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Eastern & Western Design: How Culture Rewires the Brain | Design Theory
https://youtu.be/8UAsN9wvePE
Fascinating video. I enjoy the comment sections, itโs usually great for additional insights on the ideas presented in the video, such as:
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
https://youtu.be/8UAsN9wvePE
Fascinating video. I enjoy the comment sections, itโs usually great for additional insights on the ideas presented in the video, such as:
The German word for butterfly 'Schmetterling' is derived from the ancient word 'Schmetten' meaning cream. People observed that some butterflies were attracted to cream and butter. That's why they are also called 'butterflies' in English. In Italian 'farfalla' is derived from the sound it makes when it flies. However, in German there are also words derived from sound as well such as 'klatschen' (clap), 'summen' (buzz) etc.
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
๐ค1
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These are electric fields. Everything in the universe has an aura of influence, meaning that itโs mere existence influences the existence of everything else in the universe. Things within a closer proximity are influenced more intensely then things that are further away. Things that are more extreme influence things more intensely than things that are less extreme.
โฝ ๐ฐ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ - ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
โฝ ๐ฐ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ - ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
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Forwarded from Roxane LaLibertรฉ
Ancient towers of China(/Tibet)
about which nothing has been known for a thousand years
They have been standing here for many centuries, but no one knows who built them and when. The towers in Sichuan province can easily compete with them for the title of the most ancient skyscrapers: they are also very ancient, and their height is about 60 meters.
They first started talking about them only in 1998. Then the French researcher Frederic Darragon went to the Chinese mountains to study snow leopards, but her attention was attracted by dozens of stone towers in local villages.
Of course, what first impressed her was that no one knew why these structures were built.
Frederic spent 5 years studying these unique structures. She mapped them, counted them, analyzed the building material, and even climbed them, which did not pose any particular danger.
She tried to find information about the Himalayan skyscrapers, but the locals knew nothing about them: according to them, they have always been here.
about which nothing has been known for a thousand years
They have been standing here for many centuries, but no one knows who built them and when. The towers in Sichuan province can easily compete with them for the title of the most ancient skyscrapers: they are also very ancient, and their height is about 60 meters.
They first started talking about them only in 1998. Then the French researcher Frederic Darragon went to the Chinese mountains to study snow leopards, but her attention was attracted by dozens of stone towers in local villages.
Of course, what first impressed her was that no one knew why these structures were built.
Frederic spent 5 years studying these unique structures. She mapped them, counted them, analyzed the building material, and even climbed them, which did not pose any particular danger.
She tried to find information about the Himalayan skyscrapers, but the locals knew nothing about them: according to them, they have always been here.
๐ข1
Forwarded from Jeff
^^^^^^^^
https://culturacolectiva.com/en/lifestyle/travel/himalayan-towers-sichuan-star-shaped-china/
https://culturacolectiva.com/en/lifestyle/travel/himalayan-towers-sichuan-star-shaped-china/
Cultura Colectiva
Himalayan towers: The thousand star-shaped castles every top traveler should visit - Cultura Colectiva
The Himalayan Towers have been true to their builders, defying gravity since time unknown. With a height of up to 60 meters, they protrude from the
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Forwarded from Canadian Curiosities
Picture 1-Stunning Fireplace in a Historic Stockholm Apartment
Picture 2- farmer silos
Picture 3- lighthouse
Picture 4- castle tower
Picture 5- church bell tower
Picture 6- church steeples
What an interesting bunch of similarities.
Probably just another coincidence....right?
@canadiancuriosities
Picture 2- farmer silos
Picture 3- lighthouse
Picture 4- castle tower
Picture 5- church bell tower
Picture 6- church steeples
What an interesting bunch of similarities.
Probably just another coincidence....right?
@canadiancuriosities
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Death is a mirror in which the entire meaning of life is reflected.
๐ขป The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
๐ขป The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
๐9โค3
Forwarded from Gerardus ConstantiusโพGC-1๏ธโฃโก๏ธ๐
พ๏ธโก๏ธ1๏ธโฃ+ The 3x4โพ4x3 infinity formula calculation table. 369(12)-1/1
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To the ancients the highest form of expression was symbolism; it was the correspondence between the thing expressed and the real thing understood.
It is the strongest language we can convey. A visible sword and dove are more expressive than their representative words.
All the words of our language are but a sign or figure of something understood, and mean nothing of themselves only what we compel them to mean by conventional use.
The Egyptian Thoth, or Hermes the wise man, was said to have invented symbols, and Thoth was the moon, the god of wisdom who invented signs and characters.
This symbolism is the associated of idea; it is finding the relationship or correspondence of one thing to another. Representing one thing always by another which has some striking analogy or likeness or a metaphysical idea expressed by a natural or visible object, by which they sought to give these recondite mysteries a natural or a conventional form. It seemed so natural to use one thing for the mirror of another. We speak of a well of life or fountain of life and call the lightning the serpent of the sky.
All language is but symbolism. All words are but symbols and have no meaning of themselves.
๐ขป Symbolic mythology and translation of a lost and forgotten language, John Martin Woolsey, 1917.
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
It is the strongest language we can convey. A visible sword and dove are more expressive than their representative words.
All the words of our language are but a sign or figure of something understood, and mean nothing of themselves only what we compel them to mean by conventional use.
The Egyptian Thoth, or Hermes the wise man, was said to have invented symbols, and Thoth was the moon, the god of wisdom who invented signs and characters.
This symbolism is the associated of idea; it is finding the relationship or correspondence of one thing to another. Representing one thing always by another which has some striking analogy or likeness or a metaphysical idea expressed by a natural or visible object, by which they sought to give these recondite mysteries a natural or a conventional form. It seemed so natural to use one thing for the mirror of another. We speak of a well of life or fountain of life and call the lightning the serpent of the sky.
All language is but symbolism. All words are but symbols and have no meaning of themselves.
๐ขป Symbolic mythology and translation of a lost and forgotten language, John Martin Woolsey, 1917.
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
โค6๐ฅ2๐2๐1
XII. A Mandrake.
Tสแดษดsสแดแดษชแดษด:
Le Cabinet de la Bibliotheque de Ste. Genevieve, Claude Du Molinet, 1692.
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
Tสแดษดsสแดแดษชแดษด:
Here is a quite famous and quite singular root, called Mandrake, which has more imposture than truth. We show them of both sexes, and we almost give them children; but all this is discovered and done at pleasure. It is only true that there are roots that Naturalists call Mandrakes, that they put of two species, male and female; but to believe that they have the shape of a man, that they are formed under the gallows from the urine of a hanged man; that the one who digs them and pulls them out of the ground dies, and finally that they have the virtues attributed to them, all this is fabulous. The one we have in our Cabinet, and all the others that I have seen, are artificial; these are forked roots which separate in two, giving rise to legs; we then make their arms as they are with a knife, adding hands with ankles, and other parts that may be missing, to make a thing that has some human figure; & to make them grow hair in the places where we want, we put grains of millet inside, & then we bury this root in the ground, where these small grains germinate and grow large filaments which are like hair . This is all the artifice and imposture of these Mandrakes.
Le Cabinet de la Bibliotheque de Ste. Genevieve, Claude Du Molinet, 1692.
@explorationoftruth ๐๏ธ
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