Carl Gustav Jung ⚔️ Martin Heidegger
Heidegger in 90 Minutes - Paul Strathern - Read by Jonathan Keeble
Paul Strathern (born 1940) is a British writer and academic. He was born in London, and studied at Trinity College, Dublin, after which he served in the Merchant Navy over a period of two years. He then lived on a Greek island. In 1966 he travelled overland to India and the Himalayas. His novel A Season in Abyssinia won a Somerset Maugham Award in 1972.
Besides five novels, he has also written numerous books on science, philosophy, history, literature, medicine and economics.
Heidegger's modus philosophandi is neurotic through and through and is ultimately rooted in his psychic crankiness
To Arnold Kiinzli
Dear Herr Kiinzli, Einsiedeln, 28 February 1943
Your kind letter has reached me in the dark forest where I am snatching the air for a few days.
I have nothing against your views if critical analysis, as you want it to do, not only judges by the presuppositions of the past but also takes account of the facts which the present has brought to light.
Philosophical criticism must, to my way of thinking, start with a maximum of factual knowledge if it is not to remain hanging in midair and thus be condemned to sterility.
I can put up with any amount of criticism so long as it is based on facts or real knowledge.
But what I have experienced in the way of philosophical criticism of my concept of the collective unconscious, for instance, was characterized by lamentable ignorance on the one hand and intellectual prejudice on the other.
Brinkmann's book on the unconscious is an exception. A work like this-and here I entirely agree with you-is a most welcome clarification of concepts and hence a valuable stepping-stone to the future.
I have no objection whatever to objective studies of this kind, since they meet all the requirements of the scientific attitude.
They discard unconscious subjective prejudices, whereas Heidegger bristles with them, trying in vain to hide behind a blown-up language.
Here he shows his true colours.
Only listen to one seminar on psychiatry and then you will know where this language can also be heard.
At Brinkmann's lecture in the SGPP the contrast between his normal language and the twaddle he read out from Heidegger was positively comic.
This struck not only me but my psychiatric colleagues as well.
The substance of what he read out was unutterably trashy and banal, and Brinkmann could just as well have done it to make Heidegger ridiculous.
At any rate that is the effect it had.
Heidegger's modus philosophandi is neurotic through and through and is ultimately rooted in his psychic crankiness.
His kindred spirits, close or distant, are sitting in lunatic asylums, some as patients and some as psychiatrists on a philosophical rampage.
For all its mistakes the nineteenth century deserves better than to have Heidegger counted as its ultimate representative.
Moreover this whole intellectual perversion is a German national institution.
England can oblige only with James Joyce and France with surrealism.
Italy remains tame with her Benedetto Croce, who should actually be dated 1850.
For all its critical analysis philosophy has not yet managed to root out its psychopaths.
What do we have psychiatric diagnosis for?
That grizzler Kierkegaard also belongs in this galere.
Philosophy has still to learn that it is made by human beings and depends to an alarming degree on their psychic constitution.
In the critical philosophy of the future there will be a chapter on "The Psychopathology of Philosophy."
Hegel is fit to bust with presumption and vanity, Nietzsche drips with outraged sexuality, and so on.
There is no thinking qua thinking, at times it is a pisspot of unconscious devils, just like any other function that lays claim to hegemony.
Often what is thought is less important than who thinks it.
But this is assiduously overlooked.
Neurosis addles the brains of every philosopher because he is at odds with himself.
His philosophy is then nothing but a systemized struggle with his own uncertainty.
Excuse these blasphemies!
They flow from my hygienic propensities, because I hate to see so many young minds infected by Heidegger.
Best regards,
Yours sincerely,
C.G. Jung ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 330-332.
58
views
📐 Euclid's Elements A Quick Introduction 📐
"Euclid alone has looked on beauty bare." --Edna St. Vincent Millay
📐 📐
Euclid (Ancient Greek: Εὐκλείδης Eukleidēs -- "Good Glory", ca. 365-275 BC) also known as Euclid of Alexandria, was a Greek mathematician, often referred to as the "Father of Geometry". He was active in Alexandria during the reign of Ptolemy I (323–283 BC). His Stoicheia (Elements) is a 13-volume exploration all corners of mathematics, based on the works of, inter alia, Aristotle, Eudoxus of Cnidus, Plato, Pythagoras. It is one of the most influential works in the history of mathematics, presenting the mathematical theorems and problems with great clarity, and showing their solutions concisely and logically. Thus, it came to serve as the main textbook for teaching mathematics (especially geometry) from the time of its publication until the late 19th or early 20th century. In the Elements, Euclid deduced the principles of what is now called Euclidean geometry from a small set of axioms. Euclid also wrote works on perspective, conic sections, spherical geometry, number theory and rigor. He is sometimes credited with one original theory, a method of exhaustion through which the area of a circle and volume of a sphere can be calculated, but he left a much greater mark as a teacher.
