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A labyrinth of ideas,
A diary of curiosities

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“But love, the essence of which is fidelity…, demonstrates how eternity can exist within the time span of life itself

— Alain Badiou
Illouz also assumes that increasing choice entails the “rationalization” of desire. Desire, she argues, is no longer determined by the unconscious mind so much as by conscious selection. The subject of desire is “made incessantly aware of and responsible for choice, for spelling out rationally desirable criteria in another.” Moreover, heightened imagination is supposed to have “raised the thresholds of women’s and men’s expectations about the desirable attributes of a partner and/or about the prospects of shared life.” In consequence, one is now “disappointed” more often. And disappointment is a “notorious handmaid of imagination.”
the Internet is “position[ing] the modern individual as a desiring subject, longing for experiences, daydreaming about objects or forms of life, and living experiences in an imaginary and virtual mode.” Increasingly, the modern self realizes its wishes and feelings in imaginary ways, through commodities and media images. Its imaginative faculty is determined by the market and mass culture.
— The Agony of Eros
Forwarded from CHAOS (Venom)
The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar (2023)
Courage, The Spirit of Daring and Bearing
Courage was scarcely deemed worthy to be counted among virtues, unless it was exercised in the cause of Righteousness. Confucius defines Courage by explaining what its negative is. ‘Perceiving what is right, and doing it not, argues lack of courage.’ To run all kinds of hazards, to jeopardize one's self, to rush into the jaws of death – these are too often identified with Valour, and in the profession of arms such rushness of conduct – what Shakespeare calls, ‘valour misbegot’ – is unjustly applauded; but not so in the Precepts of Knighthood. Death for a cause unworthy of dying for was called a ‘dog's death.’ ‘To rush into the thick of battle and to be slain in it,’ says a Prince of Mito, ‘is easy enough, and the merest churl is equal to the task; but it is true courage to live when it is right to live, and to die only when it is right to die,’ and yet the Prince had not even heard of the name of Plato, who defines courage as ‘the knowledge of things that a man should fear and that he should not fear.’

— Inazo Notibé, Bushido
Forwarded from Lab Rats In Lab Coats (Haidar A. Fahad)
You only see what you look for, and you only look for what you know.
Lab Rats In Lab Coats
You only see what you look for, and you only look for what you know.
Perhaps Osler was mistaken when he said that more diagnoses were missed because of not seeing than not knowing. Perhaps not knowing is what caused not seeing.

The expectations of the viewer are the primary shapers of what is seen, and that the unexpected will often be missed. We become better seers when we have better expectations.

— Every Patient Tells a Story, by Lisa Sanders
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Perhaps Osler was mistaken when he said that more diagnoses were missed because of not seeing than not knowing. Perhaps not knowing is what caused not seeing. The expectations of the viewer are the primary shapers of what is seen, and that the unexpected…
ذكرني بسشن الأشعة
هواي مرات أصفن على الأشعة وماشوف شي لحد ما الدكتور يأشر على الـ abnormality وفجأة تصير واضحة كلش وماكدر ماشوفها بعد
شكو مادة سختت بيها بأول 3 مراحل دترجعلي وتطيح حظي هسة...
Forwarded from L'appel du Vide. (Qiwi)
L'appel du Vide.
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Reading is like eating, you have to give yourself the time to digest what you just consumed.
Contemplation, reflection, discussion, argumentation, thinking and re-thinking (and re-reading) are way more important than mere ingestion of new information.

A world so focused on getting so much done in so little time loses the ability to contemplate, to fully understand and incorporate separate informations into the whole framework of human understanding. It gains knowledge, but relinquishes insight.
L'appel du Vide.
Photo
Informational Tourism
Tourism is defined as "traveling for pleasure." You seek new places in search of pleasurable experience. Informational tourism is a similar phenomenon; it is traveling—metaphorically—through endless seas of information in search of some knowledge, facts, did-you-know's that are simply interesting.

The problem with informational tourism is the same as with real tourism: compare it with traveling; the traveller is active, he searches for adventure and almost "studies" and tries to penetrate deep into the new culture he is in. While the tourist is passive, he goes to "popular tourist destinations" and expects interesting things to happen to him. The traveller steps away from his comfort zone and bears danger and estrangement, but the tourist, in a sense, never leaves the comfort of his residence.

Informational tourists give the illusion of knowledge and wisdom, while in reality they are nothing more than trivia books on two legs.
Many of those perceived to be educated or smart in the simple sense are mere tourists in the vast lands of knowledge. They pick up interesting, safe, and welcoming places to visit and get some souvenirs (trivia) to exhibit them back at home.
More people look for salvation through relationship than in the houses of worship. One may even suggest that romantic love has replaced institutional religion as the greatest motive power and influence in our lives ... the search for love has replaced the search for God.