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Lawrence Hrubes

Daniel Tammet: Different ways of knowing | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    "Daniel Tammet has linguistic, numerical and visual synesthesia -- meaning that his perception of words, numbers and colors are woven together into a new way of perceiving and understanding the world."
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC - Culture - Art of Noise: Photographer captures colour explosions - 0 views

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    "Sonic is the latest project by German photographer Martin Klimas. Paint is put on top of a speaker and then music is played at full volume - creating explosions of colour."
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC - Culture - Margaret Atwood's dystopian view of the future - 0 views

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    (video segment 3:40) "Themes in her work include dealing with the past, memory and how we tell stories about ourselves. She speaks with Talking Books' Razia Iqbal about her novels, science fiction, and the importance of storytelling"
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC - Capital - Trusting your gut: Smart management or a fool's errand? - 0 views

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    ""A lot of people think intuition is general purpose, but intuition is actually domain specific," said Massimo Pigliucci, a philosophy professor at City University of New York, and author of Answers for Aristotle: How Science and Philosophy Can Lead Us to A More Meaningful Life. "Intuition is the result of your subconscious brain picking up on clues and hints and calculating the situation for you, and that's based solely on experience.""
markfrankel18

Adam Gopnik: What Galileo Saw : The New Yorker - 0 views

  • It may be no accident that so many of the great scientists really have followed Galileo, in ducking and avoiding the consequences of what they discovered. In the roster of genius, evasion of worldly responsibility seems practically a fixed theme. Newton escaped the world through nuttiness, Darwin through elaborate evasive courtesies and by farming out the politics to Huxley. Heisenberg’s uncertainty was political—he did nuclear-fission research for Hitler—as well as quantum-mechanical. Science demands heroic minds, but not heroic morals. It’s one of the things that make it move. ♦
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    "Kepler encouraged Galileo to announce publicly his agreement with the sun-centered cosmology of the Polish astronomer monk Copernik, better known to history by the far less euphonious, Latinized name of Copernicus. His system, which greatly eased astronomical calculation, had been published in 1543, to little ideological agitation. It was only half a century later, as the consequences of pushing the earth out into plebeian orbit dawned on the priests, that it became too hot to handle, or even touch."
Lawrence Hrubes

Chef Heston Blumenthal's Philosophy: The Fat Duck Restaurant - 1 views

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    "Of course I want to create food that is delicious, but this depends on so much more than simply what's going on in the mouth-context, history, nostalgia, emotion, memory and the interplay of sight, smell, sound and taste all play an important part in our appreciation and enjoyment of food"
markfrankel18

Elizabeth Loftus: The fiction of memory | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    "Psychologist Elizabeth Loftus studies memories. More precisely, she studies false memories, when people either remember things that didn't happen or remember them differently from the way they really were. It's more common than you might think, and Loftus shares some startling stories and statistics, and raises some important ethical questions we should all remember to consider. Memory-manipulation expert Elizabeth Loftus explains how our memories might not be what they seem -- and how implanted memories can have real-life repercussions."
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC News - A Point of View: Why people give in to temptation when no-one's watching - 0 views

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    "After World War II showed our species just how many hells on earth it could create, a whole generation of researchers devoted themselves to what I find a much more vital question. "Why do apparently good and normal people do abnormal and appalling things ?""
Lawrence Hrubes

Long Story Long: A Cartoon Controversy : The New Yorker - 0 views

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    "I was very pleased with the results of the cliché caption contest, but, while many people shared my opinion that the finalists were funny, some women took umbrage at this cartoon, considering it offensive to women"
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC News - She Who Tells a Story: Female lens on Iran and the Arab world - 0 views

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    "In the Middle East, a number of pioneering female photographers have risen to prominence, using art to defy stereotypes and explore questions of identity in the changing region."
Lawrence Hrubes

Grand Theft Auto V's Torture Scene: How Evil Should a Video Game Allow You to Be? ... - 0 views

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    "A 2011 Supreme Court ruling recognized that video games, like other forms of art and entertainment, are protected by the First Amendment as a form of speech. "For better or worse," Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia wrote in the decision, "our society has long regarded many depictions of killing and maiming as suitable features of popular entertainment.""
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC News - Lost Spanish lotto ticket handed in to clear conscience - 0 views

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    "A man who found a multi million-euro winning lottery ticket in La Coruna, Spain said he would not have been able to sleep if he had claimed the prize."
markfrankel18

List of topics characterized as pseudoscience - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    "[106]"
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