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On January 3, 2009, 20 to 25 thousand people demonstrated in Paris to condemn the killings of Palestinians in the Gaza strip by Israel since the beginning of the offensive on Dec. 27. Similar demonstrations took place in other French cities. Spirits were high, and the organizers had a tough time maintaining order.
Incidents broke out around 5pm in St Augustin, where the rally ended, when approx. 200 to 300 people started attacking the police with stones, bottles, etc. as well as vandalizing cars, storefronts, phone booths, bus stops, etc. all the way to the Opéra. 3 or 4 cars were burnt down, others flipped upside down, and dozens had their windows smashed.
While many protesters complained and tried to stop the violence, some also attacked the photographers (sometimes physically), accused of showing the "wrong" side of the event.
Here, "protesters" pose in front a burning car.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Stop the killing in Gaza ! (Recommended as a slideshow)
On March 31st, a group of approx. 100 people demonstrated near the headquarters of the Olympic Committee (CIO) in Paris, to demand that the olympic torch is not carried through Tibet.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Free Tibet ! (Recommended as a slideshow)
Voir aussi la photo précédente .....J'écrirai d'autres explications demain, et aussi en Anglais....
The 70 m (230 ft) high Saviour Tower is the most magnificent of the Kremlin towers, the very symbol and emblem of Moscow. From time immemorial it has been the principal entrance to the Kremlin. The tower, like its two neighbors tothe north, was built in 1491 by the Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari.
The tower was given its name in 1658, when an iconof Christ was set up over the entrance. It was not tall originally but then it was added to in 1624-1625 by the architect Bazhen Ogurtsovand adorned with white-stone sculptures.
The first clock was set into the tower in the 16th century. The Kremlin chimes that adorn the tower today were made in 1851-1852 by the brothers N. and P. Butenop. The gigantic mechanism (about 25 tons) of the carillon occupies three storeysof the tower. The clock now only strikes the hours.
The ruby star was installed in 1937. Sure it's not a real ruby. Just a name and color.
Il existe bel et bien une explication à cette image. Il n'y a aucun trucage et ceci est le pur reflet de la réalité!
:)
There is indeed an explanation for this image. There is no faking and this is the pure reflection of reality!
:)
Press L to view in full screen.
Working on the 100m (300 feet) of the Grande Arche de La Défense.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Supporters of President Evo Morales are cheering during the closing ceremony of the referendum campaign in El Alto, on Aug. 7.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Un groupe d'environ 400 à 500 manifestants fait face aux forces de l'ordre Route du Rhin, a quelques heures du debut de la manifestation du 4 avril 2009 contre le sommet de l'OTAN a Strasbourg.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Residents of El Alto take refuge under a bridge covered by pro-Evo Morales writings, as snow falls on Aug. 8. Many of them are waiting for the "micros", the small private buses which most people use to travel around, while others are selling small commodities.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Où la symbolique de la Méduse, placée dans le centre, devint une figure fixe où les trois jambes devinrent le symbole triangulaire de l'île, formée ainsi par trois sommets.
Triangle pour les Grecs, "Trinacria" (l'île aux trois promontoires), on retrouve partout ce fameux symbole qui trace trois jambes prenant naissance autour de la tête de Cérès. Il illustre cette course vaine, retrace l'histoire complexe et toujours recommencée.
Inspiré du symbole de l'Ile de Man : le "Triskèle Manx" (droite) serait une représentation de la Trinité Celtique. Ce symbole est souvent relié à Manannan, Dieu celtique de la Mer qui résidait sur l'île, qui lui doit aussi son nom. On trouve ce symbole sur les monnaies de l'île, dès le Xe siècle, puis il figure comme armoiries des roi de l'Ile de Man.
Dans le centre, on y voit une figure, souvent la Gorgone, ce qui laisserait croire à son origine méditerranéenne. Il est fort probable que le symbole dérive de figures religieuses de l'Orient, qui représenteraient le Dieu Baal, sous forme des trois saisons ou de la lune.
Gravée sur les boucliers ou sur les casques, la triskèle était utilisée pour distinguer les guerriers d'une même race ou d'une catégorie particulière. Ce symbole a été aussi retrouvé sur les tombes, comme signe d'importance des personnes décédées.
Aujourd'hui encore, elle est le symbole de la Sicile ](Trinacrie, Triquêtre)
Trinacria:
* c'est une tête de femme, ailée et coiffée d'un nœud de serpents, d'ou rayonnement trois jambes fléchies, comme saisies en plaine course, telle est la représentation symbolique de la Sicile.
* Le nom vient de "Trinakrie" (ou"trêis àkrai "), signifiant "trois pointes" (ou "trois promontaires") en grec. L'île était sur nommée ainsi en raison de ses trois caps (peloro,passero et libeo).
* Ce symbole a pour origine une monnaie de l'antiquité, la Triskèle grecque.
"Triskékésignifie d'ailleurs en grec: "qui a trois jambes".
on à coutume d'identifier le virage qui se trouve au centre de l'emblème comme étant la méduse, l'une des trois gorgnes mythologiques grecques.
* D'autre explications existent également à propos des éléments figurant autour de la Méduse:
pour certains, le nœud de serpents est une crinière d'anguilles de mer qui vise à terroriser les ennemis, et quant aux jambes fléchies, elle représenterait les rayons du soleil.
* dans l'antiquité, les marins et cartographes grecs représentaient la Sicile par le symbole de la "Trinakrie " sur les cortes.
* La plus ancienne représentation siulienne de la Trinacria,comme, connue a ce jour, date du 7 ièm siècle avant Jésus Christ.
* de nos jours, ce même emblème de la Trinacria orne le drapeau officiel de Region Sicilienne.
Where the symbolism of the Medusa, placed in the center, became a fixed figure where the three legs became the triangular symbol of the island, thus formed by three peaks.
Triangle for the Greeks, "Trinacria" (the island with three promontories), we find everywhere this famous symbol which traces three legs taking birth around the head of Ceres. It illustrates this vain race, retraces the complex history and always started again.
Inspired by the symbol of the Isle of Man: the "Triskèle Manx" (right) would be a representation of the Celtic Trinity. This symbol is often linked to Manannan, Celtic God of the Sea who resided on the island, which also owes his name to him. We find this symbol on the coins of the island, from the 10th century, then it appears as the coat of arms of the king of the Isle of Man.
In the center, we see a figure, often the Gorgon, which would suggest its Mediterranean origin. It is very likely that the symbol derives from religious figures of the East, who would represent the God Baal, in the form of the three seasons or the moon.
Engraved on shields or helmets, the triskelion was used to distinguish warriors of the same race or of a particular category. This symbol was also found on tombs, as a sign of importance of the deceased.
Even today, it is the symbol of Sicily] (Trinacria, Triquêtre)
Trinacria:
* it is the head of a woman, winged and wearing a knot of snakes, or radiating three bent legs, as if seized in plain running, such is the symbolic representation of Sicily.
* The name comes from "Trinakrie" (or "trêis àkrai"), meaning "three points" (or "three promontaires") in Greek. The island was so named because of its three capes (peloro, passero and libeo).
* This symbol originates from a currency of antiquity, the Greek Triskele.
"Triskékésésifier besides in Greek:" which has three legs ".
it is customary to identify the turn which is in the center of the emblem as being the jellyfish, one of the three Greek mythological gorgos.
* Other explanations also exist about the elements appearing around the Medusa:
for some, the snake knot is a mane of sea eels which aims to terrorize the enemies, and as for the bent legs, it would represent the rays of the sun.
* in antiquity, Greek sailors and cartographers represented Sicily by the symbol of "Trinakrie" on the cortes.
* The oldest Siulan representation of the Trinacria, as, known to date, dates from the 7 th century BC.
* these days, this same emblem of Trinacria adorns the official flag of the Sicilian Region.
Pres du Pont de l'Europe a Strasbourg, des membres du "Black Block" regardent bruler l'ancien bureau des douanes durant la manifestation du 4 avril 2009 contre le sommet de l'OTAN.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
No this is not a Halloween costume, but statue outside a Chinese restaurant in Panama.
Today's Halloween customs are also thought to have been influenced by Christian dogma and practices derived from it. Halloween falls on the evening before the Christian holy days of All Hallows' Day (also known as All Saints' or Hallowmas) on 1 November and All Souls' Day on 2 November, thus giving the holiday on 31 October the full name of All Hallows' Eve (meaning the evening before All Hallows' Day).Since the time of the primitive Church, major feasts in the Christian Church (such as Christmas, Easter and Pentecost) had vigils which began the night before, as did the feast of All Hallows'. These three days are collectively referred to as Allhallowtide and are a time for honoring the saints and praying for the recently departed soulswho have yet to reach Heaven. All Saints was introduced in the year 609, but was originally celebrated on 13 May. In 835, it was switched to 1 November (the same date as Samhain) at the behest of Pope Gregory IV. Some suggest this was due to Celtic influence, while others suggest it was a Germanic idea. It is also suggested that the change was made on the "practical grounds that Rome in summer could not accommodate the great number of pilgrims who flocked to it", and perhaps because of public health considerations regarding Roman Fever– a disease that claimed a number of lives during the sultry summers of the regionBy the end of the 12th century they had becomeholy days of obligation across Europe and involved such traditions as ringing church bells for the souls in purgatory. In addition, "it was customary forcriers dressed in black to parade the streets, ringing a bell of mournful sound and calling on all good Christians to remember the poor souls." "Souling", the custom of baking and sharing soul cakes for all christened souls, has been suggested as the origin of trick-or-treating. The custom dates back at least as far as the 15th century and was found in parts of England, Belgium, Germany, Austria and Italy. Groups of poor people, often children, would go door-to-door during Allhallowtide, collecting soul cakes, in exchange for praying for the dead, especially the souls of the givers' friends and relatives. Shakespeare mentions the practice in his comedy The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1593). The custom of wearing costumes has been explicated by Prince Sorie Conteh, who wrote: "It was traditionally believed that the souls of the departed wandered the earth until All Saints' Day, and All Hallows' Eve provided one last chance for the dead to gain vengeance on their enemies before moving to the next world. In order to avoid being recognized by any soul that might be seeking such vengeance, people would don masks or costumes to disguise their identities". In the Middle Ages, churches displayed the relics of martyred saints and those parishes that were too poor to have relics let parishioners dress up as the saints instead, a practice that some Christians continue in Halloween celebrations today. folklorist Kingsley Palmer, in addition to others, has suggested that the carved jack-o'-lantern, a popular symbol of Halloween, originally represented the souls of the dead. On Halloween, in medieval Europe, "fires [were] lit to guide these souls on their way and deflect them from haunting honest Christian folk." In addition, households in Austria, England, Ireland often had "candles burning in every room to guide the souls back to visit their earthly homes". These were known as "soul lights". Many Christians in continental Europe, especially in France, acknowledged "a belief that once a year, on Hallowe'en, the dead of the churchyards rose for one wild, hideous carnival," known as the danse macabre, which has been commonly depicted in church decoration, especially on the walls of cathedrals, monasteries, and cemeteries. Christopher Allmand and Rosamond McKitterick write inThe New Cambridge Medieval History that "Christians were moved by the sight of the Infant Jesus playing on his mother's knee; their hearts were touched by the Pietà; and patron saints reassured them by their presence. But, all the while, the danse macabre urged them not to forget the end of all earthly things." This danse macabre, which was enacted by "Christian village children [who] celebrated the vigil of All Saints" in the 16th Century, has been suggested as the predecessor of modern day costume parties on this same day.
