Orson Arthur's Torn Asunder

["The great point is that everything now is going to be different, is going to be broken in two." he cried, suddenly returning to his dejection.]
- Dostoevsky- Crime and Punishment
~ Friday, May 18 ~
Permalink
legrandcirque:

Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, ca. 1923.

legrandcirque:

Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, ca. 1923.


46 notes
reblogged via legrandcirque
~ Wednesday, May 9 ~
Permalink

(Source: pushthemovement)


826 notes
reblogged via pushthemovement
~ Monday, May 7 ~
Permalink

Everything takes forever
And in the parking lot alleyways of the latest night,
Blacker cats roam the slicker asphalt just in front of the
Grocery store entrance. 24 hours- how rouge the notion. How many hours is night in the ocean? How long does it take to name an emotion?
88 years and the carpet endears the man who has fallen, is not getting up.
He is not just his fears.


1 note
~ Thursday, May 3 ~
Permalink

Why do we believe in electrons, but not in fairies?

by Benjamin Kuipers

No one has directly observed either electrons or fairies. Both of them are theoretical constructs, useful to explain observations that might be difficult to explain otherwise. The “theory of fairies” can actually explain more things than the “theory of electrons”. So why do we believe in electrons, but not in fairies?

Is the issue a political one, where the “electron” fans got the upper hand in the nineteenth century, so by the twentieth century the “fairy” fans were a scorned and persecuted minority? Or, have we proved for sure that fairies don’t exist?

No, to both. The real difference is that for electrons, we have accumulated a set of quite narrow and specific rules about how electrons will behave under various circumstances. Those rules let us make very specific predictions about electron behavior, and about the observations that will result. If those predictions don’t come true, we know that either we didn’t set up the circumstances correctly, or there is something wrong with the rules. But over many decades, we have repeatedly fixed problems with the rules, so we can now make really good predictions about electrons, especially in certain highly contrived circumstances (i.e., circuits).

Fairies are much more free. A fairy does what it decides to do. We haven’t been able to find any useful rules for predicting how a fairy will behave under particular circumstances, or even for telling when a fairy has been involved in a particular observation. (At least I don’t know of any such rules. I stand ready for correction on this.) Over many, many decades, it has not been possible for people to try out pretty-good sets of fairy-prediction rules, find out where they make mistakes, and replace them with better sets of rules. 

Read More?


~ Wednesday, May 2 ~
Permalink
Lumber Jake-ca$h monett

Lumber Jake-ca$h monett


Permalink

Permalink

~ Tuesday, May 1 ~
Permalink

(Source: pastelfluff)


586 notes
reblogged via oh-my-gouache
~ Sunday, April 29 ~
Permalink

33 notes
reblogged via batwithbutterflywings
Permalink
The Illusion of Choice- BusinessInsider

The Illusion of Choice- BusinessInsider


2 notes
~ Saturday, April 28 ~
Permalink
1 note
~ Friday, April 27 ~
Permalink
springnite- Ca$h

springnite- Ca$h


2 notes
Permalink
Ca$h

Ca$h


1 note
Permalink

(Source: lisaalya)


34 notes
reblogged via la-madrina
~ Thursday, April 26 ~
Permalink
Hologram Tupac flew the hologram planes into the WTC on 9/!!

Hologram Tupac flew the hologram planes into the WTC on 9/!!


1 note