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Greek hoplite, the 6th century BC (photo by Ana Belen Rubio).  Basic armament of a hoplite from the 6th century BC consi...
16/06/2022

Greek hoplite, the 6th century BC (photo by Ana Belen Rubio).

Basic armament of a hoplite from the 6th century BC consisted of:
- spear - dory (about 2.5-3 m long),
- short sword - machaira (photo), kopis or xiphos,
- round shield - aspis (photo),
- bronze helmet - most often the Corinthian, Chalcidian (photo), sometimes Illyrian styles,
- bronze cuirass - bell type (photo) or newer athlete,
- bronze greaves (photo).

Sometimes there were additional bronze protective elements on:
- thighs,
- feet with toes,
- arm (photo),
- forearm (photo),
- groin (photo). πŸ˜²πŸ‡¬πŸ‡·β€οΈπŸŒ

According to legend, Caesar had only one person and a friend he trusted: his doctor. Moreover, if he was ill, he took me...
18/05/2022

According to legend, Caesar had only one person and a friend he trusted: his doctor. Moreover, if he was ill, he took medication only when the doctor personally gave it to him.
Once, at a time when Caesar was not feeling very well, he received an anonymous message: "Be afraid of your closest friend, your doctor. He wants to poison you! "And after a while, the doctor came and brought Caesar medicine. Caesar handed the message over to a friend, and while the doctor was reading it, he drank the medicine he had brought him.
The doctor froze in horror.
"Sir, how could you drink what I gave you after reading this?"
To which Caesar calmly replied:
"Better to die than to doubt your friend!"

A man sat down at a Washington DC subway station and began to play the violin, one cold January morning; he played six B...
23/04/2022

A man sat down at a Washington DC subway station and began to play the violin, one cold January morning; he played six Bach pieces for about 45 minutes. During that time, as it was rush hour, it is estimated that about 1,100 people crossed the station, mostly on their way to work.
β€’
Three minutes elapsed when a middle-aged man noticed the musician, slowed his pace and stopped for a few seconds, but then continued his journey so he wouldn't be late.
β€’
A minute later, the violinist received his first dollar, a lady threw the money without even stopping and went on her way.
β€’
A few minutes later, someone stopped at the wall to hear him, but looking at the clock he resumed the march. I was clearly late for work
β€’
Who paid the most attention was a 3 year old. Mom carried it by the hand, in a hurry, but the boy stopped to stare at the violinist. Finally, mom pulled it out harder and the boy kept walking, turning his head several times to see the violinist. This action was repeated by several other children. All parents, without exception, forced the children to keep going.
β€’
In the 45 minutes the musician played, only 6 people stopped for a while. About 20 gave him money but continued in his normal pace. Took about 32 dollars. When he stopped playing and silence took over the place, no one noticed. No one applauded, nor was there any kind of recognition.
β€’
No one knew this violinist was Joshua Bell, one of the most talented musicians in the world. He played some of the most elaborate pieces once written on a $3.5 million violin.
β€’
Two days before hitting the subway, Joshua Bell sold out a theater in Boston, where each venue cost an average of $100.
β€’
This is a true story, Joshua Bell played incognito at the subway station at an event hosted by the Washington Post that was part of a social experience about perception, tastes, and priorities.
β€’
The question was: in an ordinary place, at an inappropriate hour are we able to perceive beauty? Did we stop to enjoy? Do we recognize talent in an unexpected context?
β€’
One of the possible conclusions that can be drawn from this experience can be: β€œIf we don’t have a moment to stop and listen to one of the best musicians in the world play beautiful music, how many other things will we be missing? "

Best news of the day 😊
12/04/2022

Best news of the day 😊

Read it to know how advanced our sanatan dharma was....Look at this fine craftsmanship on female sulpture at Bhuleshwar ...
01/04/2022

Read it to know how advanced our sanatan dharma was....
Look at this fine craftsmanship on female sulpture at Bhuleshwar temple.❣️

Here is the scientific reason why women in India wear toe rings from ancient times.

This toe ring is worn in pairs in the second toe of both feet and are usually made of silver metal.
According to Ayurveda, the nerve on the second toe of the feet is connected directly to the uterus of the woman. So, a slight pressure (due to the toe ring) is known to regulate the menstrual cycle. It is also known to ensure a healthy uterus.

Traditionally, a married woman wears this ring on her second toe of the feet while the unmarried women wear it on the third toe. It is said that wearing a silver toe ring in the third toe by unmarried women helps them get rid or atleast ease the period pain.
It is also said that toe rings may result in acupressure benefits as well. This is because they press some nerves in the feet which are known to help the reproductive system of the woman.

This toe rings are made up of silver.It is a common knowledge that silver is a good conductor, hence it absorbs the energy from the earth and passes it to the body, thus nourishing the human body.

Usually women wearing gold ornaments in the upper part of the body and silver ornaments in the lower part of the body.
GOLD - Reacts well with body’s aura
SILVER - Reacts well with earth’s energy
Hence gold is used to adorn the upper part of body (Bangles,ear rings , mangalsutra)
whereas silver is worn on lower part of body ( anklets, toe rings)

Resource :-
A CASE STUDY ON INDIAN WOMEN TRADITIONS By Chetana Shetty (B.N.Bandodkar College of Science, Thane )




29/03/2022
06/01/2022

Here are the five most plausible scientific theories suggesting we live in a multiverse:

1. Infinite Universes

Scientists can't be sure what the shape of space-time is, but most likely, it's flat (as opposed to spherical or even donut-shape) and stretches out infinitely. But if space-time goes on forever, then it must start repeating at some point, because there are a finite number of ways particles can be arranged in space and time.

