
Who's Fulvia is this?
Re: Who's Fulvia is this?
That is most interesting and I imagine probably a fairly early example.
I always quite fancied the "pop art" Fulvia that one sees in the books.
Of course, in answer to your question, I haven't a clue!
Paul
I always quite fancied the "pop art" Fulvia that one sees in the books.
Of course, in answer to your question, I haven't a clue!
Paul
Re: Who's Fulvia is this?
Well!!
I have to hold up my hand on that one, even so, the similarity is amazing.
I wonder if Signor Michelotti had anything to say to Signor Castagnero?
Paul
I have to hold up my hand on that one, even so, the similarity is amazing.
I wonder if Signor Michelotti had anything to say to Signor Castagnero?
Paul
Re: Who's Fulvia is this?
It had me fooled too. The similarity is indeed amazing. The signori probably took their sons to the same football club or something like that.
It is perhaps more often than we realize that things seem to have dropped from the sky just because we fail to see the the preceeding things.
At the time Rupert Sheldrake was doing his research in what he called morphic resonance, I was doing research in the same thing. Rupert concluded that if someone does something it becomes easier for someone else to learn and thus progressively easier for everybody. In other words: the first person trying to wind surf had a hard time learing it. For every following person it became easier and easier. His theory is that anything which is done has its effect on a global energy field, sort of collective memory, paving the way for others.
My conclusion while researching the same matter was: "If the world changes, someone has to be first"
Rupert was of course smarter as his theory brought him fame.
It is perhaps more often than we realize that things seem to have dropped from the sky just because we fail to see the the preceeding things.
At the time Rupert Sheldrake was doing his research in what he called morphic resonance, I was doing research in the same thing. Rupert concluded that if someone does something it becomes easier for someone else to learn and thus progressively easier for everybody. In other words: the first person trying to wind surf had a hard time learing it. For every following person it became easier and easier. His theory is that anything which is done has its effect on a global energy field, sort of collective memory, paving the way for others.
My conclusion while researching the same matter was: "If the world changes, someone has to be first"
Rupert was of course smarter as his theory brought him fame.