In parts of Britain, these customs came under attack during the Reformation as some Protestants berated purgatory as a "popish" doctrine incompatible with the notion of predestination. Thus, for some Nonconformist Protestants, the theology of All Hallows’ Eve was redefined; without the doctrine of purgatory, "the returning souls cannot be journeying from Purgatory on their way to Heaven, as Catholics frequently believe and assert. Instead, the so-called ghosts are thought to be in actuality evil spirits. As such they are threatening."[ Other Protestants maintained belief in an intermediate state, known as Hades (Bosom of Abraham),[ and continued to observe the original customs, especially souling, candlelit processions and the ringing of church bells in memory of the dead. With regard to the evil spirits, on Halloween, "barns and homes were blessed to protect people and livestock from the effect of witches, who were believed to accompany the malignant spirits as they traveled the earth." In the 19th century, in some rural parts of England, families gathered on hills on the night of All Hallows' Eve. One held a bunch of burning straw on a pitchfork while the rest knelt around him in a circle, praying for the souls of relatives and friends until the flames went out. This was known as teen'lay, derived either from the Old English tendan (meaning to kindle) or a word related to Old Irishtenlach (meaning hearth).The rising popularity of Guy Fawkes Night (5 November) from 1605 onward, saw many Halloween traditions appropriated by that holiday instead, and Halloween's popularity waned in Britain, with the noteworthy exception of Scotland. There and in Ireland, they had been celebrating Samhain and Halloween since at least the early Middle Ages, and the Scottish kirk took a more pragmatic approach to Halloween, seeing it as important to the life cycle and rites of passage of communities and thus ensuring its survival in the country.
In France, some Christian families, on the night of All Hallows' Eve, prayed beside the graves of their loved ones, setting down dishes full of milk for them. On Halloween, in Italy, some families left a large meal out for ghosts of their passed relatives, before they departed for church services. In Spain, on this night, special pastries are baked, known as "bones of the holy" (Spanish: Huesos de Santo) and put them on the graves of the churchyard, a practice that continues to this day.
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La façon en photo argentique d'avoir une image au foyer c'est d'utiliser du plan film. Étant donné que je ne voulais pas investir dans une autre caméra, j'ai décidé de modifier une caméra que je possédais. La Kodak Tourist, avec sa porte amovible, était la candidate idéale pour en faire une caméra utilisant le plan film; d'autant plus que j'avais déjà des plaques de plan film. Aussi je ne voulais pas utiliser un drap par dessus la tête pour effectuer le foyer, j'ai donc adapter une loupe. Le tout est expliqué sommairement sur la photo.
/ A good way in film photography to get the image in focus is to use sheet film. I did not want to buy another camera so I modified a camera already owned. The Kodak Tourist, with its removable door was an ideal donor; I already had the cut sheet film plate from a Rolleiflex, all I had to do is work it out. Also I did not want to use a dark cloth over my head so I adapted a hood magnifier to help get a sharp focus. On the photo, I give a summary of the procedure.
La photo témoin sur la feuille explicative est ici (Here is a link to a better view of the photo ): www.flickr.com/photos/pentaxamera/44709967380/in/photolis...
Merci beaucoup pour votre visite, les gentils commentaires et les favoris. / Many thanks for your visit, kind comments and favs.
Philippe et Frédéric travaillent à la corde sur la centrale EDF de Vitry sur Seine.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Supporters of the PPP at a popular rally in Nasirabad, in the suburbs of Rawalpindi on Jan.4, 2008. At some point, people (incl. children) were praying for Benazir Bhutto, a scene that I've seen repeatedly at every gathering. As in many other aspects of life in Pakistan, it seems that politics and religion are closely intricated.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Pakistani Elections (Recommended as a slideshow)
The magic mirror is a mirror belonging to the universe of the marvelous. He is in turn gifted with speech, capable of revealing invisible truths or the deepest wishes through the image.The Mirror of Erised is a mystical mirror discovered by Harry in an abandoned classroom in Philosopher's Stone. On it is inscribed "erised stra ehru oyt ube cafru oyt on wohsi". When mirrored and correctly spaced, this reads "I show not your face but your heart's desire." As "erised" reversed is "desire," it is the "Mirror of Desire." Harry, upon encountering the Mirror, can see his parents, as well as what appears to be a crowd of relatives; Ron sees himself as Head Boy and Quidditch Captain holding the House Cup, thus revealing his wish to escape from the shadow of his highly successful older brothers, as well as his more popular friend, Harry. Dumbledore cautions Harry that the Mirror gives neither knowledge nor truth, merely showing the viewer's deepest desire, and that men have wasted their lives away before it, entranced by what they see. Dumbledore, one of the few other characters to face the Mirror in the novel, claims to see himself holding a pair of socks he always wanted, telling Harry that "one can never have enough socks," and lamenting that he did not receive any for Christmas, since people will insist on giving him books. However, Harry suspects that this is not true, and it is suggested in Deathly Hallows that what he really sees is his entire family alive, well and happy together again, much like Harry.The Mirror of Erised was the final protection given to the Philosopher's Stone in the first book. Dumbledore hid the Mirror and hid the Stone inside it, knowing that only a person who wanted to find but not use the Stone would be able to obtain it. Anyone else would see him or herself making an Elixir of Life or turning things to gold, rather than actually finding the Stone, and would be unable to obtain it. What happens to it afterwards is unknown. In Order of the Phoenix, Sirius gives Harry a mirror he originally used to communicate with James while they were in separate detentions. That mirror is a part of a set of Two-way Mirrors that are activated by holding one of them and saying the name of the other possessor, causing his or her face to appear on the caller's mirror and vice versa. Harry receives this mirror from Sirius in a package after spending his Christmas holiday at Grimmauld Place. Harry, at first, chooses not to open the package, although he does discover the mirror after Sirius's death, by which point it is no longer functional. It makes its second appearance in Deathly Hallows when Mundungus Fletcher loots Grimmauld Place and sells Sirius's mirror to Aberforth Dumbledore, who uses it to watch out for Harry in Deathly Hallows. When Harry desperately cries for help to a shard of the magical mirror (which broke in the bottom of his trunk), a brilliant blue eye belonging to Aberforth (which Harry mistakes for Albus's eye), appears and he sends Dobby, who arrives to help Harry escape from Malfoy Manor to Shell Cottage. The Chinese magic mirror is an ancient art that can be traced back to the Chinese Han dynasty (206 BC – 24 AD).[1] The mirrors were made out of solid bronze. The front is a shiny polished surface and could be used as a mirror, while the back has a design cast in the bronze. When bright sunlight or other bright light reflects onto the mirror, the mirror seems to become transparent. If that light is reflected from the mirror towards a wall, the pattern on the back of the mirror is then projected onto the wall. In about 800 AD, during the Tang dynasty (618–907), a book entitled Record of Ancient Mirrors described the method of crafting solid bronze mirrors with decorations, written characters, or patterns on the reverse side that could cast these in a reflection on a nearby surface as light struck the front, polished side of the mirror; due to this seemingly transparent effect, they were called "light-penetration mirrors" by the Chinese.This Tang era book was lost over the centuries, but magic mirrors were described in the Dream Pool Essays by Shen Kuo (1031–1095), who owned three of them as a family heirloom. Perplexed as to how solid metal could be transparent, Shen guessed that some sort of quenching technique was used to produce tiny wrinkles on the face of the mirror too small to be observed by the eye. Although his explanation of different cooling rates was incorrect, he was right to suggest the surface contained minute variations which the naked eye could not detect; these mirrors also had no transparent quality at all, as discovered by William Bragg in 1932 (after an entire century of them confounding Western scientists). Robert Temple describes their construction: "The basic mirror shape, with the design on the back, was cast flat, and the convexity of the surface produced afterwards by elaborate scraping and scratching. The surface was then polished to become shiny. The stresses set up by these processes caused the thinner parts of the surface to bulge outwards and become more convex than the thicker portions. Finally, a mercury amalgam was laid over the surface; this created further stresses and preferential buckling. The result was that imperfections of the mirror surface matched the patterns on the back, although they were too minute to be seen by the eye. But when the mirror reflected bright sunlight against a wall, with the resultant magnification of the whole image, the effect was to reproduce the patterns as if they were passing through the solid bronze by way of light beams."
