See this Instagram video by @rodrigoygabriela: https://www.instagram.com/tv/B_IqB4jBMUR/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
See this Instagram video by @rodrigoygabriela: https://www.instagram.com/tv/B_IqB4jBMUR/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
That bar of soap you’re so rigorously scrubbing your hands with multiple times a day is one of the most ancient consumer products you use, with one caveat: A lot of modern soap isn’t soap at all.
https://thewirecutter.com/blog/history-of-soap/
Things can’t stay as they are, but the prospect of doing something about it is hardly appealing. Nevertheless, the only way things are going to get better is to conduct controlled, careful migrations to modern soft- and hardware.
https://www.howtogeek.com/667596/what-is-cobol-and-why-do-so-many-institutions-rely-on-it/
"In short, when someone tells you that you are a dirty communist for saying landlords contribute nothing and merely drain society, remind them that the idea came first from Adam Smith."
http://existentialcomics.com/comic/337
https://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_webb_where_are_all_the_aliens
This is great stuff, particularly in the last few minutes.
Can you spot a liar? We all know people who think they can, and very often they claim to be able to do so by reading "body language." Clearing one’s throat, touching one’s mouth, crossing one’s arms, looking away: these and other such gestures, they say, indicate on the part of the speaker a certain distance from the truth. In the WIRED "Tradecraft" video above, however former FBI special agent Joe Navarro more than once pronounces ideas about such physical lie indicators "nonsense." And having spent 25 years working to identify people presenting themselves falsely to the world — "my job was to catch spies," he says — he should know, at the very least, what isn’t a tell.
http://www.openculture.com/2020/01/can-you-spot-liars-through-their-body-language.html
https://tcf.org/content/report/dear-colleges-take-control-online-courses/?agreed=1
Our ancestors evolved in small groups, where cooperation and persuasion had at least as much to do with reproductive success as holding accurate factual beliefs about the world. Assimilation into one’s tribe required assimilation into the group’s ideological belief system. An instinctive bias in favor of one’s “in-group” and its worldview is deeply ingrained in human psychology.
A human being’s very sense of self is intimately tied up with his or her identity group’s status and beliefs. Unsurprisingly, then, people respond automatically and defensively to information that threatens their ideological worldview. We respond with rationalization and selective assessment of evidence – that is, we engage in “confirmation bias,” giving credit to expert testimony we like and find reasons to reject the rest.
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