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zuno

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Submissions

Radioactive Real Estate: Finding a Forever Home for Nuclear Waste

undark.org
2 points·by zuno·2 anni fa·0 comments

Are You a Time Optimist?

theguardian.com
3 points·by zuno·3 anni fa·0 comments

Anxious dogs, like anxious people, need help managing and reducing distress

undark.org
69 points·by zuno·3 anni fa·100 comments

comments

zuno
·10 mesi fa·discuss
Thank you! I reckon it is this one? https://www.amazon.com/-/hi/Dr-Josh-C-Simmons-ebook/dp/B0FN2...
zuno
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thank you for your comment. Interesting! Would this be of interest to you? "Dental Treatment for Low Back and Hip Pain in a Long-Distance Runner: A Case Report" at https://www.scirp.org/journal/paperinformation.aspx?paperid=...
zuno
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thank you for talking about your friend. As someone on the autism spectrum, I am worried about a future where most of the humans would become so used to ChatGPT-enhanced human responses, that they might find my broken approach of using language as being another bot response, or as coming from someone who happens to be an incompetent user of ChatGPT. I am not guessing which is worse, but to have your attempt at communicating being deemed suspicious does hurt.
zuno
·4 anni fa·discuss
"The origin of the saying of the dead, which emphasises the nothingness of earthly life, is attributed to Arabic poetry. Thus the Arab poet ʿAdī b. Zayd, as he rode past graves with the king of Hira (c. 580 CE), has the dead exclaim to the king:

"We were what you are; But the time will come, And it will come to you swiftly, when ye shall be what we are."

Like the dance of death and the triumph of death, the motif is emblematic of the medieval admonition memento mori. Simultaneous depiction of the topoi is common, for example in Francesco Traini's mid-fourteenth-century fresco Triumph of Death, which depicts the three living and the three dead. The legend was also integrated in the Dance of Death by Kientzheim.

A fresco from the Isefjord workshop in the church of Tuse (Denmark) from the 15th century shows three mounted kings on the hunt, who are met by three dead kings from whom maggots and worms escape. Each of them is assigned a banner. On the first dead man's banner is written: "Vos qui transitis n(os)t(r)i me(m)ores rogo sitis" (You who are passing by, I beg you: Remember us), on the second: "Quod sumus hoc eritis" (What we are now, you shall become one day) and on the third: "Fuimus aliquando quod estis" (We were once what you are now). Above their heads one reads: "Heu qua(n)tus est noster dolor" (Oh, how great is our pain)."

https://old.reddit.com/r/latin/comments/n8dzuo/quod_sumus_ho...