Thumbnail:
Dana Densmore, Thomas Little Heath (Translator)
Green Lion Press has prepared a new one-volume edition of T.L. Heath's translation of the thirteen books of Euclid's Elements. In keeping with Green Lion's design commitment, diagrams have been placed on every spread for convenient reference while working through the proofs; running heads on every page indicate both Euclid's book number and proposition numbers for that page; and adequate space for notes is allowed between propositions and around diagrams. The all-new index has built into it a glossary of Euclid's Greek terms.
Heath's translation has stood the test of time, and, as one done by a renowned scholar of ancient mathematics, it can be relied upon not to have inadvertantly introduced modern concepts or nomenclature.
We have excised the voluminous historical and scholarly commentary that swells the Dover edition to three volumes and impedes classroom use of the original text. The single volume is not only more convenient, but less expensive as well.
“The laws of nature are but the mathematical thoughts of God.”
“1. An 'unit' is that by virtue of which each of the things that exist is called one.
2. A 'number' is a multiple composed of units.”
“A straight line is said to have been cut in extreme and mean ratio when, as the whole line is to the greater segment, so is the greater to the lesser.”
― Euclid, Euclid's Elements
#shorts #Euclid, #EuclideanGeometry #Geometry #GoldenRatio #Historyofmathematics #mathematics
42
views
Euclid's Elements A Quick Introduction
"Euclid alone has looked on beauty bare." --Edna St. Vincent Millay
Euclid (Ancient Greek: Εὐκλείδης Eukleidēs -- "Good Glory", ca. 365-275 BC) also known as Euclid of Alexandria, was a Greek mathematician, often referred to as the "Father of Geometry". He was active in Alexandria during the reign of Ptolemy I (323–283 BC). His Stoicheia (Elements) is a 13-volume exploration all corners of mathematics, based on the works of, inter alia, Aristotle, Eudoxus of Cnidus, Plato, Pythagoras. It is one of the most influential works in the history of mathematics, presenting the mathematical theorems and problems with great clarity, and showing their solutions concisely and logically. Thus, it came to serve as the main textbook for teaching mathematics (especially geometry) from the time of its publication until the late 19th or early 20th century. In the Elements, Euclid deduced the principles of what is now called Euclidean geometry from a small set of axioms. Euclid also wrote works on perspective, conic sections, spherical geometry, number theory and rigor. He is sometimes credited with one original theory, a method of exhaustion through which the area of a circle and volume of a sphere can be calculated, but he left a much greater mark as a teacher.
Thumbnail:
Dana Densmore, Thomas Little Heath (Translator)
Green Lion Press has prepared a new one-volume edition of T.L. Heath's translation of the thirteen books of Euclid's Elements. In keeping with Green Lion's design commitment, diagrams have been placed on every spread for convenient reference while working through the proofs; running heads on every page indicate both Euclid's book number and proposition numbers for that page; and adequate space for notes is allowed between propositions and around diagrams. The all-new index has built into it a glossary of Euclid's Greek terms.
Heath's translation has stood the test of time, and, as one done by a renowned scholar of ancient mathematics, it can be relied upon not to have inadvertantly introduced modern concepts or nomenclature.
We have excised the voluminous historical and scholarly commentary that swells the Dover edition to three volumes and impedes classroom use of the original text. The single volume is not only more convenient, but less expensive as well.
“The laws of nature are but the mathematical thoughts of God.”
“1. An 'unit' is that by virtue of which each of the things that exist is called one.
2. A 'number' is a multiple composed of units.”
“A straight line is said to have been cut in extreme and mean ratio when, as the whole line is to the greater segment, so is the greater to the lesser.”
― Euclid, Euclid's Elements
#Euclid, #EuclideanGeometry #Geometry #GoldenRatio #Historyofmathematics #mathematics
42
views
After the Map: Cartography, Navigation...
After the Map: Cartography, Navigation, and the Transformation of Territory in the Twentieth Century
William Rankin http://afterthemap.info/about.html.
http://radicalcartography.net.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26153718-after-the-map.
