Memorias de un primate: la vida de un neurólogo en África.
http://darwinstainaker.com/blog/14165235/baboons
occasionally subtle
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

blake kathryn
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
One Nice Bug Per Day
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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i don't do bad sauce passes

Kaledo Art

ellievsbear
Show & Tell
d e v o n
will byers stan first human second

Love Begins
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h
Jules of Nature

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@darwinstainaker
Memorias de un primate: la vida de un neurólogo en África.
http://darwinstainaker.com/blog/14165235/baboons
Homosexuality is natural.
Some claim that Evolution is just a theory, as if it were merely an opinion.
I have discovered further supporting evidence for my Tyson Theories of General and Special Relative Awesomeness, they are basically fact at this point.
EVERYBODY WHO IS HONEST IS INTERESTING
Uncle Darwin
Your writing can only be as good as the best books you’ve read. … It’s true, too, that your writing can only be as good as the best readings you’ve given of the best books. … Better to read one good book well than a hundred poorly. Aspire to be a world class reader.
Writing tips from Pulitzer-Prize-winning novelist Paul Harding, who echoes Henry Miller on the art of reading and seconds Jennifer Egan’s assertion that "reading is the nourishment that lets you do interesting work."
To optimize that, learn how to read like a writer, then see the greatest books of all time as voted by 125 top contemporary authors.
(via explore-blog)
Happy 100th birthday, Albert Camus! Complement this lovely poster of his best-known tenets by illustrator Marcela Restrepo with the story of Camus’s unlikely and heartening WWII friendship with pioneering biologist Jacques Monod and Camus on happiness, unhappiness, and our self-imposed prisons.
1. Linguistic Intelligence: the capacity to use language to express what’s on your mind and to understand other people. Any kind of writer, orator, speaker, lawyer, or other person for whom language is an important stock in trade has great linguistic intelligence. 2. Logical/Mathematical Intelligence: the capacity to understand the underlying principles of some kind of causal system, the way a scientist or a logician does; or to manipulate numbers, quantities, and operations, the way a mathematician does. 3. Musical Rhythmic Intelligence: the capacity to think in music; to be able to hear patterns, recognize them, and perhaps manipulate them. People who have strong musical intelligence don’t just remember music easily, they can’t get it out of their minds, it’s so omnipresent. 4. Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence: the capacity to use your whole body or parts of your body (your hands, your fingers, your arms) to solve a problem, make something, or put on some kind of production. The most evident examples are people in athletics or the performing arts, particularly dancing or acting. 5. Spatial Intelligence: the ability to represent the spatial world internally in your mind — the way a sailor or airplane pilot navigates the large spatial world, or the way a chess player or sculptor represents a more circumscribed spatial world. Spatial intelligence can be used in the arts or in the sciences. 6. Naturalist Intelligence: the ability to discriminate among living things (plants, animals) and sensitivity to other features of the natural world (clouds, rock configurations). This ability was clearly of value in our evolutionary past as hunters, gatherers, and farmers; it continues to be central in such roles as botanist or chef. 7. Intrapersonal Intelligence: having an understanding of yourself; knowing who you are, what you can do, what you want to do, how you react to things, which things to avoid, and which things to gravitate toward. We are drawn to people who have a good understanding of themselves. They tend to know what they can and can’t do, and to know where to go if they need help. 8. Interpersonal Intelligence: the ability to understand other people. It’s an ability we all need, but is especially important for teachers, clinicians, salespersons, or politicians — anybody who deals with other people. 9. Existential Intelligence: the ability and proclivity to pose (and ponder) questions about life, death, and ultimate realities.
Howard Gardner's seminal Theory of Multiple Intelligences, originally published in 1983, which revolutionized psychology and education by offering a more dimensional conception of intelligence than the narrow measures traditional standardized tests had long applied. (via explore-blog)
A plethora of conflicting and competing religious fables and myths, is what you get…when there is no evidence for god…
Exactly. The plethora of violently conflicting and convoluted ideas about gods is exactly what you’d expect in a world where god is just an unverifiable figment of people’s imaginations.
via pbsdigitalstudios:
laughingsquid:
Bohemian Gravity, An A Capella Science Parody of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’
Brilliant. Although now I’m waiting for the “volcano version” where “MAMAAAAA” becomes “LAVAAAAAA. OOooooOOOooo!”
Quantum Queen! Brilliant way to start the day.
When you consider that Brian May is an actual astrophysicist and Freddie is named for the closest planet to the sun, this just gets better.
Bohemian Gravity
keep good company. don’t hang out with negative, bitchy, judgemental assholes (or…don’t hang out with them too much. sometimes you gotta, especailly if they’re family). don’t do too many drugs or drink too much. (do shit, but everything in moderation.) floss hydrate unplug. we’re all too fucking plugged in, including me. put your phone in a drawer the next time you’re hanging out with someone. it feels amazing. yoga, mediation, or any kind of mindfulness practice is gold. it keeps me sane, at least. i don’t think i’d be here, where i am, without those things. i’ve been doing this one lately and finding it incredibly handy…occasionally look around, or wake up, and ask: “how can i be helpful” instead of “what do i want”. it re-focuses you. don’t take shit too seriously. everything changes. remember every so often that you’re going to die. sounds weird, but it helps. lastly…. don’t watch stupid television, and especially stay away from advertising. it rots your time and your brain and your soul.
The inimitable Amanda Palmer shares her advice on life in answering a college freshman’s question about how to love oneself physically and mentally – fantastic addition to this archive of essential advice on life.
David Foster Wallace would vigorously agree with her last point.
Also see Palmer on the art of asking without shame and on the terrifying joy of sharing your creativity online.
(via explore-blog)
Baby deer.
Marie Curie, además de recibir dos premios Nobel, también fue una excelente mamá: su hija también ganó un Nobel. ¿Sabías que la luz se puede detener? Lene Hau, profesora de Harvard lo hizo. Mujeres en la Ciencia
For a richer, fuller life, READ
(↬@brainpicker)
Who said textbook covers couldn’t be artistically ambitious? Vibrant vintage-inspired designs for science texts by Dover Publications.
(ᔥ It’s Okay To Be Smart)
I actually own the book on the upper left corner.
Daltonismo, la relación entre jardines Renacentistas con el motor de combustión y, las Dos Culturas.
[ESPANGLISH]
Anything else you’re interested in is not going to happen if you can’t breathe the air and drink the water. Don’t sit this one out. Do something. You are by accident of fate alive at an absolutely critical moment in the history of our planet.
Carl Sagan
Carpe that diem, folks. You know how on the subway, they say “If you see something, say something”?
Well, if you see something about the planet that you’d like to change, do something. You’ve been given the gift of being right here, right now, so why not make the most of it?
(via we-are-star-stuff)