Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Saturday, October 24, 2015
A nice place to visit
Mommy, the universe
is such a big scary place,
says the little girl with red hair.
Oh, yes, it is such a big scary place,
says the red-headed mother
of the little girl with red hair.
But don't worry, dear,
we're not going there.
Overhead while exiting the Hayden Planetarium, New York City. Submitted by J.R. Solonche.
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Fossil
In this quiet inlet,
some eddy has collected
and drowned at the bottom
of the mire, now turned into marl,
enormous heaps of shells
of every shape and size.
It is a molluscs' burying ground
with hills for tumuli.
I dig up oysters a cubit long
and weighing five or six pounds a piece.
One could shovel up in the immense pile,
Scallops, Cones, Cylheridae,
Mactridae, Murices,
Turretellidae, Mitridae
and others too numerous,
too innumerable to mention
You stand stupefied before the vital ardour
of the days of old, which was able
to supply such a pile of relics
in a mere nook of earth.
Taken from an account by Jean-Henri Fabre on fossils in The Faber Book of Science edited by John Carey (Faber & Faber, 1995). Submitted by Taidgh Lynch.
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
Trinity Tanka
I am become Death
We made a terrible thing
Destroyer of Worlds
What are you moping about?
We�re all sons of bitches now.
A collection of quotations from Manhattan Project physicists on the occasion of the first ever atomic explosion, the Trinity Test in Los Alamos in 1945. Lines attributed to Richard Feynman, Bob Wilson and J. Robert Oppenheimer. Submitted by Daniel Galef.
Labels:
byDanielGalef,
death,
quotation,
science,
tanka
Saturday, June 28, 2014
Sticks and stones
Unfortunately it is far from true�
The power of words to affect
your emotions and actions
is well demonstrated in science.
A word is not a crystal,
transparent and unchanged;
it is the skin of a living thought
and may vary greatly in color and content
according to the circumstances and time
in which it is used.
Majority Floor Leader Jim Stamas, R-Midland,
determined Lisa Brown's comments
violated the decorum of the House,
"What she said was offensive" said Rep. Mike Callton, R-Nashville.
�It was so offensive, I don't even want to say it
in front of women.
I would not say that in mixed company.�
Lisa Brown called a press conference, today.
She defended her use of the word "vagina"
saying it is the "anatomically medically correct term.�
Her English teacher even told her
you can�t get wet from the word water.
Each stanza from a different source: Susan Smalley, Professor Emeritus, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at UCLA; Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr; Detroit News, June 2012; Detroit Free Press, June 2012; and Nin Andrews, Sleeping with Houdini (BOA Editions Ltd, 2008). Submitted by Joanna White.
Friday, April 18, 2014
The corrugator supercilii
is a
small, narrow
pyramidal muscle
located at
the medial end
of the eyebrow.
Its fibers
pass upward
and laterally.
Regarded
as the principal
muscle of suffering
the muscle is
sometimes severed
or paralyzed with
botulinium toxin
as treatment for migraine
or for aesthetic reasons.
From the Wikipedia entry for Corrugator supercilii muscle. Submitted by Dawn Corrigan.
Monday, March 24, 2014
Scientific American
You sink into their brains
a little socket with a screw on it
and the electrode can then
be screwed deeper and deeper
into the brainstem,
and you can test at any moment
according to the depth,
which goes at fractions of the mm,
what you're stimulating,
and these creatures are not
merely stimulated by wire,
they're fitted with a miniature
radio receiver so that they can be
communicated with at a distance.
The technique is very ingenious.
I mean you could press a button
and a sleeping chicken would jump up
and run about, or an active chicken
would suddenly sit down and go to sleep,
or a hen would sit down and act
like she's hatching out an egg,
or a fighting rooster would go into depression.
Taken from Aldous Huxley's speech "The Ultimate Revolution", given on 20th March 1962 at Berkeley Language Center. Submitted by Howie Good.
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