Noah Kahan
𩵠avery cochrane š©µ
Game of Thrones Daily
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EXPECTATIONS

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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
art blog(derogatory)
Jules of Nature

JVL
I'd rather be in outer space šø
Monterey Bay Aquarium

shark vs the universe

Kiana Khansmith

Andulka
noise dept.
Stranger Things
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Claire Keane
h
seen from Türkiye

seen from Uruguay
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seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
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@morty104
BrrrrrBrrrr
found this cool branch in the woods. i want to mount it but i need to make sure it's clean before i nail it anywhere.
"That log had a child"
Sounds a bit like:
A Face in the Clouds of Jupiter from Juno
Credits: NASA, JPL-Caltech, SwRI, MSSS, Jason, Major
"Hey you! Up for some hydrogen or helium"?
A chair made of a million ants
Pierre Bonnard; Le Chat blanc; 1894
huile sur carton
H. 51,9 ; L. 33,5 cm.
Achat, 1982
GrandPalaisRmn (musée d'Orsay) / Franck Raux
rb this with ur opinion on this shade of pink:
This is magenta, and not pink. Unlike pink, magenta doesnāt actually exist. Our brain just invents magenta to serve as what it considers a logical bridge between red and violet, which each exist at opposite ends of a linear spectrum.
TL;DR this color is fake (and also I hate it)
Wait til you learn about Stygean Blue
Your brain is a badly-designed hot mess of bootstrapped chemistry that will tell you that all kinds of shit is happening that has no correlation to physical reality, includingĀ time travel. It just makes things up. Your brain is guessing about whatās happening when your eyes saccade, whatās happening in your blind spot, and what the majority of the visible light spectrum looks like, and you donāt know itās happening because it doesnāt aid your survival to become aware that a lot of what you see is fake.
The human eye only has three types of color sensitive cones, which detect red, blue, and green light. Your brain is making up every other color you perceive.
Letās have a little fun with that thought. This is the visible spectrum of light.
You will of course note that yellow is on the chart. Yellow has a discreet wavelength, and is therefore a distinct physical color. But we canāt see it.
āSorry, what the fuck?ā
What we call yellow is just what our brain shrugs and spits out when our red and green cones are equally stimulated. We have lightĀ receptors that can pick up on the physical spectrum of light we call yellow: thatās why yellow things donāt just look like moving black blocks to us. But your brain has no fucking idea what the color yellow looks like.Ā
Some animals have eyes that canĀ perceive the color yellow! Goldfish have a yellow cone in their eyes. If they could talk, they could tell us what yellow looks like. But we wouldnāt be able to understand it.
What your brain actually sees of the color spectrum:
We can measure the wavelength of light, so we know that when we seeĀ āyellow,ā we are seeing light in that 550-ish nanometers range. But we donāt have a cone in our eyes that can pick that up. Your brain just has a very consistentĀ guess about what color that wavelength of light could be. We decided to name that guessĀ āyellow.ā We canāt imagine what yellow really looks like any more than a dog can imagine the color red.
Hereās the funny thing: your brain is never perceiving just oneĀ photon of light at a time. Something likeĀ 2*10āø photons per secondĀ are hitting your retina under normal conditions.Ā Your brain doesnāt individually process all of them. So it averages them out. It grabs a bunch of photons all coming from the same direction, with the same pattern, and goes,Ā āyeah, that cup is blue, fuck it, next.ā
Thatās how colors blend in our eyes. So sure, if a photon of light with a wavelength of 550 nanometers bounces into our eyes, we see what we callĀ āyellow.ā But if we see two photons at the same time, coming from the same object, one of which is 500 nms and the other of which is 600 nms, your brain will average them out and you will still see yellow even though none of the light you just saw was 550 nms.
So how does magenta factor into this?
Well, as weāve just established, when your brain sees light from two different slices of the visible light spectrum, it will try to just average them together. Green plus red is yellow, fuck it. If itās more red than green, weāll call thatĀ āorange.ā Literally who gives a shit, weāre trying to forage over here. There are bears out here and itās so scary.
What happens if you take the average of blue and red light, which we perceive to be magenta? Whatās the centerpoint of that line?
Fucking green.
Hey, thatās not gonna work?Ā We live on a planet where EVERYTHING IS GREEN. If something is NOT green, that means itās either food, or a potential source of danger, and either way your brain wants you to know about it.
So your brain goes, WHOOPS. Okay - this is fine. We already made up yellow, orange, cyan, and violet. Weāll just make up another color. Something that looks really, really different from green.Ā
And so it made up magenta.
So, physics-wise, is magentaĀ āreal?ā
No; thereās no single wavelength of light that corresponds to magenta. But youāre rarely seeing only a single wavelength of light anyway. And even when you are, every color other than RGB is a dart thrown on the wall by your meat computer. This is the CIE Chromaticity Diagram:
Explaining this thing is a little more than I want to take on on a Saturday morning, but Iāve included a link above that goes into it a little more. The point is that only the colors that actually touch theĀ āoutlineā of the shape actually correspond to a specific wavelength of light. All of the other colors are blends of multiple wavelengths. So magenta isnāt special.
Given that color is just a fun trick your brain is playing on you to help you find food and avoid danger, is magenta real?
Yeah, absolutely. Or at least, itās just as real as most of what we see. Itās what we see when we mix up blue and red. It would be disastrous from a survival standpoint to perceive that color as green, so we donāt. Because itās not green. Light thatās green has a wavelength of around 510 nm. Stuff thatās magenta bounces back light that is both ~400 and ~700. Your brain knows the difference. So it fills in the gap for you, with the best guess it has, same as it does with your blind spot.
