Saturday, November 29, 2025

World Map of Human Ideas

 

World Map of Human Ideas

Explore the birthplaces of ideas that shaped civilization

Legend:

  • Science
  • Technology
  • Art & Culture
  • Philosophy
  • Politics & Society
  • Exploration
  • Communication

CHEESE FOR THE WIN:  A Taste For Cheese May Reveal Your Future Risk of Dementia. “Of the cheese-eating group, 134 people developed dementia (3.4 percent); among cheese abstainers, 176 developed dementia (4.5 percent). That’s a difference of around 10 or 11 extra cases in every 1,000 people.”

Glad it turned out that way. If loving cheese is wrong, I don’t want to be right.

3 Rebel Nuns Can Stay in Abbey, if They Give Up Social Media

 

3 Rebel Nuns Can Stay in Abbey, if They Give Up Social Media

After the octogenarian nuns refused to return to their senior center, the abbot has finally folded. But he has some conditions.




When three octogenarian nuns escaped their senior center in September, their unlikely quest for freedom set off a bitter standoff with the abbot who leads their Roman Catholic order.

The three rebel nuns forced their way back into the Austrian abbey where they had lived for decades, before the senior center. That put them at odds with the abbot, who had wanted to keep them out, while capturing the global imagination with their lively social media feed and even prompting the involvement of Catholic leaders in Rome.

Now, after a monthslong standoff in which the nuns refused to return to the care home, the standoff seems to have a winner.


Abbot Markus Grasl appeared to admit defeat on Friday, announcing in a statement that, after talks with Rome and the local archdiocese, he would finally allow the sisters to continue to live in the abbey at Castle Goldenstein, close to Austria’s border with Germany.

In another concession, Abbot Grasl said that the nuns — Sister Rita, 82, Sister Regina, 86, and Sister Bernadette, 88, who are all known only by their religious names — would be provided with round-the-clock care, an on-call doctor and a priest to hold weekly services in the abbey’s chapel.

In return, the abbot listed several conditions: The women must stop letting laypeople into their cloisters, and — most likely much more important — they must end their social media feed.

“I hope that the sisters will accept the path I have outlined and that a regulated religious life will once again be a reality in Goldenstein,” Abbot Grasl wrote in a statement sent to journalists on Friday


The sisters did not immediately accept those conditions, perhaps wary of relinquishing an important source of leverage over the abbot; their Instagram feed has nearly 100,000 followers. Reinhard Bruzek, their lawyer, told Austrian public television that the deal offered by the abbot reminded him of a “gagging contract” worthy of North Korea and that he would advise his clients against accepting

Staying at the abbey on the abbot’s terms would also give their Catholic order — the Austrian chapter of the Canonesses of St. Augustine — power of attorney over the nuns and the donations that they have received since escaping the senior center. That could potentially allow the abbot to force them back to a care home at a later date.

“At this point, they don’t really trust anyone,” said Christina Wirtenberger, 65, a former student who is helping organize care for the nuns.

The disagreement began nearly two years ago, when the abbot shut down their living quarters in the abbey and arranged for the sisters, the last surviving nuns of their order, to move to the care home.

The nuns said that they were moved there against their will. Abbot Grasl said they went willingly.

Either way, the sisters had had enough of the home by early September, and — with the aid of a locksmith — fled to the century-old abbey. Once their supporters restored electricity and water, the sisters went about their old lives with the help of their former students, almost as if they had never left.

After setting up a social media account and publicizing their plight, the sisters attracted global attention and sympathy. International reporters covered their story, the British ambassador to Austria came for tea, and a publisher rushed out a book, set to be published in December, about their unlikely predicament. Some of the proceeds, the publisher said, will be given to the nuns.

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Donations from well-wishers have already allowed their former students to pay for a full-time home care worker, as well as an expensive chairlift that allows the sisters to descend more easily from their third-floor living quarters for prayers in the abbey’s chapel.

“We are taking care of them the way we would take care of our own grandparents or parents,” said Ms. Wirtenberger.

