able to do it - he'd only be able to put an object into orbit on a much, much smaller moon (about one/fifty-third of the moon). The moon is really big.

Saturday, October 6, 2018

CCXXI - a vegemite sandwich

I guess part of the course, the exventure, if you will, of growing older, is that time seems to run a little more imperceptibly. It glides along, just fades away. Well, if there really was one defining hallmark of my time away in Australia, it is that the two weeks have passed in but several long and lovely afternoons, each full and satisfying, but when put together, seem to run and blur into a whole melded series, encompassed in so many long happy sighs and exhalations, shuttings and re-openings of tired eyes, rubbings of cold fingers and stretched yawns, steaming cups of coffee and slow teas of roasted lamb. Yes, it's all passed so shortly. The entirety of the pleasure, convenience, comfort and companionship, is not taken for granted. A great and gentle joy, Adelaide.

There's a certain relaxed attitude here which I like. I really don't think I'll ever be all that crazy about legal work, and to be honest, I'm much happier that way. I suppose being less careful about it means sometimes the work gets roundly picked on, but you know, that's what it is. I don't need to get stressed up and neurotic about the whole thing. It's better for me.

Of my happiest memories, I should think chiefly of these: A hearty "they won't hurt you!" cried from a runner chasing after her over-eager dogs; the twinkle in the eye of an old couple of mining days, talking about cherished times; flinging little rounded stones into a whispering, flowing river from a small clearing near its bank; kick-starting a forty-five year old refurbished chook-chaser and roaring up and down the countryside; listening to U2 on the road, with a quiet cheer in my heart for an old friend; drawing with thick, coloured chalk on a road where we went camping near Lake Bonney, a little, delightful darling of a neighbour tracing after my alphabets, answering with emphatic yes-es! and no-s!, the little, adorable darling; and visiting the old West house, with garden and shed, all fantastic, drinking beer, playing guitar and having tea with old John West and my mum. Now that was a good holiday.

Monday, July 30, 2018

CCXX - misadventure

Samsung transcribes: A Horse with No Name

https://soundcloud.com/ian-ho/horse-with-no-name-1482018 

Who were this were during their attackers her and send the 1st thing the moon scared the asantu 7 the get there 00 hair to do the the What's to to see Beryl vents 7 it there was and the the the the and the the the and the the the the the the the the 1000 go to the the the the alarm

I've been through the desert on a horse with no name
It felt good to be out of the rain
In the desert you can remember your name
Cos' there ain't no one for to give you no pain
(la, la, la la la la la,
la la la, la, la la la la)

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

CCXIX - Mister Rogers

I've never liked poetry that much. It's so annoying. It has the potential, of course, but so often it's just so annoying. I feel it has an artificial measure and fragmented quality about it. Sentences are supposed to flow from one word to another, one idea to another, one breath to another. Poetry stilts that. And it's ever so cryptic, so much duality, triunality, sometimes it isn't clear that the poet himself has thought clearly of what he is trying to say, nor the words with which to say it. And the imagery is far-flung, melded from the bizarre. Words are employed in unfathomable, painful new ways. Themes of melancholy, loss, bitterness abound. I need to hear a voice speaking, and I don't get that unless I get a hint of the character speaking the poem's lines. I've never liked poetry that much.

But I've never heard a poem by Mister Rogers, and he is a poet to me. I've never been touched by a poet, but Mister Rogers' poem has me.
What do you do with the mad that you feel
When you feel so mad you could bite?
When the whole wide world seems oh, so wrong
And nothing you do seems very right?
Oh, it's you I like. (It's a beautiful day in the neighbourhood ...)

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

CCXVIII - growing old is like that i think

There comes a time in every sunset when you decide to turn away, from the phosphorescent, coruscant, illumination. It's hard to imagine a sky so lovely, peach, orange, red hues, blue, purple and forest around the corners. Every tuft and nook in the clouds taking an edge of light, blobbing shadows each to their own measure, glow and burble. Even to the eyes, the most direct of senses, it is marvelous, effulgent, unbelievable. If you close your eyes, the memory is magnificent, towering.

