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3.174 AMICOR (26)

 3.174 AMICOR (26)

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

Novembro 1996 num balcão de l'Operá de Paris

#Re-PUBLICANDO artigos antigos meus

CLEPTOMANIA

12 de dezembro de 2014 | N° 18011

ARTIGO ZH

CLEPTOMANIA

Está tão na moda a apropriação indébita do que não é seu, que a gente se pergunta: será somente uma falha moral numa espécie que naturalmente respeita o que não lhe pertence, ou seria uma característica instintiva que a civilização teima em controlar? Se consequência de comportamento mórbido compulsivo, receberia um nome mais sofisticado – cleptomania – mas, pela frequência, estaríamos frente a uma epidemia...

Há quem queira justificar o comportamento como uma estratégia virtuosa de redistribuir a riqueza, atingir mais rapidamente nobres objetivos, ou facilitar o acesso ao poder para corrigir as desigualdades.Elucubrações à parte, o que nos deixa inseguros e incomoda é roubalheira, ladroagem, furto, subtração, assalto, apropriação indébita, saque, rapto, propina, desvio, fraude, ocultação, abafa, mentira, corrupção, formação de cartel, consultorias de mentirinha, concussão, ou peculato – seja por que motivo for.

Como, para guri, roubar era mais feio do que mentir, meu pai, para evitar esses pecadilhos muito comuns, dizia: “Quem mente rouba”. Os dois vêm juntos ou se confundem. Quem mente está roubando a verdade do outro, e para não ser pego é preciso ocultar e mentir enquanto der, ou enquanto não for mais compensador recorrer à delação premiada. Como coisa que possa merecer recompensa: o delator traiu a sociedade que roubou e depois trai seus comparsas. Nossa salvação está na briga de bandidos.

Frente ao crime organizado, à predação em matilha, ao uso do aparelho do Estado e de recursos sofisticados destinados ao desenvolvimento social, ao aproveitamento de posições privilegiadas na hierarquia do poder para fraudar, é difícil até classificar o ladrão de galinhas e o punguista, que se expõem geralmente sozinhos para produzir malfeitos (como ficou na moda dizer).

As desculpas das artimanhas de mercado, das necessidades para gastos de campanha e da propaganda – não raro exagerada, se não enganosa – contribuem para banalizar tais desvios de comportamento. Não há mais reduto isento ou local sagrado, cada um precisa se cuidar e ajudar a organizar sistemas de vigilância e controle social. Estamos sendo roubados pelos impostos, nas taxas bancárias, nos salários, nos preços dos artigos e serviços mais necessários, nos medicamentos, nos custos de assistência à saúde, no financiamento dos custos de guerra e conflitos (mesmo que distantes), através de projetos com fachada de ajuda humanitária, até no Banco do Vaticano...

Se não for como sequela de períodos de fome em que a humanidade teve que se defender de qualquer forma, acumulando para fugir da penúria, estou seriamente preocupado que nossa espécie tenha herdado algum gene de rato ou de animais predadores...

ALOYZIO ACHUTTI

#LIVESCIENE

TOP SCIENCE NEWS
Mysterious virus-like 'Obelisks' found in the human gut and mouth
(OLEKSANDRA TROIAN via Getty Images)
Scientists have uncovered a never-before-seen class of virus-like entities hiding in the human gut and mouth, and these "viroids" may influence the gene activity within the human microbiome.
HISTORY & ARCHAEOLOGY
90,000-year-old human footprints found on a Moroccan beach are some of the oldest and best preserved in the world
(M. Sedrati, et al)
Researchers in Morocco happened upon a trackway containing 85 well-preserved human footprints that are some of the oldest in the world.













Researchers say the runic letters may spell "little sword," which could have been the name of the knife's owner or the knife itself.
 Full Story: Live Science (1/29) 
SPACE
The moon is shrinking, causing landslides and moonquakes exactly where NASA wants to build its 1st lunar colony
(NASA)
The moon has been slowly shrinking for millions of years. Now, as Artemis 3 nears its 2026 launch date, geologists worry about whether moonquakes and lunar landslides will impact landing.
ANIMALS
What was the typical life span of a dinosaur?
(Orla via Getty Images)
That depends on the size and species, of course. 
Dark matter could be gently wobbling space-time around us — and scientists may finally know how to detect it













(NASA)
A new paper suggests we may finally be able to uncover the identity of dark matter using
the same technology that detects ripples in space-time known as gravitational waves.
#Neuroscience

Summary: A recent study reveals that music’s emotional impact transcends cultures,
evoking similar bodily sensations globally. Researchers found that happy music
energizes arms and legs, while sad tunes resonate in the chest.

