First of all, this reading was very interesting in the way it was framed. In a way, the way the writing and pieces of art were placed on the page was a form of art. The photos that said “the wheel is an extension of the foot”, “the book is an extension of the eye”, and “clothing, an extension of the skin” caught my attention right away because of how it’s placed on two full pages each. The author is trying to put emphasis on these words. I never thought of these items in this way, but I do understand what the author is trying to say. These items have a purpose and most of them have to do with human body parts. Same thing for art, there is still a purpose behind all of it. I really like the phrase at the end of the chapter, saying how the public consists of separate individuals walking around with separate, fixed points of view. With these different points of view, we are allowed to make all different types of art. In the passage, it mentioned how an astronomer might be looking at the world through a 200-inch telescope and that is their perspective of the world. But others might be looking at it with a completely different lens. Especially if we look at nature, I think all things were already created there, but we just haven’t seen it in that light yet. Those are the “new discoveries” we see. When I was reading the section titled “you”, I felt that these questions are very common questions all humans have to face. And the last thing that’s buzzing with the really long z could represent the mind of the author at that moment in life. He/she thinks that the world is buzzing with them. That is also probably why the pictures on the side are never ending circles, like the condition of the author. When I was reading the “your family” page, I agreed with it. Of course, what mainly fosters our character are our parents but as our media continues to develop there are many different media that can start to overtake how our parents have shaped us. Sometimes that might be scary, but other times that could be a rewarding outcome.