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Seeker of Carcosa
Seeker of Carcosa @ WilloftheWest @feddit.uk
Posts
13
Comments
127
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • Bravo to the exceptional bravery on display here. I'm sure the majority of PhD graduates, including myself, wish they'd had the gumption to name and shame the suppressing factors contributing to a toxic academic environment. Reading this makes me kind of appreciative that my troubles were only administrative mismanagement and an inexperienced supervisor.

    Also what the hell is up with TU Delft? It's only partway through March and this is the second time this year that I've seen a PhD candidate publicly call out the institute.

  • If you’re able to do so, try exercise. That was my problem: too much energy to sleep, too tired to expend energy due to poor sleep.

  • Towels

  • I’m married and we just have the towel.

  • Great post. Star Wars/Genesys is a great RPG system, but fuck proprietary dice. It’s even more egregious that a pack of FF dice isn’t a full “play-set”, and star wars/genesys use slightly different symbols. I managed to buy a bulk set of blank dice and shade them for less than the price of a single set of FF dice.

  • Baroque: possessing a marvellous proof, which the margin of your book is too narrow to contain.

  • Math(s)

  • For me it’s Grothendieck's prime.

  • Math(s)

  • Divisibility by 3 rule is real. If the sum of the digits of a number is divisible by 3, then the number itself is also divisible by 3. Same goes with 9. There’s an 11 rule, but it’s a bit convoluted.

  • It’s more insidious than dead internet theory. Imagine any significant social media platform containing a large proportion of users that can be directly prompted to tout any message, or mass downvote opinions that the company doesn’t like. All this can happen while the company claims to be a “free speech platform”.

  • Were you not aware of it at any point? I don’t necessarily mean as part of the GCSE curriculum. I’ve been aware of the Odyssey and the Iliad from the “Ancient Greeks” part of our primary school curriculum back in year 4. Of course we weren’t analysing texts, but I’d expect any ten year old to be capable of rattling off some major plot points like blinding Polyphemus, or sailors plugging their ears with wax against the sirens and tying Odysseus to the mast.

  • Liam’s a tool. UK schools absolutely do teach the Odyssey, and have done so at least as far back as my youth.

  • Yeah those 3 years really demonstrate how the myth of “they married young in the past” can’t possibly be a myth.

    When talking about a lower bound on something, the only information one can directly infer from the statement “13 is too low” is “any number below 13 is also too low.” If you’re arguing that “13 is too low” implies “16 is too low” then ditto 19, 22, 25. It’s an absurd argument.

  • I’m a mathematician so I’ll give you a free lesson: 13 is less than 16. So in a thread discussing Disney and the historic attitudes of people towards a 16 year old marrying, saying that it was inappropriate for a 13 year old in a Shakespeare play is immaterial to the discussion.

  • Romeo and Juliet were 13 though.

  • There should be a narcissist’s prayer for people who bury their heads in the sand.

    That didn’t happen

    And if it did, it’s contained online

    And if it isn’t, it’s not popular

    And if it is, you can ignore it

    And if you can’t, ¯(ツ)

  • I thought I was being a reductionist but it seems from that article I might be closer to the truth than I thought. It's weirdly disappointing that it simply boils down to some childish tactic of pretending to be confused by the results, instead of there being some obscure legal precedent.

  • Can someone better versed in US politics give a quick rundown on how the fake electoral scheme actually works? I’m aware of the physical steps involved but I don’t see how the scheme doesn’t just fail at the first hurdle. In what world can a person not assigned as elector send in their own certificate and not be immediately disregarded? To my mind it sounds like this:

    Mrs Krabappel: I’m the fourth grade teacher and have counted the votes for fourth grade class president. Martin Prince wins with 2 votes.

    Miss Hoover: No, I’m the real fourth grade teacher and I declare that Bart Simpson wins with 2 votes.

    Principal Skinner: There’s no way of discerning who the real fourth grade teacher is. My only option is to ignore the results of the vote and decide by fiat.

  • Sorry but that knife screams “mall ninja.”

  • They’re the same picture.

  • ”For a comment.”

