Ma3vis
Ma3vis t1_j6iiwhd wrote
Reply to TIL about Kwihnai Tosabitʉ or "White Eagle," a Medicine Man and messiah of the Comanche Native American tribe. Uniting all of the Comanche people and several other groups, he led them to an immediate defeat and was renamed Isatai'i "Wolf's Vulva." by marmorset
The process by which native americans endowed each other with new names, with the idea being that you were given a new name which informs a story relevant to the reason the name that was given is particularly interesting.
Ma3vis t1_j5k98hc wrote
Reply to comment by Bluestripedshirt in Turning problem sea algae into a replacement for plastic by ChrisOntario
Aren't they already doing similar things with mushrooms? (Sauce)
Ma3vis t1_j2l6qpl wrote
Reply to comment by DragonGarlicBreath in The nun and the monk who fell in love and married by Stanny491
I think it's cause Nuns are often depicted as "brides of Christ" married to either Jesus or the church (which I think is a popularized myth). Apparently it’s a metaphor meant to better understand their commitments to Chasity, which works for some people, but it’s not something that is literal or universally embraced. So to give that up is like you're divorcing Christ himself probably to some folks out there.
I understand people taking a vow of celibacy but I also feel like to devote yourself entirely to it is in rejection of the biblical message of Adam and Eve, God's message to be fruitful and multiply, and so on. That said, even for asexual people of faith there's always the option to adopt and be stewards that way, so I see no outright harm in such. Just that certain institutions are unfortunately misleading their own clergy.
Ma3vis t1_j1zwbjq wrote
Reply to comment by OnlyFlannyFlanFlans in Life is a game we play without ever knowing the rules: Camus, absurdist fiction, and the paradoxes of existence. by IAI_Admin
> Providing for basic needs and living a meaningful life are two different things.
You do not require basic needs to live a meaningful life?
Ma3vis t1_j1yx39p wrote
Reply to Life is a game we play without ever knowing the rules: Camus, absurdist fiction, and the paradoxes of existence. by IAI_Admin
Isn't that the whole point of survivalist/homesteaders, governments and religions -- figuring out those rules?
Ma3vis t1_j1ynjzw wrote
Reply to comment by ExtremePrivilege in TIL that on average women live five years longer than men, and that by age 85 around 67% of the population is female in the US. by Successful-Depth-235
> society treats us as disposable and we often go through life isolated and distrustful of institutions
Wonder if these things are all correlated in some way?
Ma3vis t1_j1ktgqg wrote
Reply to comment by dudinax in This is an excerpt from Cixin Liu's book "The Dark Forest", describing what happens to people when they lose all hope in Humanity by RobleViejo
> Tolkien expressed the idea of "Northern Courage", which is a bit chauvinist, but the idea is good: it's the courage to keep struggling even if you don't see any hope
Interesting insight. Is this a reference to Aragon and company suicidally charging the black gates of Mordor while not having clear knowledge but faith that frodo and sam will achieve their mission?
Ma3vis t1_j1cjil1 wrote
Reply to comment by RecycledMatrix in TikTok confirms employees improperly accessed journalists' user data in hunt for leaks by j1ggy
> We're long overdue for a global GDPR framework
I mean how can you protect citizens rights to constitutional privacy without one? All these foreign spy agencies, government contractors and private corporations swaying elections and collecting meta data is a threat to democracy, or a moral hazard at the very least
Ma3vis t1_j037giw wrote
Reply to Existence is infinitely richer than our descriptions of it. So, rather than cling to reductive explanations that only ‘close’ life’s possibilities, we should ‘open’ reality by seeing ourselves as perpetual students | Interview with Black Existentialist Lewis Gordon by philosophybreak
Interesting
Ma3vis t1_izw1zav wrote
Reply to comment by kozmonyet in TIL Rap can be Traced Back to the 1940s, to a Gospel Group Called The Jubalaires by OdinDCat
Yeah, I remember a TIL that was basically about vikings having rap battles against one another. There was diss track levels of poetry in Rome and other historical societies as well
Personally tho I theorize that all edm music can be traced back to James Brown, due to his use of rhythm and loops
Ma3vis t1_iz22rm4 wrote
Reply to comment by SixIsNotANumber in Homelessness charity staff start strike, after low pay risks homelessness by db_2_k
Might as well refer to as corporate feudalism at that point. I guess this is what the late stage of capitalism is now?
Ma3vis t1_iycuxiv wrote
Reply to As a non-American, reading On The Road, felt like a snapshot of postwar youthful Boomer mentality. by [deleted]
Yeah idk this book bothered the fuck outta me. I was told it was one of those must read great American novels then I read it and wondered what was so great about it?
I'd say it's almost like reading Great Gatsby or catcher in the rye but somehow worse than both combined. I just couldn't empathize with the main character at all in this one.
There's better jack kerouac novels out there too, who to me was sorta the boomer wannabe version of Hemingway
Ma3vis t1_iycu6za wrote
Reply to Former federal agent sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for accepting bribes to help figure associated with organized crime by WhoIsJolyonWest
Just wait until you hear about the LDS Mormon church, it's practices, and all it's federal employees. Not to mention that it runs as a top-down authority organization so everyone takes orders from their leadership.
Take for example Mitt Romney's homeland security record In Massachusetts: domestic spying, wiretapping, the Utah 2002 Olympic bribery scandal, the Bain capitol scandal and so on.
Ma3vis t1_j7gupq4 wrote
Reply to comment by guitarist4hire in ‘Flow’, comparable to the Chinese concept of Wu Wei, dissolves our sense of self and transforms our experience of time. It’s an antidote to the modern world’s obsession with multitasking, but finding it depends on balancing the challenge of a task against our skill. by IAI_Admin
And how does "hyper-focus" and this concept of "flow" affect productivity?