In the early twentieth century, cartographers and journalists predicted the dawn of a “map-minded age” where state-of-the-art maps would become everyday tools, and during the two World Wars newspapers gushed at the many millions of maps produced for the battlefield. But a few decades later maps barely made the news at all, and headlines instead focused on the rise of new electronic navigation technologies and the “revolution” promised by ubiquitous GPS receivers. How should we understand this radical shift in geographic knowledge, from the god’s-eye view of the map to the embedded experience of GPS?
Technologies like GPS have certainly not rendered maps obsolete; if anything, we are more “map-minded” than ever before. But maps clearly do not enjoy the authority they once did, and older concerns with geographic truth and objectivity have been upstaged by a new emphasis on simplicity, reliability, and everyday convenience. International collaborations between scientists have likewise been overshadowed by wartime mobilization and the global reach of the US military. Overall, managing space using GPS rather than maps alone has transformed the meaning of territory and the status of geographic boundaries – not just the boundaries between countries, but even the boundary between land and water.
As a result, it no longer makes sense to regard territory as simply a well-bounded block of geographic space. This is the territory produced by maps. New forms of geographic knowledge have instead created new ways of being territorial. This new territoriality emphasizes points instead of large continuous areas, and pointillist territories can overlap and shift for each different task. Even at the human scale of cell phones and driving directions, the goal is to navigate a constellation of coordinates, not to contemplate a bird’s-eye view of the world.
After the Map explores these changes by telling the story of three major international projects, each of which, in its own time, attempted to organize all geographic knowledge. Together the three projects span the three major branches of the mapping sciences: cartography, geodesy, and navigation.
The first is the International Map of the World, a hugely ambitious scheme for all countries of the world to collaborate on a uniform atlas of unprecedented detail. It was first proposed in 1891 and its standards were given the force of international treaty in 1909. By the time the project ended in the 1980s, thousands of maps had been produced.
The second is the Universal Transverse Mercator system, a grid-based alternative to latitude and longitude created by the US Army in the late 1940s. This system gives every point on the earth a remarkably user-friendly coordinate that can be used for everything from archeology to nuclear-missile targeting. It is arguably one of the most successful cartographic technologies of the twentieth century.
Finally, the third project is GPS – the Global Positioning System. The first radionavigation technologies were created as early as the 1910s, and a huge number of systems were created during and after World War II. The design of GPS began in the 1970s, and it was only at the turn of the twenty-first century that it became the dominant system we know today.
This book can be read at two scales. Narrowly, it is a history of the mapping sciences in the twentieth century that situates technologies like GPS within a longer trajectory of spatial knowledge. But more expansively, by connecting geographic knowledge to territorial politics and new ways of navigating the world, it is also a political and cultural history of geographic space itself.
#AftertheMap #Cartography #Navigation #Map #radical
69
views
Santos Bonacci Finds Tartarian Truth
Rest of Sh*t Show @The Warrior https://youtu.be/9QCzIqeV6V8.
@Tartarian Truth https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYSgnoBG_k85iPR8fdoAlAA.
😲 Meet our group of instructors and the people who work with us https://www.syncretismsociety.com.
@Santos Bonacci @MrAstrotheology @Daniel Mamheg @Barnabas Nagy @Billie Burvill @Cambell Purvis @Christopher Campbell @Christopher Gutierrez @Crystal Cavalier @Daniel Falkenbach @David Weiss @DITRH @Dena Mohajeri @Edmundo Reyes @Evelyn Sanchez @Ian Herbert @Darius Tirigan @Jenneca Rose @Ken Wheeler @Theoria Apophasis @Logan Jayson @Mar Medina @Mehmet Deveji @Micah Dank @Micah Skye @Nick Schizzano @Noé L’herisse @Oscar Aragon @Rebecca Rodrigues @Richard Whitt @Ricardo Defazio @Santiago Castellanos @Marta Ortiz @Anne Marie Recsnik @Luis Blea @Sarah Gomez @Benjamin Gass @Ricardo Brito @Joshua Smith 😵The Company You Keep😵
#MrAstrotheology #TartarianTruth #SantosBonacci #DITRH #TheoriaApophasis #SyncretismSociety
391
views
What's wrong with Santos?
