The Crap Life of a Drone
A male honey bee is called a drone, which is an apt name for a creature which exists for one purpose and that is to have sex with the queen. These drones then compete with each other, as the queen flies out in search of mates.
One drone amongst a competing swam, will make a move and latch on to the queen and insert his penis. Ejaculation is immediate and explosive, so much so, that the drone's penis ruptures, separating from the drone's body. The drone crashes to the ground to die and the penis stays embedded in the queen.
During this flight in search of sex partners, the queen mates with many drones, leaving a trail of dead bees behind her. Any drone who does not mate with the queen will be hounded from the hive, as drones exist only as sperm carriers and once the queen's mating is over, drones are not needed.
Books To Read
California is a novel by American author Edan Lepucki - characters Frida and Cal flee Los Angeles to live in the wilderness of post-apocalyptic California.
A Strange 600 Year Old Manuscript
Described as "the world's most mysterious manuscript", the The Voynich manuscript is indeed an enigma. Comprising about 240 vellum (made from calf skin) pages, mostly of illustrations, with some pages missing. This work is written in a script and language which is unknown and unreadable. As can be imagined, this manuscript has been the subject of many theories and much speculation.
Scientific analysis has found that the text and figure outlines, were written with a quill pen and iron gall ink; the painting may have been added later.
Written from right to left, there seems to be some evidence of some kind of phonological laws used in the text, with certain characters appearing in each word in a way similar to vowels in English. Statistical analysis also shows patterns similar to those used in natural languages. However mostly, the manuscript is unlike that of European languages in many ways. For example, a certain common word may appear up to three times in a row.
There are six sections of the manuscript, which according to the illustrations contain different subject matter. In the Astronomical section there is drawings of moons and stars, as well as the symbols of conventional zodiacal constellations e.g. a bull for Taurus. Another section has text, interspersed with figures of small naked women, with some wearing crowns and bathing in pools which are connected by a complicated network of pipes, which have a look of body organs.
There are many theories about the origin and purpose of this manuscript. Some propose that the text is a cipher, others speculate that it is a kind of hybrid language and yet others put forward the idea of an elaborate hoax.Yet maybe, the author was simply under the sway of a mental delusion.Who really knows?
The latest evidence supports the idea that this manuscript was written by an Italian Jew.
Scientific analysis has found that the text and figure outlines, were written with a quill pen and iron gall ink; the painting may have been added later.
Written from right to left, there seems to be some evidence of some kind of phonological laws used in the text, with certain characters appearing in each word in a way similar to vowels in English. Statistical analysis also shows patterns similar to those used in natural languages. However mostly, the manuscript is unlike that of European languages in many ways. For example, a certain common word may appear up to three times in a row.
There are six sections of the manuscript, which according to the illustrations contain different subject matter. In the Astronomical section there is drawings of moons and stars, as well as the symbols of conventional zodiacal constellations e.g. a bull for Taurus. Another section has text, interspersed with figures of small naked women, with some wearing crowns and bathing in pools which are connected by a complicated network of pipes, which have a look of body organs.
There are many theories about the origin and purpose of this manuscript. Some propose that the text is a cipher, others speculate that it is a kind of hybrid language and yet others put forward the idea of an elaborate hoax.Yet maybe, the author was simply under the sway of a mental delusion.Who really knows?
The latest evidence supports the idea that this manuscript was written by an Italian Jew.
The Hammer of the Witches
Written in 1486 by Heinrich Kramer, a German Catholic clergyman, Malleus Maleficarum, meaning "Hammer of the Witches", in Latin, was a handbook used by legal courts throughout Renaissance Europe.
Kramer had been thrown out of the Tyrol region in 1484 and dismissed by the local bishop as a "senile old man", for attempting to systematically persecute people who he believed were witches. Soon, however, the malevolent fellow received full papal approval for such Inquisitions to proceed "correcting, imprisoning, punishing and chastising" those accused of witchcraft and heresy.
The Existence of Witches
Church approval for the existence of witches was a strange about-face, as previously, the church had associated belief in witches with pagan superstition. However, with the publication of Malleus Maleficarum, persecution of so-called witches was officially sanctioned and recognised as a real threat.
