A wise man do pass or refuse a good thing .
Deciphering , recite , learn a humph a profound neglect of the piercing desire that is .
Suffering of joyful promenade in the adventurous mind set of a nomad.
Inspirational twirl and emotional misfit all seclude a verbal pun mischief , vulgar to the reality of rationality .
Profound pronunciation revolve around the enunciation . A palate delightful purposeful torment with anguish the recipient vein of imagination. Resilient in a figment sensually pending on the core of a refine disorderly execution whoever impeding will hold on a string shorter thinner as invisibly visible . A pigment on existence . AwT
An oversimplified version of what one Occupy protester explained to me yesterday as his ideal monetary system
Well
Mind-Melter of the Day
It turns out that if you divide 1 by 998,001 you get all three-digit numbers from 000 to 999 in order.
Except for 998.
(via Futility Closet)
Mathematics is a beautiful, beautiful thing.
Now that is mind blowing just to imagine
From The Atlantic:
To verify their findings and check if English is inherently positive or negative, the scientists analyzed billions of words from Twitter, a half-century of music lyrics, 20 years of The New York Times, and millions of books going back to 1520.
After finding the 10,222 most frequently used English words from these four sources, they asked a group of volunteers to rate the emotional temperature of these words. […]
RESULTS: There was an overwhelming preponderance of happier words among the top 5,000 words in each of the sources.
CONCLUSION: English is strongly biased toward being positive.
Unlike in real life, our online friendships are not subject to a healthy natural decay.
Paul Higgins: interesting piece on social media and online friends and the difference to the real world.
Full Story: The Mark
“I was told some years ago that the reason why some species of sea turtles migrate all the way across the South Atlantic to lay their eggs on the east coast of South America after mating on the west coast of Africa is that when the behavior started, Gondwanaland was just beginning to break apart (that would be between 130 and 110 million years ago), and these turtles were just swimming across the narrow strait to lay their eggs. Each year the swim was a little longer—maybe an inch or so—but who could notice that? Eventually they were crossing the ocean to lay their eggs, having no idea, of course, why they would do such an extravagant thing.
What is delicious about this example is that it vividly illustrates several important evolutionary themes: the staggering power over millions of years of change so gradual it is essentially unnoticeable, the cluelessness of much animal behavior, even when it is adaptive, and of course the eye-opening perspective that evolution by natural selection can offer to the imagination of the curious naturalist.”
Via The Atlantic
Brilliant