The nuns quickly became symbols of joyful self-reliance in old age: Their supporters swooned over videos of the sisters trying on boxing gloves or running in the abbey’s parking lot. Others find inspiration in the sisters’ rebellion against a religious order that, to its critics, appeared ready to dismiss the nuns’ wishes once they seemed too old to live alone.

In an interview with The New York Times in September, Sister Rita said she still hoped to reconcile with the abbot, whom the nuns have known since he was a teenager.

“I still like him,” she said.

Christopher F. Schuetze is a reporter for The Times based in Berlin, covering politics, society and culture in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
See more on: Roman Catholic Church


Gallery - Garry GORDON


 “Photography is a love affair with life.”
- Burk Uzzle


Garry Gordon is an avid traveler who loves photography and shares his deep insights into culture and history. Taking an image, freezing a moment, reveals how rich reality truly is …


 Garry GORDAN Photography


The colours, the subjects, the compositions, the magical moments … it’s just so good.




Photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving. What you have caught on film is captured forever… It remembers little things, long after you have forgotten everything.”
 - Aaron Siskind


The atmosphere and the melancholy in his photos are out of this world …


Gallery

The Earth is Art, The Photographer is only a Witness

~Yann Arthus-Bertrand


“My life is shaped by the urgent need to wander and observe, and my camera is my passport.” 

- Steve McCurry 






Garry Gordon

A picture is a secret about a secret, the more it tells you the less you know.
~ Diane Arbus

 


Garry has a knack for finding shots that are extremely rare to come across. It is not just one shot that mesmerises … it is the body of work that rocks


 Some of most influential and highly regarded photographers across different genres and time periods:

Historical & Documentary Masters
  • Ansel Adams: Widely regarded as one of the pioneers and best landscape photographers of all time, known for his iconic black-and-white images of the American West.
  • Henri Cartier-Bresson: Described by many as the greatest photographer of the twentieth century, he was a master of street photography and is famous for his concept of "the decisive moment".
  • Dorothea Lange: One of the nation's greatest documentary photographers, known for her empathetic and powerful images of people during the Great Depression.
  • Robert Capa: A co-founder of Magnum Photos and a revered photojournalist, known as a "poet of the camera" who captured the suffering of war with unique human tenderness.
  • Vivian Maier: A posthumously famous street photographer whose candid mid-century photographs of Chicago and New York offer an incredible look into American life. 
Portraiture & Fine Art
  • Yousuf Karsh: Considered by many to be the best portrait photographer of all time, known for his definitive portraits of celebrities and politicians, and his distinctive lighting style.
  • Annie Leibovitz: Considered one of the best photographers in the world, renowned for her iconic and often controversial celebrity portraits published in magazines like Rolling StoneVanity Fair, and Vogue.
  • Andreas Gursky: A German photographer known for his large-scale color images that command record prices at auction and transform how photography is perceived as art.
  • Lisa Kristine: An internationally recognized fine-art and humanitarian photographer who has spent decades documenting indigenous cultures and social causes, particularly modern slavery. 
Modern & Commercial Innovators
  • Peter Lik: Known for creating extremely successful landscape fine art businesses, one of his photographs ("Phantom") reportedly sold for $6.5 million, an all-time high price for a single photo.
  • Jimmy Nelson: Celebrated for his work documenting indigenous cultures and tribes around the world, creating stunning and inspiring images that highlight global diversity.
  • Demas Rusli: A modern talent known for his expert use of social media and exceptional post-editing skills in Lightroom to create "other-worldly" and creative images. 
My brother in law gave us a book by Helmut Newton. We treasure this provocative fashion photographer who has numerous acclaimed books showcasing his iconic work, including the comprehensive 
Helmut Newton. Legacy and the famously oversized Helmut Newton. SUMO. 

My parents introduced me to images by Karol Plicka and 
I treasure it especially as late Karol gave them a book 
that I keep  on coffee table as it was a gift for their 
hospitality as he stayed in our house in Vrbov 
for a week in the early 1970s. 
Tatranka folkloric singing and dancing group (subor) 
background - the High Tatra Mountains 

National Artist Prof. Karol Plicka [also called Karel Plicka] (1894-1985) himself characterized his work as the art of "nine trades". He was in an even measure a film maker, a producer, a cameraman and script-writer in one person, a photographer, author of illustrated publications, a folklorist - collector of musical and verbal expressions, an ethnomusicologist, the organizer of the first folkloric festivities, a teacher, a conductor of singing choirs and, what is less known - a violin virtuoso.