Michael Berry has written a paper describing the optics and giving some photos. In Shrek, an animated animation film brocading traditional fairy tales, the magic mirror is both gifted with speech and able by the image to reveal distant truths.
Lord Farquaad, in search of a princess to marry, a necessary condition for him to become king, interrogates the magic mirror brought to him by his men. They pull it out of a thick bag, suggesting that it has been removed. The mirror is supposed to help Lord Farquaad in his approach, but his inability to lie from the beginning is taken for impertinence and his frankness is quickly swayed by the threat of a guard, who breaks a small mirror in front of him in a gesture of intimidation. The magical mirror then responds "carefully" to save his life. He speaks with a man's voice and his expression is personified by the image of a white mask that appears in his reflection. The image of the mask disappears in a second time, remains the voice that is transformed into voiceover of the program Tournez manège. Then appear in the reflection the three princesses candidate for marriage, qualified as "Catherinettes": Cinderella, Snow White and Fiona. When Lord Farquaad, indecisive and influenced by his henchmen, finally set his sights on Fiona, the magic mirror tries to warn him against an event that occurs at nightfall, but Lord Farquaad, in his impatience, does not give him time.The title of this chapter is a quote from Cassirer. In The Myth of State, he describes theories of myth that followed Schelling's: [The old spell was never completely broken. Every scholar still found in myth those objects with which he was most familiar. At bottom the different schools saw in the magic mirror of myth only their own faces. The linguist found in it a world of words and names-the philosopher found a "primitive ophy"--the psychiatrist a highly complicated and interesting neurotic phenomenon. This may indeed be true. But there is a correlative truth-at least concerning the theories of myth we're examining here. The reflec- tion and the reflected are much more intimately related than Cas- sirer admits. If the subject of myth is a mirror reflecting our intel- lectual concerns, our intellectual mirror myth as well. The present chapter has two goals. The first is piecing together the investigative results of Cassirer, Barthes, Eliade, into a coherent pattern of explanation and description. The second goal is more ambitious. We will examine this explanatory fabric for what it can theoretical endeavors. I will articulate the ways in which the theo- ries of myth themselves exhibit the same characteristics as those authors ascribe Though changed, its function remains the same: myth can be discovered at work in our most sophisticated theoretical constructions about myth. Our theo- retical accounts of myth serve the same tales around an open fire. through 5, we examined four theories of rather straightforward way. I offered synopses of the intellectual positions of the thinkers, outlined their views of myth, and pointed out areas of agreement and disagreement among them. The analysis undertake in this chapter is more like making a quilt. will take bits and pieces of the four accounts of myth, rearrange them into a harmonious pattern, and create something new without destroying the texture, the color, or the fabric of the old. The four authors we've been studying seem to have little in common beyond the selection of myth as an important topic for Cassirer is a critical idealist, investigating the mythical for what it exhibits of the movement of consciousness out of its embeddedness in organic, biologically determined exis- tence and toward an ideal freedom, the fulfillment of the telos of Spirit as it creates symbolic form. Barthes is a neo-Marxist struc- turalist semiologist inveighing against the furtive cover-up of con- tingent, historical processes; a cover-up performed by mythical sig- nification, especially as bourgeois mythmaking attempts to stop up free, revolutionary speech. Eliade offers an account of a sacred ontology, an existential position of being human made possible and available through reciting mythical narratives and participating ritual acts. Sacred ontology allows for the erasure of the terrors history and for full freedom for human being in participating in the creation of the cosmos as a meaningful, ordered, Hillman, a or archetypal psychologist, follows the path of soul-making through mythical forms to the soul's destination of freedom from analys and misogyny, movement toward a divine" psychology. the great differences in perspective we find these theories, why have I chosen to compare them in my own work on myth? First, I am doing a "second-order" analysis, not begun at the beginning, so to speak, examining myriad examples of myth and offering an original interpretation of them. That groundwork has already been done by many other competent researchers, includ ing Cassirer, Barthes, Eliade, and Hillman, I have taken for granted that thinkers of such intellectual sophistication, despite their inerad. 166 THE MAGIC MIRROR articulate and constitute the distinction between human being and the world for human being. We can also begin to elucidate more fully the means by which myth-and theories of myth-perform this task. We can identify these by piecing together our explanatory fabric in a different wa Rather than explicating the internal organization of a theory (for example, moving step-by-step through Eliade's account of the hiero- phany) and clarifying this through comparison we can look for more subtle points of congruence across the four theories. We can find these congruences, and they exhibit a definite theoretical pattern. I will offer a schematic rendering of this pattern here, it will be examined in detail in what follows. "Myth" is a functional construct with no definite able content. The function that myth serves is to unite and separate two opposed ontological regions. Myth is irreducible to one or the other and at the same time is intimately related to each and to both. This is the paradoxical nature of the mythical, it is a kind of gateway, hinge, turnstile, or threshold. This undecidable quality of myth in service of distinguishing opposing ontological regions means to maintain its status as myth it must con- tinue in its function as the boundary between incommensurables The ontological regions delineated through the paradoxical func tiot of myth are that which belongs to human being proper and that which is other. Myth also plays an important role in deter mining the ontological priority of the region that belongs to human being (however construed). The otherness of what belongs to the secondary region determined by the mythical makes it particularly intransigent for theoretical endeavor. However, certain features of what is mythically designated as other can be transformed and recu- perated for the truly human region through a reduction of what is other to that of the same, myth works as a kind of permeable boundary This pattern of explanation is evident in each of the theories we've examined. But the same constellation of traits can be found in way that each author uses the concept of myth. We will see how concept of myth works as it alternately hides and betrays (some- times) covert metaphysical, ontological, and valuational assump tions in the theories. The concept of myth serves as a gateway or threshold, the paradoxical site or the perfect alibi, demarcating anti thetical ontological realms, one of which is honored and valorized the other taboo. The concept of myth, like myth itself, serves to mark the limit of the truly human, however construed.The Magic Mirror is owned by the Evil Queen and has been depicted in different versions as either a hand mirror or a mirror on the wall. Every morning, the Evil Queen asked the Magic Mirror the question "Magic mirror in my hand, who is the fairest in the land?". The mirror always replies: "My Queen, you are the fairest in the land." The Queen is always pleased with that, because the magic mirror never lies. But, when Snow White reaches the age of seven, she becomes as beautiful as the day and even more beautiful than the Queen and when the Queen asks her mirror, it responds: "My Queen, you are the fairest here so true. But Snow White is a thousand times more beautiful than you." This resulted in the Evil Queen enlisting a huntsman to kill Snow White and bring her Snow White's lungs and liver.
After eating the lungs and liver of a boar that the Huntsman passed off as Snow White's lungs and liver, the Evil Queen asked the Magic Mirror the question "Magic Mirror in my hand, who is the fairest in the land?" The mirror replies: "My Queen, you are the fairest here so true. But Snow White beyond the mountains at the seven Dwarfs is a thousand times more beautiful than you." This caused the Evil Queen to disguise herself as different women to kill Snow White.
After the latest attempt with a poison apple which was undone by the Prince and Snow White marrying him, the Evil Queen asked the Magic Mirror who the fairest in the land was, the Magic Mirror quoted "You, my Queen, are fair so true. But the young Queen is a thousand times fairer than you." The Evil Queen learned too late at the wedding that the young queen in question was Snow White which eventually leads to the Queen's death which varied per version.
Real-life influences
The “Talking Mirror” at the Spessart Museum in Lohr am Main
German pharmacist and fairy-tale parodist Karlheinz Bartels suggests, in a tongue-in-cheek manner, that the German folk tale "Snow White" is influenced by Maria Sophia Margaretha Catherina von und zu Erthal, who was born in Lohr am Main in 1725.[1] After the death of Maria Sophia's birth mother in 1738, her father Philipp Christoph von und zu Erthal remarried.[2] Claudia Elisabeth von Reichenstein, the stepmother, was domineering and greatly favored the children from her first marriage.[3] The Queen's iconic mirror, referred to as “The Talking Mirror,” can still be viewed today at Spessart Museum in the Lohr Castle, where Maria Sophia was born. The mirror was likely a gift from Philipp Christoph to Claudia Elisabeth. It was a product of the Lohr Mirror Manufacture (Kurmainzische Spiegelmanufaktur). The mirror “talked” predominantly in aphorisms. The upper right corner of “The Talking Mirror” contains a clear reference to self-love (Amour Propre). Moreover, mirrors from Lohr were so elaborately worked that they were accorded the reputation of “always speaking the truth”. They became a favorite gift at European crown and aristocratic courts.
Modern adaptations
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. Disney Disney's Snow White franchise
The Evil Queen with her Mirror at Mickey's Boo-to-You Halloween Parade 2010. The Magic Mirror appeared in Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs voiced by Moroni Olsen. The Magic Mirror contained an imprisoned spirit who is referred to as the Slave in the Magic Mirror. In his first appearance in the film, the Evil Queen would consult with the Magic Mirror to ask who the fairest of one all was. The Magic Mirror always told the Evil Queen that she was the fairest one of all. When asked who the fairest of all is, the spirit replies that, while the Queen is beautiful, a fairer being exists. When the Queen angrily asks for the girl's name, the spirit describes her, making it obvious to the Queen that Snow White is the one being referred to. The Queen then orders her Huntsman to kill Snow White and bring her back her heart. When the Evil Queen asks the Magic Mirror who the fairest of them all was later that evening, the Magic Mirror told her that Snow White was the fairest of them all. Though the Queen at first believes the spirit to be incorrect and showed it the heart in question, she is told that she holds the heart of a pig and that Snow White still lives in the Cottage of the Seven Dwarfs.
