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Science: Everything explained by PV=nRT, F=ma=Gm(1)•m(2)/r^2

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  • Originally posted by dxmnkd316 View Post
    Arecibo collapsed entirely today
    I gotta say, this brought a tear to my eye...

    Video of Collapse

    :0(
    Dave
    RIT - '90

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    • AI passes conservatives on the Turing Test.
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      • Conservatism may be neurobiological.

        A new paper in the scientific journal Personality and Individual Differences posits a Tendency for Interpersonal Victimhood (TIV), an archetype defined by several truly toxic traits: a pathological need for recognition, a difficulty empathizing with others, feelings of moral superiority, and, importantly, a thirst for vengeance.

        "The findings…suggest that victimhood is a stable and meaningful personality tendency," write the study's authors, a quartet of scholars associated with Tel Aviv University, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the University of Pennsylvania.

        The researchers solicited several hundred participants for a series of psychological experiments that tested their assumptions. As such, the results should be taken with a grain of salt—social psychology research suffers from notoriously thorny replication issues, since these kinds of experiments are not always great substitutes for the sort of thing being studied. In one of this paper's experiments, for instance, a computer split a pot of money between itself and a human participant; this person was led to believe the computer was also a human participant. Sometimes the pot was split unevenly, and the human participant was given a chance to take vengeance by reducing the computer's pot without enriching his own. Researchers discovered that participants classified as having higher TIV scores were "strongly associated with behavioral revenge" in this scenario.

        TIV was also "associated with an increased experience of negative emotions, and entitlement to immoral behavior."

        The study distinguishes TIV from narcissism. Narcissistic individuals also experience moral superiority and vengeful desires, but these feelings tend to spring from the belief that their authority, capability, or grandiosity is being undermined. TIV, on the other hand, is associated with low self-esteem. And while narcissists do not want to be victimized, high-TIV individuals lash out when their victimhood is questioned.

        "The self-presentation of high-TIV individuals is that of a weak victim, who has been hurt and is therefore in need of protection," write the authors. "Threats to high-TIV individuals are related to anything that can undermine their self-image of moral superiority; or elicit doubts from their environment as to whether the offense occurred, the intensity of the offense, or their exclusivity as victims."

        Writing in Scientific American, psychologist Scott Kauffman notes that "the researchers do not equate experiencing trauma and victimization with possessing the victimhood mindset. They point out that a victimhood mindset can develop without experiencing severe trauma or victimization."
        Basically, a conservative has such a weak moral constitution that anything can make him feel victimized. He has an eggshell character. The slightest thwarting of the infinity of things he preens as entitled to feels like terrible persecution to him, and he cries like a stuck pig.

        Behavior by conservatives on the Cafe checks with this.

        Last edited by Kepler; 12-11-2020, 05:17 PM.
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        • Some random but very cool stories popped up for me the past few days:

          2-Million-Year-Old Stone Tools Unearthed in Tanzania

          An international team of archaeologists and paleoanthropologists has discovered a large collection of 2-million-year-old stone tools, fossilized bones and plant materials at the site of Ewass Oldupa in the western portion of the ancient basin of Olduvai Gorge (now Oldupai) in northern Tanzania. The discovery reveals that the earliest Olduvai hominins used diverse, rapidly changing environments that ranged from fern meadows to woodland mosaics, naturally burned landscapes, to lakeside woodland/palm groves as well as steppes.

          Archaeologists in Turkey Unearth 2,500-Year-Old Temple of Aphrodite

          An inscription found at the site—dedicated to the Greek goddess of love and beauty—states, “This is the sacred area”

          Researchers surveying the Urla-Çeşme peninsula in western Turkey have unearthed a sixth-century B.C. temple dedicated to the goddess Aphrodite.

          “Aphrodite was a very common cult at that time,” team leader Elif Koparal, an archaeologist at Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University, tells the Hürriyet Daily News.
          Aphrodite was the ancient Greek goddess of beauty, love and procreation. At times, she was also associated with seafaring and war. Early sculptures show her clothed and largely similar to other goddesses, but around the fifth century B.C., artists began portraying her naked or mostly nude, according to Encyclopedia Britannica. Many temples and shrines were devoted to her cult, with particular areas of strength in Cyprus and on the island of Cythera off the southern coast of Greece.

          A Tombstone Inscribed in Ancient Greek Is Found in Southern Israel

          The Byzantine-era stone reads ‘blessed Maria, who lived an immaculate life’

          Workers cleaning Israel’s Nitzana National Park as part of a conservation jobs program for the unemployed recently discovered a tombstone inscribed in ancient Greek dating to the late sixth or early seventh century. Almog Ben Zikri reports for Haaretz that the stone’s inscription reads “Blessed Maria, who lived an immaculate life.”

          Researchers consider Nitzana, a site in the Negev desert close to the Egyptian border, important for the study of the transition from the Byzantine to Early Islamic periods.
          “During the fifth and sixth centuries CE, Nitzana served as a center for the villages and settlements in the vicinity,” Tali Erickson-Gini, an archaeologist with the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), says in a statement. “Among other things, it had a military fortress as well as churches, a monastery and a roadside inn that served Christian pilgrims traveling to Santa Katarina, which believers regarded as the site of Mount Sinai.”