 The result of his life-long activity is a remarkable, monumental work of an outstanding standard, comprising over 100 book publications (in 1937 he published the first picture publication “Slovakia in Photography”), about 50 000 recordings of folk songs and tales, tens of thousands of negatives and slides documenting nature, architecture, man - his way of life and his art; a large quantity of films (he began filming in 1927 for the needs of the Slovak Foundation at Martin – “After the Slovak People”, “Through Hills and Dales”, “After Slovaks from New York to the Mississippi”; through his sound film “The Singing Earth” he became the founder of Slovak national cinematography).

Best non-fiction books of 2025

 June’s Mollong


In the times, when boring white walls, minimal features and mass production are the hallmark of housing, a growing appreciation is emerging for the complete opposite, which was once a niche trend in the mid-20th century…


The fast-track to boosting your property's value starts with a pot plant


Retro audio boom: Why cassettes and CDs have risen from the dead


Social media isn’t driving the teenage “loneliness epidemic” Mike Males


What Happens To Kids’ Brains After Thousands Of Hours Staring At Screens? StudyFinds 


100 Notable Books of 2025

The New York Times: “Each January, the editors and critics at the Book Review begin sifting through thousands of new books. By February, we’re meeting regularly to debate and discuss the standouts. 

All of us are passionate readers, but our tastes don’t necessarily overlap, so the conversations are lively! By September, we’re winnowing down our big list of contenders to arrive at 100 Notables. 

A hundred may seem like a lot of books, but not to us — we all have favorites that didn’t make the final cut. As you browse, you can save the books you’ve read or want to read. By the time you reach the end, you’ll have a personalized reading list to share…”


Best non-fiction books of 2025

The year started off slow, but it ended up being a normally strong time for quality, readable non-fiction.  Here is my list, noting that the links lead either to my reviews or to Amazon.  These are roughly in the order I read them, not ranked ordinally.  Here goes:

Caroline Burt and Richard Partington, Arise, England: Six Kings and the Making of the English State.

Tirthankar Roy and K. Ravi Raman, Kerala: 1956 to the Present.

Agnes Callard, Open Socrates: The Case for a Philosophical Life.

Amy Sall, The African Gaze: Photography, Cinema, and Power.

Michael Krielaars, The Sound of Utopia: Musicians in the Time of Stalin.

David Eltis, Rethinking the Atlantic Slave Trades.

Philip Freeman, In the Brewing Luminous: The Life and Music of Cecil Taylor.

Daniel Dain, A History of Boston. Short review here.

Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson, Abundance.

Ian Leslie, John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs.

Benjamin E. Park, American Zion: A New History of Mormonism

Roger Chickering, The German Empire, 1871-1918.

Donald S. Lopez Jr., Buddhism: A Journey Through History.

Dan Wang, Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future.

Keach Hagey, The Optimist: Sam Altman, OpenAI, and the Race to Invent the Future.

Joseph Torigian, The Party’s Interests Come First: The Life of Xi Zhongxun, Father of Xi Jinping.

Rupert Gavin, Amorous or Loving?: The Highly Peculiar Tale of English and the English.

Sam Tanenhaus, Buckley: The Life and Revolution that Changed America.

Erik Penman, Eric Satie Three Piece Suite.

Dwarkesh Patel, and others, The Scaling Era: An Oral History of AI, 2019-2025.

Jeff McMahan, editor, Derek Parfit: His Life and Thought.

Paul McCartney, Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run.

William Easterly, Violent Saviors: The West’s Conquest of the Rest.

Nicholas Walton, Orange Sky, Rising Water: The Remarkable Past and Uncertain Future of the Netherlands.

What else?  I will give you an update on anything notable I encounter between now and the end of the year.  And here is my earlier post on the best fiction of the year.