The Love Poems of Rumi, edited by Deepak Chopra First published 1273
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Peter Solarz

Kaledo Art

if i look back, i am lost
No title available
dirt enthusiast
noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap
Today's Document
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

shark vs the universe
Three Goblin Art
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
NASA

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

JVL

izzy's playlists!
Acquired Stardust

oozey mess
RMH
seen from Brazil
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@lechatdort
The Love Poems of Rumi, edited by Deepak Chopra First published 1273
So refreshing 🥹💚 - Author: xSugarTale
Spring from The House of Four Seasons by Roger Duvoisin
Japanese Aspen and a truly beautiful fountain that may also be a bird's bath. A charming garden.
Friedrich Nietzsche - The Birth of Tragedy Part 2
In The Birth of Tragedy, Nietzsche creates a dichotomy* between two positions in cultural expressions. The Apollonian - based on the Greek god Apollon, which for Nietzsche represents order and structure built on logic and reason. On the other hand, we have Dionysus, the expression of chaos and emotions. This is the language of myth and intuition.
The Apollonian inspiration is rational and, in many ways, closely linked to the strong scientific dominance throughout Nietzsche's lifetime. The mid to late 1800s saw a massive progress in scientific development, but with that came a wide variety of pseudoscience. Many of these new inventions and ideas would come to shape the next century, and often not for the better.
In contrast, we have human expression through mythmaking and storytelling. These are expressions of the human condition through narratives and metaphors. This is the language of symbols and archetypes. Here Nietzsche draws on the inspiration of Schopenhauer and Wagner, who saw the only true human expression in music, an idea Nietzsche later breaks with
*Dicothotomy means creating two opposing positions. Night and day are dichotomous from one another. You will often find people who criticise someone for creating a “false dichotomy”, thus doing what's often referred to as binary thinking.
Øst
Friedrich Nietzsche - The Birth of Tragedy Part 4
So how did we end up in the grasp of the Apollian logos? According to Nietzsche, there is one philosopher to blame for our descent into logos, Socrates. By most modern philosophers, Socrates is seen as the beginning of Western philosophy, and it's common to trace ideals from the Enlightenment all the way back to him. The result is that Nietzsche, in some ways, is not just criticising Socratic philosophy itself, but all of Western philosophical tradition. In later books, we will see some of the fruits of this seed of how deep Nietzsche's dislike for modern Europe goes. In many ways, this will be the start of Nietzsche's authorship, and he will continue to develop these ideas further in later books. He will break with the dialectical form and not use Apollon and Dionysus as images of his philosophical project. Still, at the end of his life, Nietzsche would sign letters as Dionysus, showing us where he placed himself in this dialectic conflict.
Have we lost something when we build our society on reason and logic alone? Can Nietzsche be correct in pointing to Socrates as the downfall of the Greek expression of the human condition? We can see this idea in psychology. Last week, I showed how Freud was deeply inspired by Nietzsche, thus also the field of Psychology. As we will explore further in his books, Nietzsche doesn't believe that we are one will within us, but a series of conflicting ideas and motivations. And perhaps we give too much power to our reason? Øst
Oxford
Library Interior - Sarah Spencer
British , b. 1965 -
Oil on panel , 16 x 12 in.
“Whenever you are creating beauty around you, you are restoring your own soul.” ― Alice Walker
Japanese movie program for Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1992), dir. David Lynch.
Authors set out to correct under-representation of female sounds – and found some surprising revelations
When we hear the beautiful call of a bird from a high bough, we’re told it’s likely to be a male – singing for territory, or belting out tunes to woo a female. But as the annual dawn chorus reaches a crescendo this spring, a new guidebook is urging us to think again – and turn our ears to the hidden world of female birdsong. The songs, sounds and sights of female birds have historically been overlooked in field guides and sound archives. In 2016, just 0.01% of the bird sounds in the global Xeno-Canto sound library were labelled female. Another sound archive was just 0.03% female, according to a 2018 study. But the new book – The Sound Approach to Birding 2 – aims to correct this under-representation and properly explain female birdsong. Female birds sing for territorial displays, to ward off other females and to attract extra males, according to Lucy McRobert, a writer and researcher who studied the issue for the guidebook. The book comes with its own library of 300 sounds from 200 species, accessed via web or app. The clips are drawn from the larger online archive of Sound Approach, a birdsong project founded in 2000 with confirmed recordings of females for 41% of species found in the Western Palearctic, a biogeographical region encompassing Europe, north Africa and most of the Middle East...
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/apr/19/hidden-world-of-female-birdsong-book
It is that time again 🌸🌸🌸
Street of cherry trees, by Hiroshi Yoshida (1935)
Diane Itter, Triangles, ca. 1977, fiber embroidery, 8 1⁄4 × 8 1⁄4 in. (21.0 × 21.0 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Carole and Paul Garrison
thank you @lifesrichpageants for tagging me in the album cover color challenge activity thing! you have to find album covers of different colors without repeating any artists
red - the very best of enya by enya
orange - aerie by john denver
yellow - tracy chapman
green - the hurdy gurdy man by donovan
blue - an ancient muse by loreena mckennitt
purple - quantum flow by richard houghten
brown - deja vu by csny
black - grief in exile by mariee siou
white - graceland by paul simon
i accidentally did brown instead of pink so feel free to change up the colors!
i tag @vampiraptor @princessmo @neutralwinehotel @bell-swamp-fitzjames @mobanjaree @live-laugh-obsess :3
Late at night two boys wake up to the sight of a beetle playing a fiddle in their room. Peterchens Mondfahrt. Peter's trip to the moon. 1920. Illustrated by Hans Balluschek.
Internet Archive
Do frogs yearn?
They yearn for dew on mushroom caps; for butterflies with laboured flaps; for the ooze of mud between their toes; for nights of stars and firefly glows; for dappled light upon their logs; for rain that fills their cozy bogs, to make them happy little frogs.
text by @ markscherz, tumblr's own herpetologist.
Oh my goodness, how beautiful! A tiny frog be upon you for this lovely treat!