More Death Threats @Tartarian Truth
Santos Bonacci calls out Tartarian Truth with Daniel Mamheg
https://youtu.be/b2utihC4Dt0
A SYNCING SHIP - Daniel Mamheg Exposed (full documentary) Santos Bonacci SYNCRETISM SOCIETY Scheme
https://youtu.be/GYZOU353U-g
FLAT EARTH DELETED🎬SCENES - Max Igan (thecrowhouse) vs Santos Bonnici
https://youtu.be/4s1fGwW3-yw
PSA: PLEASE DON'T Spend Your Life Savings To Move To Mexico | Don't Follow False Prophets
https://youtu.be/h4Pu2TRDj_0
#SantosBonacci #SyncretismSociety #TheJudgmentDay #Cult #Vegan #FESociety #FTFE #TheoriaApophasis #MaxIgan
219
views
1
comment
The Santosment Day Is Coming, Coming, Coming...We’re All Gonna Die(X_X)
More Death Threats @Tartarian Truth
Santos Bonacci calls out Tartarian Truth with Daniel Mamheg
https://youtu.be/b2utihC4Dt0
A SYNCING SHIP - Daniel Mamheg Exposed (full documentary) Santos Bonacci SYNCRETISM SOCIETY Scheme
https://youtu.be/GYZOU353U-g
FLAT EARTH DELETED🎬SCENES - Max Igan (thecrowhouse) vs Santos Bonnici
https://youtu.be/4s1fGwW3-yw
PSA: PLEASE DON'T Spend Your Life Savings To Move To Mexico | Don't Follow False Prophets
https://youtu.be/h4Pu2TRDj_0
#SantosBonacci #SyncretismSociety #TheJudgmentDay #Cult #Vegan #FESociety #FTFE #TheoriaApophasis #MaxIgan
150
views
Bohm & Suzuki
Great interview of Dr. David Suzuki with Dr. David Bohm, physicist, a colleague of Dr. Albert Einstein
https://youtu.be/r-jI0zzYgIE.
Infinite Potential | THE LIFE & IDEAS OF DAVID BOHM
https://www.infinitepotential.com.
Join us on an incredible journey into the nature of life and Reality with David Bohm, the man Einstein called his “spiritual son” and the Dalai Lama.
David Joseph Bohm FRS (20 December 1917 – 27 October 1992) was an American-Brazilian-British scientist who has been described as one of the most significant theoretical physicists of the 20th century and who contributed unorthodox ideas to quantum theory, neuropsychology, and the philosophy of mind.
Bohm advanced the view that quantum physics meant that the old Cartesian model of reality – that there are two kinds of substance, the mental and the physical, that somehow interact – was too limited. To complement it, he developed a mathematical and physical theory of "implicate" and "explicate" order. He also believed that the brain, at the cellular level, works according to the mathematics of some quantum effects, and postulated that thought is distributed and non-localised just as quantum entities are.
Known for
Aharonov–Bohm effect
De Broglie–Bohm theory
Bohm criterion
Bohm-diffusion
Bohm dialogue
Bohm's EPR experiment
Bohm interpretation
Bohm quantum potential
Hidden variable theory
Pilot wave theory
Holographic paradigm
Holomovement
Holonomic brain theory
Nonradiation condition
Pilot wave
Plasmon
Implicate and explicate order
Random phase approximation
Quantum decoherence
Quantum mind
Awards
1991 Elliott Cresson Medal
1990 Royal Society fellowship
Institutions
Manhattan Project
Princeton University
University of São Paulo
Technion
University of Bristol
Birkbeck College, London
#DavidBohm #QuantumTheory #Pilotwave #Bohms #EPR #experiment #DeBroglie–Bohm theory
55
views
SAVE SANTOS by Kenny Wheeler Dealers Tattooed Monkey
https://www.syncretismsociety.com/team.
A SYNCING SHIP - Daniel Mamheg Exposed (full documentary) Santos Bonacci SYNCRETISM SOCIETY Scheme
https://youtu.be/GYZOU353U-g. @Tartarian Truth
Analysis of Ken Wheeler's theory of magnetism. Kenny Wheeler Dealer - Theoria Apophasis - p. 1 - p. 2
https://youtu.be/BLBrXao5Hao.
https://youtu.be/bjaEyhqUEnc.
VEIAG will Completely Change this Uninformed Acceptance! (Daniel Mamheg)
https://youtu.be/aeRaT4SE2fc
#SyncretismSociety #TheoriaApophasis #KenWheeler #vegan #cult #exposé #Scheme #Santos #Bonacci
163
views
George Bernard Shaw on Education (He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches.).