The Magic Mirror appeared in Disney's House of Mouse, voiced by Tony Jay and seen in the lobby of the club. It would always answer questions given to him by the guests or give advice to the staff members. The Magic Mirror also appeared in Fantasmic! voiced again by Tony Jay.
The Magic Mirror appears in Kingdom Hearts: Birth by Sleep voiced by Corey Burton. The Magic Mirror first appears in Terra's storyline. As per the movie, it told the Queen that Snow White was now much fairer than the vain ruler. However, it added on that her heart was a pure light than shone bright. It was then promised by the Evil Queen usage by Terra to find Master Xehanort if he brought her Snow White's heart. However, he did not do so and told the Evil Queen he never intended to. Terra then proceeds to tell her that unlike Snow White, she has much darkness in her heart. The Evil Queen, insulted and outraged, commanded the mirror to destroy Terra. The Magic Mirror refused saying it can only answer questions. The Evil Queen's increasing rage then caused the mirror to have a potion slammed on its face sucking Terra in and fighting him. However, he is defeated and releases Terra. The Evil Queen reluctantly has the Magic Mirror tell Terra where he can find Master Xehanort. The Magic Mirror quotes "Beyond both light and dark he dwells, where war was waged upon the fells." Upon learning this information, Terra takes his leave from the Evil Queen and the Magic Mirror where the Magic Mirror's cryptic response would direct Terra to the Keyblade Graveyard. The Magic Mirror later appears in Aqua's storyline. When Aqua looks for a cure for Snow White in the castle, the still-possessed Magic Mirror drags her into the mirror for a fight, but she also manages to defeat him and is released. The Magic Mirror then disappears stating to Aqua "The Queen is gone, my service done. Adieu, oh victorious one."
In the Disney Channel original movie Descendants, the Evil Queen has retained the Mirror after her exile to the Isle of the Lost, reduced to a small hand-mirror that is passed on to her daughter Evie. Although it is still controlled by rhymes spoken by the user and doesn't have an inhabitant in it.
A different version of the Magic Mirror appeared in The 7D voiced by Whoopi Goldberg. This version is a female that serves Queen Delightful of Jollyland.
Once Upon a Time
In Once Upon a Time, the Magic Mirror started out as a Genie (played by Giancarlo Esposito) where he and his lamp were discovered by King Leopold. King Leopold feels no need to wish for anything and uses the first and second wishes to free the Genie from the lamp and to give the third wish to the Genie. The Genie expresses the desire to find true love, so King Leopold takes the Genie to his castle as he believes the Genie can find true love there. He falls in love with the King's wife Queen Regina and gives her a hand mirror. The King reads in the Queen's diary that she has fallen in love with the man who gave her the hand mirror and asks the Genie to locate him. The Queen is then locked in her room to prevent her from leaving the King. To free her, her father has the Genie bring her a locked box, which turns out to be filled with poisonous vipers from Agrabah so the Queen can kill herself. Instead, the Genie uses the vipers to kill King Leopold and allow the Queen to be with him. She tells him that since the vipers were from his country, the guards will find out that he was the murderer and flee. Realizing the Queen never loved him, he uses his wish to be always with her and to never leave her sight. This traps him in the hand mirror. As a spirit in the Magic Mirror, he is able to move between and see through all other mirrors in the Enchanted Forest. He is used by Regina to spy on and locate others.
In Storybrooke, he is Sidney Glass, a reporter for Storybrooke's local newspaper The Daily Mirror. On Regina's request, he researches Emma Swan's past to help Regina expel her from Storybrooke. After Graham's death, Regina attempts to appoint him sheriff, but the wording of the town charter calls for an election. He loses the position to Emma Swan. Regina has him removed from the newspaper staff, and Sidney goes to Emma, claiming that he wants to expose Regina as the corrupt person she is. However, the exposé reveals Regina's attempts to improve the community. Despite this, Sidney tells Emma that he will help her take down Regina, but it is revealed that he is secretly in league with Regina, who is using Emma's trust in Sidney to gain leverage over Emma. Emma later learns that he planted a bug in a vase glass after it is used to tip off Regina upon discovering a key piece of evidence that would have cleared Mary Margaret Blanchard of Kathryn Nolan's murder. Emma confronts Sidney and realizes that he is in love with Regina. Still, Emma presses him to help defeat Regina. However, after Kathryn is found alive, Sidney falsely confesses to kidnapping Kathryn and framing Mary Margaret so that he could "find" Kathryn and become famous. Later, a cell labeled "S. Glass" is seen in the hospital basement's psychiatric ward. The name "S. Glass" is visible on a door in the first season finale, suggesting that Regina had locked him in the Storybrooke Hospital's psychiatric ward after he confessed to the kidnapping. In "A Tale of Two Sisters," Regina frees Sidney Glass from the psychiatric ward to be her Mirror again in order to enlist him into helping get rid of the people that are in the middle of her happiness. Regina temporarily places Sidney in the mirror to find the exact moment in which Maid Marian was apprehended by Regina's men. Regina later consults with Sidney on how to change fate. Regina tells Sidney that the villains in the book don't get a happy ending and wants him to find the writer of the book so that she can make some changes like allowing the villains to get their happy endings. In "Breaking Glass," Regina has Sidney Glass look for the Snow Queen's hideout in order to force her into thawing Maid Marian from her freezing spell. When Emma arrives to know where Sidney Glass is, Regina states that she's too busy to tell her where Sidney Glass is. Sidney later reports to Regina about where the Snow Queen is hiding out after his failed attempt to get a leverage on Regina. Using a compact to remain in contact to Sidney Glass, Regina heads in the directions of the Snow Queen's hideout. Regina later admits that Sidney was in the mirror. Upon strong winds reaching Emma and Regina, Sidney states the Snow Queen had swayed him to her side as Elsa's ice bridge breaks. After Emma and Regina defeat a large Viking made of ice, the Snow Queen takes the compact that Sidney is and retreats. At her hideout, the Snow Queen frees Sidney from the mirror as she wanted the mirror that he was trapped in to go with her mirror that she is putting together. The Snow Queen states that she wants the mirror that Sidney Glass is in since it is filled with dark magic. Before declaring Sidney free, the Snow Queen advises Sidney to get a warm coat since it is "going to get cooler around here."
Other
The 10th Kingdom
In the TV miniseries The 10th Kingdom, a magic mirror is a key element of the plot, as protagonists Tony and Virginia Lewis travel from New York into the fairy-tale realm via a traveling mirror, which they subsequently lose and must spend the rest of the series searching for, while their enemy, the evil Queen and protégé of Snow White's deceased stepmother, spies on them with other magic mirrors. The travelling mirror that brought them to this world is destroyed in an accident, but an old mirror referred to as Gustav- which can only communicate and respond to queries made in rhyme- reveals that there were two other travelling mirrors made, with one sunk at the bottom of the ocean and the other in the possession of the Queen. With the Queen's defeat, Virginia returns to New York through the Queen's travelling mirror, although Tony decides to remain in the fairy-tale realm to enjoy his new status as a hero.
Faerie Tale Theatre
The mirror in Faerie Tale Theatre was played by Vincent Price, whose face appeared as if mounted on the top of the mirror (in reality, Price stuck his face through a hole). This mirror, as did all of the Queen's (Vanessa Redgrave) other mirrors, turned black as she found out that Snow White was alive.
Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics
The Magic Mirror appears in the "Snow White" episode of Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics. It is kept in a cabinet in the Evil Queen's chambers. Like the story, the Magic Mirror told the Evil Queen that she was the fairest of them all until the day when Snow White came of age. In this version when the Magic Mirror told the Evil Queen that the Seven Dwarfs freed Snow White from the deadly laces and that she can't be killed when she is in their protection, the Evil Queen breaks the Magic Mirror vowing to prove it wrong.
Happily Ever After
The Magic Mirror appeared as the Looking Glass in Happily Ever After voiced by Dom DeLuise. When Lord Maliss asks him where his sister the Evil Queen is and threatens it for information, the Looking Glass tells him that she has died trying to kill Snow White. After Snow White evaded Lord Maliss' dragon form, Lord Maliss consults the Looking Glass again as the Looking Glass tells him that Snow White and the Dwarfelles are heading to Rainbow Falls. When Snow White ventures to Lord Maliss' castle, the Looking Glass tells him that it will be tough for Snow White to find his castle. When the Dwarfelles enter Lord Maliss' castle and wonder where Lord Maliss has taken Snow White, the Looking Glass states that "beneath the Queen lies a secret door." After searching the area, they find a panel to the hidden door underneath the Evil Queen's bust.
The Hunters
In the 2013 SyFy film The Hunters, it is revealed that the Magic Mirror was inspired by a fabled mirror that is said to grant the wish of whoever looks into it; supposedly, the mirror triggered the Dark Ages. The mirror was sought by an ancient army known as the Krugen before the hunters- a group of scientist knights dedicated to protecting fairy-tale artefacts- acquired the mirror, breaking off four shards from the mirror and hiding them and the mirror away when destroying it completely proved impossible. The film focuses on a family of hunters, the Flynns, with the parents being experienced hunters seeking the shards to keep them away from the Krugen and their sons being forced to take up the hunt when their parents go missing. The mirror is eventually reassembled by the film's antagonist, but he is tricked into making a wish that caused the mirror to destroy him, with the protagonists subsequently wishing for the mirror to destroy itself.
The Huntsman film series
In Snow White and the Huntsman, the Magic Mirror appears as a golden gong-like mirror that oozes out a hooded robed being (voiced by Christopher Obi) whenever Queen Ravenna called upon it for information, although apparently, the being is only visible to Ravenna, as her henchmen observe her talking to thin air. The Magic Mirror first appeared where he told Queen Ravenna that Snow White was coming to the age where she will be more fairer than Queen Ravenna. The Mirror is last seen when Snow White defeats Ravenna, ending the Evil Queen's rule.
