(Posts tagged FASCINATING!)

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
inneskeeper
inneskeeper

Please stop conflating heresy blasphemy and apostasy. It's a victimless crime but it irritates me on principle

inneskeeper

BLASPHEMY is to speak against a religion's doctrine and practices. To say "The Holy Roman Catholic Church has been abandoned by God for taking indulgences" is blasphemous.

HERESY is to preach and act in contradiction with your religion's doctrine, dogma, and practices. "Pope Leo has no right to tell me as a priest to retract certain statements I have made about our religion" is heretical.

APOSTASY is to separate yourself from your religion and no longer follow it. "I'm going to create the most insufferable denomination on the planet in about 150 or so years" is what Martin Luther said, nailing his list of HR complaints to a door as he became an apostate.

fascinating!

Gosh, this is neat. Okay, so you can try to incorporate both male and female forms. Or you can try to use neither and invent new words. Or you can try to speak without gendering:

“-  Je vous présente madame Camille Beaudoin, une scientifique renommée qui se consacre à la recherche sur le cancer. (Camille est une femme.)

-  Je vous présente monsieur Camil Beaudoin, un scientifique renommé qui se consacre à la recherche sur le cancer. (Camil est un homme.)

-  Je vous présente Camille Beaudoin, scientifique de renom qui se consacre à la recherche sur le cancer. (Camille est une personne non binaire*.)”

non-binary non-binaire fascinating! language
brain-garden-blog
brain-garden:
“ Magic-mushroom drug lifts depression in first human trial A hallucinogenic drug derived from magic mushrooms could be useful in treating depression, the first safety study of this approach has concluded.
Researchers from Imperial...
brain-garden

Magic-mushroom drug lifts depression in first human trial

A hallucinogenic drug derived from magic mushrooms could be useful in treating depression, the first safety study of this approach has concluded.

Researchers from Imperial College London gave 12 people psilocybin, the active component in magic mushrooms. All had been clinically depressed for a significant amount of time — on average 17.8 years. None of the patients had responded to standard medications, such as selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs), or had electroconvulsive therapy.

One week after receiving an oral dose of psilocybin, all patients experienced a marked improvement in their symptoms. Three months on, five patients were in complete remission.

“That is pretty remarkable in the context of currently available treatments,” says Robin Carhart-Harris, a neuropsychopharmacologist at Imperial College London and first author of the latest study, which is published in The Lancet Psychiatry1.

The equivalent remission rate for SSRIs is around 20%.

The study’s authors are not suggesting that psilocybin should be a treatment of last resort for depressed patients. “Our conclusion is more sober than that — we are simply saying that this is doable,” says Carhart-Harris. “We can give psilocybin to depressed patients, they can tolerate it, and it is safe. This gives us an initial impression of the effectiveness of the treatment.”

Drug problems

Demonstrating the safety of psilocybin is no small task. Magic mushrooms are categorized as a Class A illegal drug in the United Kingdom — the most serious category, which also includes heroin and cocaine.

The ethics committee that granted approval for the trial was so concerned that trial volunteers could experience delayed onset psychotic symptoms that it requested a three-month follow-up on the subjects.

“This was unprecedented,” says neuropsychopharmacologist David Nutt at Imperial, who is senior author of the study.

It took 32 months between having the grant awarded and dosing the first patient, says Nutt. By comparison, it took six months “to get through the machinations” for his team’s previous studies using the equally illegal drugs LSD and MDMA, he says.

“Every interaction — applying for licenses, waiting for licenses, receiving the licenses, applying for contracts for drug manufacture, on and on — involved a delay of up to two months. It was enormously frustrating, and most of it was unnecessary,” says Nutt. “The study result isn’t the remarkable part — it’s the fact that we did it at all.”

Scientists at the Heffter Research Institute in Santa Fe, New Mexico, have been investigating how psilocybin could be used to alleviate depression and anxiety in people with terminal cancer, but this is the first study to look specifically at how psilocybin could be used to treat depression alone.

The World Health Organisation calls depression “the leading cause of disability worldwide”. But effective therapies are hard to find. Searching for new treatments, researchers have looked to potent and quirky alternatives such as ketamine and ayahuasca, both of which have shown promise in clinical trials.

“It’s worth noting that we have not developed any new treatments which are widely used since the 1970s for depression, despite the fact that this is the major public-health problem in the Western world and middle-income countries,” says Glyn Lewis, who studies psychiatric disorders at University College London.

