-
11 votes
-
Danecdotes: Reminiscences and Reflections Concerning a Largely Wasted Life
9 votes -
You don't descend from all your ancestors
21 votes -
It's starting to look a lot like... Y2K
24 votes -
Stephen Hawking Archive made available to historians and researchers
17 votes -
Easy access to stimulants aided scientific progress in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
https://mastodon.social/@tef/112763581163648202 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Erd%C5%91s#Personality His colleague Alfréd Rényi said, "a mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into...
https://mastodon.social/@tef/112763581163648202
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Erd%C5%91s#Personality
His colleague Alfréd Rényi said, "a mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems", and Erdős drank copious quantities
After his mother's death in 1971 he started taking antidepressants and amphetamines, despite the concern of his friends, one of whom (Ron Graham) bet him $500 that he could not stop taking them for a month. Erdős won the bet, but complained that it impacted his performance: "You've showed me I'm not an addict. But I didn't get any work done. I'd get up in the morning and stare at a blank piece of paper. I'd have no ideas, just like an ordinary person. You've set mathematics back a month."
https://kolektiva.social/@sidereal/112764385284252961
They were called the "greatest generation" because they collectively had far easier access to stimulants than anyone before or since
Random showerthought time:
The war on drugs, medical skepticism, stigma, and other factors caused stimulants and medications, especially those useful for treating conditions such as ADHD, to become less accessible. This adversely affected the people who needed or would otherwise benefit from these stimulants and medications, and scientific progress and society more widely has suffered because of it.
35 votes -
Objects of Our Life: Steve Jobs' talk at the 1983 design conference in Aspen
7 votes -
The rise of the ‘union curious’ - support for unionization among America’s frontline workers
28 votes -
‘Goldmine’ collection of wheat from 100 years ago may help feed the world, scientists say
25 votes -
Helsinki's incredibly well executed Jokeri light rail project – finished way ahead of schedule and costs lower than initially budgeted
24 votes -
Credit at last for female screenwriter airbrushed from Hollywood history
12 votes -
The struggle to contain, and eat, the invasive deer taking over Hawaii
36 votes -
An archaeology of personhood and abortion: Opinions about fetal personhood and abortion have fluctuated enormously throughout history and differ in surprising ways between cultures
14 votes -
Greek poet who inspired EM Forster, David Hockney and Jackie Onassis emerges from the shadows
6 votes -
Artists, activism and AIDS
7 votes -
The Philosophy of Liberty – On Liberalism
9 votes -
When tomatoes were blamed for witchcraft and werewolves
17 votes -
The Ballad of John and Yoko | Lindsay Ellis
13 votes -
Modern Warfare: How Call of Duty 4 changed a genre forever
22 votes -
12,000-year-old Aboriginal sticks may be evidence of the oldest known culturally transmitted ritual in the world
16 votes -
Thirty years later, FreeDOS is still keeping the dream of the command prompt alive
18 votes -
Pål Enger, talented Norwegian soccer player turned celebrity art thief who pulled off the sensational 1994 heist of Edvard Munch's famed “The Scream”, has died
13 votes -
FreeDOS open-source text-based OS turns 30, still in active development and primarily used for retro gaming
13 votes -
Slovenia's beautiful beehives turn apiaries into art
15 votes -
The strange origin story behind Akira's megacity, Neo Tokyo
12 votes -
Why didn't Chris and Dan get into Berghain?
7 votes -
What a century (plus a pandemic) does to moviegoing and why it matters
16 votes -
Scholars discover rare 16th-century tome with handwritten notes by John Milton
17 votes -
Chef cooks from 720 year old cook book
15 votes -
Adrift off the Finnish coast, the autonomous island of Maakalla comes alive each summer and offers a fascinating glimpse at how Finns once lived
10 votes -
Decades later, John Romero looks back at the birth of the first-person shooter
18 votes -
Red Lobster | Bankrupt
21 votes -
Fast crimes at Lambda School
21 votes -
Ahmes, the first known maths author
4 votes -
Before smartphones, an army of real people helped you find stuff on Google
21 votes -
Milwaukee’s oldest gay bar donates thousands of photos to Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project
20 votes -
Is Tetris really forty this year?
12 votes -
TETRIS: Heavenly Scrolls (1989)
5 votes -
Fit to be dyed: The enduring appeal of tie-dye
15 votes -
Government without states (how to raise a tribal army in pre-Roman Europe, part II)
8 votes -
Goldfish memories - most of China’s early websites have disappeared
30 votes -
Undemocratic, anachronistic, fantastic. How the City of London survives.
7 votes -
Divers find remains of Finnish WWII plane that was shot down by Moscow with a US diplomat aboard
18 votes -
Band Saw Sculptor [1964]
7 votes -
Why we like people who ask us for favors
12 votes -
The life and death of E3
14 votes -
Science fiction writer Ursula K. Le Guin made Schrödinger’s cat famous
12 votes -
The origin of every European country's name
13 votes -
"Sword breakers" were rare and we don't know much about them. How were they used and what were they really for? Two experienced rapier fencers experiment with one to discover more about them.
11 votes -
The moral economy of the Shire
26 votes