In prequel/sequel, The Huntsman: Winter's War, the Magic Mirror (voiced by Fred Tatasciore) is revealed to hold darker forms of magic. He is seen in flashbacks of Queen Ravenna's tyrannical reign, where it tells Ravenna that her sister Freya will give birth to a child who will exceed Ravenna's beauty as the fairest of them all. The Mirror also predicts that if the child was to be harmed, Freya will unleash powers, prompting Ravenna to orchestrate the murder of her own niece, both to preserve her own beauty and, in her own twisted way, help her sister. Freya, in horror at her discovery, releases icy powers that kill her lover and turns her hair white. Years later, after Ravenna's death, the Magic Mirror has gone missing while travelling to a Sanctuary where Snow White believes its evil can be contained. It is revealed to be in the hands of a troll in a forest, but Freya, seeking the mirror for herself, orders Sara- the Huntsman's presumed-dead wife- to retrieve it. Although Sara obeys this order, she tricks Freya by sparing Eric's life. Freya's subsequent attempt to use the Mirror herself reveals that Ravenna had hidden a part of herself in the mirror, restoring her to a form of life apparently formed of the Mirror's gold while still appearing human. In the final confrontation, Freya learns the truth about her sister's role in the death of her daughter (Ravenna was now the mirror spirit and was thus bound to answer Freya's questions truthfully), prompting her to aid Eric in destroying the Mirror at the cost of her own life. However, the final scene shows a golden raven flying away, suggesting that a part of the mirror - and thus Ravenna - may have survived.
Mirror Mirror
In the film Mirror Mirror, elements of the Magic Mirror are featured as a large mirror that serves as a portal to the Mirror House where Queen Clementianna consults with the Mirror Queen (played by Lisa Roberts Gillian). To access the portal to the Mirror House, Queen Clementianna would quote "Mirror Mirror on the Wall." The Mirror Queen would always advise Queen Clementianna not to use dark magic for her own gain. After the aged Queen Clementianna takes the slice of an apple she was to give to Snow White from her, the Mirror Queen declared that it was Snow White's story all along as the Mirror House and the Mirror Portal shattered.
Princesses
In Jim C. Hines' Princesses series – chronicling the adventures of Snow White with Princess Danielle Whiteshore (Cinderella) and former Princess Talia Malak-el-Dahshat (Sleeping Beauty) after their tales concluded with Snow and Talia being banished from their kingdoms and taken in by Danielle's mother-in-law – Snow White is a sorceress who uses her mother's mirror as a key focus of her spells, relying on various smaller mirrors to maintain a link to it when away from the palace; her power is commonly focused by using various rhymes as spells, although she can create other spells without speaking. The fourth novel, The Snow Queen's Revenge, reveals that the magic mirror was created by Snow White's mother imprisoning a demon and binding it to her service. The plot suggests that the mirror's role in the original story was motivated by the demon attempting to create a set of circumstances that would allow it to escape, inspiring Snow's mother to attack her daughter so that Snow would inherit the mirror and some day make a mistake that would let the demon out. In the novel The Snow Queen's Revenge, the mirror shatters after Snow tries to perform a particularly complex spell, allowing the demon within it to possess Snow while shards of the mirror corrupt others, forcing Danielle and Talia to return to Snow's kingdom in the hopes of rediscovering the secrets used by Snow White's mother to bind the demon in the first place so that they can try and exorcise it from Snow. After this plan proves impossible due to the demon's interference, the demon attempts to recreate a larger ice-mirror to summon further demons into this world, using the part-fairy blood of Danielle's son Jakub – Danielle having some fairy blood in her from her mother's side of the family – but a reflection of Snow's untainted self helps protect her friends long enough for them to destroy the demon, at the cost of Snow's life.
Sesame Street
The Magic Mirror appeared in Episode 685 of Sesame Street with the Magic Mirror's face being the face of Jerry Nelson. In the "Sesame Street News Flash" segment, Kermit the Frog interviews the Magic Mirror on which question the evil witch will ask him and tells Kermit that it is the same question where the Snow White answer "drives her up the wall." The witch who is the fairest in the land, has two beautiful eyes, is green, wearing a hat, wielding a microphone, and is in the same room as the Magic Mirror. The Magic Mirror states that Kermit the Frog is the fairest. The witch then notices Kermit the Frog hiding behind the curtain and states that he is good-looking.
Snow White: A Tale of Terror
In Snow White: A Tale of Terror, this version has the mirror a property of Lady Claudia (Sigourney Weaver). It is a wooden closet with a statue as the door and hands acting as locks. It is regarded as a family heritage artifact by her. Snow White's nanny, tries to see what's inside while cleaning it and immediately suffers a heart attack. The mirror displays a beautiful and younger version of the Queen who advices her what to do. The mirror also contains her life force and she ages rapidly when Snow White stabs the mirror and then engulfs in flame of the burning room.
Shrek
The Magic Mirror appears in the Shrek franchise voiced by Chris Miller. It is depicted as a mirror with a live spirit communicating through it, and with magical displaying abilities. In Shrek, the Magic Mirror is first brought to Lord Farquaad who asks it if Duloc is not the most perfect kingdom, exactly the same way the Evil Queen used to ask it if she was not the fairest of all. The Magic Mirror then presents Lord Farquaad with three princesses that he can marry (from which he chooses Fiona). This is done in a parody of Blind Date. It is later seen to be with Shrek's posse who in Shrek 2 use it as a television set such as announcing that the show will be back after commercials.In Shrek Forever After, Rumpelstiltskin has it and uses it on television broadcasting purposes.
Simon the Sorcerer
Near the end of the video game Simon the Sorcerer, the player can use the Magic Mirror in Sordid's tower as an surveillance monitor, using any reflecting surface like a camera.
Sisters Grimm
In the Sisters Grimm series by Michael Buckley, the Magic Mirror appears as a minor protagonist in the first six books, but is revealed to be the main antagonist in book seven and remains evil until near the end of book nine.
Snow White: The Fairest of Them All
Here, the wicked queen Elspeth possesses a hall of magic mirrors, and a hand mirror that displays several attributes not seen before. The Queen may command the hand mirror to terminate enemies (as she did to the Huntsman), use it as a means of transport or step through it to change appearances, even turning others into animals.
The Suite Life
A parody version of the Magic Mirror appears as a recurring character throughout The Suite Life of Zack & Cody voiced by Brian Peck. It is a high tech mirror that often compliments London Tipton's attire.
A direct representation of the Magic Mirror in The Suite Life on Deck episode "Once Upon A Suite Life" voiced by Michael Airington. It is seen when all the characters are dreaming of themselves in the classic fairytales such as Snow White, Jack and the Beanstalk and Hansel and Gretel.
The Wolf Among Us
Appearing as a magical object in the Business Office, the Magic Mirror is a minor protagonist in The Wolf Among Us. Usually demanding its request be given to it in rhyme form, the Magic Mirror is capable of showing a brief vision of its requested subject. The Magic Mirror's shattering and the search for its missing shard play key aspects following the end of the second episode.
Sinister Squad
Although the magic mirror does not appear directly in the Asylum film Sinister Squad, it is referenced as a key part of the film's backstory; when Rumpelstiltskin destroyed the mirror to prevent the forces of Death claiming it, it transferred several fairy-tale characters into our world, with Rumpelstiltskin relying on fragments of the mirror to sustain his own magical manipulation abilities until the final confrontation with Death.
Magic Mirror inspired technology
In 2017 Amazon announced Echo Look, a “style assistant” camera that helps catalog your outfits and rates your look based on “machine learning algorithms with advice from fashion specialists.
The Magic Mirror: Myth's Abiding Power
Par Elizabeth M. Baeten
A protester holding a flyer denouncing the military dictature, in front of the Myanmar embassy in Paris. The police actually prevented the rally to reach the embassy itself resulting in a stand-off.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Protest at Myanmar embassy (Recommended as a slideshow)
On May 21, a couple of hundreds fishermen came to Paris to demonstrate against the increase in oil prices and the failure of the government to fulfill its promises (partly due to UE rules). While a delegation was received by the minister Michel Barnier, some protested outside the ministery, clashing with the police for about an hour with flares and emergency rockets. 3 policemen were seriously hurt. Everybody calmed down afterwards and no arrest were made.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album et de parcourir les photos par ordre chronologique / Please read the explanation at the beginning of the set and view the pictures in chronological order.
Part of "Pêcheurs en colère"
Thank you to all of you , old and new flickr friends , in this one year and half that I have started to do photos you have been very important for me , every your word and view has been appreciated very much and I have became a little better photographer first of all for this .
So I would like to send a little present for all of you ,of course if you want :) , and this little present is : one photo of mine in original size with a little explication about the way that I have done it in post-production ( so write me the photo that you want ).
Ufff ... I know that my english is very bad I hope that you have understand all :)
Thank you again
P.S. my flickr friends = all my flickr contacts
this isn't the gift ( for istance is not in original size ) , all of you can choose the photo that you prefer .
*AS* Elegant Hair Top Model ~Short Styling+Glitter
All inside the delivery box: fit mesh Hair or resize version.
Use the HUD tool and choose between all the texture color: Blond, Red, Brown, Black, (9 color base)High light style (6 color choice).
Click the button to add the glitter with 5 kinds of color choice: Silver, light gold, gold, red, green.
Use the HUD to add any color of your choice above any texture.`
read the NC all explication are into.
This Elegant Hair Top Model Included :
~ FitMesh Hair (it's not resizable but will fit to your head size automatic, just ''add them'')
~ Hair Top Model (Resizable version, use the HUD on Resize Tab to resize them)
~ HUD Tool for Hair ( ''add'' the HUD it will go to your computer screen, you can move the HUD if you right click on it and move the HUD with your computer mouse to different place into your computer screen)
~ HAIR BASE MODEL 1 (APPLIER HUD + BOM TATTOO FOR ALL KIND OF HEAD) Open the box and read the NC to learn how to use them
SL Market Place :
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Elegant-Hair-Top-Model-Short...