    In this day and age, who hasn’t made incredibly specific ultraviolent threats against an elected official while constantly reassuring others that they are serious/making a promise to enact these threats? Did this upstanding citizen simply forget to cite his first amendment rights to the agents?

  • Podcasts @lemmy.ml
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Request: Podcasts dismantling right wing pundits’ rhetoric, which isn’t snarky mediocre comedians

    I like the “facts and logic” crowd having their arguments torn down with actual facts and logic. I don’t like cutaway gags, ridiculous hyperbole delivered in an exasperated tone, shoehorned Obama worship coated in an “I’m not saying he was perfect” disclaimer, or recurring meta-gags. This cuts out most snark podcasts which, unfortunately, make up a lot of the most popular podcasts tackling right wing pundits.

    Ideally, I want an introduction to the right-wing narrative of the week, and a firm put-down delivered in a documentary fashion. I don’t want hosts who I can see 2 nights a week at Second City or hear on half a dozen other podcasts.

    Any suggestions welcome.

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Fourteen

    Welcome back to our Dream Cycle Book Club, where we explore the dream based stories and dream-adjacent tales written by H.P. Lovecraft. In this week's thread we shall discuss the final half of At the Mountains of Madness.

    This week we will be reading our penultimate story: The Dreams in the Witch House. The Arkham Archivist provides us with a collated collection of stories here. A LibriVox audio recording is not available and so I direct you to a recording by the YouTuber HorrorBabble here

    This week image credit goes to Joseph Diaz.

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Thirteen

    Hello everyone and welcome to the thirteenth week of our book club exploring H.P. Lovecraft's Dream Cycle.

    In this week's thread we discuss the first 5 chapters of At the Mountains of Madness, written in 1931. Our reading assignment for this week is the second half of At the Mountains of Madness, from Chapter VI onwards.

    A PDF of the short story is found in the collected works curated by the Arkham Archivist here. A LibriVox audio recording is available here.

    Very sorry for the late submission this week. My department is hosting an algebra conference and I'm spending my evenings "networking" (read: getting drunk while ranting about the Representation Theory of algebraic groups). Unfortunately, pleasure has to be sidelined by business until Wednesday evening. I'll post comments on the first five chapters as soon as possible but expect significa

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Twelve

    Hello everyone and welcome back to the Dream Cycle Book Club. Today we will discuss the final two parts of The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.

    Our reading for this week is the first five chapters of At the Mountains of Madness, written in 1931. The first five chapters should put us at around the halfway point of this novella.

    I'd call this one Dream Cycle-adjacent, as it features and mentions locations such as Leng and Kadath. It's also an important story in Lovecraft's Bibliography, but we'll cover that during the relevant discussion.

    A PDF of the short story is found in the collected works curated by the Arkham Archivist here. A LibriVox audio recording is available here.

    Image credit Jagoba Lekuona

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Eleven

    Hello everyone and welcome back to the Dream Cycle Book Club. This week we will be discussing the first three parts of The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.

    Our reading for this week will be parts IV and V of The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, thus finishing the story. The text, collated as part of a collection by The Arkham Archivist, is found here. An audio recording by the talented HorrorBabble can be found here.

    The image is a portrait of Vincent Price who played the role of Charles Dexter Ward/Joseph Curwen in the 1963 film The Haunted Palace. Art credit goes to Shayu Dan

    RPGMemes @ttrpg.network
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Basic descriptions are necessary for collaborative storytelling

    Just a vibe check of the Lemmy community with a deliberately exaggerated meme.

    A reddit post would get flooded with argumentative mini-essays from folks who can’t string together 5 words in-character.

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Ten

    Hello everyone and welcome to the tenth week of our Dream Cycle Book Club. In this thread we'll be discussing Lovecraft's epic novella The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath.

    This week's reading is The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, Written in 1927. This is another novella of Lovecraft, weighing in at 104 pages in my copy of his fiction. I'm aware that 100 pages of Lovecraft's often verbose prose can be trying. Thankfully, Lovecraft actually separated this story into parts, which allows for easy splitting up of the reading. Our reading for this week is parts I-III, with parts IV and V covered next week. The text is available in PDF format courtesy of the Arkham Archivist here. Audio is provided by the talented HorrorBabble here

    Image Credit Jian Guo

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Nine

    Hello everyone and welcome to Week Nine of our Dream Cycle Book Club. This week's thread is for the discussion of the three stories from last week: The Outsider, The Silver Key, and The Strange High House in the Mist.

