maximosis:

Perfect Balance

maximosis:

Perfect Balance

jtotheizzoe:

Please Reload Webpage In 31.69 Years To See Results
Big universes. Big numbers. How do we make sense of billions? Our brains just aren’t wired to do it, although we’ve seen some pretty amazing ways that we measure stuff on those largest scales.
A weatherman in Belgium has set up the Billion Second Clock. It will count up to 1,000,000,000 in seconds. Which will take 31.69 years. That’s a big number.
You can send a message to the future, too! I said “I hope you’re all being nice to each other. Have we put a guy on Mars yet?”
(↬ Let’s count to one billion seconds, unfortunate use of Comic Sans at the link)

jtotheizzoe:

Please Reload Webpage In 31.69 Years To See Results

Big universes. Big numbers. How do we make sense of billions? Our brains just aren’t wired to do it, although we’ve seen some pretty amazing ways that we measure stuff on those largest scales.

A weatherman in Belgium has set up the Billion Second Clock. It will count up to 1,000,000,000 in seconds. Which will take 31.69 years. That’s a big number.

You can send a message to the future, too! I said “I hope you’re all being nice to each other. Have we put a guy on Mars yet?

( Let’s count to one billion seconds, unfortunate use of Comic Sans at the link)

jtotheizzoe:

expose-the-light:

Is this a New Planet?

The answer to the title is NO. These images are from a project entitled “Devour” by Christopher Jonassen, which displays pictures of the bottom of worn-out frying pans. 

Looks like we’ve discovered a new egg-soplanet. Maybe these images come from Voyager II’s fry-by?  

jtotheizzoe:

kevinnuut:

Astronomical, Brah.
We all know the sun is licking his lips, waiting. The galaxy is the longest of socially awkward party settings. I think I could have improved on Venus, but after about 10 faces I gave up.

It’s true. If you’re into studying the impending doom of our solar system and universe (sickos), might I remind you to check out Wikipedia’s most interesting entry: The Timeline of the Far Future.

jtotheizzoe:

kevinnuut:

Astronomical, Brah.

We all know the sun is licking his lips, waiting. The galaxy is the longest of socially awkward party settings. I think I could have improved on Venus, but after about 10 faces I gave up.

It’s true. If you’re into studying the impending doom of our solar system and universe (sickos), might I remind you to check out Wikipedia’s most interesting entry: The Timeline of the Far Future.

(via suavena)

(Source: kqedscience, via jtotheizzoe)

(Source: 87true)

(via 87true)

fuckyouverymuch:

We rollerskate.

fuckyouverymuch:

We rollerskate.

(Source: expose-the-light, via suavena)

Sartre and the Anguish of Freedom

In the series of extracts from my almost-finished book on the  history of moral thought, I have reached Chapter 15, which looks at existentialism, and primarily the work of Søren Kierkegaard and Jean-Paul Sartre. This extract is from the section that explores Sartre’s concept of freedom and his relationship to Marxism.

Imagine, Kierkegaard wrote in his pseudonymously published The Concept of Anxiety, a man standing at the edge of a cliff. When he glances over the edge, he is overcome with dread, not just because he is filled with fear at the thought of falling, but also because he is seized by a terrifying impulse deliberately to leap. ‘He whose eye happens to look down into the yawning abyss becomes dizzy’, Kierkegaard gnomically observed. That dizziness ‘is just as much in his own eye as in the abyss.’ For if ‘he had not looked down’, he would not have felt that dread. What grips that man, Kierkegaard suggests, is dread of the possibilities open to him; what he experiences ‘is the dizziness of freedom’.

Sartre, too, sees what he calls ‘anguish’ as the condition of human freedom. Since nothing can determine our choice of life for us, neither can anything explain or justify what we are. There is no inherent meaning in the universe. Only we can create meaning. Albert Camus, the French-Algerian novelist and fellow existentialist, called this sense of groundlessness the ‘absurdity’ of life. There is, Camus observes in The Myth of Sisyphus, a chasm between ‘the human need [for meaning] and the unreasonable silence of the world’. Religion is a means of bridging that chasm, but a dishonest one. ‘I don’t know if the world has any meaning that transcends it’, he writes. ‘But I know that I do not know this meaning and that it is impossible for me just now to know it.’ Camus does not know that God does not exist. But he is determined to believe it, because that is the only way to make sense of being human. The only way to find meaning, the only way to bridge the chasm between the cold, silent world and the human need for moral warmth, is to create our own meaning, our own values. Sartre similarly sees the world as absurd in the sense that there is no meaning to be found beyond the meaning that humans create. The price of making meaning is anguish.

The recognition that humans have to bear responsibility for our lives and the values we create is the source of anguish.  A wholly authentic or truly human life, Sartre suggests, is only possible for those who recognize the inescapability of freedom and its responsibility and are happy to live with anguish. But humankind, Sartre agrees with TS Eliot, mostly ‘cannot bear too much reality’. They fear, they dread, they feel enchained by, the responsibility of freedom.

Humans try to avoid the anguish that comes with looking over the cliff edge by hiding the truth from themselves, by pretending that there is no cliff, that something or someone has erased that edge. There are, Sartre suggests, many ways in which people do this. The most important, and the idea for which Sartre is probably most celebrated, is that of ‘bad faith’. People often try to evade the terrifying realities of the human condition by ordering their lives according to some preordained social role, in essence by turning themselves into objects, in an effort to deny the burden of subjectivity.

(Source: sunrec, via fuckyeahexistentialism)

jtotheizzoe:

The weirdest mating habits of the animal kingdom, explained using humans
An amazing set of illustrations here that will have you thinking twice the next time you complain about the frustrations of your human love life.
Of course as strange as some these are, they’ve got nothing on penis fencing flatworms or spiders breaking off their penises inside females.
(via io9)

jtotheizzoe:

The weirdest mating habits of the animal kingdom, explained using humans

An amazing set of illustrations here that will have you thinking twice the next time you complain about the frustrations of your human love life.

Of course as strange as some these are, they’ve got nothing on penis fencing flatworms or spiders breaking off their penises inside females.

(via io9)

wendino:

she was gorgeous to me.

wendino:

she was gorgeous to me.

(Source: alexisbelon, via suavena)

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

(Source: tastefullyoffensive, via suavena)