[BLOG] Some Monday links
- Centauri Dreams notes the discovery of rocky debris indicative of destroyed planets in orbit of the white dwarf SDSS J122859.93+104032.9, 400 light-years away.
- JSTOR Daily shows how the Columbine massacre led to a resurgence of evangelical Christianity in the US.
- Language Log notes an example of digraphia, two scripts, in use in Taiwan.
- Lawyers, Guns and Money identifies the presidential run of Howard Schultz in ways unflattering to him yet accurate.
- The LRB Blog takes a look at the current, unsettling, stage of artificial intelligence research.
- At the NYR Daily, Boyd Tonkin writes about an exhibition of the works of Van Gogh at the Tate Britain highlighting his ties with England and with his Europeanness.
- Starts With A Bang’s Ethan Siegel reports on the ultimate fate of the Earth, a cinder orbiting a black dwarf.
- Strange Company tells the strange, sad story of 19th century California writer Yda Hillis Addis.
- At Vintage Space, Amy Shira Teitel explains why the Apollo missions made use of a dangerous pure-oxygen environment.
- Window on Eurasia notes how, 41 years ago, protests in Georgia forced the Soviet Union to let the Georgian republic keep Georgian as its official language.
- Arnold Zwicky starts with peeps and goes on to look at dragons.
Written by Randy McDonald
April 15, 2019 at 2:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences
Tagged with artificial intelligence, astronomy, black dwarf, blogs, california, chinese language, crime, earth, english language, former soviet union, france, futurology, georgia, howard schultz, humour, language, links, manned apollo missions, netherlands, oddities, politics, public art, religion, SDSS J122859.93+104032.9, solar system, south caucasus, space science, space travel, taiwan, technology, united states, white dwarf