Summary from the youtuber that made this video "The living philosophy":
"For Nietzsche The Last Man stood as the opposite of the Ubermensch and the great danger of the "levelling" tendency of modernity. In this episode we are going to look at what Nietzsche meant by the Last Man and how his prophecy has come through. We look at The Last Man in 21st century society and what Nietzsche got right even while we should be cautious of fully embracing his ideal.
📚 Further Reading:
- Joseph S (2011) What Doesn’t Kill Us: The New Psychology of Posttraumatic Growth. New York: Basic Books.
- McGonigal K (2015) The Upside of Stress: Why Stress Is Good for You, and How to Get Good at It. New York: Avery, a member of Penguin Random House.
- Seligman MEP (2013) Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment. Atria paperback edition. New York London Toronto Sydney New Delhi: Atria Paperback.
- Nietzsche FW (1976) Thus Spoke Zarathustra in The Portable Nietzsche. New York: Penguin Books.
- Nietzsche FW and Kaufmann WA (1974) The Gay Science: With a Prelude in Rhymes and an Appendix of Songs. 1st ed. New York: Vintage Books.
- Nietzsche FW and Kaufmann WA (2000) Basic Writings of Nietzsche. Modern Library ed. New York: Modern Library."
From the video description:
"The British Library is one of the six legal deposit libraries for the UK — and the only one that doesn't pick and choose, or have to ask for copies. That's a lot of books to store, and the internet's only making it worse. ■ The BL: https://bl.uk ■ UK Web Archive: https://www.webarchive.org.uk/
This video has a correction: it turns out the formal interview requirement for a reader pass has been dropped. However, you'll still need to get a pass, and you're not allowed to take books out of the reading rooms! You can see all corrections on the channel here: https://www.tomscott.com/corrections/
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It used to be a todo list set up where I just check off and add whatever books caught my interest but it wasn't very shareable so I moved onto storygraph which I liked more than goodreads as the data visualization and breakdown of books via tags and moods gives me a better idea of where I tend to lean in books I seek out and which genres I rarely touch at all.
I edited the name of the post to better reflect the content of the video as the original video title is just "Don't waste it", the host talks about the stats relating to how many people in the modern world in first world countries are still counted as illiterate and how those stats made him reflect on how lucky he was in being encouraged to read and still does to this day. I like this video as a decent summation of what makes reading wonderful in and of itself.
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Lots of graphic novels and manga, once done with that I have a nice gardening book to look forward to:
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Home after Dark by David Small
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Kuusama by Elisa Macellari
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The Climber by Shinichi Sakamoto
This summary is from the youtube channel that made it: History Dose.
"The young sailor Sam Bellamy sails to the West Indies to seek Spanish gold and discovers a sea infested with thieves. Turning pirate himself, Bellamy navigates a back-stabbing and libertine underworld host to the pirates of Nassau, including Henry Jennings, Benjamin Hornigold and Blackbeard.
The art is original and manually made by Joseph Feely. "
The usual mantras for guided meditations are abstract and focus on guiding your breathing but this one is more down to earth imho.
Small criticism, I think your first article on "The redditor's guide to how Kbin works" is the one packed with the most useful information for any newbie migrating from reddit or any social media so it deserves a sticky or some kind of mechanism to make it the first thing that pops up imho. Otherwise, awesome work. I thought the Artemis app was still in exclusive beta so it's good to hear it's available on the app store now.
So a team of you just collectively stomping/T-bagging a random dinosaur Skeleton?
Also what would be your strategy to taking down said largest animal?
Download the offline version maps of wherever you plan to stay/travel to. You can do this via google maps or OSM maps, at the very least it's helped me keep peace of mind when out and about.
I don't know why but Lutris has been consistently dependable at installing and launching gog games but installing them via heroic launcher has been hit or miss where it says it can't locate the install folder. Maybe I mishandled the mounting of the SD card but Lutris has been a simple way to install more gog games from my library so that's why I use it more than adding each non steam game one at a time.