Education
When a man teaches something he does not know to somebody else who has no aptitude for it and gives him a certificate of proficiency, the latter has completed the education of a gentleman.
A fool’s brain digests philosophy into folly, science into superstition, and art into pedantry. Hence University- education.
The best-brought-up children are those who have seen their parents as they are. Hypocrisy is not the parent’s first duty.
The vilest abortionist is he who attempts to mould a child’s character.
At the University every great treatise is postponed until its author attains impartial judgment and perfect knowledge. If a horse could wait as long for its shoes and would pay for them in advance, our blacksmiths would all be college dons.
He who can does. He who cannot, teaches.
A learned man is an idler who kills time with study. Beware of his false knowledge: it is more dangerous than ignorance.
Activity is the only road to knowledge.
Every fool believes what his teachers tell him, and calls his credulity science or morality as confidently as his father called it divine revelation.
No man fully capable of his own language ever masters another.
No man can be a pure specialist without being in the strict sense an idiot.
Do not give your children moral and religious instruction unless you are quite sure they will not take it too seriously. Better be the mother of Henri Quatre and Nell Gwynne than of Robespierre and Queen Mary Tudor.
https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.208167/mode/2up.
#GeorgeBernardShaw #Education #HeWhoCannot #Teaches.
27
views
Everybody Hates Witsit Gets It, jeranism, and Arwijn 33
Video: Response to My Haters https://www.youtube.com/c/WitsitGetsIt.
https://www.youtube.com/c/jeranism.
https://unicourt.com/case/ca-mrc-jeran-campanella-vs-jake-gibson-65485
https://www.youtube.com/c/Arwijn33.
Music: Content Chaos - Flat Motionless Cuck
https://youtu.be/q0i1hiuwTMM.
407
views
3
comments
It's...Himalaya
Himalaya with Michael Palin is a 2004 BBC television series presented by comedian and travel presenter Michael Palin.
22
views
Let’s Make Politics Fun Again
Another Round (Danish: Druk, "binge drinking") is a 2020 black comedy-drama film directed by Thomas Vinterberg, from a screenplay by Vinterberg and Tobias Lindholm. An international co-production between Denmark, the Netherlands, and Sweden, the film stars Mads Mikkelsen, Thomas Bo Larsen, Magnus Millang, and Lars Ranthe.
40
views
Freeman Dysyn - Maverick - Genius
Freeman John Dyson FRS (15 December 1923 – 28 February 2020) was an English-American theoretical physicist and mathematician known for his works in quantum field theory, astrophysics, random matrices, mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics, condensed matter physics, nuclear physics, and engineering. He was Professor Emeritus in the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and a member of the Board of Sponsors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
Freeman Dyson: Heretical Thoughts About Science and Society
https://youtu.be/8xFLjUt2leM.
☎️ Telegram: https://t.me/FattishPhysics 📱
17
views
Cosmology - James Peebles
Phillip James Edwin Peebles CC OM FRS is a Canadian-American astrophysicist, astronomer, and theoretical cosmologist who is currently the Albert Einstein Professor in Science, Emeritus, at Princeton University. He is widely regarded as one of the world's leading theoretical cosmologists in the period since 1970, with major theoretical contributions to primordial nucleosynthesis, dark matter, the cosmic microwave background, and structure formation.
Awards
Fellow of the American Physical Society (1964)
Eddington Medal (1981)
Heineman Prize (1982)
Fellow of the Royal Society (1982)
Henry Norris Russell Lectureship (1993)
Bruce Medal (1995)
Oskar Klein Medal (1997)
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1998)
Gruber Prize in Cosmology (2000), with Allan Sandage
Harvey Prize (2001)
Shaw Prize (2004)
Member of the American Philosophical Society (2004)
Crafoord Prize with James E. Gunn and Martin Rees (2005)
Hitchcock Professorship (2006)
Dirac Medal (2013)
Member of the Order of Manitoba (2017)
Nobel Prize in Physics (2019)
Elected a Legacy Fellow of the American Astronomical Society in 2020.
☎️ Telegram: https://t.me/FattishPhysics 📱
20
views
Orson Welles on Acting
George Orson Welles (May 6, 1915 – October 10, 1985) was an American director, actor, screenwriter, and producer who is remembered for his innovative work in radio, theatre, and film. He is considered to be among the greatest and most influential filmmakers of all time.
