ONE OF THE MOST CRINGE-WORTHY SHIT I’VE EVER SEEN…
HOW CAN PEOPLE BE THIS BLARINGLY UNPROFESSIONAL!?!
IN THIS GENERATION!!! WHERE GOOGLE EXISTS!!!!
Amalie Emmy Noether was a German mathematician known for her landmark contributions to abstract algebra and theoretical physics. And noether’s theorem is one of the most beautiful equation in all of theoretical physics.
The theorem explains the connection between symmetry and conservation laws.
It is remarkably surprising that there are a lot of people who are not aware of Noether’s contribution to physics.
This video by ‘Looking Glass Universe’ does a good job (but does not cover the math) in explaining the essence of the theorem.
Have fun!
To be fair 🤔, you have to have a very ❗❗ high IQ 😏 to understand 📚 the taste of McDonald’s Szechuan Dipping Sauce 👌😩 .The taste 👄👅 is extremely subtle 😳 , and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics 📖📘 and culinary mastery 🍴🍽 most of the flavors 😜 will go over a typical eater’s head 🙄 . There’s also the sauce’s nihilistic 🚫🖤 outlook, which is deftly woven 😲 ❓ into the flavors - which draws heavily from ancient 🙊 Korean Dishes, for instance. The fans understand 😏 this stuff; they have the intellectual 😏😏😏 capacity to truly appreciate the depths 💻🔮 of these dipping sauces 😛💦, to realize that they’re not just delicious 👅💯 - they say something deep about LIFE 🤔⌛. As a consequence people who dislike 👎 the Rick and Morty dipping sauce truly ARE idiots 😖 - of course they wouldn’t appreciate 😶, for instance, the taste in Rick’s existencial fascination 👀👃 with the sauce 🙀, and his catchphrase 💬 when consuming said sauce, “Wubba Lubba Dub Dub,” 😢💔 which itself is a cryptic reference to Turgenev’s Russian 🇷🇺 epic Fathers and Sons 📔. I’m smirking 😏 right now just imagining 🗯 one of those addlepated simpletons 😒 scratching their heads 😔 in confusion 🙁 as McDonald’s Kitchen Chef’s geniuses 🤔😏 unfolds itself on their food tray 🍽 and taste glands 👄 🥂. What fools… 😏 how I pity them.
I need to be the hottest person at the grocery store
In which Jun keeps getting “rejected” by Zee.
i’m speechless
This is how the system of white supremacy operates. The media is used 2 create stereotypes like blk on blk crime.They need black men to fill jail cells for the Prison Indstrial complex
You know what? I’m tired of this. I do not know what exactly they are waiting for. I mean our government comes up with “reasons” to invade other countries, such as Syria, like their government is allegedly violating human rights or something like that. but… I mean for other countries, they do not even have to go deep to bomb the fuck out of this place, they can just look at our media. And this has been happening to people of color since the media has existed.
I’ll never forget this 👇🏾
my common sense watching my idiot brain overthink everything
types of aggressive defense: throw objects at the ghost (4), counterattack (2), snatch ghost’s wig (1), flirt (1).
Antibiotic resistance - the phenomenon in which bacteria stop responding to certain antibiotics - is a growing threat around the world.
It’s expected to kill 10 million people annually by 2050.
And it hasn’t been easy to develop new drugs in order to stay ahead of the problem. Many major pharmaceutical companies have stopped developing new antibiotics, and the drugs that are still in development have faced numerous stumbling blocks toward approval.
So some drugmakers are starting to turn to other solutions, including one that’s actually had a fairly long history: phage therapy.
The treatments are made of bacteria-killing viruses called bacteriophages, or phages for short. Discovered in the early 1900s, bacteriophages have the potential to treat people with bacterial infections.
They’re commonly used in parts of eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union as another way to treat infections that could otherwise be treated by antibiotics. Because they are programmed to fight bacteria, phages don’t pose much of a threat to human safety on a larger scale.
“There’s huge potential there that regular antibiotics don’t have,” NYT columnist Carl Zimmer told Business Insider in 2015. “I think what we’d actually have to work on is how we approve medical treatments to make room for viruses that kill bacteria.”