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AdamSmith

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Everything posted by AdamSmith

  1. You and I got to disagree then.
  2. How can Most Rev Curry possibly be compared with least rev Trump? For just once you ain't making no sense.
  3. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/may/20/bishop-michael-curry-sermon-history-harry-meghan-wedding
  4. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    And one could only imagine the potency of Paracelsus's interdicted substances!
  5. The farther we go into the future, the more it gets to be not 1984 (despite this momentary Trump aberration) but instead Brave New World.
  6. Ivanka Trump won China trademarks days before her father's reversal on ZTE Watchdog group says the timing of the approvals ‘raises significant questions about corruption’ https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/may/28/ivanka-trump-won-china-trademarks-donald-trump-zte-reversal
  7. @Suckrates, you gon' burn in Hell, bitch. ...See you there! We got lots of catchin up to do.
  8. Interview HR McMaster on rugby: 'The warrior ethos is what a good team has' By Martin Pengelly No longer Donald Trump’s national security adviser, the three-star general is returning to a love of his life: rugby union https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2018/may/28/hr-mcmaster-rugby-warrior-ethos
  9. What killed the dinosaurs https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/25/opinions/we-are-the-dinosaurs-of-today-opinion-brusatte/
  10. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    God fuck. This is the most accomplished organist I have ever had privilege to hear. Either on record or in person. My lifelong fultuous praise of one Michel Chapuis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michel_Chapuis_(organist) now has to be eclipsed by this performer. God fuck. Jesus creeping shit.
  11. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    Occurs just now that Herself's conduct has been just about as great an influence on my adult consequence as that of Kubrick/Clarke, Einstein/Dirac, Milton/Dante/Wordsworth/Stevens/Ashbery...
  12. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    Returning to the named subject matter...
  13. Let's keep it top of mind for a while longer. Michael Curry’s royal wedding sermon will go down in history The American bishop did it black. And he shocked the congregation by refusing to tone down his passionate message on power and love https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/may/20/bishop-michael-curry-sermon-history-harry-meghan-wedding
  14. ...Castmates remember him as having a "devilish" sense of humour, in complete contrast to the humourless Roger Collins - which could cause some problems when recording, as Alexandra Moltke recalled in 1995: "He would be saying something incredibly droll - or naughty - one minute, and then a cue would be given and he would slip into character, leaving Nancy Barrett and I very much out of character and trying not to laugh at whatever witticism he had just uttered."
  15. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    Career At Basel In 1524 Paracelsus returned to his home in Villach to find that his fame for many miraculous cures had preceded him. He was subsequently appointed town physician and lecturer in medicine at the University of Basel in Switzerland, and students from all parts of Europe went to the city to hear his lectures. Pinning a program of his forthcoming lectures to the notice board of the university on June 5, 1527, he invited not only students but anyone and everyone. The authorities were incensed by his open invitation. Ten years earlier German theologian and religious reformer Martin Luther had circulated his Theses on Indulgences. (See Researcher’s Note.) Later, Paracelsus wrote: Three weeks later, on June 24, 1527, in front of the university, Paracelsus reportedly burned the books of Avicenna, the Muslim “Prince of Physicians,” and those of Greek physician Galen. This incident is said to have again recalled in many peoples’ minds Luther, who on December 10, 1520, at the Elster Gate of Wittenberg, Germany, had burned a papal bull that threatened excommunication. Paracelsus seemingly remained a Catholic to his death; however, it is suspected that his books were placed on the Index Expurgatorius (a catalogue of books from which passages of text considered immoral or against the Catholic religion are removed). Similar to Luther, Paracelsus also lectured and wrote in German rather than in Latin. Paracelsus reached the peak of his career at Basel. In his lectures, he stressed the healing power of nature and denounced the use of methods of treating wounds, such as padding with moss or dried dung, that prevented natural draining. The wounds must drain, he insisted, for “if you prevent infection, Nature will heal the wound all by herself.” He also attacked many other medical malpractices of his time, including the use of worthless pills, salves, infusions, balsams, electuaries, fumigants, and