This cross-cultural study, involving 1,500 participants from the West and Asia, links
music’s acoustic features to consistent emotions and bodily responses.

The findings suggest that music’s power to unify emotions and movements may have
played a role in human evolution, fostering social bonds and community.

Ginkgo Biloba Compound Shows Promise in Cognitive Recovery After Stroke

Neuroscience News

February 1

A preliminary study reveals that intravenous injections of ginkgo biloba components could significantly improve early cognitive recovery in ischemic stroke patients. Conducted across multiple centers in China, the research tested the effects of ginkgo diterpene lactone meglumine (GDLM) on 3,163 stroke survivors, showing notable improvements in cognitive scores compared to a placebo group.

Read more of this post

#NAUTILUS









ASTRONOMY: The Enlightening Beauty of an Einstein Ring. 

What a trippy gravitational phenomenon can tell us about the universe. 
BY BRIAN GALLAGHER 

Continue reading

#HMV




















Read More
The Bird in the Heart: Terry Tempest Williams on the Paradox of
Transformation and how to live in Uncertainty
 BY MARIA POPOVA

#MURMURATION... MAIS:
https://x.com/buitengebieden/status/1753166995648827656?s=20

#OUR WORLD IN DATA

Explore our featured work

The world has passed “peak child”

Hans Rosling famously coined the term “peak child” for the moment in global
demographic history when the number of children stops increasing.

According to UN data, the world has now passed “peak child,” which is
defined as the number of children under the age of five.

The chart shows the UN’s historical estimates and projections of the global number
of children under five.

It estimates that the number of under-fives in the world peaked in 2017.
Demographers expect a decades-long plateau before a more rapid decline in the
second half of the century.

The “ups and downs” in this chart reflect generational effects and “baby booms”
when there are large cohorts of women of reproductive age and high fertility rates.

About one quarter of CO2 emissions are
covered by a carbon price

People often compare the monetary price of fossil fuels to low-carbon alternatives
such as renewables or nuclear energy. But these comparisons don’t capture the
social and environmental costs of different fuels. The true cost of burning fossil fuels is not reflected in their market price.


Burning fossil fuels drives climate change, which has very costly impacts that we’re  already seeing. Fossil fuels also cause local air pollution, which kills millions every year and has negative health impacts for many more.

One way to capture some of these external costs in the market is to put a price on
carbon. This makes fuels, products, and services that emit more pollution more
expensive. It also means it’s those who emit greenhouse gasses that pay.


There are a few policies that countries can use, including a carbon tax and an
emissions trading system (sometimes called a “cap and trade” system). Many countries have adopted such carbon pricing policies.


In this article, we provide an overview of which countries have carbon prices, and
how the price of carbon has changed over time.

It’s flu season — how many people die from the flu each year?
Ocean plastics: How much do rich countries contribute by shipping their waste overseas?


The mission of Our World in Data is to make data and research on the world’s largest problems understandable and accessible.

We are a nonprofit, building Our World in Data as a public good that’s freely available to everyone. Help us do more by supporting us with a donation.

#

COSMOLOGY | ALL TOPICS

 

In a ‘Dark Dimension,’ Physicists Search for the Universe’s Missing Matter

By STEVE NADIS

An idea derived from string theory suggests that dark matter is hiding in a (relatively) large extra dimension. The theory makes testable predictions that physicists are investigating now.

Read the article

THE JOY OF WHY

 

What Makes for ‘Good’ Mathematics?

Podcast hosted by STEVEN STROGATZ

Terence Tao, who has been called the “Mozart of Mathematics,” wrote an essay in 2007 about the common ingredients in “good” mathematical research. In this episode, the Fields Medalist joins Steven Strogatz to revisit the topic.


Listen to the podcast


Read the transcript

 

PERCEPTION

 

Plants Find Light Using Gaps Between Their Cells

By ASHER ELBEIN

Light changes direction when it moves through different materials. A recent study found that seedlings possess cellular mechanisms that help measure refraction, imbuing them with a sense of where light is.

Read the article


Related: 
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ALGORITHMS

 

A New Limit for Some Optimization Problems

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Integer linear programming can help find the answer to a variety of real-world problems. Now researchers have found a much faster way to do it.

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Computer Scientists Break Traveling Salesperson Record

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COMPUTABILITY

 

How to Build an Origami Computer

By JORDANA CEPELEWICZ

What’s a computer? Technically speaking, it’s any machine that can perform computations. A recent proof shows that origami can serve as one such machine.

Read the blog


Related: 
The Most Important Machine
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By Sheon Han (2023)
#CFM

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