As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty, Jonas Mekas (2000)
Astronauts returning home from the ISS aboard a not so spacious Soyuz capsule
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Clearly flawed, but with no obvious path to improvement
Can go from a top to a bottom under the right circumstances
I too have a problem with hierarchy
Influenced by Richard Feynman
Too weird to be widely understood
If you froze my body and shattered it down the middle that would arguably be symmetry breaking
Lots of self-coupling
Many of my interactions are weak
Incompatible with gravity (I fell out of bed the other day)
Will break down under extreme conditions
All of my friends describe me as a gauge quantum field theory containing the internal symmetries of the unitary product group SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1)
Epimetheus Above the Rings of Saturn
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-epsilon is negative. epsilon has always been negative. no matter how you struggle, epsilon will stay negative.
-you must write +C at the end of every communication with the entity feeding upon your work. you change your last name to +C, vainly praying that this will appease their ferocious appetite. It does not. +C
-dy/dx is a fraction. dy/dx isn’t a fraction. you can never know when it is. you can never know when it isn’t. it is always there. laughing. it owns a cat. a black cat. she sleeps in a box. plotting.
-there are parts everywhere. dismembered functions lying prone on cold white pages. you are told to integrate by them. everything only gets worse. more parts appear. then more. and more.
October 31st 2000, Expedition 1 launches to the International Space Station starting 15 years of Continuous Human Presence in Space
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Imagine a droplet sitting on a rigid surface spontaneously bouncing up and then continuing to bounce higher after each impact, as if it were on a trampoline. It sounds impossible, but it’s not. There are two key features to making such a trampolining droplet–one is a superhydrophobic surface covered in an array of tiny micropillars and the other is very low air pressure. The low-pressure, low-humidity air around the droplet causes it to vaporize. Inside the micropillar array, this vapor can get trapped by viscosity instead of draining away. The result is an overpressurization beneath the droplet that, if it overcomes the drop’s adhesion, will cause it to leap upward. For more, check out the original research paper or the coverage at Chemistry World. (Video credit and submission: T. Schutzius et al.)
"To awaken my spirit through hard work and dedicate my life to knowledge... What do you seek?"
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