A shooting star over Mount Rainier By Tanner Wendell Stewart
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Woman who loves science over here
Science Side of Tumblr, I need your help! Ladies of the Science Side of Tumblr, I especially need your help!
I had a conversation at my non-science day job that went like this:
A friend who shall be called Diane (not her real name) comes to my desk to chat. Just one of the many topics we discuss is that her boyfriend is taking a class in wildlife biology. She has decided that she has grown tired of hearing about local wildlife and hearing him recite a plethora of scientific names.
I responded positively to this subject, and told her that I too found the subject interesting. A third person had heard our conversation. We shall call her Claire (again, not her real name). Claire immediately responded, “Girls don’t like that kind of thing.”
“Are you saying that girls don’t like science?” I asked.
“No, not normally they don’t,” she responded.
Before you all screech with anguish, bear with me for a moment. We all know that this is not true. As a man, I find this idea upsetting for countless reasons that have all been validly discussed before. To try to debate the issue is rather moot. Instead, I’d like a show of hands.
Ladies of the Science Side of Tumblr! I call you to arms! Will you rally around me in saying that women can and do indeed love science, of any variety? Gentleman of the Science Side of Tumblr who know someone who is a girl who also happens to love science, will you stand with me too? We all like and reblog the pro-women-in-science posts we see so often, let’s all stand and be counted in one place this time.
Reblog this if you are a woman who loves science. Reblog this if you are a man who knows a woman who loves science. Let us disprove her beyond all doubt!
Under Sun Pin’s direction the Ch’i armies, which were advancing into Wei, followed the dictum “Be deceptive.”
P’ang Chüan arrogantly believed the men of Ch’i to be cowards who would flee rather than engage mighty Wei in battle. Therefore, Sun Pin daily reduced the number of cooking fires in the encampment to create a facade of every-increasing desertion. He also effected a tactical withdrawal to further entice P’ang Chüan into the favorable terrain at Ma-ling where the Ch’i commander concealed ten thousand crossbowman among the hills.
P’ang Chüan, apparently afraid that he would miss an opportunity to inflict a severe blow on the retreating Ch’i army, abandoned his heavy forces and supply train and rushed forth with only light units. Arriving at night, the combined Wei forces were ambushed as soon as they penetrated the killing zone.
In addition to being decisively defeated by Ch’i’s withering crossbow fire, 100,000 Wei soldiers needlessly perished because of their commander’s character flaws and hasty judgement.
The battle of Ma-ling is apparently the first recorded conflict in which crossbows were employed. The quote is taken from “Evolution of Conflicts and Weapons in China” in The Art of War by Sun Tzu.
audience member: what do you respect about each other
clinton: i respect that trump's children haven't stabbed him yet. i'm consistently shocked and amazed by it
How is the source for this returnofkings, a MRA site?
If men stopped working…the world would continue on.
If women stopped working, then things would get ugly.
Now we know the (proposed) names of the four new elements, here’s an updated graphic with more information on each! High-res image/PDF: http://wp.me/p4aPLT-1Eg
Edgley Design builds family home around 100-year-old pear tree in south London »
IS SCIENCE EATING ITS YOUNG?
Background. Scientists and policy makers around the world increasingly worry about the plight of young researchers in academia, and for good reason. Competition for tenure-track positions has surged, and some early career researchers face tough odds in the quest for funding. This week Nature pleads the case for the young in a special issue.
Design challenge. How do we visually convey the idea that science is eating its young? We felt it was important to represent a system that has gone wrong, with various consequences, in an engaging way. The metaphor of a video came to mind, as young scientists find themselves trapped in framework, playing along.
We gave this brief to Megapont, an artist that specializes in isometric pixel art, and he created a fantastic scene for the cover. The retro gaming vibe gives a sense of an aging system that needs an overhaul. The detail in the artwork rewards the observant reader, with hidden treasures and references to iconic games and other worlds. And check out the tiny rat fleeing the scene - only a few pixels!
Have your say. Perhaps you are a young scientist who identifies with a cover character? Maybe the one slouched in dispair on the floor, or the one cutting out in bunny slippers? We’d like to hear your story – here’s a tumblr just for you: researchrealities.tumblr.com
-Kelly Krause
Gaming, Science, History, Feminism, and all other manners of geekery. Also a lot of dance
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