So if you look far enough, you would encounter another version of you β€” in fact, infinite versions of you. Some of these twins will be doing exactly what you're doing right now, while others will have worn a different sweater this morning, and still others will have made vastly different career and life choices.

Because the observable universe extends only as far as light has had a chance to get in the 13.7 billion years since the Big Bang (that would be 13.7 billion light-years), the space-time beyond that distance can be considered to be its own separate universe. In this way, a multitude of universes exists next to each other in a giant patchwork quilt of universes.

2. Bubble Universes

In addition to the multiple universes created by infinitely extending space-time, other universes could arise from a theory called "eternal inflation." Inflation is the notion that the universe expanded rapidly after the Big Bang, in effect inflating like a balloon. Eternal inflation, first proposed by Tufts University cosmologist Alexander Vilenkin, suggests that some pockets of space stop inflating, while other regions continue to inflate, thus giving rise to many isolated "bubble universes."

Thus, our own universe, where inflation has ended, allowing stars and galaxies to form, is but a small bubble in a vast sea of space, some of which is still inflating, that contains many other bubbles like ours. And in some of these bubble universes, the laws of physics and fundamental constants might be different than in ours, making some universes strange places indeed.

3. Parallel Universes

Another idea that arises from string theory is the notion of "braneworlds" β€” parallel universes that hover just out of reach of our own, proposed by Princeton University's Paul Steinhardt and Neil Turok of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Ontario, Canada. The idea comes from the possibility of many more dimensions to our world than the three of space and one of time that we know. In addition to our own three-dimensional "brane" of space, other three-dimensional branes may float in a higher-dimensional space.

Columbia University physicist Brian Greene describes the idea as the notion that "our universe is one of potentially numerous 'slabs' floating in a higher-dimensional space, much like a slice of bread within a grander cosmic loaf," in his book "The Hidden Reality" (Vintage Books, 2011).

A further wrinkle on this theory suggests these brane universes aren't always parallel and out of reach. Sometimes, they might slam into each other, causing repeated Big Bangs that reset the universes over and over again.

4. Daughter Universes

The theory of quantum mechanics, which reigns over the tiny world of subatomic particles, suggests another way multiple universes might arise. Quantum mechanics describes the world in terms of probabilities, rather than definite outcomes. And the mathematics of this theory might suggest that all possible outcomes of a situation do occur β€” in their own separate universes. For example, if you reach a crossroads where you can go right or left, the present universe gives rise to two daughter universes: one in which you go right, and one in which you go left.

"And in each universe, there's a copy of you witnessing one or the other outcome, thinking β€” incorrectly β€” that your reality is the only reality," Greene wrote in "The Hidden Reality."

5. Mathematical Universes

Scientists have debated whether mathematics is simply a useful tool for describing the universe, or whether math itself is the fundamental reality, and our observations of the universe are just imperfect perceptions of its true mathematical nature. If the latter is the case, then perhaps the particular mathematical structure that makes up our universe isn't the only option, and in fact all possible mathematical structures exist as their own separate universes.

"A mathematical structure is something that you can describe in a way that's completely independent of human baggage," said Max Tegmark of MIT, who proposed this brain-twistin gidea. "I really believe that there is this universe out there that can exist independently of me that would continue to exist even if there were no humans."

First ever drawings of the moon made by Galileo Galilei after observing it through his telescope in 1609.
17/12/2021

First ever drawings of the moon made by Galileo Galilei after observing it through his telescope in 1609.

Installed in 1410, this 600 year-old clock located in Prague is the world's oldest astrological clock still in operation...
16/12/2021

Installed in 1410, this 600 year-old clock located in Prague is the world's oldest astrological clock still in operation.

Tomb of Christopher Columbus, Cathedral of Santa Maria de la Sede, Seville, Andalusia, Spain.Located in the south transe...
16/12/2021

Tomb of Christopher Columbus, Cathedral of Santa Maria de la Sede, Seville, Andalusia, Spain.
Located in the south transept, the Mausoleum of Christobal Colon (Mausoleum of Christopher Columbus or Tomb of Christopher Columbus) is one of the most famous Seville Cathedrals. As can be seen from, the sarcophagus of Columbus is carried by a porter, which symbolizes the images of the four kingdoms of former Spain - Castile, Aragon, Navara, and Leon.
The tomb of Columbus has an intriguing story. After the death of Christopher Columbus in 1506, his body traveled to many countries, then it found its last refuge in the Seville Cathedral. He was first buried in Valladolid, Spain. Shortly thereafter, his brother Diego transferred him to a convent in Seville.
In 1542, his body was again transported to the Caribbean island of Hispaniola, a Spanish territory founded by Columbus. He was buried in the newly built Cathedral of Santa Maria la Menor in Santo Domingo, the capital of the modern Dominican Republic.
By the will of fate, France captured the island of Hispaniola in 1795. Not wanting his remains to fall into the hands of the French, the Spaniards transported them to Havana, Cuba, where the current monument was built. After staying there for about 100 years, the Spaniards transported the tomb of Columbus along with his remains to Spain.
The monument we see now was erected in the south transept of Seville Cathedral in 1899. A DNA test in 2006 confirmed that the remains in this tomb really belonged to Christopher Columbus. However, the Dominican Republic still claims that Columbus' remains never left the country.

Thanks to make billions of heart ❀️ happy 😊
07/08/2021

Thanks to make billions of heart ❀️ happy 😊

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