The second law of Thermodynamics explains how the entire universe tends to increase its entropy, in other words, that every isolated system always aims to balance itself. Even if everything ends up scattered, a black hole has the opposite quality: it accumulates. It possesses a large amount of mass, so nothing -not even light- can escape from its power of attraction, which allows it to break the entropic principle that regulates the systems. PANA (Spanish acronym for Small self-supporting black hole) represents this astronomic phenomenon at a small, manageable, and portable scale. Thus, it creates the fantasy of its possible domination by different agents willing to take it and manipulate it in different natural environments. If the landscape tends to its constant repetition, PANA challenges that balance and deconstructs it, becoming an irruption, a discontinuity that imposes its force of attraction, which is nothing else but its tenacious intention of being the focal point of perception.
You are all set!
Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.