View allAll Photos Tagged Logic
" always make it a practice to stir your own mind thoroughly to think through what you have easily believed. your position is not really yours until you make it yours through suffering and study. the author or speaker from which you learn the most is not the one who teaches you something you didn't know before, but the one who helps you take a truth with which you have quietly struggled, give it expression, and speak it clearly and boldly. " --- Oswald Chambers
*** sorry, i can't visit your streams yet... hopefully over the weekend i can... :)
Apparently January 14th is World Logic Day - I struggled to think of something for this list item in the latest ANSH scavenger hunt so I googled logic to see what came up - amongst many things were puzzles and on from that the Rubik's Cube.
Uneseco say this about the creation of World Logic Day (first celebrated in 2019)
'The ability to think is one of the most defining features of humankind. In different cultures, the definition of humanity is associated with concepts such as consciousness, knowledge and reason. According to the classic western tradition, human beings are defined as “rational” or “logical animals”. Logic, as the investigation on the principles of reasoning, has been studied by many civilizations throughout history and, since its earliest formulations, logic has played an important role in the development of philosophy and the sciences.
Despite its undeniable relevance to the development of knowledge, sciences and technologies, there is little public awareness on the importance of logic. The proclamation of World Logic Day by UNESCO, in association with the International Council for Philosophy and Human Sciences (CIPSH), intends to bring the intellectual history, conceptual significance and practical implications of logic to the attention of interdisciplinary science communities and the broader public.
A dynamic and global annual celebration of World Logic Day aims at fostering international cooperation, promoting the development of logic, in both research and teaching, supporting the activities of associations, universities and other institutions involved with logic, and enhancing public understanding of logic and its implications for science, technology and innovation. Furthermore, the celebration of World Logic Day can also contribute to the promotion of a culture of peace, dialogue and mutual understanding, based on the advancement of education and science.'
ANSH 108 (3) logic
Artwork ©jackiecrossley
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Logic Lane is a small, historic cobbled lane through University College in Oxford, England, so called because it was the location of a school of logicians.
In the 13th and 14th centuries it was known as Horseman Lane. During the medieval period, a horse-mill was located here. It was also known as Horsemull Lane. The name of Logic Lane was adopted by the 17th century, due to a school of logicians at the northern end of the lane.
Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logic_Lane
All rights reserved. © copyright by Seung Kye Lee
- Website: www.leeseungkye.com
- Blog: seungkyelee.wordpress.com/
- Sun had set and said farewell with this spectacular lightshow through the fog at Huk, Oslo Fjord, Norway.
The 5 last images are from the same location and shows how the variety of light, weather and impression changes continously.
This was the place I shot my first landscape image about 10 years ago, using quite funny equipment which seemed just as quite logic at the time, and recently I`ve had the urge to return here and finally decided to capture all four seasons of this place after seeing it`s potential.
I framed the shot to get everything from deep layers of underwater ice, highlights in the snow, golden reflection in the water and dramatic sky to compliment the colors.
After third try, fine adjusting the polarizer effect and handholding a neutral density filter moving it slightly up-and-down during the exposure, I got my best exposure of light and details.
Quite a challenge as the light was very strong and shadows deep.
Wintertime is often easier as snow and ice reflects more light and makes the exposure easier for a satisfying result.
The meditation and emptiness of relying on getting the shot in-camera at the time of exposure is essential for me and brings me great joy when it comes down to photography.
I think of it as zen.
Observing how the mind automatically utilizes everything from abstract concepts to the most detailed technical and artistic aspects of photography is very interesting. Just to keep the focus above the emotions at spectacular moments like this teaches me a lot about the mind and gives me energy and peace. Mindfood.
Zen.
During the last year I`ve achieved to master some shooting techniques that requires minimum of post-processing on the pc.
Working on subtle enhancement to the RAW and TIFF-files, using curves, local dodge/burn and color correction, rather than letting an image rely on time consuming post-processing that does more bad than good to the images.
In my experience, minimum but adequate processing, is crucial to get the best image quality when printing large prints and also let`s me spend more time in nature photographing.
On flickrs eye-hurting white background and with my 25% downsize of image file for compressed jpg-upload, this image is not justified. Please take a look at my website for larger images on more pleasing dark background.