Particularly interesting, he says, is the fact that psilocybin seems to take effect with a single dose, unlike some current medications for depression that must be taken daily.

“This study is simply asking: is this interesting enough to pursue further as a treatment for depression?” says Lewis. “My own judgement is that yes, it is.”

ahahhahaa! fascinating!

“Why do you hate the shape of breasts in plate armor so much?”

danbensen:

petermorwood:

Since people often ask “Alright, well this is fantasy!  Why can’t we have boob shapes in plate armor?!“  I decided to make a post about it.  My frustration has nothing to do with historical inaccuracy and I’m all for imagination and freedom– but I’d like to (very quickly) illustrate this for you:

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I purposely over-emphasized the shape of the two spheres in the armor so you can really think about this. 

Look at the shape of the blue cups and the green line, think about the form of that on some beautiful ornate plate armor.  A female warrior is charging into battle.  In the midst of this, she trips!  Or is pushed over, or takes a blow to the chest!  So long as the force is on the front of her torso it really doesn’t matter for the conclusion:

She feels a sharp pain in her chest and hears the cracking of bone!  Oh no, what’s gone wrong?  Well she doesn’t have time to think about that, because she is now dead.

Her sternum just fractured, take another look at that green line, that’s where all of the pressure from any front impact is going to go because of the shape of the two blue cups made for her breasts.  The rest of the armor slides around your body, but because of the two cups for breasts that are often made in fantasy female armors, the pressure point is directly on the sternum.  The breasts are not going to stop the force of you falling onto them, and because of that the metal is going to push in and bash you in the sternum.

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What does a fractured sternum do?  Why it goes right into your heart and lungs of course.

(that was the sound of all of my followers inhaling a sharp breath between closed teeth at once)

Here are three great solutions to the problem:

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GREAT EXAMPLE OF FANTASY TORSO ARMOR THAT IS FEMININE BUT FUNCTIONAL:

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It is usually possible to bind the breasts when fighting if they really are far too large to fit into regular looking armor (there’s padding anyway), but most women can actually fit into a similarly sized male counterpart’s armor quite easily.  Even if that’s the case, the armor can be made to have a curve to it without putting all of the pressure in one area, which was actually a style of armor for quite some time as shown here:

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And don’t even get me started on the dreaded “Cleavage Window”

The “Cleavage Window” defeats the purpose of having any armor on your torso because it means you’re just going to be leaving open the vital organs the rest of the armor is trying to protect.

If people are going to protect themselves and not have much torso protection, invest in some blocking lessons, because the best defense is to not get hit at all.  There are also advantages to not having plate armor, and plate armor was often really expensive anyway.

– Edit –

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supaslim replied to your post: “Why do you hate the shape of breasts in plate armor so much?”

I’d also like to add that boob bulges direct blows straight to the sternum as well, rather than making them glance to either side. Good post.

but how else can you sexualize the women if you don’t give them armored boob pods!!!!

Also, breastplates are shaped to redirect the tip of a sword or spear to the side. Boobplates would redirect the weapon right into the middle of the woman’s chest.

@petermorwood

This topic pops up (or the subjects of the topic pop out) every now and again. Something to remember is that it’s easier for an illustrator on a deadline (check comics costumes) to start with a basic nude then add enough “not-naked-honestly” colours and patterns to make it fit for print.

That’s (IMO) the technical reason for boob-plates, chainmail bikinis and all the rest, but then come the excuses and justifications about “lightness”, “mobility” and “distraction”. I’ve said before that Red Sonja could strip to the buff and any opponent who knew her reputation would still pay more attention to her sword that all the flesh on show. Naked T&A aren’t as dangerous as naked steel.

And why is it always boob-plates? Why not bum-plates? There’s actual historical precedent for those…

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Here’s another commentary on boob-plates; here’s yet another; and here’s a rebuttal to that one from someone who knows rather less than he thinks he does. Some of his original post made sense, but his reply to a comment destroyed his credibility in 17 words:

And yes a mace, morning star or hammer would cause some damage but it wont kill you”.

Facepalm. Headdesk. Of course they bloody well would! Why else were they carried in battle? As flyswatters or back-scratchers?

