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What a Fourteenth Century Legal Case Can Teach Us about Storytelling - Uncanny Magazine
What a Fourteenth Century Legal Case Can Teach Us about Storytelling - Uncanny Magazine
A scandal has fractured the world of medieval historians, and it turns on the meaning of a single word of Medieval Latin. The word is “raptus” and it appears in a batch of late fourteenth century legal documents pertaining to Geoffrey Chaucer, famous author of The Canterbury Tales. In late 2022, two scholars announced a […]
·uncannymagazine.com·
What a Fourteenth Century Legal Case Can Teach Us about Storytelling - Uncanny Magazine
The Seamstress Who Solved the Ancient Mystery of the Argonaut, Pioneered the Aquarium, and Laid the Groundwork for the Study of Octopus Intelligence – The Marginalian
The Seamstress Who Solved the Ancient Mystery of the Argonaut, Pioneered the Aquarium, and Laid the Groundwork for the Study of Octopus Intelligence – The Marginalian
“I armed myself with patience and courage, and only after several months managed to dissolve my doubts and see my research crowned with happy confirmation.”
·themarginalian.org·
The Seamstress Who Solved the Ancient Mystery of the Argonaut, Pioneered the Aquarium, and Laid the Groundwork for the Study of Octopus Intelligence – The Marginalian
Why the Age of American Progress Ended - The Atlantic
Why the Age of American Progress Ended - The Atlantic
The real reason American progress has stalled
What went wrong? There are many answers, but one is that we have become too enthralled by the eureka myth and, more to the point, too inattentive to all the things that must follow a eureka moment. The U.S. has more Nobel Prizes for science than the U.K., Germany, France, Japan, Canada, and Austria combined. But if there were a Nobel Prize for the deployment and widespread adoption of technology—even technology that we invented, even technology that’s not so new anymore—our legacy wouldn’t be so sterling. Americans invented the first nuclear reactor, the solar cell, and the microchip, but today, we’re well behind a variety of European and Asian countries in deploying and improving these technologies.
·theatlantic.com·
Why the Age of American Progress Ended - The Atlantic
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do? · LRB 15 December 2022
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do? · LRB 15 December 2022
The primary product sold by all management consultants – both software developers and strategic organisers – is the...
The aim was to maximise profit, enrich management and shareholders, and circumscribe worker militancy. Outside the US, as the Cold War raged, management consultants were willing foot soldiers in the global battle for capitalism.
Bogdanich and Forsythe’s​ book is a damning account of the way McKinsey has made workplaces unsafe, ditched consumer protections, disembowelled regulatory agencies, ravaged health and social care organisations, plundered public institutions, hugely reduced workforces and increased worker exploitation.
·lrb.co.uk·
Laleh Khalili · In Clover: What does McKinsey do? · LRB 15 December 2022
How the West projected Hitler’s ‘hooked cross’ as the Swastika with the help of New York Times
How the West projected Hitler’s ‘hooked cross’ as the Swastika with the help of New York Times
The New York Times has distorted the image of Hindu holy symbol Swastika. The publication compared Hindu symbol with the Nazi Symbol.
It is imperative to note that the Nazi Party adopted the hooked cross (Hakenkreuz in German) as its emblem in 1920. There is no evidence that Hitler ever heard of the word “Swastika”. Hooked Cross had been a sacred symbol of Christianity since its inception in ancient days and it is very natural to find Hooked Cross symbols in old churches and chapels. The Christian symbol had nothing to do either with Hinduism or Swastika. It existed as an important symbol of Christendom since its very existence. It was found in early Christian Graves of Rome in the second century CE.
·tfipost.com·
How the West projected Hitler’s ‘hooked cross’ as the Swastika with the help of New York Times
Forgotten photos show how Kenyan archaeologists unearthed secrets of their own country | Archaeology | The Guardian
Forgotten photos show how Kenyan archaeologists unearthed secrets of their own country | Archaeology | The Guardian
Exhibitions in UK and Africa rewrite history by celebrating discoveries of overlooked black excavators in colonial era
Many of the Kenyan excavators, who would typically open the trenches and dig the various layers by following the various strata, had expert local knowledge about the ancient sites, including their geology, histories and oral traditions. This knowledge was highly prized by the European scholars, who rarely did any digging themselves. But it was colonial practice, to intentionally “forget” the contributions of Africans to African history, Abungu said. “And the scholars went along with that.”
·theguardian.com·
Forgotten photos show how Kenyan archaeologists unearthed secrets of their own country | Archaeology | The Guardian