Interview with Dr. Ringcircle

Good afternoon Dr. Ringcircle. Can you tell us about your research?
Well, "doctor" does not apply in my case. I have no cures for the ailments I study. Yes, though. Let's talk about the human conditional. That optional step after human shampoo, when we rinse and repeat ad infinitum. The deconstructionists helped describe our conditional, but, if I may be less than humble, the creativists were needed to build up the theory. In our lab, we watch, listen, feel, and create circumstances with circumspection, whose vagaries dazzle and reproduce. 

It's those gaps between unconditional reality and total indescribability where your work is most interesting. How did you find your way between those brackets?
Well, Bill, it was a matter unseeing truth and farce. Lovely dichotomies have illuminated myth and religion and politics for as long as language can be found to recollect our conditions as described. When we get into our conditions as experienced however, it becomes ignorant to deal in absolutes. And of course, language is not inherently absolutist. So with a little bit more attention than what passes for average, conditionality emerges from conditions.

Your work has drawn critics from every conceivable creed. Why?
Well we only need to rearrange your question to explain. Creeds manufacture critics: any ideal is a describable only, a comparative only. When a framework exists in thought or in language or in schematic, the complexity of experience will produce differences, and when one has embraced an idea, one becomes a critic, a pointer-out (and typically a seeker) of distinctions. I am interested in sums. The worship of ideals fixed at spatial-temporal-linguistic-cultural coordinates is for uncreative creatures who have yet to discover the art of continuous conditional summation.

What are three books you would recommend to our audience?
Well, I only recommend generative books. So, one: a notebook with lines, college or wide ruled. Two: a notebook with a grid, triangular or square. Three: a notebook with blank pages.