Saturday, July 04, 2020

The Golden Nuggets of Philosophy



This Is Not A Museum, Australia

A new “museum” in Sydney is intended to be built on a flood plain, with no clarity about permanent collections, no storage on site, and so much more that’s even worse. “The new Powerhouse in Parramatta is set to be an embarrassing example of worst practice by international museum standards. Ironically the current Powerhouse would not loan valuable pieces from their collection to any institution so poorly equipped.” – Sydney Morning Herald - It is unclear where Dr Cope pottery collection of Australian and Japanese craftsmen will end up ...


1947 Film That Eerily Predicted How People Would Use Smartphones


Five Arrested, Including Ex-Curator At Louvre, In Major Antiquities Trafficking Case

“The case concerns ‘the sale of hundreds of pieces for tens of millions of euros’, which were allegedly looted from Egypt, Syria and Yemen as well as zones in Libya under Islamic State control. The criminal investigation into gang fraud, concealment of stolen goods, and money laundering was launched [in France] in 2018.” – The Art Newspaper


The Social Codes of the Crazy Rich




The freedom of driving New Statesman


‘Get them laughing to get them drinking’ and ‘Keep them drinking’ while they’re stuck at home.

What’s the first ad you think of when someone says alcohol? Perhaps it is Carlton Draught’s ‘This is a big ad’, or the Canadian Club ‘Over beer?’ series. Chances are, it’s an amusing commercial that comes to mind. 

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Effects of the characteristic temperament of cats on the emotions and hemodynamic responses of humans PLOS One. “The characteristic temperament of cats may be a key factor influencing the health benefits of owning cats.”




The Golden Nuggets of Philosophy

Sophia Stone, a philosopher at Lynn University and the creator of Wisdom’s Edge Foundation, which “promotes critical thinking through philosophical inquiry, ​guided by a democratic process in communities that do not have access to the university,” could use your assistance. (more…)


Guardian UK – First week back after shops reopened in England on 15 June saw almost 4m books sold, with Reni Eddo-Lodge’s anti-racism book still topping the charts – “Almost 4m books were sold in the UK in the first six days after bookshops reopened last week – a jump of over 30% on the same week last year as desperate readers returned to browse the aisles for the first time in three months. Bricks and mortar bookshops in England were able to open to shoppers on 15 June for the first time since they closed their doors in March, in response to the coronavirus pandemic. 



Angrynomics: read it if you want to get angry Richard Murphy 


How Dollar Stores Became Magnets for Crime and Killing ProPublica 

 

Amazon To Pay $500 Million in Bonuses To Workers Most Exposed To Coronavirus 

 

CNET

Tesla workers fired after staying home during covid-19 pandemic Washington Post