They’d do it without going through the armour, too. They’d crush and dent the plate, they’d ruin the joint articulation and the wearer’s mobility, they’d transmit impact shock into tissue and organs, bones and joints…

Look up “blunt force trauma”, “concussion”, “coup-contrecoup injury”, “internal haemorrhage”, “depressed skull fracture” and indeed any number of other fractures, and all the many other ways in which apparently-well-protected human beings can come to harm. If that can be the result of accident, think about deliberate assault with a weapon designed to negate the protection and wielded by someone trained to use it to best effect.

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A man in full plate harness getting seriously done over by a percussion weapon, like the mace, morning-star or hammer dismissed so lightly, would suffer injuries similar to a car crash. But in this crash, the “other car” would be taking deliberate aim at the places where impact would do most harm, and that full plate harness would be proper armour meant for battlefield use to avert injury if possible, not some Vegas showgirl “look at the boobies” nonsense. It might help.

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Or it might not.

One well-placed blow of his mace, hammer, whatever, against the back of your gauntlet hasn’t damaged the steel, but the impact shock though the metacarpal bones has made you drop your sword. It hurts like hell and distracts you enough that you don’t avoid the next one, delivered low against your knee. Again the armour holds, but its joint and that of the leg within snap sideways in a direction it was never meant to go. Cartilage rips, your kneecap pops loose, ligaments tear free of bone, the leg buckles and you crash to the ground. You wrench up your visor to yell “Quarter!”, but his next blow is already on its way as you sprawl. It starts high above his head and ends against your helmet. The helmet’s as well made as everything else you’re wearing, it doesn’t shatter or split, but its metal crushes so much that the dent caves in your skull. If you’re lucky, if you’re unaware of what’s about to happen, the lights will just go out. Otherwise the last thing you ever see, coming down hard and fast, is one of these…

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…wont kill you.” Yeah, right.

Deeep breath. Okay. Better.

Here’s real boob-plate armour…

Keep reading

injury death gore FASCINATING!

Not only were they generally unflattering (unless you were Denise Crosby) and tended to ride up in people’s areas, they stank to Warp Factor Nine. According to costume designer Bob Blackman in this archived interview with the BBC unearthed by Fast Company Design:

“Spandex retains odor, so there is a certain part where if you’re wearing them for a long period of time, you can’t really clean all the smell out, and it becomes a little bit annoying. And it also retains the odor of the dry cleaning fluid. It is, on a day-to-day basis, unpleasant.”

This article is delightful, and the comments are fascinating. Did you know Bashir’s uniform was padded to give him muscles? Are you even remotely surprised?

tng star trek costuming fascinating!
propheticfire
leaveharmony

Yep, not even close to being tired of the subject. ^_^

Those clothes: who designed them? Did the Founders? Are they replicated or tailored? The patterns and colours are all disparate within the same outfit…random choices or deliberate, signifying something? Why does Borath wear…

leaveharmony

It’s possible that while having no real interest in sensual matters, they’re still capable of using sensuality to manipulate? Or at least attempting to…honestly my take when I saw Kilana was “Oh god, they’re trying to throw Sisko off with a pretty girl.” She was playing innocent deliberately, so it’s not a stretch to think she’d tarted up a bit in case that would help as well? It was practically a giggling barbie act, at least at first. Kilana doesn’t dress like Eris or Luaran, she has the longer hair…maybe she was from like, the mata-hari division?

Anyway if they switch up the genetics and abilities of individual Vorta for specific tasks it’s not unrealistic to assume that includes cosmetic appearances as well.

It’s a big empire, maybe the tailoring itself is done by a third party? And the Vorta just put in orders from swatches of cloth or something. Though Weyoun’s gotta be some kind of masochist if he picked out his own trousers, god they look like the most uncomfortable fabric…

All I can tell you for sure is it’s a bitch to recreate his clothes in doll form lol


