Science News
451.1K views | +3 today
Follow
Science News
All the latest and important science news
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Sakis Koukouvis
Scoop.it!

The Sacred Geography of 21st Century Renaissance Civilization

The Sacred Geography of 21st Century Renaissance Civilization | Science News | Scoop.it

“As viewed by astronauts from the moon, the earth lacks those lines of sociopolitical division that are so prominent on maps. And as recognized here below, the web of interlacing socioeconomic interdependencies that now enfold the planet is of one life. All that is required is a general change of vision to accord with those contemporary facts.”

– Joseph Campbell, The Inner Reaches of Outer Space

No comment yet.
Rescooped by Sakis Koukouvis from Conciencia Colectiva
Scoop.it!

Hot new social media maybe not so new: plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose

Hot new social media maybe not so new: plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose | Science News | Scoop.it

"“In the 17th century, conversation exploded,” said Anaïs Saint-Jude, director of Stanford’s BiblioTech program. “It was an early modern version of information overload.”

The Copernican Revolution, the invention of the printing press, the exploration of the New World – all needed to be digested over time. There was a lot of catching-up to do. “It was a dynamic, troubling, messy period,” she said.

Public postal systems became the equivalent of Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and smartphones. Letters crisscrossed Paris by the thousands daily. Voltaire was writing 10 to 15 letters a day. Dramatist Jean Racine complained that he couldn’t keep up with the aggressive letter writing. His inbox was full, so to speak."


Via Howard Rheingold, Abel Revoredo
Sakis Koukouvis's comment, December 15, 2011 2:16 AM
Thanks. It is a gem of the history.
Scooped by Sakis Koukouvis
Scoop.it!

OpenLab: The Renaissance Man, and how to become a scientist over and over again | Not Exactly Rocket Science | Discover Magazine

OpenLab: The Renaissance Man, and how to become a scientist over and over again | Not Exactly Rocket Science | Discover Magazine | Science News | Scoop.it

Aiden is a scientist, yes, but while most of his peers stay within a specific field – say, neuroscience or genetics – Aiden crosses them with almost casual abandon. His research has taken him across molecular biology, linguistics, physics, engineering and mathematics. He was the man behind last year’s “culturomics” study, where he looked at the evolution of human culture through the lens of four per cent of all the books ever published. Before that, he solved the three-dimensional structure of the human genome, studied the mathematics of verbs, and invented an insole called the iShoe that can diagnose balance problems in elderly people. “I guess I just view myself as a scientist,” he says.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Sakis Koukouvis
Scoop.it!

The Poem That Dragged Us Out of the Dark Ages

Particle physics. Human self-determination. Evolution. According to Renaissance scholar Stephen Greenblatt, we owe these modern ideas to an ancient Roman poe...
No comment yet.