View allAll Photos Tagged ether
✰ This photo was featured on The Epic Global Showcase here: bit.ly/2fJvriM
-------------
Now featuring: bread in the spiderweb [2] by pani ell
A.S.S.CLEANER is a small crusher used for destroying all sorts of things. Equipped with a miniaturized C-ether engine, it crushes anything with extremely powerful power.
Optional parts can be attached to the tip, and an iron stake for piercing is attached as standard.
Although it was a very popular product, the ether engine would often run out of control, and users may become addicted to ether.
[A.S.S.CLEANER]
Includeds 2 sizes animesh ver./ resizable unrigged ver./ coloring HUD / Animesh HUD
It will be released at the ENGINE ROOM event starting SEPT. 20, 2023
October 16 is “Ether Day” — celebrating the first time anesthesia was successfully used for surgery in 1846. The “Ether Dome” where the surgery took place is now a historic landmark in Boston. That early anesthetic that is usually inhaled was born in a very specific place, a place known as the Ether Dome at Mass General Hospital in Boston. -- Courtesy NPR
Experiments in frustration...
Actually, I really like how this turned out.
The past week has been HECTIC. I'm really missing taking photos right now so I fooled around a little earlier. Hopefully soon I can develop the rolls I took over break... finally...
5th Platonic Solid - The Ether - Geometric Representation of the higher dimensions and crystalline consciousness grid our earth is surrounded by.
See Wiki for more details:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platonic_solid
The Platonic solids have been known since antiquity. Ornamented models of them can be found among the carved stone balls created by the late neolithic people of Scotland at least 1000 years before Plato (Atiyah and Sutcliffe 2003). Dice go back to the dawn of civilization with shapes that augured formal charting of Platonic solids.
The ancient Greeks studied the Platonic solids extensively. Some sources (such as Proclus) credit Pythagoras with their discovery. Other evidence suggests he may have only been familiar with the tetrahedron, cube, and dodecahedron, and that the discovery of the octahedron and icosahedron belong to Theaetetus, a contemporary of Plato. In any case, Theaetetus gave a mathematical description of all five and may have been responsible for the first known proof that there are no other convex regular polyhedra.
The Platonic solids feature prominently in the philosophy of Plato for whom they are named. Plato wrote about them in the dialogue Timaeus c.360 B.C. in which he associated each of the four classical elements (earth, air, water, and fire) with a regular solid. Earth was associated with the cube, air with the octahedron, water with the icosahedron, and fire with the tetrahedron. There was intuitive justification for these associations: the heat of fire feels sharp and stabbing (like little tetrahedra). Air is made of the octahedron; its minuscule components are so smooth that one can barely feel it. Water, the icosahedron, flows out of one's hand when picked up, as if it is made of tiny little balls. By contrast, a highly un-spherical solid, the hexahedron (cube) represents earth. These clumsy little solids cause dirt to crumble and break when picked up, in stark difference to the smooth flow of water. Moreover, the solidity of the Earth was believed to be due to the fact that the cube is the only regular solid that tesselates Euclidean space. The fifth Platonic solid, the dodecahedron, Plato obscurely remarks, "...the god used for arranging the constellations on the whole heaven". Aristotle added a fifth element, aithêr (aether in Latin, "ether" in English) and postulated that the heavens were made of this element, but he had no interest in matching it with Plato's fifth solid