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Saturday, April 15, 2023

3.132 - AMICOR (25)

 3.132 - AMICOR (25)

#Dra. Valderês Antonietta Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)

Ainda no Tahiti 1987, (com 56 anos).
#Slideshow: 102 fotos de abertura Clicar em apresentação de slides

#AEON-Psiche Magazine
aeon
PSYCHE
 
 

Friday 14 April 2023

 
 

Economics

Essay

The empty basket

 

Economics is the language of power and affects us all. What can we do to improve its impoverished menu of ideas?

 

by Ha-Joon Chang

 

Consciousness and altered states

Essay

Animal, vegetable, mineral

 

Cruel and unscientific, the ‘vegetative state’ diagnosis stems from a hierarchical and bigoted view of all living things

 

by Ben Platts-Mills

 
 

Creativity

Idea

A life of splendid uselessness is a life well lived

 

by Joseph M. Keegin

 

Learning and education

Idea

Perplexed? Embrace it! Confusion is a symptom of learning

 

by Juliette Vazard

 
GUIDE

How to be a hands-on citizen

 

You can be so much more than a well-informed consumer: it is in your (and our) power to change society from the ground up

 

by Jon Alexander

 
 
 

Meaning and the good life

Video

Why Aristotle believed that philosophy was humanity’s highest purpose

 

9 minutes

 

History of technology

Video

Who owns history? How remarkable historical footage is hidden and monetised

 

18 minutes

 
 
 
 

Human evolution

Essay

How like the kiwi we are

 

To understand helpless human babies, our big brains and oddly involved dads, look to the evolution of birds not mammals

 

by Antone Martinho-Truswell

 

History of science

Essay

Machina mundi

 

How medieval thinkers foreshadowed modern physics in investigating the character of machines, devices and forces

 

by Henrik Lagerlund and Sylvain Roudaut

 
 

Sacred places

Idea

Nan Shepherd delved into a queer erotic kinship with nature

 

by Melissa Matthewson

 

Space exploration

Video

What are you really seeing when you see magnificent images of space?

 

5 minutes

 

Parenting and families

Film

Young, gay and Arab, Omar navigates the seasons of his life in Montreal

 

18 minutes

 

#TIME.com

The A to Z of Artificial Intelligence

As artificial intelligence becomes a larger part of our world, it’s easy to get lost in its sea of jargon. But it has never been more important to get your bearings than today.

AI is poised to have a major impact on the job market in the coming years (see: Automation). Discussions over how to manage it are playing a larger part in our political conversation (see: Regulation). And some of its most crucial concepts are things that you won’t have been taught in school (see: Competitive Pressure)./.../


#

My Bookmarks

MACHINE LEARNING | ALL TOPICS

 

A New Approach to Computation Reimagines Artificial Intelligence

By ANIL ANANTHASWAMY

By imbuing enormous vectors with semantic meaning, we can get machines to reason more abstractly — and efficiently — than before.

Read the article

MICROBES

 

Primitive Asgard Cells Show Life on the Brink of Complexity

By JOSHUA SOKOL

As researchers race to cultivate more of them, the intriguing cells now growing in labs give us our best look at what the forerunners of all complex life were like.

Read the article


Related: 
DNA’s Histone Spools Hint
at How Complex Cells Evolved

By Viviane Callier (2021)

QUANTUM PHYSICS

 

The Electron Is So Round That It’s Ruling Out Potential New Particles

By ZACK SAVITSKY

If the electron’s charge wasn’t perfectly round, it could reveal the existence of hidden particles. A new measurement approaches perfection.

Read the blog


Related: 
Physicists Use Quantum Mechanics
to Pull Energy out of Nothing

By Charlie Wood

COMBINATORICS

 

Mathematicians Find Hidden Structure in a Common Type of Space

By JORDANA CEPELEWICZ

In 50 years of searching, mathematicians found only one example of a “subspace design” that fit their criteria. A new proof reveals that there are infinitely more out there.

Read the blog

QUANTA SCIENCE PODCAST

 

Astronomers Say They Have Spotted the Universe’s First Stars

Podcast hosted by SUSAN VALOT;
Story by JONATHAN O'CALLAGHAN

Theory has it that “Population III” stars brought light to the cosmos. JWST may have just glimpsed them.

Listen to the podcast

Read the article

Around the Web

New Image of M87 Black Hole
The Event Horizon Telescope collaboration has released a new image of the black hole at the center of the M87 galaxy, Jennifer Ouellette reports for Ars Technica. The new image is a more detailed version of one released in 2019 — the first glimpse ever of any black hole. At the time, astrophysicist Janna Levin wrote for Quanta about what that image meant to her and her field.


Eye Cite
Since Darwin, biologists have wondered how evolution could drive the development of complex, intricate organs such as the eye. New research suggests that a key gene stolen from bacteria might have played a role in accelerating the eye’s evolution, reports Elizabeth Pennisi for Science Magazine. Some lines of evidence suggest that the evolution of complexity can often be almost inevitable, even arising in the absence of natural selection. In 2013, Carl Zimmer wrote for Quanta about this 
zero-force evolutionary law.
#The Alantic
The Atlantic’s archive logo and a collection of a few magazine covers.

CNPq e MCTI anunciam o vencedor do Prêmio Almirante Álvaro Alberto

Nesta 35ª edição a premiação contempla a área de Ciências da Vida e premia o epidemiologista, professor da UFPel, Cesar Gomes Victora

1 comment:

Jorge, colega da Valderes said...

Caro Aloysio!!!Parabéns pela nova apresentação de seu Amicor. Ficou bem mais atraente.