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honcho

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Everything posted by honcho

  1. from an expired rentmasseur ad:
  2. Many happy returns of the day!
  3. I usually don't bother to crosspost pics of guys doing shirtless double-bicep flex, because that always shows an armpit (although its not the focus of the act). But this one time since the guy is hanging upside down, has a big smile and seems to be enjoying himself, I'll relent ...
  4. Ancillary to the main *thrust* but definitely noticable therein ...
  5. @easygoingpal , might you be willing to say were you found this pic, and if there are any more of him? Totally awesome!
  6. You have to be a member of lpsg in order to see them. I am not.
  7. Yeah - I don't recall ever having heard the term "Paradigm Shift" before reading that book. The point of the study was that as scientific endeavors became more skilled, certain collections of assumptions (paradigms), couldn't explain or match experimental results, and when the whole premise was rethought, new questions could be asked, which wouldn't have even made sense to phrase or ask prior to that change. I was reminded of it taking a course called "Introduction to research in Music" when I went back to grad school a couple of years ago - it was actually cited in one of the readings, but the instructor had never pursued t.i I nudged her a couple of times - her husband is a scientist, and she said he hadn't read it either. But why I mentioned it here in the forum was that in that context, at least, the term "Paradigm Shift" was completely meaningful and appropriate. There were later editions that doubled the number of examples and case studies, but I don't think the inclusion of more examples really made the thesis any more compelling to reasonably educated non-specialists.
  8. later shown to be a german instagrammer:
  9. I recommend for you The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn. Chicago: 1970. A really, really good read.
  10. (advocate spread continued:)
  11. From the Advocate spread mentioned in todays reviews:
  12. http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/0d4251ae8cda2fa355ce47a3d218ce7b61b05fd_r.jpg
  13. On the other hand, the french phrase "Pas de probleme" translates as exactly that, and is considered OK, although "De rien" ("it was nothing"), used to be a little more idiomatic. "No worries" seems a little less hackneyed when Brits or Australians use it, but seems a bit stilted for north american speakers, (although it is getting increasingly common).
  14. closing out this round with a 2018 broadway chorus guy: Steven Trumon Gray
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