Section 1. of the book rants on about how the devil exists and how loose women had sex with the devil and so became witches. Section 2. of this licensed twaddle spoke of how these insatiable nympho witches would find young and pure maidens to introduce to the devil. The third part of this book of buffoonery laid out a guide for conducting a witch trial (including torture) and ways to recognise witches. Women who did not cry during their trial were automatically believed to be witches. (thoughts of the trial of Lindy Chamberlain come to mind).
This witch-hunting manual was a work of inspired misogyny (most witches were women). Female witches were also accused of having the power to steal penises, cause harm with their evil eyes and perform diabolical carnal acts with incubus and succubus demons.
Mass Panic
Midwife witches would kill unborn children in the womb, drink the blood of others and present some to the 'ole devil himself. Women who had been abandoned by their men, however, routinely sought out the devil, not only in pursuit of revenge but to indulge in carnal pleasures. Once a woman had the devil's favour, then she had the ability to fly about the place, perform magic and appear in animal form.
The result of this church supported nonsense, was hysteria, mass panic and the death of millions of innocent people (mostly women).
One popular way of testing a witch was to throw the suspected witch into water with her left hand or thumb tied to her right foot, and her right hand tied to her left foot. The guilty would float, the innocent would sink. You couldn't win.
Ordeal by water was associated with the witch-hunts of the 16th and 17th centuries. The accused witch who sank was considered innocent while floating indicated witchcraft.
"Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live" (Exodus 22:18)
Malleus Maleficarum
Books To read
50 Popular Beliefs That People Think Are True, by
Kramer had been thrown out of the Tyrol region in 1484 and dismissed by the local bishop as a "senile old man", for attempting to systematically persecute people who he believed were witches. Soon, however, the malevolent fellow received full papal approval for such Inquisitions to proceed "correcting, imprisoning, punishing and chastising" those accused of witchcraft and heresy.
The Existence of Witches
Church approval for the existence of witches was a strange about-face, as previously, the church had associated belief in witches with pagan superstition. However, with the publication of Malleus Maleficarum, persecution of so-called witches was officially sanctioned and recognised as a real threat.
Section 1. of the book rants on about how the devil exists and how loose women had sex with the devil and so became witches. Section 2. of this licensed twaddle spoke of how these insatiable nympho witches would find young and pure maidens to introduce to the devil. The third part of this book of buffoonery laid out a guide for conducting a witch trial (including torture) and ways to recognise witches. Women who did not cry during their trial were automatically believed to be witches. (thoughts of the trial of Lindy Chamberlain come to mind).
This witch-hunting manual was a work of inspired misogyny (most witches were women). Female witches were also accused of having the power to steal penises, cause harm with their evil eyes and perform diabolical carnal acts with incubus and succubus demons.
Mass Panic
Midwife witches would kill unborn children in the womb, drink the blood of others and present some to the 'ole devil himself. Women who had been abandoned by their men, however, routinely sought out the devil, not only in pursuit of revenge but to indulge in carnal pleasures. Once a woman had the devil's favour, then she had the ability to fly about the place, perform magic and appear in animal form.
The result of this church supported nonsense, was hysteria, mass panic and the death of millions of innocent people (mostly women).
One popular way of testing a witch was to throw the suspected witch into water with her left hand or thumb tied to her right foot, and her right hand tied to her left foot. The guilty would float, the innocent would sink. You couldn't win.
Ordeal by water was associated with the witch-hunts of the 16th and 17th centuries. The accused witch who sank was considered innocent while floating indicated witchcraft.
"Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live" (Exodus 22:18)
Malleus Maleficarum
Books To read
50 Popular Beliefs That People Think Are True, by
Guy P. Harrison
The Strange American Vampire Panics
According to an article by the Smithsonian Institution, a little over 100 years ago, people who lived in Rhode Island, New England, USA, dug up the dead bodies of relatives they suspected of being vampires. The dead were then desecrated in various ways and hearts were cut from the decaying bodies in the mistaken belief that they were safeguarding the living.
According to this article, "vampire panics" historically, mostly coincided with contagious diseases and in New England at this time, this was tuberculosis (TB). People in this period did not know about bacteria and so, jumped to supernatural entities as being the root cause of the death and sickness plaguing the area and its people.