          Erikson-Gini says Nitzana was founded in the third century B.C. as a station on a major Nabataean trade route. The Nabateans lived in the area between Syria and Arabia at that time, benefiting from the caravan trade between Arabia and the Mediterranean coast. The kingdom grew for centuries and eventually became an ally to the Roman Empire. Nitzana continued to be inhabited at various times until the 10th century, when it was abandoned.

          In the 1930s, archaeologists discovered a trove of sixth- and seventh-century Greek and Arabic papyrus documents at the site, which is also known as “Nessana.” The documents include military, church and family records, as well as information about the caravan industry.

          Researchers have since found a number of Christian tombstones outside Nitzana, but they are trying to learn more about the history of the area. Ariel David reported for Haaretz in July that archaeologists believe Nitzana was part of a thriving regional wine industry in the fifth century, when it was part of the Byzantine Empire. However, a plague pandemic and a volcanic winter in the middle of the sixth century may have devastated the area’s Christian communities. Islamic forces then took over the area in the seventh century.

          “Unlike other ancient towns in the Negev, very little is known about the burial grounds around Nitzana,” Israel Antiquities Authority Southern District archaeologist Pablo Betzer says in the statement. “The find of any inscription such as this may improve our definition of the cemeteries’ boundaries, thus helping to reconstruct the boundaries of the settlement itself, which have not yet been ascertained.”
          13 mysterious mummies discovered in Egyptian well

          Egypt has uncovered a mysterious collection of coffins thought to contain human mummies that have been sealed inside for more than 2,500 years.

          The 13 unopened coffins, which were found piled on top of each other in a well nearly 40 feet (12 meters) deep are so well preserved that the original detailed designs and colors are clearly visible, according to Egypt's Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities.

          Archeologists who made the discovery at Saqqara, an ancient site that lies about 20 miles south of Egypt's capital and is also home to landmarks including the Step Pyramid, believed to be the world's oldest, are expected to make more discoveries at the site in coming days.

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          • These are great; thank you for sharing them!
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            • How to make a schoolroom globe in 1950.
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              • Mount Etna came.
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                • As mentioned in another thread, there was a 5.3 earthquake centered ~9 miles from Anchorage today.

                  It is being called an aftershock of the 7.1 earthquake back in November 2018.
                  U-A-A!!!Go!Go!GreenandGold!
                  Applejack Tells You How UAA Is Doing...
                  I spell Failure with UAF

                  Originally posted by UAFIceAngel
                  But let's be real...There are 40 some other teams and only two alaskan teams...the day one of us wins something big will be the day I transfer to UAA
                  Originally posted by Doyle Woody
                  Best sign by a visting Seawolf fan Friday went to a young man who held up a piece of white poster board that read: "YOU CAN'T SPELL FAILURE WITHOUT UAF."

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                  • Originally posted by Jimjamesak View Post
                    As mentioned in another thread, there was a 5.3 earthquake centered ~9 miles from Anchorage today.

                    It is being called an aftershock of the 7.1 earthquake back in November 2018.
                    How is it still an aftershock that much later?
                    “Demolish the bridges behind you… then there is no choice but to build again.”

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                    • Originally posted by aparch View Post

                      How is it still an aftershock that much later?
                      I have no idea. A lot of us are wondering the same thing.

                      They did follow up.
                      U-A-A!!!Go!Go!GreenandGold!
                      Applejack Tells You How UAA Is Doing...
                      I spell Failure with UAF

                      Originally posted by UAFIceAngel
                      But let's be real...There are 40 some other teams and only two alaskan teams...the day one of us wins something big will be the day I transfer to UAA
                      Originally posted by Doyle Woody
                      Best sign by a visting Seawolf fan Friday went to a young man who held up a piece of white poster board that read: "YOU CAN'T SPELL FAILURE WITHOUT UAF."

                      Comment


                      • What a desert looks like when it ends in a sand "cliff," Namibia:

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                        • The episode where Grand Tour ventured into Namibia was breathtaking
                          Code:
                          As of 9/21/10:         As of 9/13/10:
                          College Hockey 6       College Football 0
                          BTHC 4                 WCHA FC:  1
                          Originally posted by SanTropez
                          May your paint thinner run dry and the fleas of a thousand camels infest your dead deer.
                          Originally posted by bigblue_dl
                          I don't even know how to classify magic vagina smoke babies..
                          Originally posted by Kepler
                          When the giraffes start building radio telescopes they can join too.
                          He's probably going to be a superstar but that man has more baggage than North West

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                          • In case anyone needs to flip 250 trillion coins in the next second:

                            Scientists have built this ultrafast laser-powered random number generator (msn.com)
                            If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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                            • Originally posted by LynahFan View Post
                              In case anyone needs to flip 250 trillion coins in the next second:

                              Scientists have built this ultrafast laser-powered random number generator (msn.com)
                              This is a dumb question, or maybe it isn't. How do they know it's random? Aren't they just assuming it because the theoretical model is they are dependent on quantum level events which are, again, theoretically, chaotic?
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                              • Definitely not a dumb question. My supposition is that it just means no pattern has been found *yet*. I suspect a quick Google (didn't try it myself) would bring up many examples where patterns have been discovered in phenomena that had formerly been presumed to be random. We are pretty darn good at finding patterns in things and breaking codes that had held for dozens or hundreds of years.
                                If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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