The perception of color exists within your brain, and your brain says you see magenta. So you see magenta.
So I googled Stygian Blue andā¦
Yall.
FORBIDDEN.
HOW TO SEE THE FORBIDDEN COLOURS
Hyperbolic Orange is the color my soul is
Dark tumblr show me the forbidden colors
We are back on this again.
My brain hurts.
i fucking love the human brain, itās like if bethesda made an animal
u/AdonisMorisette
Looks like he's having a quest or something interesting to sell..
"Listen here you little shit - your food is now mine. You'll do as i say. Now let's look a little cute and stop looking like I'm gonna kill you. Purr purr..."
iām speechless
This is how the system of white supremacy Ā operates. The media is used 2 create stereotypes like blk on blk crime.They need black men to fill jail cells for the Prison Indstrial complex
You know what? Iām tired of this. I do not know what exactly they are waiting for. I mean our government comes up with āreasonsā to invade other countries, such as Syria, like their government is allegedly violating human rights or something like that. but⦠I mean for other countries, they do not even have to go deep to bomb the fuck out of this place, they can just look at our media. And this has been happening to people of color since the media has existed.
Iāll never forget this šš¾
Did a research project on this in undergrad and the results are extremely alarming because itās not just in imagery, itās in language used even in the law making process and within our own communities in a completely different way than expected.
This āšæ
I highly recommend watching this testimony from Aliya Rahman, the disabled woman who was dragged out of her car and kidnapped by ICE on her way to a doctor appointment in Minneapolis a few weeks ago.
Truly my worst nightmare.
Transcript of Aliya Rahman's speech:
Thank you members, for taking the time to be here today, and thank you staff for making this happen.
My name is Aliya Rahman, and I am a resident of South Minneapolis. I am a Bangladeshi American born in Northern Wisconsin. And Iām a disabled person with autism and a traumatic brain injury.
Not all autistic brains do this, but mine fixates on sounds, numbers, and patterns. And while what the world saw happen to me exactly three weeks ago today on video was a terrible violation it is still nothing compared to the horrific practices I saw inside the Whipple center.
So I am here today with a duty to the people who have not had the privilege of coming home, and I offer this data because these practices must end now.
On January 13th on the way to my 39th appointment at Hennepin Countyās traumatic brain injury center, I encountered a traffic jam caused by ICE vehicles and no signs indicating how to get around it. I had not wanted to pull in to a blocked, chaotic intersection, but verbally agreed to do so and rolled down my window after an agent yelled, āMove! I will break your f-ing window!ā
His first instruction.
Agents on all sides of my vehicle yelled conflicting threats and instructions that I could not process while watching for pedestrians.
Then, the glass of the passenger side window flew across my face.
I yelled, āIām disabled!ā at the hands grabbing at me and an agent said, āToo late.ā
I felt immersed in a pattern, and I thought of Jenoah Donald, an autistic black man killed by the police during a traffic stop in 2021.
I remembered mister Silverio Villegas GonzƔlez, who was killed by ICE in his vehicle last year.
An agent pulled a large combat knife in front of my face, which I thought was for cutting me, and later learned was used to cut off my seat belt. Shooting pain went through my head, neck, and wrists when I hit the ground face first and people leaned on my back.
I felt the pattern, and I thought of mister George Floyd, who was killed four blocks away.
I was carried face down through the street by my cuffed arms and legs while yelling that I had a brain injury and was disabled. I now cannot lift my arms normally.
I was never asked for ID.
Never told I was under arrest.
Never read my rights.
And never charged with a crime.
Approaching the Whipple center, I saw black and brown bodies shackled together, chained together, being marched by yelling agents outdoors. I continued to hear the word ābodiesā, because that is how agents referred to us:
āWeāre bringing in a body.ā
āTheyāre bringing in bodies 7, 8 at a time, where do I put āem?ā
āWe canāt use that room, thereās already a body in there.ā
You have no reason to believe you will make it out alive if youāre already being called a body.
Agents repeatedly had to stop and ask how to do tasks. I received no medical screening, phone call, or access to a lawyer. I was denied a communication navigator when my speech began to slur. Agents laughed as I tried to immobilize my own neck. I asked for my cane and was told no, pulled up by my arms and prodded forward in leg irons by agents laughing and saying, āWalk! You can do it, walk.ā
Agents did not know if the facility had a wheelchair.
When I was finally placed in one to be taken to interrogation an agent taunted, āYou were driving, right? So your legs do work.ā
I pleaded for emergency medical care for over an hour after my vision had become blurry, my heart rate went through the roof, and the pain in my neck and head became unbearable.
It was denied.
When I became unable to speak my cellmate pleaded for me.
The last sounds I remember before I blacked out on the cell floor were my cellmate banging on the door, pleading for a medic, and a voice outside saying, āWe donāt wanna step on ICEās toes.ā
When I opened my eyes at Hennepin Countyās emergency room, I learned I was brought there to be treated for assault.
The impacts of DHS detention on my physical, mental and financial well-being and safety have been very severe, but I do not deserve more humane treatment than anyone else, US citizen or not. And I am here today with a strong spirit and a duty to the many people who havenāt had the privilege to tell their stories or see their loved ones come home. I am extremely distressed by the pattern that violence from law enforcement has been happening to black and indigenous communities for centuries, and to DHS survivors for over 20 years.
We call ourselves a civilized nation, but we lack rules and accountability around what a person claiming to be law enforcement is permitted to do to another human being.
I am not afraid, and Iām not afraid to keep working on this problem even after ICE is gone. Thank you for your time.