When the overwrought New Englanders would dig up their dead, they would be met with corpses bloated and leaking blood, these natural signs of decay would, however, be interpreted as confirming their vampire suspicions. And so, there would follow, burning at the stake, beheading and other such horrors.
Books To Read
The Book of Strange New Things, by Michel Faber -an English pastor is sent to the planet of Oasis to teach its reclusive native inhabitants about Christianity.
Read here
According to this article, "vampire panics" historically, mostly coincided with contagious diseases and in New England at this time, this was tuberculosis (TB). People in this period did not know about bacteria and so, jumped to supernatural entities as being the root cause of the death and sickness plaguing the area and its people.
When the overwrought New Englanders would dig up their dead, they would be met with corpses bloated and leaking blood, these natural signs of decay would, however, be interpreted as confirming their vampire suspicions. And so, there would follow, burning at the stake, beheading and other such horrors.
Books To Read
The Book of Strange New Things, by Michel Faber -an English pastor is sent to the planet of Oasis to teach its reclusive native inhabitants about Christianity.
Read here
This Fish Has a Strange Way to Do It!
The anglerfish has a really strange way of doing the deed, i.e. reproducing. At first, scientists who studied anglerfish were puzzled as to why most of the specimens that they found were females; soon, however, a gruesome story was revealed after it was noted that many female anglerfish had what looked like parasites attached to them.
Male anglerfish have one aim in life and that is to use their olfactory senses to find a female anglerfish to attach to, as they are much smaller and have problems finding food. If that is not enough to deal with, the male anglerfish often, also, has a severely stunted gut (alimentary canal) and so can't eat anyway.
When the male anglerfish finally locates a female, he bites into her skin which releases an enzyme that digests the skin of his mouth and her body. The romantic pair then, become fused together, down to the blood vessel level. The male then slowly wastes away (atrophy) leaving only a pair of gonads ( testes).
When the female anglerfish is ready to reproduce she releases a hormone and sperm is released. Multiple males can attach and be incorporated into a single female.
Flickr Gary Robson |
Books To Read
Hellenistic Philosophy: Stoics, Epicureans, Sceptics, by Anthony A. Long.
Read Random Strange Facts
Nazi Ufos and Other Crazy Claims
It sounds too crazy for words, but there is actually a collection of claims and anecdotes connecting Hitler and the Nazi's with successfully developing super-advanced spacecraft during World War II.
Early claims relate to the many reports by allied aircraft pilots about mysterious aerial phenomena from around the world. These reports came to be known as "foo fighter" phenomena; although initially, this term applied to a specific UFO reported and named by the U.S, as 415th Night Fighter Squadron. Foo fighters were assumed, by most witnesses to be secret weaponry used by their enemies.
Flying Saucers
After 1947, there were a series of flying saucer reports and in 1950, Professor Giuseppe Belluzzo, an Italian scientist asserted that "types of flying discs were designed and studied in Germany and Italy as early as 1942". Aeronautical engineer Roy Fedden also remarked that the Germans were working on a number of very unusual aeronautical projects and that if the war had gone on only months longer, there would have been some very "deadly developments".
Later in 1960, Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels alleged the existence of a secret society called the Vril-Society, which was supposedly searching for the energy force called, Vril, an “all-permeating fluid” of limitless power. In their book, The Morning of the Magicians, Bergier and Pauwels claimed that the Nazi Party, together with the Vril society, had actually developed a series of flying disc prototypes. When the Nazi's were defeated, the Vril society allegedly retreated to a base in Antarctica and vanished into hollow Earth, to meet up with the leaders of an advanced race inhabiting the inner Earth.
Bulgarian engineer, Vladimir Terziski, has also made a few startling claims, such as alleging that the Nazi's had the ability to land on the moon in 1942 and that, "there is atmosphere, water and vegetation on the Moon," which is concealed by NASA to exclude the third world from moon exploration.
Tin-Foil Territory
German Holocaust denier Ernst Zündel claimed that flying saucers were Nazi secret weapons, launched from an underground base in Antarctica, from which the Nazis hoped to conquer the world and possibly the planets. But would you believe the ideas a chap who advertised an expedition to Antarctica to find these bases and wanted to charge $9,999 for an exploration team to locate the polar entrance to the hollow earth?
