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Moon at Shinobazu
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1854938647117640135/photo/1
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Latin practice day 5: Questions about ch 9 of LLPSI
I. Cūr lupī edunt ovēs, sed non edunt pāstōrēs?
II. Quantum est vestīgium lupī?
III. Est sōl in caelō, aut sunt mōntēs et collēs et campi etc in caelō?
IV. Homō est pāstor ovium. Quis est pāstor hominum? Quōrum pāstor est ovis?
V. Pāstor quaerit ovis quae errat. Ovis quaerit herba, quae ēstur. Quid quaerit herba?
VI. In campō sunt ūna ovis nigra et ūndēcentum ovēs albae. Pāstor habet unum canem nigrum. Cūr nōn habet ūndecentum canēs albōs?
VII. Campus dat silvae ovem. Quid dat silva campō?
VIII. Habet arbor umbram, aut habet umbra arbōrem?
Tanaka Ryōhei
Persimmons . Mountains
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1853326310933770502/photo/1
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Shiro Shirahata- Moon over Fuji, 1972.
From: https://x.com/MenschOhneMusil/status/1853201333983023451/photo/1
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Last Train/Look
Night Train. 2020 Ink on paper
Christoph Niemann.
American, born in 1970.
From: https://x.com/fraveris/status/1853184339753992541/photo/1
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Latin practice day 4
Emō līberōs Latīnōs: "Latin via Ovid" and "Cambridge Latin Course, books 1 and 2".
Ōrnāmenta mē nōn ōrnant.
Cubīle in quō dormiō calet (?).
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Notes on Claude 3.5 Sonnet (new)'s ability to find errors in Latin text
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Kalshi and PredictIt differ by 10 points! Wild!
Also apparently I can't sell all my "no" shares in Kamala on PI? Quite annoying.
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Latin practice day 3
Inter Sydneium et Berkeleiam nōn est via.
Verba mea audiuntur ā multīs persōnīs.
Saccus quem ego portō (= quī portātur ā mē) pulcher est.
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Types of breaks
Sometimes when I'm stuck at a work task, I take a break by standing up and walking away (to go get food or go on a walk or something). Often, this produces a sudden helpful insight after I have taken a few steps.
Some other times, I take a break by staying where I am, changing tabs, and opening social media. This approximately never produces a sudden helpful insight.
I suppose this is a reason to take more breaks physically separated from my work space.
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One theory for this (mentioned in Your Brain at Work) is that when you've been working on a task for a long time, you tend to have a lot of blood flow in one part of your brain, and walking/doing something else gets you to reset, spreading it across. Then you're more likely to use a mental process that you didn't before.
I find the specific mechanic sketchy, but as a metaphor it works reasonably well: I definitely have different types of thoughts when on a walk or taking a shower than I do while at the computer, and these thoughts are usually at a higher level of abstraction and less specific/detailed.
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Hot sauce can be too hot
I consumed this hot sauce, called "Hellfire re-booted double doomed" as part of a "hot ones" themed party. Specifically, I consumed it at the same time as a bunch of other people. Here is my review:
- when we ate it, a bunch of people were visibly in physical pain
- I threw up after eating a small amount of it
- I am now hearing my friend Ronny groan in pain, because of this hot sauce. It is now 7:38 pm. He ate it at like 2:30 pm.
- one of the people who ate it with us is now in hospital seeking help with the pain they feel
I genuinely do not recommend it - I consider it more of a poison than a food.
As contrast, I also consumed the Hot Ones season 22 line-up of sauces before this. I found the last ones unpleasantly spicy, but would recommend them as a food experience if you like spicy things.
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Latin practice day 2
Liber meus latīnus adest. Habeō liberum.
Cūr is nōn in mēnsā est? Quia mēnsa abest.
Liber bonus est.
Numerus vocābulārum liberī magnus est.
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Current Latin stack:
- Lingua Latīna per se Illustrata (w/ Scorpio Martianus reading it out loud)
- Colloquia Persōnārum (not sure if the vowel lengths are right here) (w/ Scorpio Martianus reading it out loud)
- Fābellae Latīnae
- Lingua Latīna per Pokémon Illustrata
- Minecraftium
- Exercitia Latīna
This is probably many enough that not all will survive, but we will see.
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I kind of had the opposite reaction, which is 'the intellectual greats of the past do deserve their reputation, but are we sure there aren't proportionate amounts of intellectual greats today also?'
I wonder if it's more that there's a fixed quota of fame for being an intellectual great, or something? Like it's easier for someone to become famous and go down in history if they're the one best philosopher/scientist/writer/inventor/whatever in their region. Whereas if there are 1000 such ones, even if they are producing equally good work to the people of the past, people don't have like a 'famous people Dunbar number' that could absorb knowing about that many people, so the culture gravitates to making just a few famous (either the best, or maybe people who are intellectual but also charismatic/notorious/good at marketing themselves).
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Ben Weinstein-Raun
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Ben Millwood
in reply to Daniel Filan • • •I've been kind of looking for an excuse to buy a new laptop, but on the other hand I have mostly been looking at vendors that operate in Europe, so effects on me will be indirect.
Still, if I'm looking for an excuse, maybe I should just do it anyway :shrug:
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Daniel Filan
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