(Updated on May 26, 2025)
On the Atlantic shoreline. Just seaward of Ocean Avenue, some 300 yd / 275 m east of its T-intersection with Harrison Avenue.
Welcome to beautiful Avalonia, a terrane that was originally associated with the southern supercontinent of Gondwana. Now it's conveniently attached itself to New England, after a long journey across an ancient, long-vanished ocean basin.
This exposure is composed of maroon, oink, greenish, and gray clastic beds, somewhat metamorphosed, that are graded in a way to suggest a turbidite sequence. This is the Newport Neck Formation, thought to be Neoproterozoic or older. It's one small component of the Avalonian section of northeastern North America.
I especially like this shot and the outcrop it shows because the reddish-brown layers extending up from the water's edge. There also seems to be a monoclinal fold—a whitish layer slopes down to a lower horizontal level at right. Is it the "buff-weathering" volcanic-ash tuff also cited for this locale?
A later note: Since I first wrote this, I've come across the following source:
- Rast, Nicholas and James W. Skehan. "The Geology of Precambrian Rocks of Newport and Middletown, Rhode Island" (1981). NEIGC Trips, 293.
This field-trip guide is an oldie but a goodie, because it specifically describes the stratigraphy and metamorphic textures of this part of the shoreline.
And of course I also like the fact that it confirms what I wrote above. See Part 7 of this set for a further explication of this site's rock types.
To see the other photos and descriptions in this set, visit my my Rocks of Little Rhody album.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Pakistani Lifestyle (Recommended as a slideshow)
What more can I say?! 'Hibiscus' should be a verb... No explication needed. So beautiful against the blue. Though in the shadow, taken without a flash near the Botanical Gardens of Stellenbosch University, South Africa. Such wonderful white light...
Police officers demonstrating in Paris under heavy rain.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Police Demonstration (Recommended as a slideshow)
During the Independence Day parade on Aug. 6th, an old man celebrates the memories of his ancesters who fought the Chaco war against Paraguay.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
NOTE: The goal wasn't to make something very detail, but something very big.
This is for my 3,000 Subscribers.
Article: wp.me/p4ZmGq-15
Video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUIq9M78_K8
Video of Explication: www.youtube.com/watch?v=cA-Ox5tnZmY
La République a décidé d'envoyer un contingent de clone de la 41st Legion ainsi qu'un commando de Shadow Trooper sur Kashyyyk afin d'explorer au plus profond de la jungle une forteresse perdue.
Republic decide to send a contingent of the 41st Legion and Shadow Trooper Commando on Kashyyyk to explore in the depths jungle a lost fortress.
Video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzB1ow604yA
Video of Explication: www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9bUMjSAS7s
About a thousand supporters of Moussavi demonstrated from the Sorbonne to Jussieu, 2 universities, on July 9, 2009, commemorating the 10th anniversary of he July 1999 students upheaval. They protested against the alleged rigging of the June 11 elections by president Ahmadinejad, hence the motto "where is my vote ?". They also condemned the violence of the repression against the opponents and the censorship of the media.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of "Where is my vote ?" (Recommended as a slideshow)
I counted them today : 100 and a little bit more. They are my first and strangest harvest in the garden of my new flat. If I look carefully, I can find some every day. And so do my neighbours in their own gardens.
I had an explanation: in the basement was a laundry, once, and the shirts drying in the wind - imagine, no electric dryer at the time .... - well, the shirts lost some buttons. I guess that, like seeds, they grew and multiplied under the ground....
Ma première et plus étrange récolte de ce nouveau jardin. A ce jour, un peu plus de 100 boutons en porcelaine blanche. Et ça continue, puisque presque chaque jour, j'en retrouve quelques uns.
A force, j'ai eu une explication: il y aurait eu une blanchisserie au sous-sol de l'immeuble. Et les chemises séchant dans le vent ont dû régulièrement perdre quelques uns de leurs boutons. Je soupçonne qu'ils ont dû germer et se multiplier sous terre.....
To view more Snowdrops, please click "here"!
To view more of my images, of Anglesey Abbey, please click "here"!
Galanthus (Snowdrops; Greek gála "milk", ánthos "flower") is a small genus of about 20 species of bulbous herbaceous plants in the family Amaryllidaceae, subfamily Amaryllidoideae. Most flower in winter, before the vernal equinox (20 or 21 March in the Northern Hemisphere), but certain species flower in early spring and late autumn. Snowdrops are sometimes confused with the two related genera within Galantheae, snowflakes Leucojum and Acis. All species of Galanthus are perennial, herbaceous plants which grow from bulbs. Each bulb generally produces just two or three linear leaves and an erect, leafless scape (flowering stalk), which bears at the top a pair of bract-like spathe valves joined by a papery membrane. From between them emerges a solitary, pendulous, bell-shaped white flower, held on a slender pedicel. The flower has no petals: it consists of six tepals, the outer three being larger and more convex than the inner series. The six anthers open by pores or short slits. The ovary is three-celled, ripening into a three-celled capsule. Each whitish seed has a small, fleshy tail (elaiosome) containing substances attractive to ants which distribute the seeds. The leaves die back a few weeks after the flowers have faded. The inner flower segments are usually marked with a green, or greenish-yellow, bridge-shaped mark over the small "sinus" (notch) at the tip of each tepal. An important feature which helps to distinguish between species (and to help to determine the parentage of hybrids) is their "vernation" (the arrangement of the emerging leaves relative to each other). This can be "applanate", "supervolute" or "explicative". In applanate vernation the two leaf blades are pressed flat to each other within the bud and as they emerge; explicative leaves are also pressed flat against each other, but the edges of the leaves are folded back or sometimes rolled; in supervolute plants one leaf is tightly clasped around the other within the bud and generally remains at the point where the leaves emerge from the soil.
Réminiscence archéologique de l'Angélus de Millet – 1934 - Huile sur bois
« Réminiscence archéologique de l'Angélus de Millet » est une référence au tableau « L'Angélus » (1859) du peintre français Jean-François Millet (l'un des fondateurs du mouvement artistique du réalisme). La peinture de Millet (à gauche) représente un couple de paysans lors de la récolte de pommes de terre à Barbizon, avec vue sur le clocher de Chailly-en-Bière récitant l'Angélus, prière marquant la fin de leur journée de travail. Salvador Dalí en avait vu une reproduction sur le mur de son école et affirmait avoir été effrayé par le tableau. Pour lui il s'agissait d'une scène funéraire (pas d'un rituel de prière), le couple étant en train de prier et de pleurer son enfant mort. Sur son insistance, le Louvre a radiographié le tableau permettant d’apercevoir un petit cercueil surpeint par le panier… Afin d’éviter de verser dans les arts divinatoires une explication probable serait que Millet avait à l'origine peint une sépulture, peut-être une version rurale du célèbre tableau de Courbet « Enterrement à Ornans » (1850) pour le peintre et collectionneur d'art américain Thomas Gold Appleton qui avait passé commande mais n’avait jamais pris son tableau. Suite à cette déconvenue et pour vendre plus facilement sa toile, Millet aurait modifié son œuvre en y ajoutant notamment un clocher, l'imagerie de l'Angélus avec des paysans en prière étant un sujet religieux sentimental populaire du XIXe siècle !
Comme Van Gogh, Salvador Dali était également fasciné par ce travail et en a écrit une analyse : « Le mythe tragique de l'Angélus de Millet ». Il peint cette interprétation surréaliste de l’Angélus de Millet (à droite), transformant le tableau original en une parabole inconsciente du pouvoir sexuel féminin. La figure féminine, à droite, pose dans l'expectative, prête à bondir, tandis que le mâle, tête baissée, essaie vainement de protéger ses parties génitales avec son chapeau. La forme de la femme suggère une mante religieuse, thème prédominant dans les œuvres surréalistes, signifiant les sentiments contradictoires d'attraction et de désespoir dans le domaine du désir. Dalí a estimé que la femme n'était pas seulement le partenaire dominant, mais constituait également une menace sexuelle pour l'homme.
La ligne d'horizon basse et le paysage presque vide soulignent la monumentalité de l'étrange structure au premier plan, les cyprès symboles de la mort et de la finalité, soulignent l'atmosphère du fatalisme. Les deux paysans de L’Angélus ont été transformées en ruines architecturales imposantes probablement inspirées par les visites de Dali des ruines romaines à proximité de sa maison d'enfance. Dali transforme les figures de Millet en monuments non pas parce qu'elles doivent être considérées comme des symboles morts, mais parce qu'elles représentent des principes anciens toujours présents, les fondements de la sexualité humaine.
Deux scènes similaires, en bas au centre un homme avec un petit garçon également vu à droite avec une infirmière assise, soulignent le contraste entre l'innocence de l'enfance et les peurs de l'âge adulte (la minuscule représentation père / fils a commencé à apparaître dans les œuvres de Dali à partir de 1929). (Dim : 31,75 x 39,4 cm)
Archeological Reminiscence of Millet's Angelus – 1934 - Oil on wood panel
"Archaeological Reminiscence of the Angelus of Millet" is a reference to the painting "The Angelus" (1859) by the French painter Jean-François Millet (one of the founders of the artistic movement of realism). Millet's painting (left) represents a couple of peasants during the potato harvest in Barbizon, with a view of the bell tower of Chailly-en-Bière reciting the Angelus, a prayer marking the end of their working day. Salvador Dalí had seen a reproduction on the wall of his school and said he had been frightened by the painting. For him it was a funeral scene (not a prayer ritual), the couple being praying and mourning their dead child. At his insistence, the Louvre x-rayed the painting allowing a glimpse of a small coffin overpainted by the basket… In order to avoid pouring into the divinatory arts a probable explanation would be that Millet, had originally painted a burial, perhaps to be a rural version of Courbet's famous painting "Burial at Ornans" (1850) for the American painter and art collector Thomas Gold Appleton who had ordered but never picked up his painting. Following this disappointment and to sell his canvas more easily, Millet would have modified his work by notably adding a bell tower, the imagery of the Angelus with praying peasants being a popular sentimental religious subject of the 19th century!