The final piece of UFO/Nazi craziness relates to Miguel Serrano, a Chilean diplomat who claimed that Adolf Hitler was an Avatar of the popular Hindu god Vishnu who was communing with Hyperborean gods of Greek mythology, in an underground Antarctic base in New Swabia. Serrano also predicted that Hitler would lead a fleet of UFOs from the base to establish the Fourth Reich. Ahhhhhhh crazy!!!
Books To Read
Flim-Flam!: Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions, by James Randi -ESP, psychokinesis, psychic detectives, levitation, psychic surgery, UFOs and more.
Early claims relate to the many reports by allied aircraft pilots about mysterious aerial phenomena from around the world. These reports came to be known as "foo fighter" phenomena; although initially, this term applied to a specific UFO reported and named by the U.S, as 415th Night Fighter Squadron. Foo fighters were assumed, by most witnesses to be secret weaponry used by their enemies.
After 1947, there were a series of flying saucer reports and in 1950, Professor Giuseppe Belluzzo, an Italian scientist asserted that "types of flying discs were designed and studied in Germany and Italy as early as 1942". Aeronautical engineer Roy Fedden also remarked that the Germans were working on a number of very unusual aeronautical projects and that if the war had gone on only months longer, there would have been some very "deadly developments".
Later in 1960, Jacques Bergier and Louis Pauwels alleged the existence of a secret society called the Vril-Society, which was supposedly searching for the energy force called, Vril, an “all-permeating fluid” of limitless power. In their book, The Morning of the Magicians, Bergier and Pauwels claimed that the Nazi Party, together with the Vril society, had actually developed a series of flying disc prototypes. When the Nazi's were defeated, the Vril society allegedly retreated to a base in Antarctica and vanished into hollow Earth, to meet up with the leaders of an advanced race inhabiting the inner Earth.
Bulgarian engineer, Vladimir Terziski, has also made a few startling claims, such as alleging that the Nazi's had the ability to land on the moon in 1942 and that, "there is atmosphere, water and vegetation on the Moon," which is concealed by NASA to exclude the third world from moon exploration.
Tin-Foil Territory
German Holocaust denier Ernst Zündel claimed that flying saucers were Nazi secret weapons, launched from an underground base in Antarctica, from which the Nazis hoped to conquer the world and possibly the planets. But would you believe the ideas a chap who advertised an expedition to Antarctica to find these bases and wanted to charge $9,999 for an exploration team to locate the polar entrance to the hollow earth?
The final piece of UFO/Nazi craziness relates to Miguel Serrano, a Chilean diplomat who claimed that Adolf Hitler was an Avatar of the popular Hindu god Vishnu who was communing with Hyperborean gods of Greek mythology, in an underground Antarctic base in New Swabia. Serrano also predicted that Hitler would lead a fleet of UFOs from the base to establish the Fourth Reich. Ahhhhhhh crazy!!!
Books To Read
Flim-Flam!: Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions, by James Randi -ESP, psychokinesis, psychic detectives, levitation, psychic surgery, UFOs and more.
Going Bananas and Smoking Bananas
Most people have heard the claim that you can get high from smoking banana peel. The Anarchist Cookbook also believing this to be possible, published information about bananadine, the supposed psychoactive substance in bananas, in their 1970's book.
The hoax recipe was lifted from the Berkeley Barb, an underground newspaper from California, founded by Max Scherr in 1965. Scherr had a mischievous sense of humour and had the rascally idea that he could get the authorities to ban bananas. So the magazine went ahead and printed a story detailing how bananas contained a substance called "bananadine", which could induce a psychedelic high similar to opium and psilocybin.
Amazingly, this tall-tale was widely believed and not only did it inspire a generation of teens to get into smoking banana skins, but the absurd manufactured anecdote was mentioned in a New York Times article on illicit drugs by Donald Louria.
Despite New York University's finding, that bananas contain no intoxicating chemicals, the bananadine idea was reinforced by such songs as Mellow Yellow by Donovan (who was actually thinking about ladies' vibrators), and the punk rock band The Dead Milkmen, who sang a song about "Smokin' Banana Peels".
Sorry guys, but the only effect you will get is a placebo.
The Spider Network, by David Enrich - about con artists and fraud cases.
