Caprice Capriccio Capriccioso a book by Milcham Karos, Finland.
More than being captivated by the image of sending the characters of the book back or forward in time with quantum physics, Milcham Karos witnesses funnily through ´jumping bumping´ play-acts what can and cannot happen beyond the space and earth; in the end of land and between the sea and the ocean. Being conscious of that the moon does not only exist when a human is looking at it, Karos tells fictitiously about a reality of the fin. of the land´. Karos´s writing is entertaining in nature, is of high quality, and worthy of sharing.
In Karos´s book characters´dialogues twisting in the rotating evocative scenes illustrate possible outcomes in the reality resulting from the opposite ends of lightness and darkness. Based on the observations that a reader can make even with the unaided eye heshe can choose to what extent the little hero of the book, Torrice is not eminent beyond other and is just hapless, even though he is called the boy with the superior playing skills.
Caprice Capriccio Capriccioso is a story of a boy prone to create a paradox without any solution to it, even when there seems not to be the one in a non-communist country which on the one hand has been under the necessity of accommodating the wishes of a powerful neighbour the ´Big Brother´ and which on the other hand has adopted increasingly the ideology of market capital freedom in the sense of ´My brother´. Torrice steps out of the ´My Brother´ which makes the actors use power for their own ends while acting in conformance with ´the agreed capital freedom´. Instead Torrice struggles to trace the nature of the ´mifio´ in human actions.
After having become entirely indispensable for the success of a playing team, Torrice is turned away as a too strong individual rugby player. He had no choice but take part in a film, in which he together with the co-actors is to think out loud and act accordingly. The boy has to respond to the film director of the film studio flooded with sunshine and he steps into a conception that he is about to make an incredibly stupid and embarrassing mistake while taking part in the film.
Quote:
If you´re good enough, you´ll get more roles. Right ?´ The director says staring intensively Torrice up and down.
´If I´m not good enough, there´ll be only few roles for me. Right ?´ Torrice asks staring at the director.
´Right.' The director says.
´If I´m bad enough, there´ll be the most roles for me. Right ?´ Torrice says. ´Right.´ The director says.
´If I´m not bad enough, there´ll be a few roles for me. Right ?´ Torrice says. ´Something like that.´ The director says.
´If I´m too good, there´ll be no roles for me any more. Right ?´ Torrice says trying to stare directly into the director´s eyes.
´-.´ The director says.
´I understand.´ Torrice says.
Without any possibility to boycott his role in the film Torrice was put to work in the prosecutor´s office. Being subjected to compelling moral force conforming one´s will everyone in the office could be persuaded to sell out to competitors, so everybody´d better act together behind each other´s back and the scenes on the scene. Torrice had all the possibilities not to complain about the fact that on behalf of the magnate of the society in no time, it was he who was to address a court in which the judge fell asleep in the middle of the proceeding. After the final decision of the court in the case Torrice discovered that there there was just still everything to be straightened out in the spherical field around the magnate. Not any measurement or observation had yet been made.
Quote:
The second court straightens the decision fairly however. It obliges Amery to receive the special overtime bonus that he has not yet had time enough to receive. Amery has had so much more work as the official in Hole of cooking oil as was assessed from the first. He has not used the skins of Hole of cooking oil in the slightest degree. He has only granted the buying and selling orders from the skins without any discrimination to everybody, who has wanted to buy or sell. Amery has been entirely overemployed as he has fail-ed to use the skins in order to develop - free enterprise. Besides, Amery is obliged to pay to Hole of cooking oil as the common compensation 100 skins for the attorney´s fees and the expenses of jusstice caused by the trial that has turned out to be unnecessary. Still, as Amery has been demonstrated to be very poor, he is is exempted from liability to compensate. Let all the interested parties obey this.´
By associating with the strange helpers Torrice became a night sky watcher. He acquired to himself the proper equipment and accessories in order to spend many enjoyable nights under the stars getting the most out of the experience of night sky watching. He watched until he was just about to find a star ´mifio´.
´Is the moon really there when we don´t observe it ?´ Einstein could ask Torrice if he were still alive. ´Do you ask me ?´ Torrise could say. ´Yes I do.´ Einstein could say.´Yes there is the moon when I don´t observe it.´ Torrice could say. ´Don´t you say so on the basis of the speed of light, do you ? ´ Einstein could say. ´No I don´t say on the basis of the speed of light, as there is no time, there is no speed.´ Torrice could say. ´Don´t you say on the basis of the speed of thought, then ?´ Einstein could say. ´´No I don´t say on the basis of the speed of thought either, as there is no speed, there is no thought either .´ Torrice could say. ´What do you mean ?´ Einstein could say. ´If you still ask me as you do, the moon is really there as I am moving 59,95 mseconds and I am not only standing on the shore of an ocean breathing air but also riding strongly ahead on a horse on the crest of a wave.´ Torrice could say.
Works consulted
EINSTEIN'S MOON
Bell's Theorem and the Curious quest for Quantum Reality by F. David Peat, Contemporary Books, Inc., Chicago 1990 QC174.17.B45P43 1990 530.1'2--dc20 90-37370,ISBN 0-8092-4512-4
Relativity Visualized
ISBN: 0-935218-05-X, 206 pages, Online. Insight Press.
Camus, Albert. The Stranger. New York: Vintage 1946.
THE BACKYARD ASTRONOMER'S GUIDE by Terence Dickinson & Alan Dyer Camden House Publishing, Ontario 1991 QB64.D53 1991 522 C91-094361-3 ISBN 0-921820-11-9