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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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Simplifying isn’t meant to leave your life empty, it’s meant to leave space in your life for what you really want to do. Know what those things are before you start.
The Power of Less, Leo Babaura
(via creatingaquietmind)
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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What if I told you 10 years from now your life would be exactly the same. Doubt you’d be happy. So why are you afraid of change?
Karen Salmansohn (via counterfeitfairytales)
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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Damn, this Periodic Table is Beautiful
Say hello to your new desktop background.
In May 1949, LIFE Magazine published a stunning series of images to accompany an issue dedicated largely to The Atom. You can check out the feature in its entirety here, but the reimagination of the periodic table of elements as a colorful spiral is easily one of the most striking graphics of the lot. [Click here to see it in hi-res]
Here in its entirety is the caption that accompanied the original graphic:
The irregular spiral above is a systematic arrangement of the 92 natural elements, the four new elements so far created by man and eight more elements which is theoretically possible to create. It is called the periodic table of the elements. The sequence begins with hydrogen (at the center of the spiral), which is the first and simplest element. Under its name appears its chemical symbol (left), its atomic weight (right) and a larger numeral which gives the total number of electrons in its atom. It is on the basis of this number that the elements are arranged in sequence: after hydrogen, with its single electron, come helium with two, lithium with three, beryllium with four and so on around the spiral.
The colors and construction of the table express another kind of relationship among the elements: the repetition, at regular intervals, of the chemical properties of the first few. Characteristics are thus repeated periodically in the progression form the simplest to the most complex. The table is so organized that elements whose chemistry is almost identical are grouped together in blocks of connected by solid arrows (all the inert gases–helium, neon, etc.–fall in the single gray block at the left). Broken arrows relate groups of elements which are similar in most respects but differ in a few of their properties. All related elements are given different shades of the same color. The key to this similarity among elements is found in the arrangement rather than the number of the electrons in their atoms. Only the electrons in the outer shell affect an atom’s chemical nature. Therefore all elements whose atoms have identical outer shells are chemically related, regardless of the total umber of electrons which each of them may possess. For example, lithium, sodium and the other elements in the red segment at left all have one electron in their outer shells and are therefore similar though they differ in the total number of their electrons. Each complete circuit of the table starts with one of these elements and ends with an element in the adjacent gray segment whose atom’s outer shell is complete.
This table, like all attempts to reduce the basic phenomena of nature to a simple pattern, falls somewhat short of its objective. For one thing, there are variations in the sequence of elements which do not fit readily into its graphic form. For another, it is not so much a simplification as an orderly presentation which specifies the relationship between elements but leaves much about them to be explained… Yet in expressing this relationship the table reveals the extraordinary symmetry and order which underlie the universe.
More beautiful science art from LIFE Magazine.
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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Beautiful Little Tea Cups
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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Surreal Wisteria Flower Tunnel in Japan
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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The ever-delightful Grant Snyder adds to history’s definitions of genius.
Available as a print in Grant’s poster shop.
Complement with the 1942 gem Anatomy of Inspiration. 
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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100,000 toothpicks + 35 years = ‘Rolling through the Bay’ by Scott Weaver.
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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Evolution Simplified
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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This beautiful fresco adorns the exterior of the La Bibliotèque De La Cité (Library of the City) in Lyon, France.
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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Don’t be in such a hurry to condemn a person because he doesn’t do what you do, or think as you think or as fast. There was a time when you didn’t know what you know today.
Malcolm X (via roseamer)
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voyageuse-du-monde · 11 years
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A novel worth reading is an education of the heart. It enlarges your sense of human possibility, of what human nature is, of what happens in the world. It’s a creator of inwardness.
Susan Sontag (via aruariandance)
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