drenches. However, by the spring of 1528 Paracelsus had fallen into disrepute with local doctors, apothecaries, and magistrates. He left Basel, heading first toward Colmar in Upper Alsace, about 50 miles north of the university. He stayed at various places with friends and continued to travel for the next eight years. During this time, he revised old manuscripts and wrote new treatises. With the publication of Der grossen Wundartzney(Great Surgery Book) in 1536 he restored, and even extended, the revered reputation he had earned at Basel. He became wealthy and was sought by royalty. In May 1538, at the zenith of that second period of renown, Paracelsus returned to Villach again to see his father, only to find that his father had died four years earlier. In 1541 Paracelsus himself died in mysterious circumstances at the White Horse Inn, Salzburg, where he had taken up an appointment under the prince-archbishop, Duke Ernst of Bavaria. Contributions To Medicine In 1530 Paracelsus wrote a clinical description of syphilis, in which he maintained that the disease could be successfully treated by carefully measured doses of mercury compoundstaken internally. He stated that the “miners’ disease” (silicosis) resulted from inhaling metal vapours and was not a punishment for sin administered by mountain spirits. He was the first to declare that, if given in small doses, “what makes a man ill also cures him”—an anticipation of the modern practice of homeopathy. Paracelsus is said to have cured many persons in the plague-stricken town of Stertzing in the summer of 1534 by administering orally a pill made of bread containing a minute amount of the patient’s excreta he had removed on a needle point. Paracelsus was the first to connect goitre with minerals, especially lead, in drinking water. He prepared and used new chemical remedies, including those containing mercury, sulfur, iron, and copper sulfate, thus uniting medicine with chemistry, as the first London Pharmacopoeia, in 1618, indicates. Paracelsus, in fact, contributed substantially to the rise of modern medicine, including psychiatric treatment. Swiss psychologist Carl Jung wrote of him that “we see in Paracelsus not only a pioneer in the domains of chemical medicine, but also in those of an empirical psychological healing science.” John G. Hargrave LEARN MORE in these related Britannica articles: Switzerland: Science >Paracelsus (Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim), who in the 16th century brought chemistry into the field of medicine; Daniel, Jakob, and Johann Bernoulli of Basel, who made significant contributions to mathematics; the innovative mathematician Leonhard Euler; the naturalist and pioneer Alpine scholar Horace Bénédict de Saussure… history of medicine: The spread of new learning …and alchemist who called himself Paracelsus. Born in Switzerland, he traveled extensively throughout Europe, gaining medical skills and practicing and teaching as he went. In the tradition of Hippocrates, Paracelsus stressed the power of nature to heal, but, unlike Hippocrates, he believed also in the power of supernatural forces, and… poison …the German-Swiss physician and alchemist Paracelsus first stressed the chemical nature of poisons. It was Paracelsus who introduced the concept of dose and studied the actions of poisons through experimentation. It was not until the 19th century, however, that the Spaniard Matthieu Orfila, the attending physician to Louis XVIII, correlated… chemistry: Alchemy The German-Swiss physician Paracelsuspracticed alchemy, Kabbala, astrology, and magic, and in the first half of the 16th century he championed the role of mineral rather than herbal remedies. His emphasis on chemicals in pharmacy and medicine was influential on later figures, and lively controversies over the Paracelsian… physical science: Chemistry Paracelsus, a 16th-century Swiss natural philosopher, was a seminal figure in the history of chemistry, putting together in an almost impenetrable combination the Aristotelian theory of matter, alchemical correspondences, mystical forms of knowledge, and chemical therapy in medicine. His influence was widely felt in succeeding… https://www.britannica.com/biography/Paracelsus https://www.britannica.com/biography/Paracelsus
  16. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    That soap taught ME how to live.
  17. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lara_Parker http://darkshadows.wikia.com/wiki/Louis_Edmonds I have posted here about how they both (almost!) fucked me.Alas.
  18. AdamSmith

    The Organ

    This is a repost. But here presented as the root - in part only, to be sure -- of what success I have had in business to date.
  19. THIS is how to do it.
  20. Applying the learning is of course a different thing.
  21. I like my testorone-charged trans men with a very penis-like engorged clit.
  22. 'If the idea is not at first impossible, then there is no hope for it.' Einstein
  23. Ah! See! I'm an idiot. You just gone done it. That IS, I think, a change from the original rules.
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