Was in St. Marks Books yesterday and a little “zine” of sorts caught my eye done by one Lief Parsons. Canadian born illustrator living and working in Brooklyn, best I can tell. Some good work. A few, in their whimsical simplicity, remind me of the glory days, others are smack on the trending-down “naive” penciled style (as above). All in all a fine browse. Also of note is his well done signifiers project.

Old Yeller. The illustrious history of the yellow legal pad. via.

Everybody knows at least one. Creative department Douchebag by Pete Johnson. (Thanks Kurt.)

Adding inter-species incest to injury for evolution rejectors. Our human ancestors were still interbreeding with their chimp cousins long after first splitting from the chimpanzee lineage, a genetic study suggests. How many times does the Prez need to say it? NO human animal hybrids!

Somewhere at the top of the Hundred Acre Wood a little boy and his bear play. On the surface it is an innocent world, but on closer examination by our group of experts we find a forest where neurodevelopmental and psychosocial problems go unrecognized and untreated. Pathologies in Winnie the Pooh. via.

05.18. filed under: link dump.


Enjoy Siberian artist Marina Bychkova’s porcelain and polymer dolls. Nice. via.

Step by patient step, one man is drawing ever closer to the real Da Vinci mystery: tracking down the master’s greatest painting, lost for four and a half centuries.

Got P.K.D? Download a torrent of The Gospel According to Philip K. Dick.

Admiral Byrd’s trip inside the hollow Earth: Fiction or fiction? via.

Shamans and ordinary people of American Indian tribes undertook dangerous missions to meet their spirit guides. The Fortean Times on Vision Quests.

05.17. filed under: link dump.


How a faceless, underground collective of scientists has helped determine the fate of the American empire. The Jasons. via.

Like a bird, like a plane, like a guy in a funny outfit jumping off a cliff… Base jumping with a twist.

Is there any knowledge in the world which is so certain that no reasonable man could doubt it? The Problems of Philosophy by Bertrand Russell.

Deafness in Disguise Concealed Hearing Devices of the 19th and 20th Centuries. via.

We really don’t have proof that black holes exist so here’s a new theory: dark energy stars.

05.16. filed under: link dump.


City Skies

At some time in 1880’s urbanites in a few cities across the world each made real estate deals with the sky. Essentially the terms of the deals went something like this: “You let us build massive and towering buildings deep into your side of the horizon-line and we, in turn, will give up all rights to a decent view of you.” The sky, being a generally aloof sort, didn’t deign to protest.

05.15. filed under: !. history. life. observations. 3


Incest, fratricide, iniquity, murder, mayhem, and breathtaking beauty: Alexandria on dipslay in Berlin via treasure hunter Franck Goddio.

Darwin, Zola, status groups, hippies, hip-hop, Jose Delgado, the yankees, the beginnings of speech, and “all you’ll ever need to know about the human beast.” Tom Wolfe and Homo Loquax. via.

A theory of prostitution (pdf). Using economic models to answer the question: Why is it that prostitution is so relatively well-paid?

Wikipedia entry on the so called Illusion of control. via.

Keeping it surreal: “In the 1920s Georges Bataille’s art magazine Documents embraced all that was “soiled, senile, rank, and sordid” in western civilization. Its radical message is as fresh as ever.”

05.13. filed under: link dump.


The Bitter Pill

Or: how to tell if you are a cynic.

Each day, faced with a cascade of decisions, every one in itself a tiny course correction on our philosophical path, we choose between A or B, and in so doing re-affirm our view of the universe. Some of these choices seem weighty and are, in as much, weighed carefully. Others are so miniscule as to be invisible, the mechanics of their resolutions seeming involuntary. It’s the totality which frame you as a pessimist, an absurdist, an elitist, an idealist, a romatic, or what have you. I’d like to focus on one of these seemingly miniscule choices today…

05.12. filed under: !. ideas. lies. observations. 3


Why must the Monkey subject poor Timmy to the horrors of his variegated fluids? The gods themselves, they do not know.

In celebration of his new memoir, the Nobel Prize-winning neuroscientist, eric kandel, recounts many formative episodes from his life in science: The Search for Memory.

Science Musings by Chet Raymo: That Cottage of Darkness.

The Space Review: Orbital vacationers will want to go outside. Good point.

Scalping in the French and Indian war.

The Pirahã people have no history, no descriptive words and no subordinate clauses. That makes their language one of the strangest in the world: Living without Numbers or Time.

Monkeys drink more alcohol when housed alone, and some like to end a long day in the lab with a boozy cocktail, according to a new analysis. Drunk Monkeys Mirror People. And here I thought it was the other way around.

05.10. filed under: link dump.


Before The Magnificent Seven, before The Seven Samurai, before The Seven Dwarfs, before The Seven Year Itch, before the Seven Year War, before The Seven Principles of Man, before The Temptation of the Seven Scientists, before The Seven Ravens, before The Seven Poor Travelers, before the seven ceremonies of the cherokee, before the seven sacraments of the Christians, before The Seven Against Thebes, before the dance of the seven veils, before the codification of seven deadly sins there were… (cue the orchestra swell) The Seven Sages!

05.10. filed under: !. history. ideas. people. philosophy. 2


New research suggests dolphins know one another’s names, which is to say new research suggests dolphins have names.

Elaborating on Francis Fukuyama’s “end of history” thesis 17 years after its initial publication, or “Are western values universal or are they the temporary success of a hegemonic culture?” via.

Evolution has done its best now it’s time to call in the engineers. pop-mech looks at human upgrades.

Check out the (once) largely secret project to develop a powerful ground-based laser weapon that would use beams of concentrated light to destroy enemy satellites in orbit. Neat pics. via.

Design Observer offers: It Takes a Nation of Lawyers to Hold Us Back on the decline of sampling culture across all mediums.

05.07. filed under: link dump.


Taking the turtle for a walk and letting him set the pace.

It happens all the time. My own ignorance is revealed to me in the same way. In the course of reading I accidentally discover that for some vague feeling or embryonic notion, which I’ve never taken the time to organize in my mind, or scrutinize, there is already a word. And where there is a word there are bound to be others. When the trouble is taken to name something it’s a safe bet there is a lineage of thought trailing behind it into history.

05.07. filed under: !. history. ideas. life. 1


| page 27 |