As a father, this rings true to me.
The best đ Â Happy National Video Games Day!
This kills me.
And then there are the so-called âforbidden colorsâ called red-green and blue-yellow, because scientists suck at naming things. We know they exist, but our retinas piss all over the very idea by crudely approximating them to their base colors when sending the signal to the brain. In an experiment conducted in 1983, researchers figured out they could make volunteers actually see these colors using specifically constructed striped images where one half of an eyeâs retinal cells could only see one color while the other saw the other, basically overloading the eye until it went âscrew itâ and unleashed the forbidden hues.
The volunteers saw colors they had not seen before, but had no words for what they were looking at. It sort of broke their brains for a minute.
I've never read a truer statement
Jon Stewart sure picked the shittiest year ever to retireâŚ.
@burbinerbs-sims maybe?
What if our dreams are just us seeing what the other versions of ourselves in alternate universes are doing?
Race Dog
Yay!
This is so cool
NAAS Astronomy Picture of the Day 2016 September 5Â
What is this meteor doing? Dynamically, the unusually short and asymmetric train may indicate that the sand-sized grain at the center of the glow is momentarily spinning as it ablates, causing its path to be slightly spiral. Geographically, the meteor appears to be going through the Heart Nebula, although really it is in Earthâs atmosphere and so is about one quadrillion times closer. Taken last month on the night of the peak, this meteor is likely from the Perseid meteor shower. The Perseids radiant, in the constellation of Perseus, is off the frame to the upper right, toward the direction that the meteor streak is pointing. The Heart Nebula was imaged in 18 one-minute exposures, of which the unusual meteor streak appeared on just one. The meteor train is multicolored as its glow emanates from different elements in the heated gas.
âStare Downâ oil on canvas by Chuck Jones, 16âł x 20âł, circa 1987.Â
âIf you donât stick to your values when theyâre being testedâŚâ - Jon Stewart
(Source)