CRAIG CONLEY (Prof. Oddfellow) is recognized by Encarta as “America’s most creative and diligent scholar of letters, words and punctuation.” He has been called a “language fanatic” by Page Six gossip columnist Cindy Adams, a “cult hero” by Publisher’s Weekly, a “monk for the modern age” by George Parker, and “a true Renaissance man of the modern era, diving headfirst into comprehensive, open-minded study of realms obscured or merely obscure” by Clint Marsh. An eccentric scholar, Conley’s ideas are often decades ahead of their time. He invented the concept of the “virtual pet” in 1980, fifteen years before the debut of the popular “Tamagotchi” in Japan. His virtual pet, actually a rare flower, still thrives and has reached an incomprehensible size. Conley’s website is OneLetterWords.com.
With that exclamation point, "Couldn't this be magic" isn't a question. But Gene Wolfe, in his utterly spectacular Book of the New Sun, notes that "Words are symbols. [One] chooses to delimit magic as that which does not exist, and so it does not exist. If you choose to call what we are about to do here magic, then magic lives while we do it." Possibly related is Maxim Gorky on the divine: "If you believe in Him—He exists. If you don't—He doesn't" (The Lower Depths).
From Pembroke's 1978 yearbook. (With a bonus "Believe it if you need it" from American University's 1974 yearbook.)
Commenting on our video about the weird secret of rolling blank dice, George Parker (author of The Little Book of Creativity) said: "Great piece! Thanks. My mind went to two places. Well actually a million places but the two that passed: I will start to look at coins as two-sided dice and metal disks as a two-sided blank dice. The other one was triggered when you talked about how blank dice may call out occult, as in hidden, powers. Since 5% of the universe consists of things we can observe, with and without instruments, and the rest is hidden (27% dark matter, 68% dark energy -- and we have little clue about what it even is) we should throw blank dice way more often."
There's an ironic subliminal message in this book cover — the middle of the word "exposed," "pos," is highlghted by the box behind it, suggesting "positive." Spirit Rapping Exposed by John Henry Anderson, 1860. See Seance Parlor Feng Shui.