The hoax recipe was lifted from the Berkeley Barb, an underground newspaper from California, founded by Max Scherr in 1965. Scherr had a mischievous sense of humour and had the rascally idea that he could get the authorities to ban bananas. So the magazine went ahead and printed a story detailing how bananas contained a substance called "bananadine", which could induce a psychedelic high similar to opium and psilocybin.
Amazingly, this tall-tale was widely believed and not only did it inspire a generation of teens to get into smoking banana skins, but the absurd manufactured anecdote was mentioned in a New York Times article on illicit drugs by Donald Louria.
Despite New York University's finding, that bananas contain no intoxicating chemicals, the bananadine idea was reinforced by such songs as Mellow Yellow by Donovan (who was actually thinking about ladies' vibrators), and the punk rock band The Dead Milkmen, who sang a song about "Smokin' Banana Peels".
Sorry guys, but the only effect you will get is a placebo.
Books To Read
How the Eyes can Trick the Brain
We can't always trust what we think we see. Remember, our brain is stuck in the enclosed darkness of our skull and it must try to interpret the messages that come via the eyes. The information that our eyes gather can, due to such reasons as competing stimuli as excessive colour, movement, tilt or brightness, create a visual picture which differs from the objective, measurable reality.
How we see things often depends on our perspective, or, how we see things as a whole. For example, what do you see below? A duck or a rabbit?
And is the dancer below, spinning clock-wise or anti-clockwise?
Our brain has to make sense of the incoming visual perceptions by organising them in certain ways, putting information together like a jigsaw and filling in missing parts. Notice how your brain creates an impression of triangles, that are not really there?
With some things our brain completely fails. For example, the impossible 2 dimensional drawings which are interpreted by our brains as being 3 dimensional, even though viewing the object for a few minutes makes us realise that it is impossible for the object to exist.
The the Dutch artist M. C. Escher used many impossible paradox illusions in his art works.
Books To read
The Ultimate Book of Optical Illusions, by Al Seckel. Wonderful trickery!
How we see things often depends on our perspective, or, how we see things as a whole. For example, what do you see below? A duck or a rabbit?
And is the dancer below, spinning clock-wise or anti-clockwise?
Our brain has to make sense of the incoming visual perceptions by organising them in certain ways, putting information together like a jigsaw and filling in missing parts. Notice how your brain creates an impression of triangles, that are not really there?
With some things our brain completely fails. For example, the impossible 2 dimensional drawings which are interpreted by our brains as being 3 dimensional, even though viewing the object for a few minutes makes us realise that it is impossible for the object to exist.
The the Dutch artist M. C. Escher used many impossible paradox illusions in his art works.
Ascending and Descending by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher |
Books To read
The Ultimate Book of Optical Illusions, by Al Seckel. Wonderful trickery!
Seeing the Face of Jesus on a Piece of Toast
Most people have heard of cases where people supposedly, see the face of Jesus on a piece of toast; this kind of perception is called Pareidolia. The human brain is a pattern maker and humans are especially inclined to see faces in random patterns, especially, anything that appears to have 2 dots and a line. : D
Despite not bearing much resemblance to a real face, most people will identify the above picture as a face.
Seeing religious figures on toast and other food items has spawned a bit of an industry, with few stopping to even consider that they don't know what Jesus may have actually looked like. It is highly unlikely that he would have looked like an Italian youth with blonde hair and blue eyes, as many Italian painters of the Renaissance seemed to think. And it is equally unlikely that a picture of him would appear on a piece of factory-produced bread.
The word pareidolia comes from Greek and essentially, it describes the human tendency to see pictures in random patterns.
Carl Sagan saw pareidolia as providing an evolutionary advantage related to differentiating a friend from enemy. Psychology has made use of pareidolia with the Rorschach inkblot test, where the patient is asked to interpret "ambiguous designs" and the psychologist accesses the personality of the patient based on what the patient claims to see. Thankfully, this flunky practice is dying out.
