Harmonia
There is no shortage of planets to choose from. Even near our so-called Sun, there are hundreds of objects with many features in common with those we call planets. Because there are no unambiguously objective criteria that determine whether something is a planet or not. Neither orbit, nor shape, nor structure, nor size necessarily indicates it. In fact, nothing decides whether something is or is not a planet, apart from human decision. And the history of the concept of a planet is full of twists, fluctuations, and disputes. Decisions were made, cancelled, and made again. If anyone thinks that Mercury, Venus, Earth, and so on are an eternal canon, one of the foundations of the world that had to be discovered, like a law of nature, they are very mistaken. The same goes for the subject of natural laws, by the way. Belief in unshakeable, everlasting foundations of things creates many problems. It creates illusions and equips with arguments rooted in these illusions. It gives a false sense of reason, which can be both funny and repulsive.
The history of astronomy and the history of music theory are interestingly linked. For some reason, the celestial order was often treated as analogous to the order of sounds. Harmony of the worlds, etc. There is something to it. Analogies are manifold and concern also apparent, fake reasons. Another valuable lesson I learned from the pizzeria was a lesson in harmony. Although I only understood it much later, just a moment ago, at the very end of the so-called cycle of academic degrees and titles. Harmony is not a set of laws, but practices. Essentially habits. Repeated millions of times, dependent on individual preferences and modified millions of times by ways of singing and playing. Closely related to the physiology and morphology. Of larynxes and instruments – individual as well as grouped in various combinations. In short, the history of harmony is a history of effective gestures, not an abstract arrangement of lines drawn on a phantom firmament. It was a revolution in my mind on the scale of Einstein's.
I am looking for planets with distinctive features. I build bridges between these features and what I could consider characteristic elements in my earlier works. In my practices and habits. Treated as simply as possible.