As we mark the passing of Professor Hawking, we are confident that his legacy and inspiration will endure for ages to come and it’s a testament to human perseverance and advances in health care that he survived and thrived for decades and upheld a career both as a scientist and personality.
While we’re of course privileged and richer for having shared this existence with Professor Hawking, it is also a bit disheartening to imagine what’s left unfinished, bittersweet knowing there are others to come to champion mathematics and the sciences and take up the gauntlet of pondering the mysteries of the Universe. Although plenty of marvels (some by his own contributions) have been revealed—like our conception of Black Holes, gravitational waves and the profusion of exoplanets—we had hoped that Professor Hawking would have lived to see planetary colonisation and first contact. And while most of his charismatic appearances have been cameos, Professor Hawking’s final role (that we were just enjoying yesterday, in fact) was playing the next edition of the eponymous Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy (the audio book version of the guide) in BBC’s radio drama of Douglas Adams’ work—reprised with continuing adventures forty years after the original serialisation. Per aspera ad astra. Per ardua ad astra.
Wednesday, 14 March 2018
ad astra
Tuesday, 13 March 2018
elemental
First shown as part of a comprehensive exhibition on the artist in the Victoria & Albert Museum in 2013, Open Culture pays a tribute to Paul Robertson’s Periodic Table of David Bowie as its twelve city gallery tour is coming to a close in Brooklyn. Each period and series feature figures that Bowie has either inspired or credits as influencers. Be sure to visit the link above to learn more and to watch a video summary of the arrangement.
time-lapse
catagories: ๐ฏ๐ต, food and drink, lifestyle
don’t confuse me with the facts. i’ve got a closed mind.
Serving as a reminder that even in these dark days, the arc of history bends towards justice, we would do good to recall the infamous gaffe of Indiana congressman and noted Nixonian sycophant Earl Fredrick Landgrebe.
Staunchly defending the seemingly indefensible actions of Richard Nixon throughout the Watergate Hearings even as documents surfaced demonstrating that Nixon himself directed aids to hinder the investigation of the break-in, Landgrebe pledged, “I am going to stick with my president even if he and I have to be taken out of this building and shot.” In lieu of impeachment, the very next day (8 August 1974) Nixon tendered his resignation and stepped down from high office. For his pledge of loyalty, Landgrebe was voted out of the House of Representatives a few months later. While such historical anecdotes are heartening, we’d also do well to remember that Americans—as well as dozens of other nations past and present—have systematically surrendered their political will and power by consenting to allow governments to work towards the advantage of business and personal enrichment rather than for the betterment of society.
Monday, 12 March 2018
7x7
media diet: what a journalist gleaned by restricting himself to print sources for a period of two months, via Swiss Miss
firmitas, utilitas, venustas: Doctor Balkrishna Vithaldas Doshi, noted for forwarding architectural dialogue and vision in South Asia, is the first Indian awarded the prestigious Pritzker prize—whose motto is founding father Vitruvius’ own
miss congeniality: a look at vintage prom royalty, via Everlasting Blรถrt
the living daylights: an overview of some of the world’s stranger time zones
ombudsman: Wikipedia’s carefully considered editorial decision on how to best illustrate its entry on “human,” via Slashdot
student thesis: thematic parallels between Jurassic Park (1993) and The Towering Inferno (1974)
night on bald mountain: long exposure shots of circling drones create halos in the sky