    Our reading for this week is a single story, The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath. It is Lovecraft's first novella-length Dreamlands story and ties together many of the disconnected stories that we've read in previous weeks. The PDF is available via the Arkham Archivist here. Audio is provided once again by the talented HorrorBabble here.

    The Silver Key used in the OP was created by the Rhode Island based sculptor Gage Prentiss

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Eight

    Hello everyone and welcome back to our Dream Cycle Book Club. This week we will be discussing What the Moon Brings and The Hound.

    There are only three more short stories until we reach the first novella length dreamlands story. If I'd had a bit more forethought, I'd have loaded one of the last two weeks with a third story, as both featured very short stories. Hopefully this week's reading doesn't prove too much. We have three stories for this week: The Outsider, The Silver Key, and The Strange High House in the Mist.

    Our First story, The Outsider, was written in 1921 but is listed on Wikipedia as 1926; this led to me missing it a couple weeks ago. It is available in PDF format via the Arkham Archivist here, and a LibriVox audio recording is available here.

    The Silver Key is our second story thi

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Seven

    Welcome back everyone, to the seventh meeting of our Dream Cycle Book Club. This week we will be discussing Hypnos and Azathoth.

    Our reading for this week is two more short stories: What the Moon Brings and The Hound.

    What the Moon Brings was written in June 1922. It is available in PDF format via the Arkham Archivist here. An audiobook version is available via LibriVox here

    The Hound was written in September 1922 and is the last dream related story written by Lovecraft in 1922. It is available in PDF format via the same link given above. I cannot find a LibriVox recording so I once again link to a reading by the talented HorrorBabble here.

    Image credit Carole Raddato

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Six

    Welcome back to our adventure into the Dreamlands as described by H.P. Lovecraft. In this week's thread we will be discussing the reading of last week, The Quest of Iranon and The Other Gods.

    This week we reach the "midway point" in terms of stories read in the Dream Cycle, though the stories in the latter half tend to be weightier volumes. We will be reading two more tales: Hypnos and Azathoth.

    Our first story, Hypnos was written in March 1922. It is found in PDF format via our friend the Arkham Archivist here and in audio format via LibriVox here.

    Our second story, Azathoth is the shortest of our tales thus far and is reportedly the beginning to an incomplete novel of Lovecraft. It can be found in PDF format via the same link above. I failed to find a LibriVox audio recording, thus I rely once

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Five

    Welcome once again to our investigation into the world of Dream as defined by our favourite horror writer, H.P. Lovecraft. In this thread we will be discussing the reading assignment for the past week: Ex Oblivione and The Nameless City.

    Our reading assignment for this week is two more short stories: The Quest of Iranon and The Other Gods.

    The Quest of Iranon is another of Lovecraft's tales explicitly inspired by Lord Dunsany. The story, written in February 1921, is available in PDF format via the Arkham Archivist here. Unfortunately, LibriVox does not have an audio version of this story available, thus our audio recording for this week is via the YouTuber HorrorBabble. The video, filtered through Piped (a privacy friendly alternative YouTube Frontend) is available here

    The Other Gods is also heavily inspired by Dunsany's Work. Written in August 1921, the tex

    H.P. Lovecraft @ka.tet42.org
    Seeker of Carcosa @feddit.uk

    Dream Cycle Book Club: Week Four

    Hello Everyone and welcome back to the Dream Cycle Book Club! In this thread we will be discussing the reading assignment for the past week: Celephaïs and Nyarlathotep.

    For this week we have two more short stories to read: Ex Oblivione and The Nameless City.

    I can't find much information on when Ex Oblivione was written, though considering it's publication in the March 1921 edition of The United Amateur, it has been given a writing date in the range of late 1920 to early 1921. It can be found via the Arkham Archivist's trusty PDF here and in audiobook format here.

    The second story for this week, The Nameless City was written in January 1921. Though it is only tangentially related to the Dreamlands, it is fantastic Mythos reading. It can be read in PDF format via the same link above, and can be fou