Better to end it early, than suffer an ignoble, fading exit. So you turn away, and your step is heavy, slow, grave. Pebbles crunch lightly as they roil and resettle under your feet, grinding into the gravel. Half shoeprints form, crumble. At the intersection, the bustle of traffic, industrial light directed from polished headlamps, little plaintive squeaks of rubber brakes, once again gain your attention.

But there comes a moment, just before you round the bend, when you yearn to turn and see again the lighted sky, catch another sight. It's still there, isn't it? It's still a physical sliver of the world that exists wherever the sun slips just under the spherical horizon of the earth, cloud, elevation, incline, humidity, foliage, etc. permitting. A paltry few seconds ago, it was all there, and magnificence can't just evaporate. It means something to be great, to comprise art, by some law of the universe that is the self-constituted makings of immortality.

But don't check, it's still better to go on, home. Your impression, reverie, nostalgia does the rest, forever in the visual idea. Keep a geist of the glory in your heart, cherished. Remember old friends, past loves, forlorn stuff in forgotten songs. And step forward with balance in your heart.


Saturday, May 5, 2018

CCXVII - moments

When i think of you which happens sometimes in a beautiful moment of serenity and often my music is playing i think of you next to me and I'm breathing in slowly and then I'm breathing out slowly and you're there in some form with me and I'm cherishing the moment being there with you and my eyes are open but I'm not looking at anything except you and i in my mind and kinda it seems then my eyes are really closed but inside my eyes are open as well and i know that it could be the case that you're there but it isn't the case and me being all of me at this exact moment being who i am i don't know if I'm enough and all there but i trust in the monent that I'm all there and it's somehow enough of me now and i trust in that me and i see clearly everything as it was as it should be and as it is as it should be even as it is as it always is well you know they say hope springs eternal but to me it always seems to turn back and i hope in so many words i hope it's you even as it is though it isn't really but that's ok because i like to think about you this way you and me here me and you here somehow just being here and that's it that's the moment.

Thursday, March 22, 2018

CCXVI - what is life

It's hard to learn about the universe, the grand physics ordering all these swathes of gas, cosmic oddities, powers and chunks of rock, that immense sphere of prolific fusion energy, our star, our ancient blue planet, out of the immaculate conditions of iterative solar and terrestrial formation, the mysterious, bewildering, brilliant start of biological L I F E, its grubby attempts to endure and survive through all the turmoil and skulduggery its host land musters out of its own nature, its tremendous, single-minded persistence, its collective ancestral will to live and will to power, spanning cycles of generations, life and death, its devastatingly wonderful machinery powering evolution of familiae, genera, species, and the meagre skinflint of that ape, homo sapiens' trampling on this earth, and not be blown away, just blown away by it all.

I've said this before, yet this always takes my mind away: one part in two billion of the sun's energy falls on the earth. Out of that sliver of juice, all of life as we have it is given. I honestly can't deal with that knowledge.

