Friday, 10 April 2020

8x8

egg²: check out Box Vox’ egg-themed week starting with this recipe for apรฉroeuf including innovations in cartoning and carting

public display: open up and curator your own virtual gallery space in this social simulation game

all hail our morlock overlords: after forcing the in-person ballot in Wisconsin, GOP death cult refuses to ban large gatherings for Easter holiday

contact tracing: a nice primer on how the method can combat the spread of contagious diseases without compromising individual privacy

animal crossing: a quarantined couple in London creates an art museum for their pet gerbils’ edification

armisonous: obsolete. rare. that which produces or is accompanied by the sounds of arms or armour, like clanging pots and pans

after all, you’re my wonder wall: a selection of collaborative music videos shot in isolation

victory garden: some ideas for plant anywhere seed beds and substrates

venerabilis inceptor

While having matriculated at Oxford and fulfilled the requirements for a graduate degree in theology the scholastic philosopher was never awarded the title and was academically known as “Venerable Beginner,” the depth and range of the influence of William of Ockham (*1285 – †1347), commemorated by the Anglican faith on this day, cannot be downplayed on technicality such as that. Pioneering thinker in the realms of logic and nominalism—rejecting the prevailing notion that universal ideas had an existence antecedent and dependent of individuals and that the generalisation or ideal form was not the abstraction of experience, he is probably best known for his appeal to efficiency in reasoning, his eponymous razor (novacula Occami) or law of parsimony—simply put that the simplest solution is usually the right one.

saint et grand vendredi

As Paris and the world approaches the one-year anniversary of the conflagration that engulfed Notre Dame last year, there will be a small, closed service (only seven clerics and worshippers in attendance) and meditation broadcasted in remembrance and solidarity for those suffering because of the spread of the corona virus, also responsible for the small and non-existent audiences at this and other communities around the world. This day marking the crucifixion of Jesus, the brief mass inside the cathedral will also focus on its most celebrated relic, the Crown of Thorns, which was gifted by Baldwin II, Emperor of Constantinople (called the Broke) to King Louis IX of France in 1248, and was saved by the city’s Fire Brigade last April.

kalsarikรคnnit

Whilst we’ve previously visited the term Hamsterkauf and agree that both it and Kummerspeck (grief bacon—added weight from anxiety-driven overeating) and fully endorse their adoption into common-parlance like Zivilcourage and Schadenfreude and have even explored the above related and relatable Finnish concept of pants-drunkenness, it hadn’t yet popped up as a way of sympathising with the corona crisis. What are some idiomatic expressions or regionalisms you’ve encountered used for the nonce to limn the Zeitgeist?

Thursday, 9 April 2020

skรคrtorsdagen

In Sweden and parts of Finland—though not an official holiday since 1772—Maundy Thursday, that day of the week already closely associated with witchcraft and magic, was according to old folkloric traditions the day that witches (pรฅskkรคrringar or pรฅskhรคxa, Easter hags which children costume themselves as and entreat parents and neighbours for eggs and treats rather than a bunny) fly off to the legendary island of Blรฅkulla (Blockula—in the ancient rendering and not to be confused with the very real island in the Kalmar strait) to dance with the Devil. Non-celebrants take part also with some frantic spring-cleaning and hiding their broomsticks to keep black magic at bay. The observation ceased being a public holiday in the late eighteenth century with the repeal of the death penalty for practising witchcraft.

maundy thursday

Called also Sheer, Great and Holy and Green (Grรผndonnerstag) this day initiates the Easter Triduum, the commemoration of the passion, crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus and is derived from a corruption of the Latin term mandatum for command—from the Vulgate of John 13:34, wherein the disciple relays that there is a new directive, namely, that we love one another as I have loved you (Mandatum novum do vobis ut diligatis invicem sicut dilexi vos) and whereupon Jesus demonstrates his humility and charity in washing the feet (pedelavium) of students to show there is no hierarchy in kindness. This courtesy ablution is not only a religious rite in many traditions but moreover a mark of hospitality in guest-host dynamics.

plaster of paris

Our faithful antiquarian and bibliophile, JF Ptak Science Books, is always uncovering interesting historical passages and ephemera and lately directs us to an 1834 invention by M. Richard Rettford to take casts mechanically by recording the impression of the object to be modelled by the indent on a matrix of tiny needles through a mesh. Though we all might be familiar with the pin art screens that are the domain of executive toys, back in the nineteenth century proposing such a solution as this physiognotype for non-intrusive three-dimensional sampling and replication was a really innovative idea.

gait, gallop and canter

Born on this day in 1830 (†1904) in Kingston upon Thames, Eadweard Muybridge (previously), adopting the archaic Anglo-Saxon spelling of his name and immigrating to New York and then San Francisco originally as a bookseller, would eventually become a pioneer in photography and projection, his studies in kinetics contributing to the development of motion pictures.
Aside from documenting Yosemite, the Alaskan territory and the American West, apprenticeships at dude ranches and at some of the country’s great zoological gardens and menageries furthered his interest in biomechanics and animal locomotion, leading to his stroboscopic inventions (the zoรถpraxiscope and the phenakistoscope) in the early 1880s that displayed fluid movements on a rotating disk.