jack: (Default)

I refute it thus

[personal profile] jack 2017-10-24 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
I thought the weak nuclear force was the thing that wasn't symmetric. I assume that's no longer the understanding if physicists are talking like that but I don't know what changed.
miss_s_b: River Song and The Eleventh Doctor have each other's back (Default)

[personal profile] miss_s_b 2017-10-24 12:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Not EVERYBODY gets that wrong about Jekyll and Hyde (see I, Monster) - which may have been mentioned in the comments, I didn't get that far down. I agree vehemently with comment 3, though.

ETA: I got to about comment 15 and when I saw it was going to turn into one of those threads about all the things movies get wrong about book adaptations that I have participated in hundreds of on the British Horror films board, I nodded in acknowledgement and closed the tab. Those type of threads are interesting sometimes, but I've seen loads ;)
Edited 2017-10-24 12:26 (UTC)
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2017-10-24 02:12 pm (UTC)(link)
First the author says that Hyde isn't a separate person because Jekyll refers to Hyde's acts in the first person. Then he says that Jekyll refers to Hyde as a separate person.

He accepts the first because we have Jekyll's word for it. He rejects the second because Jekyll is an unreliable narrator.

It's almost as if this article were a collaboration between two separate persons in the same body.

[personal profile] ironyoxide 2017-10-24 02:14 pm (UTC)(link)
>Physicists still not sure why the universe didn't instantly destroy itself

Site is currently throwing a 500 Internal Server Error, ironically enough.
cybik: (Default)

[personal profile] cybik 2017-10-24 06:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I've been learning to read writing from the Middle Ages over the last month (and will continue doing this for most of the coming year), and you really do see "&" a lot. Interestingly they also sometimes used it in the middle of words, so you might see a word like "budg&" for "budget" (only, you know, a word they'd actually use!). In the medieval period they shortened a lot of words, so you might get "qs" with a dash above it, which would stand for "quaesumus", for example. It's fascinating. Well, it's fascinating for history geeks like me :)
melchar: medieval raccoon girl (Default)

[personal profile] melchar 2017-10-31 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
The history of the Ampersand was glorious to read. I could feel my brain accepting the information with an almost-audible 'click', because it made so much sense.