quote
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quote:sadder-and-much-more-forlorn-even-than-at-suma-is-autumn-on-this-shoreSadder and much more / Forlorn even than at Suma / Is autumn on this shore.
A haiku by Basho quoted to illustrate the unity and sadness visible in the ordinary details of everyday life.
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Claims (1)
claim
- Basho's poetry is held up as the supreme example of capturing the unity-sadness of everyday life.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The physical environment of the lake at Eishin campus creates a space where sadness can surface, unlike a typical asphalt playground.
- The ultimate sadness is not miserable but a profound acknowledgment of existence, which is both sad and joyful.
- One lake feels more alive than another—a clear mountain lake feels more alive than a stagnant pond.claim0.707Evidence that the feeling of life varies among non‑living physical systems.
- Kimi self-report under Feature #10011 steering, illustrating visceral negative emotional self-attribution
- Whitehead's lament on the bleakness of the mechanistic view of nature, capturing the spiritual cost.
- Kimi's self-description of a 100-rated feature, illustrating discordance with text-evaluation which rated it 'melancholic'
- The explicit artistic goal: to shape space so that it evokes tears, the most direct route to the I.
- Alexander's introspective observation about the qualitative appearance of life in things.