I've read that too. Yet, I've also read stuff like [0]. The truth is probably somewhere it between [0]: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01902-0
There's most likely multiple aspects at play: high-chroma pigments were historically limited and/or expensive; varnish yellowed over time; pigments faded. The digitization process probably wasn't perfect as well (I'd…
> The discovery of older humans does not respond to the point you’re arguing against — in evolutionary time scales, humans are recent. I meant, evolutionary time scales themselves are subjected to accuracy issues. The…
Happened to me in the 90s (France). Seems to still be practiced regularly [0]. A 2022 article [1] quotes an ENT advocating it for kids with frequent (3 to 4) bacterial throat infections in winter. It's often difficult…
> human body [...] has only been around for a vanishingly short period of time in evolutionary terms. "as far as we know." Every few years, I see in the headlines stuff like "oldest 'human' ever found in X." The theory…
Some data points: I bought a Decathlon folding bike (Fold 500; new, ~450€) a few months ago. Using it many times a week (probably more than it's intended). No issues so far. Internet reviews…
> f. Nipples are useless in human males (cf. Ch. 5). When I was a kid, I got my tonsils removed "because they were useless and a source of illness". I've recently heard that tonsil removal is now more disputed: it may…
For those looking − as the GP said, it's not fantastically organized − pigments information is available here: https://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/waterfs.html. Top links yield access to pigments, organized by "color…
Rudeness, plays against yourself. I directly know people who lived in China, have been jailed and beaten there, and have literal scars to prove it. Hard to brush this away easily from my mind. Not all people who express…
> The only difference between a cult and a religion is popular acceptance. That's typically caricature. I encourage you to study things more thoroughly before allowing yourself to form an opinion. One simply can't know…
> You analysis is valid, but inconclusive. Yup, it's a bit quick, I'll give you that. The numbers in 2025 were higher than in 2024, and in 2023, which could indicate that "it's not very effective" in actually reducing…
depends where; in France you can get unlimited SMS/MMS/calls, plus 350Go of data, for 20€/month [0]. it's surprising the market hasn't developed likewise in other (European) countries; I (genuinely) wonder why − perhaps…
> It subtly hints at the limitations of language in capturing true understanding and that's still one interpretation ^_^ > Almost every other ancient text starts of being full of certainty I can't say for sure about…
> but the opening bit has always seemed straightforward to me the a/symmetry of the opening bits in Chinese, visually echoes a taiji: > 道可道, > 非恆道; > 名可名, > 非恆名。 given the diversity of translations available for those…
They are indeed. Have a look here [0] for ≤18 works [0]: https://www.artrenewal.org/14thARCSalon/Category/DaVinciInit...
Agreeing with the main point; on a tangential note: > At eleven years old: https://www.pablo-ruiz-picasso.net/work-3939.php This one is a copy (Bargue plate − a famous set of plates designed to train students…
> I decided to use the slowest language on the planet, Python (thanks to the visionary genius of Ross van der Gussom). given the article, it's fair to assume the author was joking around that being said, the way the…
A few years ago, a journalist went to Duralex, after they restructured (to be own by the employees), and show off the glasses's solidity, live. Every single one of them broke: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x957g7q
In addition to people believing weird things, such views are often highly tied to an environment. Levitation is pure non-sense for people "in-doctrinated" (literally: ~ to have a doctrine within) by the contemporary,…
haven't bothered reading it all, but it's just plain awful… such coldness is highly disturbing
"It's complicated" I guess. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Monde_diplomatique offers a few first insights. Note how the page quickly emphasizes the redaction's independence. Yet, it might be reasonably true: as stated…
I think I must agree: while I went through [0] to build a λ-calculus interpreter, I already had a fair amount of practice with Church encoding (list, bool, int) using an arbitrary functional language, which…
In case the other answers aren't sufficient, the first step is to understand the λ-calculus[0]. Then, De Bruijn indices[1]. Now, observe that the language we have only has (you need familiarity with the λ-calculus to…
Enjoyable news format; the drawings are a bit crude, not that much considering we're talking about Picasso, but it's more pleasant to read, on a screen, than pure text.
