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Jan5

Written by:Tom Wellige
Dienstag, 5. Januar 2010 16:56 

In 1977, Charles and Ray Eames made a nine-minute film called Powers of Ten that still has the capacity to expand the way we think and view our world. Millions of people have seen the film, and it continues to be shown in classrooms, business meetings, festivals and retreats around the world. Starting with a sleeping man at a picnic, the film takes the viewer on a journey out to the edge of space and then back into a carbon atom in the hand of the man at the picnic, all in a single shot. It is an unforgettable experience.

Each October 10th, the Eames Office celebrates Powers of Ten Day to promote and share this method of viewing ideas from an infinitesimal to a cosmic perspective.

If you haven’t seen the film yet, you should definitely take a small 9 minute break and watch it. I wouldn’t be too surprised it the film influences your picture of the world.

 

By the end of last year the American Museum of Natural History did a sort of a remake of the original film. Based on the most recent astronomical knowledge it takes the viewer from the earth to the beginning of the universe.

 

 

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