One thing I did always wonder was how typical Keevan’s behaviour was, though. Not so much in totally disregarding the lives of his men, that’s obviously completely normal for Vorta (again, Keevan’s actions in Rocks & Shoals are a whooole other thing). But in that he seemed to be thinking more along the lines of “To hell with that, I’m going to live through this” than he was “I’ll die before I compromise the safety of Dominion secrets.”
He seemed more concerned with saving his own ass than serving the Founders, which is very interesting when we’re talking about someone who’s had the same conditioning as say, Weyoun 6 and Weyoun 8 (both of whom immediately put themselves in harms way to shield a Founder). We have…*thinks* Two? Examples of…no three, examples of deviation on part of the Jem’Hadar; Goran’Agar and his men, the “rebels” who attempt to repair the Iconian gateway, and Omet’iklan when he murders Weyoun 4 (tho this is kind of arguable b/c he’s not exactly rebelling against the Founders themselves). But Keevan’s the only Vorta we see who just genuinely seems to not give a fuck about the Dominion as a whole or the Founders as his gods…

propheticfire

One last quick thought before I go to bed (because it’s laughably early in the morning already): Is Keevan a clone? Maybe he’s trying his darnedest to live because this is Keevan 1, and he doesn’t really trust that he’ll wake up again. Maybe he doesn’t care as much about the Founders because each incarnation of a clone produces increased devotion, and since he’s had no incarnations other than the first his self-preservation instinct is stronger than his protect-the-Dominion-for-the-gods-whom-I-worship instinct?

leaveharmony

Ooh good thought. Gooood thought. Adding it to my Keevan File. Lol


One occured to me late too - maybe all of the bright colours and clashing patterns and distinct colours are to help a weak-eyed species indentify and recognise other Vorta? “Oh, a berry-and-blue blur, hi Kilana!” It would sure help me with my glasses off, anyway.
propheticfire

It’s possible, but then why is Borath wearing Weyoun’s clothes? Maybe he’s hoping he’ll get mistaken for Weyoun by other Vorta, at least until they get a proper look at him? Because Weyoun is more important? Because Borath is a fanboy? Lol, I can only imagine what a mess that would be. I have a hard time believing that their eyesight is that bad, though. They can’t seem to be able to see distance all that well, but I’m sure from a normal (read: across the room or something) distance their vision is just fine. KaiWeyoun’s idea about the Vorta being attracted to each other’s voices because of their weak eyes is pretty sweet, though.

I found this hilarious website about Vorta fashions while I was browsing through the depths of the internet last night. Gave me a chuckle, anyway. I hope you enjoy it.

Lol, the Mata Hari division… I like it. I’ve been thinking, are the clones sterile? Is fertility something the Founders tweak when they choose a Vorta for cloning? The clones don’t seem to be interested in intimacy/sensuality/sexuality, as you pointed out earlier, but if there are Vorta who breed back on Kurill then clearly there are some for whom that is a part of life. So, do the Founders dial down/eradicate the sex drive of those they deal with directly? What are courtship rituals like back on Kurill? What is the family structure like? Are different genders viewed as equal, or is their society a matriarchal/patriarchal one?

Have the Founders also built a growth acceleration sequence into the clones’ genetic code? Because it seems pretty instantaneous that a new clone can take the place of its predecessor. Or does the cloning facility just have a bunch of vats/stasis chambers/what have you of Weyouns lying around waiting to be activated?

What must it be like for the clones to interact with the natural Vorta? Do they? Or do the Founders whisk them away from Kurill once it’s decided that they’re slated for cloning? What would happen if Weyoun 8 had survived and gone back to Kurill and run into his mother? He probably wouldn’t recognize her; we talked about that a while back. But how would she react? Is it a big taboo for natural Vorta to interact with cloned Vorta? I mean, this person wouldn’t really be her son anymore—he’s been eight times removed from her. He wouldn’t think of her as family, but she’d still see him as the little boy who fell out of the tree trying to pick kava nuts. How would that dynamic play out?

They have no reference for aesthetics, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have preferences and opinions about artistic things, does it? Weyoun might not have known if Ziyal’s painting was “any good” based on whatever scale of artistic excellence he thinks he doesn’t know about, but did he like looking at it? Did he ask Kira if it would be more aesthetically pleasing if it were blue because he enjoys the color blue? Why doesn’t someone just explain to him that whether or not something is aesthetically pleasing is really a matter of personal taste anyway? All cultures create art, it seems (except maybe the Breen); do the Vorta still do artistic things, and just not call them artistic? Depending on their level of cultural advancement when the Founders intervened, do they have statues and monuments and paintings and literature and music just lying around because they don’t know what to do with it anymore? Does Weyoun hear other Vorta hum or whistle and envy them, and then secretly blame the Founders for his inability to carry a tune?

Okay, that’s all I’ve got for right now. Now I’m just incredibly curious about what goes on on Kurill Prime.

vorta! fascinating!