Like Van Gogh, Salvador Dali was also fascinated by this work and wrote an analysis of it: "The tragic myth of the Angelus of Millet". He paints this surreal interpretation of Millet's Angelus (right), transforming the original painting into an unconscious parable of female sexual power. The female figure, on the right, poses expectantly, ready to pounce, while the male, head down, vainly tries to protect his genitals with his hat. The form of the woman suggests a praying mantis, a predominant theme in surrealist works, signifying the contradictory feelings of attraction and despair in the domain of desire. Dalí believed that the woman was not only the dominant partner, but also posed a sexual threat to the man.
The low horizon line and the almost empty landscape underline the monumentality of the strange structure in the foreground, the cypresses symbols of death and finality, underline the atmosphere of fatalism. The two peasants of L’Angélus were transformed into imposing architectural ruins probably inspired by Dali’s visits to the Roman ruins near his childhood home. Dali transforms Millet's figures into monuments not because they must be considered as dead symbols, but because they represent ancient principles still present, the foundations of human sexuality.
Two similar scenes, in the bottom center a man with a little boy also seen on the right with a nurse seated, underline the contrast between the innocence of childhood and the fears of adulthood (the tiny representation father / son has started to appear in Dali's works from 1929). (Dim : 12 1/2 in x 15 1/2 in)
This is an oil painting using both a paint brush and a palette knife. I was inspired by one of my favorite quotes to create this piece. The outlines of the two individuals are painted in black and their faces contain a multitude of colors. The atypical and messy nature of the faces explicates that our imperfections make us beautiful and that although we are constantly growing, learning and changing, we are all still masterpieces.
The older twin ladies either side of me saw Buffalo Bill perform before Queen Victoria when they were children.
Collaboration with Simon Suckling (original photographer).
Difficile après la tonte. Non seulement sa tonte fut longue et difficile car sa laine est très sèche et elle a été assez méchamment coupée, mais en plus les autres la chassent (voir explication sur la video en commentaire)
Hard after the shearing. Not only was the shearing long and difficult because her wool is too dry, so she was also badly cut, but her "sisters" chase her (see complete explanation on the video in the comment field below).
Si quelqu'un sait de quel genre de bateau il s'agit, son explication sera la bienvenue, d'avance merci !
If anyone knows what kind of boat this is, their explanation will be welcome, thank you in advance!
P1090746
Un journaliste interviewe un activiste participant a un sit-in d'une trentaine de personnes Boulevard Clémenceau, devant l'un des check-points de la zone de securite au matin du début du sommet de l'OTAN à Strasbourg, le 04 avril 2009. Apres avoir essuye quelques tirs de grenades lacrymogenes, ils seront finalement portes a l'ecart par les forces de l'ordre puis relaches.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Definitely my biggest project, both in term of parts used and time spent on the design. It represents a geisha from Ghost in the Shell (the 2017 live action movie). Her mask can open in 7 panels to reveal a frightening robotic face.
The tricky part was to make a convincing face while the mask is closed, but thin enough to keep some space behind it for the pearl gold part. I spent a long time working on the hinges, trying to limit the space between the panels when they are closed. Because of those constraints, some proportions are a bit off. I'm still very happy about with how it turned out, as it's quite far from what I'm used to building.
Reference pictures: mask closed, mask open.
And the opening scene of the movie that features this character.
Des explications en français sont disponibles ici sur brickpirate.
J'aime beaucoup ces petits animaux, tellement patauds au sol et si gracieux dans l'eau.
A ne pas confondre avec les pingouins qui s'appellent "auk" en anglais et penguin pour les manchots ce qui rajoute à la confusion.
Explication intéressante sur la différence : www.manchots.com/differences-entre-manchots-et-pingouins/
I love these little animals, so clumsy on the ground and so graceful in the water.
There is a source of confusion between French and English
The French word "pingouin" = auk while the English "penguin" = manchot in French
Difference between the penguin and the oak : whatis.thedifferencebetween.com/compare/auk-and-penguin/
Merci à .Sissi, petite fée plus d'explications sur le site www.flickr.com/photos/26450367@N04/7342776210/in/set-7215...
Au musée Animalaine (voir photo précédente pour explication), il n'y avait pas que des moutons, il y avait aussi des lamas dont celui-ci qui m'a fait plein de bisous. Du moins tant que j'avais des friandises (sachet avec mélange pour moutons vendus à l'entrée)... après il m'a complètement ignorée le vilain
At the Animalaine museum (see previous photo for explanation), there were not only sheep, there were also llamas including this one that gave me kisses. At least as long as I had treats (bag with mix for sheep sold at the entrance) ... after he completely ignored me, naughty guy
On April 8th, 20.000 people (according to the Union nationale lycéenne-UNL), 8. 500 according to the police, demonstrated once more from Luxembourg. Numerous incidents forced the organizers to stop the march around Duroc, with stones and bottles thrown at the police, who replicated with tear gas and charges, with a few arrests.
Here, protesters party frenetically around the traditional flare ;-)
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Ecole en danger ! (Recommended as a slideshow)
Bonjour,
« Cosmos » : Postprocessing de la superposition d’une photo prise à MERLIMONT (62, Côte d’Opale) et d’une copie d’écran de veille d’une photo de galaxie :
www.lesphotosdarchibald.fr/zenphoto/R%C3%AAve-d%27enfant/...
Vous trouverez les explications sur la réalisation de cette photo à l’adresse :
www.lesphotosdarchibald.fr/zenphoto/news/Cosmos,-rencontr...
Je vous souhaite un bel été.
Cordialement.
Daniel LEJEUNE
Black Holes May Hide a Mind-Bending Secret About Our Universe
By Dennis Overbye
Published Oct. 10, 2022
Updated Oct. 12, 2022
For the last century, the biggest bar fight in science has been between Albert Einstein and himself.
On one side is the Einstein who in 1915 conceived general relativity, which describes gravity as the warping of space-time by matter and energy. That theory predicted that space-time could bend, expand, rip, and quiver like a bowl of Jell-O and disappear into those bottomless pits of nothingness known as black holes.
On the other side is the Einstein who, starting in 1905, laid the foundation for quantum mechanics, the nonintuitive rules that inject randomness into the world — rules that Einstein never accepted. According to quantum mechanics, a subatomic particle like an electron can be anywhere and everywhere at once, and a cat can be both alive and dead until it is observed. God doesn’t play dice, Einstein often complained.
Gravity rules outer space, shaping galaxies and indeed the whole universe, whereas quantum mechanics rules inner space, the arena of atoms and elementary particles. The two realms long seemed to have nothing to do with each other; this left scientists ill-equipped to understand what happens in an extreme situation like a black hole or the beginning of the universe.
But a blizzard of research in the last decade on the inner lives of black holes has revealed unexpected connections between the two views of the cosmos. The implications are mind-bending, including the possibility that our three-dimensional universe — and we ourselves — may be holograms, like the ghostly anti-counterfeiting images that appear on some credit cards and drivers licenses. In this version of the cosmos, there is no difference between here and there, cause and effect, inside and outside or perhaps even then and now; household cats can be conjured in empty space. We can all be Dr. Strange.
“It may be too strong to say that gravity and quantum mechanics are exactly the same thing,” Leonard Susskind of Stanford University wrote in a paper in 2017. “But those of us who are paying attention may already sense that the two are inseparable, and that neither makes sense without the other.”
That insight, Dr. Susskind and his colleagues hope, could lead to a theory that combines gravity and quantum mechanics — quantum gravity — and perhaps explains how the universe began.
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Einstein vs. Einstein
The schism between the two Einsteins entered the spotlight in 1935, when the physicist faced off against himself in a pair of scholarly papers.
In one paper, Einstein and Nathan Rosen showed that general relativity predicted that black holes (which were not yet known by that name) could form in pairs connected by shortcuts through space-time, called Einstein-Rosen bridges — “wormholes.” In the imaginations of science fiction writers, you could jump into one black hole and pop out of the other.
In the other paper, Einstein, Rosen and another physicist, Boris Podolsky, tried to pull the rug out from quantum mechanics by exposing a seeming logical inconsistency. They pointed out that, according to the uncertainty principle of quantum physics, a pair of particles once associated would be eternally connected, even if they were light-years apart. Measuring a property of one particle — its direction of spin, say — would instantaneously affect the measurement of its mate. If these photons were flipped coins and one came up heads, the other invariably would be found out to be tails.
To Einstein, this proposition was obviously ludicrous, and he dismissed it as “spooky action at a distance.” But today physicists call it “entanglement,” and lab experiments confirm its reality every day. Last week the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to a trio of physicists whose experiments over the years had demonstrated the reality of this “spooky action.”
The physicist N. David Mermin of Cornell University once called such quantum weirdness “the closest thing we have to magic.”
As Daniel Kabat, a physics professor at Lehman College in New York, explained it, “We’re used to thinking that information about an object — say, that a glass is half-full — is somehow contained within the object. Entanglement means this isn’t correct. Entangled objects don’t have an independent existence with definite properties of their own. Instead they only exist in relation to other objects.”
Einstein probably never dreamed that the two 1935 papers had anything in common, Dr. Susskind said recently. But Dr. Susskind and other physicists now speculate that wormholes and spooky action are two aspects of the same magic and, as such, are the key to resolving an array of cosmic paradoxes.
