Et in arcadia ego.
A few months ago there was a news article about some ex-Bletchley park people considering a mysterious inscription on a monument in Staffordshire, reputedly containing information about the Holy Grail. Well, they don't think so. This is entirely unsurprising. The Holy Blood And The Wholly Specious has a lot to answer for, even if it has managed to indirectly pay for the Roslin Chapel's restoration.
There's a page about the Poussin in question here.
Rather more practically, here's an article about a possible treatment for rabies, previously 100% fatal once it became symptomatic (bar one single person in the sixties, I believe).
There's a page about the Poussin in question here.
Rather more practically, here's an article about a possible treatment for rabies, previously 100% fatal once it became symptomatic (bar one single person in the sixties, I believe).
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Apophenia still isn't in the OED, you know.
You shock me. It isn't on dictionary.com either; what does it mean?
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Oh, hundreds of mutually-incompatible theories, I would guess.
what does it mean?
Right up your street, I'd have thught. In use since the fifties, apparently, to name the tendency to impute apparently-meaningful patterns and connections to entirely random data.
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Yes, it's an excellent word. recently popularised by Bill Gibson in Pattern Recognition.
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Did you see the recent article about the image of the Virgin Mary on someone's toasted cheese sandwich?
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Whenever I see the photo, I think of those little kitchen blowtorches you use to scorch puddings. Can't imagine why.
$28 000? Excuse me, I have some puddings to scorch . . .
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Some years ago, an ex of mine gave me, as a birthday present, a pen-sized (well, if your pens are large-ish) blow-torch, specifically for the purposes of addressing toast, and cooking steak. I never got round to doing the former, but I did try the latter. It was fine for _one_ steak, but if you're doing two, you have to stop and re-fill it half way through, which is not do good.
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Quote form the sleeve blurb - "What is now revealed is an immense geometric temple ..... a sparkling constellation of pentacles, circles and hexagons, whose engineering complexity far exceeds that of the Pyramids "
In other words, a map of the south of France with some triangles drawn on it.
Personally, I much prefer the 'soup line' project of Bill Drummond - he will come and make you soup if your house lies on a straight line drawn through Belfast & Nottingham.
(http://www.penkiln-burn.com/jobs/job7.html).