Substance
ideas about arithmography
Arithmography does not strive for absolute truth. It is responsible for creating
a world that is both tangible and intellectual, as at its core lies the number,
which governs this process. The attainment of truth is not dependent on the
quality or quantity of arithmographic processes. Since the digital image
operator connects the external world with the internal world, the degree of
approximation to truth, especially absolute truth, depends on both the
operator and the surrounding reality, objective and subjective. Achieving
absolute truth relies more on the quality of ingredients than on the cooking
process itself. Thus, returning to arithmography, it is a process of preserving
sensory thoughts in a physical form through the mathematical transformation
of numerical values in the image. It is the creation of a third reality where
visible and recognisable objects exist, filled not with their objective function
but with the feeling expressed by the author.