☎️ Telegram: https://t.me/FattishPhysics 📱
14
views
Freddy Reidenschneider/Tony Shalhoub The Man Who Wasn't There (2001)
In quantum mechanics, the uncertainty principle (also known as Heisenberg's uncertainty principle) is any of a variety of mathematical inequalities[1] asserting a fundamental limit to the accuracy with which the values for certain pairs of physical quantities of a particle, such as position, x, and momentum, p, can be predicted from initial conditions.
Freddy Reidenschneider: They got this guy in Germany. Fritz Something-or-other. Or is it? Maybe it's Werner. Anyway, he's got this theory: You wanna test something, you know, scientifically. How the planets go round the sun, what sunspots are made of, why the water comes out of the tap. Well, you gotta look at it. But sometimes you look at it, your looking changes it. You can't know the reality of what happened, or what would've happened if you hadn't stuck in your own goddamn schnozz. So there is no "what happened?"
Looking at something changes it. They call it "The Uncertainty Principle". Sure, it sounds screwy, but even Einstein says: "The guy's on to something." Science. Perception. Reality. Doubt. Reasonable doubt. I´m saying that sometimes the more you look, the less you really know. It's a fact, a proved fact. In a way, it's the only fact there is. This heinie even wrote it out in numbers.
#Shorts #UncertaintyPrinciple #TonyShalhoub #TheManWhoWasntThere
☎️ Telegram: https://t.me/FattishPhysics 📱
12
views
Monty Python and the Holy Tartaria
Terrence Vance Gilliam born 22 November 1940) is an American-born British filmmaker, animator, actor, comedian, and former member of the Monty Python comedy troupe.
Monty Python and the Holy Grail is a 1975 British comedy film satirizing the Arthurian legend, written and performed by the Monty Python comedy group (Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin) and directed by Gilliam and Jones in their feature directorial debuts. It was conceived during the hiatus between the third and fourth series of their BBC Television series Monty Python's Flying Circus.
139
views
What is a preposition?
By definition, a preposition is a word used before a noun or pronoun to mark its relation to the rest of the sentence.
Common Prepositions
They refer to movement or placement.
about, above, across, after, against, among, around, at, before,
behind, below, beside, between, by, down, during, for, from, in,
inside, into, near, of, off, on, out, over, through, to, toward,
under, up, with.
Less common prepositions
aboard, along, amid, as, beneath, beyond, but, concerning, considering, despite, except, following, like, minus, next,
onto, opposite, outside, past, per, plus, regarding, round,
save, since, than, till, underneath, unlike, until, upon,
versus, via, within, without.
9
views
Santos Gonna Get 'Cha(For That)
Santos Bonacci is gonna send ya'll to heyall.
Syncretism Society
https://www.syncretismsociety.com/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpDrSOtQ552LXmdRVYvTLyQ
FTFE https://www.youtube.com/c/FTFE1.
Science is not the devil https://youtu.be/7AgHiNsiItk?t=278.
MCToon Live https://www.youtube.com/c/MCToon
39
views
Who simulated it Better? World Trade Center 9/11 2001
The September 11 attacks, commonly known as 9/11, were four coordinated suicide terrorist attacks carried out by the militant Islamic extremist network al-Qaeda against the United States. On the morning of Tuesday, September 11, 2001, nineteen terrorists—directed by al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden—hijacked four commercial airliners mid-flight while traveling from the northeastern U.S. to California.
Who Did it Better?
#Whathappened #on9/11
33
views
Laws of Thermodynamics: Michael Jackson - The Wiz -
How the Laws of Thermodynamics Ended Up in "The Wiz"
the Laws of Thermodynamics: You can't win, you can't break even, & you can't get out of the game. Which is also the Crow's anthem in "The Wiz"! Where did this expression come from, why is it (erroneously) attributed to Allen Ginsberg, and how did it end up in "The Wiz"? Check it out!
https://youtu.be/n9Za1ADqpbc
☎️ Telegram: https://t.me/FattishPhysics 📱
11
views
Maps for Dummies
Video: https://twitter.com/Bobby22Digital.
Music: Chief Crow https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCalmAUAuMRy5-mcfi_pd9aQ.
15
views
Can Monkeys Understand Calculus?
C More @ https://www.youtube.com/shorts/dopJx7fsT7o.
🙈 🙊 🙉: Michio Kaku https://mkaku.org.
FTFE https://www.youtube.com/c/FTFE1.
Science is not the devil https://youtu.be/7AgHiNsiItk?t=278.
17
views