Canon 5D, 17-40mm f/4, Singh-Ray Warming Polarizer, Lee gnd filter, 1/3 sec., f/16 at 17mm.
i made this for my very talented friend vashti's new album. its called love + logic, hence the title of this image!
i think this fits her music well (its very soft and whimsical sounding), and i think it shows the idea of having to pick between love and logic clearly (typically i try to show things in a deeper way, but i think for an album cover its helpful to be more upfront!). though im not tooooo excited since the image itself isnt the most unique - i mean, how many photos are out there of someone stepping off a cliff? ive also used a composition so similar to this a few other times. :P the full image i had in mind for this was basically impossible for me to create at this point in time, given the fact that it was fully dependent upon location (even this is completely built in photoshop, i took it in my backyard... in a plain ol' field!), which is always a bit of a bummer. however i was very happy to get a chance to use this beautiful vintage wedding gown that i bought over a year ago!
if youre interested in seeing more from this shoot, or if youre interested in finding out more about vashti's album release, head on over to facebook.
p.s. i miss you flickr!! i have SO many new ideas for personal work, but ive been on client stuff like crazy. ive got one more wedding and one more family shoot in the next week, and then after that ill catch up on editing, and i should be back to flickr quite a bit before it snows (hopefully...)!
I would love to tour the Southland
In a traveling minstrel show
Yes I'd love to tour the Southland
In a traveling minstrel show
Yes I'm dying to be a star and make them laugh
Sound just like a record on the phonograph
Those days are gone forever
Over a long time ago, oh yeah
I have never met Napoleon
But I plan to find the time
I have never met Napoleon
But I plan to find the time
'Cause he looks so fine upon that hill
They tell me he was lonely, he's lonely still
Those days are gone forever
Over a long time ago, oh yeah
I stepped up on the platform
The man gave me the news
He said, You must be joking son
Where did you get those shoes?
Where did you get those shoes?
Well, I've seen 'em on the TV, the movie show
They say the times are changing but I just don't know
These things are gone forever
Over a long time ago, oh yeah
Steely Dan — 1974
Boeing 747-400ERF G-CLBA of CargoLogicAir lands at London Heathrow Airport with a flight from Atlanta.
During our Oktoberfest celebration, over 23,000 soft pretzels are consumed. That's a whole lotta' dough! Here, a worker unloads several racks of freshly-made soft pretzels from the Servatii Pastry delivery truck at this year's Oktoberfest Zinzinnati.
Τα Τριαντάφυλλα είναι Κόκκινα.
Το Κόκκινο είναι ένα Χρώμα.
Άρα τα Τριαντάφυλλα είναι Χρωματιστά.
Roses are Red.
Red is a Colour.
Therefore Roses are coloured...
*
The simplest of bridges, a promise
that you will go forward,
that you can come back.
So you cross over.
It says you can come back.
So you go forward.
But even if you come back
then you must go forward.
I am always either going back
or coming forward. There is always
something I have to carry,
something I leave behind.
I am a figure in a logic problem,
standing on one shore
with the things I cannot leave,
looking across at what I cannot have.
Nan Cohen
**
Οι Πιγκουίνοι είναι Ασπρόμαυροι.
Κάποιες Παλιές Ταινίες είναι Ασπρόμαυρες.
Άρα Κάποιοι Πιγκουίνοι είναι Παλιές Ταινίες...
Penguins are Black & White.
Some Old Movies are Black & White...
Therefore some Penguins are Old Movies...
A puzzle is a game, problem, or toy that tests a person's ingenuity or knowledge. In a puzzle, the solver is expected to put pieces together (or take them apart) in a logical way, in order to find the solution of the puzzle. There are different genres of puzzles, such as crossword puzzles, word-search puzzles, number puzzles, relational puzzles, and logic puzzles. The academic study of puzzles is called enigmatology.
Puzzles are often created to be a form of entertainment but they can also arise from serious mathematical or logical problems. In such cases, their solution may be a significant contribution to mathematical research.
The Oxford English Dictionary dates the word puzzle (as a verb) to the end of the 16th century. Its earliest use documented in the OED was in a book titled The Voyage of Robert Dudley...to the West Indies, 1594–95, narrated by Capt. Wyatt, by himself, and by Abram Kendall, master (published circa 1595). The word later came to be used as a noun, first as an abstract noun meaning 'the state or condition of being puzzled', and later developing the meaning of 'a perplexing problem'. The OED's earliest clear citation in the sense of 'a toy that tests the player's ingenuity' is from Sir Walter Scott's 1814 novel Waverley, referring to a toy known as a "reel in a bottle".
The etymology of the verb puzzle is described by OED as "unknown"; unproven hypotheses regarding its origin include an Old English verb puslian meaning 'pick out', and a derivation of the verb pose.
Source Wikipédia
Lumix S5 - Sigma 24-70mm f/2.8
1/200 f/7.1 100 ISO @37mm
Copyright © by John Russell – All Rights Reserved
Kinetic Photograph made with one single long exposure shot. See more in: "The Best of Drawing with Light"
. . . Boston Common, Boston, Massachusetts. Reminds me of the cover from Steely Dan's "Pretzel Logic" album, only with nuts.
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