Monday, March 5, 2018

CCXV - snowflake


I was at the National Gallery on Saturday. I actually find the National Museum more ... lovely in its old timey way (they also had an exhibit with impressionist art in 2012). It was my second time to this exhibit with the National Gallery. They brought in paintings from the Musée d'Orsay. The interesting thing about this particular style of painting, the so-called impressionists, is that originally, most of their kind were rejected by a kind of uppity panel of Parisian art jurists, who were more used to the classical style of the great David. So Napoleon III, nephew of that Napoleon, started a Salon des Refusés for these rejected artwork. And you know, by and large, the public became enamored with this slightly surreal new style of painting, more dreamy than the romantics, a little bit less stark than the realists, a kind that went after essences and spirits of things, presented in a little haziness, melding life and mystery, all in a painterly style, giving up slightly the high techniques of the old masters, but only to escape their stuffiness, to present better their ideas of the imprecise interplay of light and shadow, a more fluid interpretation of the elements in a scene. They had the great geniuses on their side, Delacroix (perhaps he wouldn't mind being lumped with this lot!), Manet, Van Gogh, Cezanne, Renoir, Signac, Monet (I don't personally like Monet, but he is definitely one of this group). I find that I think about the art better when I went this second time. The first time, I kinda was a little driven to making sure I traversed every corner, taking photos of everything I liked. It was like chasing Pokémon. I enjoyed just being a goer-thinker this time. You know, there's a little in every painting that reveals new things to you. Everything is important, everything fits into the composition, makes the ghost in the machine. And so often you realise it's you that kinda wakes up to the magic of the painting, like you can feel yourself growing up as the painting shows you who you are, what you know about life, beauty and art, skill, love and technique. Art, books, music ... you have to take out something deep inside your soul to grasp their deep architecture, rhythms and resonances.

Take this painting (Gustave Caillebotte, Rooftops in the Snow [Snow Effect]), 1878). I didn't think much of it at first, and to be honest, I think you'd forgive me, with all the other artwork that was on (there were what, three Manets and three Cezannes?). But you know, it kinda occurred to me that this was a view of reality for someone out there. People lived in this world, going about their business, occupying these homes, working their little occupations, building their little lives. Once in a while, waking up to cold, dark snowbound days. What if there was a war, yeah they'd have to gather as conscripts, fight to defend their towns and cities, go far, far places to die to a cruel, remorseless bullet, bleed to death on a hill, or in a mud filled gutter. What if you were a snowflake falling on this city, and that snowflake became a man. Could you do it, could you shoot another man in this picture, his blood spilling out onto the snow, forever changing the fabric of this painting, the strings that weave together into this world? I don't know, I don't think I could. Whatever the casus belli.

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

CCXIV - guesswork

How do you learn a new word? Say a word you've never heard of before. Rubric. Parse. Jargon. Juxtaposition. God, when I read Augusto Roa Bastos' I, the Supreme, he's literally making up new words, part English, Spanish and indigenous Guarani. It's confusing. But he leaves hints as to what they mean. That's the secret. You guess what the words mean by their context, and you think, ok, maybe a similar word or phrase could be substituted there. Framework. Break down into little pieces, like a computer processor. Technical language. Side by side comparison. And so on. And by that process you apply the mental understanding of those concepts to the new word. You apply the mental characterisations, the potential uses and abuses, the possibility for doublespeak, hidden mirth, cryptic humor and subtextual intent. It evokes appropriate measures of memory, fear, anxiety, outrage, annoyance, envy, or perhaps the lighter elements. You understand.

That incidentally is what Steven Pinker warns about when he warns of the power of euphemisms (The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined, 2011). When you use a euphemism, such as "collateral damage" instead of "civilian casualties", you're not only making it sound more palatable. To some extent, you're avoiding the natural way that people apply their mental, empathetic, contextual faculties. The message misses them by. Of course, add a healthy dose of cognitive dissonance reduction (a healthy tendency to avoid thinking horrible thoughts if possible), and these things just don't register. That's the true danger of doublespeak (shoutout to the great, and truly immortal, Orwell), censorship, re-shaping language, and so on.

I think it was Wittgenstein that reformulated, in his mildly absurd way, that words are equivalent to ideas.
"The move to thought, and thereafter to language, is perpetrated with the use of Wittgenstein’s famous idea that thoughts, and propositions, are pictures—“the picture is a model of reality” (TLP 2.12). Pictures are made up of elements that together constitute the picture. Each element represents an object, and the combination of elements in the picture represents the combination of objects in a state of affairs. The logical structure of the picture, whether in thought or in language, is isomorphic with the logical structure of the state of affairs which it pictures."
(https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/wittgenstein/#TracLogiPhil)