Friday 1.6.12
Yay!

Yay!

Tuesday 1.3.12

(via robdelaney)

Sunday 12.25.11

Was Christmas star a double eclipse of Jupiter?

A U.S. astronomer said he has uncovered the first reference to the star of Bethlehem outside the Bible, in the 4th-century writings of a Christian convert who wanted to hide the astrological roots of the celestial phenomenon.

For centuries, scientists and scholars have debated about the nature of the Biblical light that led the Magi to the newborn Jesus. Some have suggested a comet or supernova.

But Michael Molnar concluded that the star was actually a double eclipse of Jupiter roughly 2,000 years ago.

The former Rutgers University researcher came up with the idea while studying a symbolic star map on an ancient Roman empire coin from Syria, which depicts Aries the ram and other celestial symbols.

Molnar, deducing that Aries was the sign of the Jews, figured that ancient astrologers would have searched that constellation for a sign of a savior of the kingdom of Judea.

Computer modeling backed up his claim. But Molnar lacked historical proof until now, he said.

The Mathesis, a book written in 334 A.D. by Firmicus Maternus, an astrologer of Constantine the Great, described an astrological event involving an eclipse of Jupiter by the moon in Aries, and said that it signified the birth of a divine king.

“Maternus did not mention Jesus’ name,” Molnar said. “But Roman astrology was a popular craze at the time and everyone reading the book would have known the reference was to Jesus and that the astrological event was the star of Bethlehem.”

He failed to bring up the name because he did not wish to offend the sensibilities of members of his new religion, who thought that the Christian God, not the stars, governed the destiny of humankind.

But old beliefs still held great sway in the Roman Empire.

“Being a pagan who had converted to Christianity in his lifetime, Firmicus was torn. Hence his use of astrology to support the Christian story, but in a veiled way,” Molnar said.

The unconventional astronomer has gained the respect of notable Biblical historians.

“I take Molnar’s work quite seriously,” said Owen Gingerich of Harvard University. “Anything he comes up with along these lines has to be considered as being very likely correct.”

Gushed Bradley Schaefer of Yale University, in a review Molnar’s book, ‘The Star of Bethlehem’: “(It) has stunning new insight and approach, which finally gives a confident answer to a question that has fascinated all Christians through the ages.”

via CNN

Saturday 12.24.11

Stay safe out there…

Thursday 12.22.11

One of the many great dialogues from the film Network, just as relevant today as it was in 1976. 

If you haven’t seen this movie, watch it tonight.

Wednesday 12.21.11

When I was 18, I spent one night trying to paint LATE AGAIN in big silver bubble letters on the side of a passenger train. British Transport Police showed up and I got ripped to shreds running away through a thorny bush. The rest of my mates made it to the car and disappeared so I spent over an hour hidden under a dumper truck with engine oil leaking all over me.

As I lay there listening to the cops on the tracks, I realised I had to cut my painting time in half or give up altogether. I was staring straight up at the stencilled plate on the bottom of a fuel tank when I realised I could just copy that style and make each letter 3ft high.

I got home at last and crawled into bed next to my girlfriend. I told her I’d had an epiphany that night and she told me to stop taking that drug ‘cos it’s bad for your heart.

Banksy

(via brycedotvc)

Tuesday 12.20.11
Friday 12.16.11

“ But the chilling takeaway of this whole debacle was the irrefutable air of anti-intellectualism; that inescapable absurdity that we have members of Congress voting on a technical bill who do not posses any technical knowledge on the subject and do not find it imperative to recognize those who do. ”

Dear Congress, It’s No Longer OK To Not Know How The Internet Works | Motherboard

And also…

(via ninakix)

(via dpstyles)

Wednesday 12.14.11
2+ years, millions of messages, hundreds of hours of calls, countless hours working w/ the best dudes in NYC.
Farewell, Fast Society.
(hello Cameo)

2+ years, millions of messages, hundreds of hours of calls, countless hours working w/ the best dudes in NYC.

Farewell, Fast Society.

(hello Cameo)

Sunday 12.11.11

Bookstore owners everywhere have a lurking suspicion: that the customers who type into their smartphones while browsing in the store, and then leave, are planning to buy the books online later — probably at a steep discount from the bookstores’ archrival, Amazon.com.

Now a survey has confirmed that the practice, known among booksellers as showrooming, is not a figment of their imaginations. According to the survey, conducted in October by the Codex Group, a book market research and consulting company, 24 percent of people who said they had bought books from an online retailer in the last month also said they had seen the book in a brick-and-mortar bookstore first.

Book Shopping in Stores, Then Buying Online

I’m the Lebron James of “showrooming”

Monday 12.5.11

@ericmayville wins the internet