Some extremely wacky and embarrassing things have also resulted from paradolia. For example, Chonosuke Okamura, a twentieth-century Japanese palaeontologist claimed that he had discovered ancient fossils showing "mini-species" of animals ranging from humans to dinosaurs, which were each less than 0.25 mm in length. He then claimed that: "There have been no changes in the bodies of mankind since the Silurian period ... except for a growth in stature from 3.5 mm to 1,700 mm."[6][7]. Okamura had looked at his fossil specimens under the microscope and also seen, "Two totally naked homos, facing each other, are moving their hands and feet harmoniously. We can only think of dancing in a present-day style."
Oh my! Some people will simply believe anything!
Books To Read
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, by Carl Sagan - learn critical and skeptical thinking.
Despite not bearing much resemblance to a real face, most people will identify the above picture as a face.
Seeing religious figures on toast and other food items has spawned a bit of an industry, with few stopping to even consider that they don't know what Jesus may have actually looked like. It is highly unlikely that he would have looked like an Italian youth with blonde hair and blue eyes, as many Italian painters of the Renaissance seemed to think. And it is equally unlikely that a picture of him would appear on a piece of factory-produced bread.
A rock that appears like a face |
Carl Sagan saw pareidolia as providing an evolutionary advantage related to differentiating a friend from enemy. Psychology has made use of pareidolia with the Rorschach inkblot test, where the patient is asked to interpret "ambiguous designs" and the psychologist accesses the personality of the patient based on what the patient claims to see. Thankfully, this flunky practice is dying out.
Some extremely wacky and embarrassing things have also resulted from paradolia. For example, Chonosuke Okamura, a twentieth-century Japanese palaeontologist claimed that he had discovered ancient fossils showing "mini-species" of animals ranging from humans to dinosaurs, which were each less than 0.25 mm in length. He then claimed that: "There have been no changes in the bodies of mankind since the Silurian period ... except for a growth in stature from 3.5 mm to 1,700 mm."[6][7]. Okamura had looked at his fossil specimens under the microscope and also seen, "Two totally naked homos, facing each other, are moving their hands and feet harmoniously. We can only think of dancing in a present-day style."
Oh my! Some people will simply believe anything!
Books To Read
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, by Carl Sagan - learn critical and skeptical thinking.
The Virgin Priestesses of Ancient Rome
Vestal Virgins were priestesses of ancient Rome dedicated to the goddess Vesta. Vesta was the goddess of the holy fire of Rome and the Vestal Virgins were selected by casting of lots. This process was believed to be a form of divination but resembled random chance. The Vestal Virgins were very influential and powerful and charged with the important job of tending the sacred fire, which was considered integral to the security and survival of Rome.
Originally there were two Vestal Virgins, but over time the number grew to six women, who would take vows of chastity. The Virgins were considered important to Rome; their major duty was to ensure that the sacred fire never went out and this was considered a life purpose, so these women could never marry or have children.
Unlike many major religions, the Vestal Virgins had respect, privileges and powers. For example, when on their way to public ceremonies in their covered two-wheeled carriage, they had right of way on the road. And when at various public ceremonies, they sat in reserved places of honour. Unlike most women of Rome, they could own property, make a will and vote. They also had the power to free condemned prisoners, simply by touching them.
There was a College of Vestals but the Christian Emperor Theodosius, ordered the college discontinued and the sacred fire extinguished in 394. Interestingly, the Roman Empire did indeed fall into decline after this and finally dissolved on September 4, 476, when the last Emperor, Romulus Augustus was deposed by a Germanic chieftain.
Originally there were two Vestal Virgins, but over time the number grew to six women, who would take vows of chastity. The Virgins were considered important to Rome; their major duty was to ensure that the sacred fire never went out and this was considered a life purpose, so these women could never marry or have children.
Unlike many major religions, the Vestal Virgins had respect, privileges and powers. For example, when on their way to public ceremonies in their covered two-wheeled carriage, they had right of way on the road. And when at various public ceremonies, they sat in reserved places of honour. Unlike most women of Rome, they could own property, make a will and vote. They also had the power to free condemned prisoners, simply by touching them.
There was a College of Vestals but the Christian Emperor Theodosius, ordered the college discontinued and the sacred fire extinguished in 394. Interestingly, the Roman Empire did indeed fall into decline after this and finally dissolved on September 4, 476, when the last Emperor, Romulus Augustus was deposed by a Germanic chieftain.
Frederic Leighton, 1st Baron Leighton Wikipedia
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