Korēator

Joined March 2009
Photos and videos
Korē retweeted
The best don’t perfectly follow the rules but they don’t always break them either. They break the rules when they don’t make sense and it matters to the outcome.
15
7
78
7,964
Korē retweeted
Beware cognitive shortcuts. When considering a course of action and weighing all the costs— just because a cost cannot be easily quantified does not make it any less real. Indeed, such costs are invariably our costliest ones.
2
1
6
588
Jun 14

ALT Buckle Up Lock In GIF by General Motors

China has a huge demographic problem. They aborted all their girls for decades due to their one child policy. So a lot of sex robots are being developed. I heard this directly when I spoke at Dreame’s conference (big Chinese consumer electronics company). Into the weird future we go…
1
15
Korē retweeted
Tiny #Robotic Bees Are Shaping the Future of Smart Farming by @amazingthings_ #AgriTech #Innovation #TechForGood #EmergingTech #Technology
1
7
12
693
Korē retweeted
1
8
13
736
Jun 13
9
Jun 13

10
Korē retweeted
38
1,126
8,737
130,454
Korē retweeted
Tom Bombadil is the most mysterious character in The Lord of the Rings. He's the oldest being in Middle-earth and completely immune to the Ring's power — but why? Bombadil is the key to the underlying ethics of the entire story, and to resisting evil yourself... Tom Bombadil is an enigmatic, merry hermit of the countryside, known as "oldest and fatherless" by the Elves. He is truly ancient, and claims he was "here before the river and the trees." He's so confounding that Peter Jackson left him out of the films entirely. This is understandable, since he's unimportant to the development of the plot. Tolkien, however, saw fit to include him anyway, because Tom reveals a lot about the underlying ethics of Middle-earth, and how to shield yourself from evil. The hobbits meet Bombadil early on in their quest, before they reach Bree and the Prancing Pony Inn. He rescues Merry and Pippin from Old Man Willow, and invites the hobbits to stay at his house in the Old Forest. There, the hobbits realize something strange about him: the Ring has no power over Bombadil whatsoever. When he wears it, he remains visible. He treats it as a plaything, making it disappear with a magic trick. Indeed, at the Council of Elrond, Gandalf rejects the idea of giving the Ring to Tom, for he would likely misplace it or forget about it entirely. So just who is he, exactly? When Frodo asks this very question to Tom's wife Goldberry, she simply responds "He is." It's a cryptic answer that echoes God's famous answer to Moses in the Book of Exodus: "I am who I am." Thus, many theorize that Bombadil is God, some kind of angelic being, or even the spirit of the Music of the Ainur (due to the fact that he is constantly singing). But Tolkien's letters reveal something considerably more interesting… In April 1954, Tolkien wrote: "The story is cast in terms of a good side, and a bad side, beauty against ruthless ugliness, tyranny against kingship… but both sides in some degree, conservative or destructive, want a measure of control.But if you have, as it were, taken a 'vow of poverty', renounced control, and take your delight in things for themselves without reference to yourself… then the questions of the rights and wrongs of power and control might become utterly meaningless to you, and the means of power quite valueless…" So, Bombadil is a representation of what it means to take pure delight in the world around you — to experience people and things simply as they are, without any thought for what they could be or how you could use them. And this is why the Ring has no power over him. To Bombadil, the One Ring is simply a ring, and the possibilities of what can be achieved through its power are of no importance. He is able to resist its evil precisely because he is entirely content with the world around him. At the end of the story, having accomplished what he set out to do in Middle-earth, Gandalf pays Tom a visit before returning to the Undying Lands: "I am going to have a long talk with Bombadil: such a talk as I have not had in all my time." If Bombadil is the epitome of simply enjoying life and being, Gandalf is the epitome of doing. He guides the hobbits, fights the Balrog, and runs up and down Middle-earth to help destroy the One Ring. But now that he's finally liberated from doing, he immediately heads to Bombadil's. He does so with a sense of relief, as if he's at last able to access a purer and higher mode of being — a sort of innocence that cannot be fully experienced by those consumed by doing. Of course, by this Tolkien doesn't disparage the value of action. The entirety of LOTR displays the importance of rising up against evil, even in the face of all odds. But with the inclusion of Bombadil, he does remind readers that fighting isn't all there is. Bombadil reminds us that while it's important to strive and *do*, it is just as important to occasionally step back and *be*. Indeed, your ability to do so plays a crucial role in helping you resist the allure of evil… Read the full piece here: theculturist.io/welcome The unsung hero of The Lord of the Rings...
221
1,274
7,374
418,654
Jun 11
😱
1
10
Jun 11
10
Jun 10

ALT Excited Jim Carrey GIF

If you're not having fun asking questions, you're not doing science right.
1
20
Jun 10
Sirius ( 9 Canis Major
In case I don't see ya. #Matrix Rayment Agents concept by @NeoMatrixology
1
1
99
Korē retweeted
re-koushi 🌘
1
16
163
2,303
Jun 9
“…or when primitive beliefs that have been surmounted appear to be once again confirmed.”
I wonder what it feels like to touch AheadForm’s Bionic face.
30
Jun 9
👏👏👏
.@JerrySeinfeld explains why @adamcarolla's "Rich Man, Poor Man" is one of the greatest comedy bits of all time 👇
30
Jun 7
So Brave
I want people to know that I stand against hate
10
Korē retweeted
Mind Over Machine: Gesture Control Brings Tentacle Robots to Life by @Fabriziobustama #Robotics #Engineering #ArtificialIntelligence #Innovation #Technology
6
26
1,583
Jun 7
Or forever…

ALT Frankenstein Frankenstein Pond GIF

Raising boys is easy. Let them throw shit in the water. They’ll do it for hours.
1
18