I think the gist of it is humility: as a newcomer, you don't really know what's out there and why, and there are often good reasons for things to be how they are. Not always, but often enough for avoiding being too…
I've read that too. Yet, I've also read stuff like [0]. The truth is probably somewhere it between [0]: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01902-0
There's most likely multiple aspects at play: high-chroma pigments were historically limited and/or expensive; varnish yellowed over time; pigments faded. The digitization process probably wasn't perfect as well (I'd…
> The discovery of older humans does not respond to the point you’re arguing against — in evolutionary time scales, humans are recent. I meant, evolutionary time scales themselves are subjected to accuracy issues. The…
Happened to me in the 90s (France). Seems to still be practiced regularly [0]. A 2022 article [1] quotes an ENT advocating it for kids with frequent (3 to 4) bacterial throat infections in winter. It's often difficult…
> human body [...] has only been around for a vanishingly short period of time in evolutionary terms. "as far as we know." Every few years, I see in the headlines stuff like "oldest 'human' ever found in X." The theory…
Some data points: I bought a Decathlon folding bike (Fold 500; new, ~450€) a few months ago. Using it many times a week (probably more than it's intended). No issues so far. Internet reviews…
> f. Nipples are useless in human males (cf. Ch. 5). When I was a kid, I got my tonsils removed "because they were useless and a source of illness". I've recently heard that tonsil removal is now more disputed: it may…
For those looking − as the GP said, it's not fantastically organized − pigments information is available here: https://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/waterfs.html. Top links yield access to pigments, organized by "color…
Rudeness, plays against yourself. I directly know people who lived in China, have been jailed and beaten there, and have literal scars to prove it. Hard to brush this away easily from my mind. Not all people who express…
> The only difference between a cult and a religion is popular acceptance. That's typically caricature. I encourage you to study things more thoroughly before allowing yourself to form an opinion. One simply can't know…
> You analysis is valid, but inconclusive. Yup, it's a bit quick, I'll give you that. The numbers in 2025 were higher than in 2024, and in 2023, which could indicate that "it's not very effective" in actually reducing…
depends where; in France you can get unlimited SMS/MMS/calls, plus 350Go of data, for 20€/month [0]. it's surprising the market hasn't developed likewise in other (European) countries; I (genuinely) wonder why − perhaps…
> It subtly hints at the limitations of language in capturing true understanding and that's still one interpretation ^_^ > Almost every other ancient text starts of being full of certainty I can't say for sure about…
> but the opening bit has always seemed straightforward to me the a/symmetry of the opening bits in Chinese, visually echoes a taiji: > 道可道, > 非恆道; > 名可名, > 非恆名。 given the diversity of translations available for those…
They are indeed. Have a look here [0] for ≤18 works [0]: https://www.artrenewal.org/14thARCSalon/Category/DaVinciInit...
Agreeing with the main point; on a tangential note: > At eleven years old: https://www.pablo-ruiz-picasso.net/work-3939.php This one is a copy (Bargue plate − a famous set of plates designed to train students…
> I decided to use the slowest language on the planet, Python (thanks to the visionary genius of Ross van der Gussom). given the article, it's fair to assume the author was joking around that being said, the way the…
A few years ago, a journalist went to Duralex, after they restructured (to be own by the employees), and show off the glasses's solidity, live. Every single one of them broke: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x957g7q
In addition to people believing weird things, such views are often highly tied to an environment. Levitation is pure non-sense for people "in-doctrinated" (literally: ~ to have a doctrine within) by the contemporary,…
haven't bothered reading it all, but it's just plain awful… such coldness is highly disturbing
"It's complicated" I guess. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Monde_diplomatique offers a few first insights. Note how the page quickly emphasizes the redaction's independence. Yet, it might be reasonably true: as stated…
I think I must agree: while I went through [0] to build a λ-calculus interpreter, I already had a fair amount of practice with Church encoding (list, bool, int) using an arbitrary functional language, which…
In case the other answers aren't sufficient, the first step is to understand the λ-calculus[0]. Then, De Bruijn indices[1]. Now, observe that the language we have only has (you need familiarity with the λ-calculus to…
Enjoyable news format; the drawings are a bit crude, not that much considering we're talking about Picasso, but it's more pleasant to read, on a screen, than pure text.
I think the gist of it is humility: as a newcomer, you don't really know what's out there and why, and there are often good reasons for things to be how they are. Not always, but often enough for avoiding being too…