Throwing Dice in the Dark
To astronomers, black holes are dark monsters with gravity so strong that they can consume stars, wreck galaxies and imprison even light. At the edge of a black hole, time seems to stop. At a black hole’s center, matter shrinks to infinite density and the known laws of physics break down. But to physicists bent on explicating those fundamental laws, black holes are a Coney Island of mysteries and imagination.
In 1974 the cosmologist Stephen Hawking astonished the scientific world with a heroic calculation showing that, to his own surprise, black holes were neither truly black nor eternal, when quantum effects were added to the picture. Over eons, a black hole would leak energy and subatomic particles, shrink, grow increasingly hot and finally explode. In the process, all the mass that had fallen into the black hole over the ages would be returned to the outer universe as a random fizz of particles and radiation.
This might sound like good news, a kind of cosmic resurrection. But it was a potential catastrophe for physics. A core tenet of science holds that information is never lost; billiard balls might scatter every which way on a pool table, but in principle, it is always possible to rewind the tape to determine where they were in the past or predict their positions in the future, even if they drop into a black hole.
But if Hawking were correct, the particles radiating from a black hole were random, a meaningless thermal noise stripped of the details of whatever has fallen in. If a cat fell in, most of its information — name, color, temperament — would be unrecoverable, effectively lost from history. It would be as if you opened your safe deposit box and found that your birth certificate and your passport had disappeared. As Hawking phrased it in 1976: “God not only plays dice, he sometimes throws them where they can’t be seen.”
His declaration triggered a 40-year war of ideas. “This can’t be right,” Dr. Susskind, who became Hawking’s biggest adversary in the subsequent debate, thought to himself when first hearing about Hawking’s claim. “I didn’t know what to make out of it.”
Image A white, illustrated cat sits in the middle of the page, staring out, and dark blue lines radiate from behind it like a scintillating star.
Credit...Leonardo Santamaria
Encoding Reality
A potential solution came to Dr. Susskind one day in 1993 as he was walking through a physics building on campus. There in the hallway he saw a display of a hologram of a young woman.
A hologram is basically a three-dimensional image — a teapot, a cat, Princess Leia — made entirely of light. It is created by illuminating the original (real) object with a laser and recording the patterns of reflected light on a photographic plate. When the plate is later illuminated, a three-dimensional image of the object springs into view at the center.
“‘Hey, here’s a situation where it looks as if information is kind of reproduced in two different ways,’” Dr. Susskind recalled thinking. On the one hand, there is a visible object that “looked real,” he said. “And on the other hand, there’s the same information coded on the film surrounding the hologram. Up close, it just looks like a little bunch of scratches and a highly complex encoding.”
The right combinations of scratches on that film, Dr. Susskind realized, could make anything emerge into three dimensions. Then he thought: What if a black hole was actually a hologram, with the event horizon serving as the “film,” encoding what was inside? It was “a nutty idea, a cool idea,” he recalled.
Across the Atlantic, the same nutty idea had occurred to the Dutch physicist, Gerardus ’t Hooft, a Nobel laureate at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
According to Einstein’s general relativity, the information content of a black hole or any three-dimensional space — your living room, say, or the whole universe — was limited to the number of bits that could be encoded on an imaginary surface surrounding it. That space was measured in pixels 10⁻³³ centimeters on a side — the smallest unit of space, known as the Planck length.
With data pixels so small, this amounted to quadrillions of megabytes per square centimeter — a stupendous amount of information, but not an infinite amount. Trying to cram too much information into any region would cause it to exceed a limit decreed by Jacob Bekenstein, then a Princeton graduate student and Hawking’s rival, and cause it to collapse into a black hole.
“This is what we found out about Nature’s bookkeeping system,” Dr. ’t Hooft wrote in 1993. “The data can be written onto a surface, and the pen with which the data are written has a finite size.”
The Soup-Can Universe
The cosmos-as-holograph idea found its fullest expression a few years later, in 1997. Juan Maldacena, a theorist at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., used new ideas from string theory — the speculative “theory of everything” that portrays subatomic particles as vibrating strings — to create a mathematical model of the entire universe as a hologram.
In his formulation, all the information about what happens inside some volume of space is encoded as quantum fields on the surface of the region’s boundary.
Dr. Maldacena’s universe is often portrayed as a can of soup: Galaxies, black holes, gravity, stars, and the rest, including us, are the soup inside, and the information describing them resides on the outside, like a label. Think of it as gravity in a can. The inside and outside of the can — the “bulk” and the “boundary” — are complementary descriptions of the same phenomena.
Since the fields on the surface of the soup can obey quantum rules about preserving information, the gravitational fields inside the can must also preserve information. In such a picture, “there is no room for information loss,” Dr. Maldacena said at a conference in 2004.
Hawking conceded: Gravity was not the great eraser after all.
“In other words, the universe makes sense,” Dr. Susskind said in an interview.
“It’s completely crazy,” he added, in reference to the holographic universe. “You could imagine in a laboratory, in a sufficiently advanced laboratory, a large sphere — let’s say, a hollow sphere of a specially tailored material — to be made of silicon and other things, with some kind of appropriate quantum fields inscribed on it.” Then you could conduct experiments, he said: Tap on the sphere, interact with it, then wait for answers from the entities inside.
“On the other hand, you could open up that shell and you would find nothing in it,” he added. As for us entities inside: “We don’t read the hologram, we are the hologram.”
Image
Against a black background sits a rough, ghostly cat that looks as if it has been drawn from white scratch marks and cat hair.
Credit...Leonardo Santamaria
Wormholes, wormholes everywhere
Our actual universe, unlike Dr. Maldacena’s mathematical model, has no boundary, no outer limit. Nonetheless, for physicists, his universe became a proof of principle that gravity and quantum mechanics were compatible and offered a font of clues to how our actual universe works.
But, Dr. Maldacena noted recently, his model did not explain how information manages to escape a black hole intact or how Hawking’s calculation in 1974 went wrong.
Don Page, a former student of Hawking now at the University of Alberta, took a different approach in the 1990s. Suppose, he said, that information is conserved when a black hole evaporates. If so, then a black hole does not spit out particles as randomly as Hawking had thought. The radiation would start out as random, but as time went on, the particles being emitted would become more and more correlated with those that had come out earlier, essentially filling the gaps in the missing information. After billions and billions of years all the hidden information would have emerged.
In quantum terms, this explanation required any particles now escaping the black hole to be entangled with the particles that had leaked out earlier. But this presented a problem. Those newly emitted particles were already entangled with their mates that had already fallen into the black hole, running afoul of quantum rules mandating that particles be entangled only in pairs. Dr. Page’s information-transmission scheme could only work if the particles inside the black hole were somehow the same as the particles that were now outside.
How could that be? The inside and outside of the black hole were connected by wormholes, the shortcuts through space and time proposed by Einstein and Rosen in 1935.
In 2012 Drs. Maldacena and Susskind proposed a formal truce between the two warring Einsteins. They proposed that spooky entanglement and wormholes were two faces of the same phenomenon. As they put it, employing the initials of the authors of those two 1935 papers, Einstein and Rosen in one and Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen in the other: “ER = EPR.”
The implication is that, in some strange sense, the outside of a black hole was the same as the inside, like a Klein bottle that has only one side.
How could information be in two places at once? Like much of quantum physics, the question boggles the mind, like the notion that light can be a wave or a particle depending on how the measurement is made.
What matters is that, if the interior and exterior of a black hole were connected by wormholes, information could flow through them in either direction, in or out, according to John Preskill, a Caltech physicist and quantum computing expert.
“We ought to be able to influence the interior of one of these black holes by ‘tickling’ its radiation, and thereby sending a message to the inside of the black hole,” he said in a 2017 interview with Quanta. He added, “It sounds crazy.”
Ahmed Almheiri, a physicist at N.Y.U. Abu Dhabi, noted recently that by manipulating radiation that had escaped a black hole, he could create a cat inside that black hole. “I can do something with the particles radiating from the black hole, and suddenly a cat is going to appear in the black hole,” he said.
He added, “We all have to get used to this.”
The metaphysical turmoil came to a head in 2019. That year two groups of theorists made detailed calculations showing that information leaking through wormholes would match the pattern predicted by Dr. Page. One paper was by Geoff Penington, now at the University of California, Berkeley. And the other was by Netta Engelhardt of M.I.T.; Don Marolf of the University of California, Santa Barbara; Henry Maxfield, now at Stanford University; and Dr. Almheiri. The two groups published their papers on the same day.
“And so the final moral of the story is, if your theory of gravity includes wormholes, then you get information coming out,” Dr. Penington said. “If it doesn’t include wormholes, then presumably, you don’t get information coming out.”
He added, “Hawking didn’t include wormholes, and we are including wormholes.”
Not everybody has signed on to this theory. And testing it is a challenge since particle accelerators will probably never be powerful enough to produce black holes in the lab for study, although several groups of experimenters hope to simulate black holes and wormholes in quantum computers.
And even if this physics turns out to be accurate, Dr. Mermin’s magic does have an important limit: Neither wormholes nor entanglement can transmit a message, much less a human, faster than the speed of light. So much for time travel. The weirdness only becomes apparent after the fact, when two scientists compare their observations and discover that they match — a process that involves classical physics, which obeys the speed limit set by Einstein.
As Dr. Susskind likes to say, “You can’t make that cat hop out of a black hole faster than the speed of light.”
Correction: Oct. 10, 2022
An earlier version of this article misidentified the academic affiliation of the physicist Don Marolf. It is the University of California, Santa Barbara, not the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Dennis Overbye joined The Times in 1998, and has been a reporter since 2001. He has written two books: “Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos: The Story of the Scientific Search for the Secret of the Universe” and “Einstein in Love: A Scientific Romance.” @overbye
About a thousand people marched in Paris to support a free Tibet on March 21.
Merci de lire les explications en début d'album / Please read the explanations at the beginning of the set
Part of Free Tibet ! (Recommended as a slideshow)