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caesar novus

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Posts posted by caesar novus

  1. On 6/24/2023 at 11:27 AM, sentinel166 said:

    Unless Greeks themselves used this phrasing ?

    That crossed my mind as well, and we used to have about a dozen experts onboard that might know.

    I'm more into architecture and sculpture than sociology, but am intrigued by applying the "natural rights" analysis to an essay from Vitruvius about pitfalls within slave holding families. He warns husbands about indiscretions with slaves; otherwise his wife's offspring from then on may fail paternity tests. With no test and similar looking slaves, the wife's rightful vengeance may never be provable.

    That reminds me of media claims of wide paternity fraud by modern wives, perhaps with lookalikes of their husband. health-street.net puts some flesh to superficially alarming 30% numbers:

    Quote
     
    >Up to 1 in 3 dads who suspect that they are not the father are right .. DNA tests confirm they are not.
     
    >Around 3% of all dads in the USA do not realize that their kid isn’t their biological kid.
     
    >Younger, unmarried, and lower income men are more likely to be victims of paternity fraud.
     
    >Paternity Fraud is when a woman intentionally tricks a man into thinking that he is the father of her child, when in fact she knows that he is not.
     

    It's like the statistical claim that most US marriages fail. wf-lawyers.com explains that only most of serial marry-ers fail; some of them are in lumped in point 7 below and really should be broken out for even lower % for non serialists:

    Quote

    7.  Researchers estimate that 41 percent of all first marriages end in divorce.

    8.  60 percent of second marriages end in divorce.

    9.  73 percent of all third marriages end in divorce.

     

  2. 7 hours ago, sentinel166 said:

    > Or do they fear the disagreements which arise in marriages of near kin, on the ground that these tend to destroy natural rights?
    Or, since they observe that women by reason of their weakness need many protectors, were they not willing to take as partners in their household women closely akin to them, so that if their husbands wronged them, their kinsmen might bring them succour?

    I love using the term incest as a metaphor, as in "your creative process is incestuous". Anyway, we lack a bit of context for the above, such as when was it translated. Natural rights may refer to natural law of marriage The Natural Law, the Marriage bond, and Divorce which for instance has been used to say divorce after children are grown can be rational regardless of what culture or laws ordain. Other natural rights have been proposed over the centuries, I guess from the tension and conscientious resolution of motives stemming from degrees of "otherness".

    A longer quote may give more certainty on use of terms like "they"; does "they" always equal husbands or perhaps philosophers? Anyway the second sentence seems to have antique structure. If "their husbands" equates to "they" then it could be simplified down to the wife's close relative defenders being so integrated into the husband's family that he can't escape punishment for his abuse. Older english can be baroque and affected so I am mostly guessing.

  3. More for the Rome video than the unrelated song, this really takes you back. Wiki sez Roman Holiday is "considered one of the most romantic films in cinema history ... nominated for multiple accolades, including 8 Academy Awards, with Hepburn winning for Best Actress; Peck also scored a BAFTA nomination for Foreign Actor." The bearded Albert was "nominated for his first Oscar as Best Supporting Actor" and later became legendary on TV (Green Acres cult screwball sitcom).

    Actors of this period had interesting WW2 experiences, with Audrey Hepburn having fascist activist parents but almost starving in occupied Holland. Eddie Albert "toured Mexico as a clown and high-wire artist with the Escalante Brothers Circus, but secretly worked for U.S. Army intelligence, photographing German U-boats in Mexican harbors" then "was awarded the Bronze Star with Combat "V" for his actions during the invasion of Tarawa".

    The film has a nice spirit but it's royalty worship doesn't age very well, and your classics streaming dollars would be better spent towards "The Seven Hills of Rome."

  4. I posted Arya's youtube on that 10 days ago. At this moment the media you posted has a protocol error. Several times you have reposted my items, but I don't think you are blocking me (even if I deserve it).

    Quote

    New museum, digs, and displays in Roman Rome:

     

    https://www.unrv.com/forum/topic/19852-notable-videos-of-roman-misc/?tab=comments#comment-133116

     

  5. On 11/1/2020 at 12:42 PM, dnewhous said:

    That lead up to the war is awful exciting.  I should really interject something here about the end of World War II

    Towards the end, there were joint Japanese/German efforts to share critical, blockaded materials like rubber. 90% of such Japanese cargo subs were sunk on the way to or returning from Germany. In around the middle of this video, there are graphic recordings of a submerged Japanese sub (also containing a few Germans) being hit by a torpedo and spewing bubbles and crunching for many minutes. It was in the Atlantic by the same type of torpedo plane the first prez Bush flew, this time at night from a junior size aircraft carrier. It is conventional to pity the noble enemy targeted by this nerdy bomber channel, but I am more in awe of the technical learning applied in a high risk altruistic effort by ex farm boys:

     

  6. Quote

    Frank Zappa / Ensemble Modern, Alte Oper, Frankfurt, Germany, 17 sept 1992. It was his last professional public appearance, as (prostate) cancer was spreading to such an extent that he was in too much pain to enjoy an event that he otherwise found "exhilarating".

     

    Quote

    Music lovers will be astonished at the influence The Wrecking Crew wielded over rock and pop music in the 1960s and early 1970s. These unsung instrumentalists were the de-facto backing band on hit records by The Beach Boys, Phil Spector, Frank Sinatra, Nancy Sinatra, Sonny & Cher, Elvis, The Monkees and many more. These dedicated musicians brought the flair and musicianship that made the American “West Coast Sound” a dominant cultural force around the world.

     

     

  7. 8 hours ago, guy said:

    I agree that there should be caution from taking too many supplements.

    Thanks; I had already just revamped my approach to skip the super-combo approach which limits the number of pills but proliferate the number of supplements. I will look into reishi and lion mane, but may have the neurological angle covered by my wild success with Alpha Lipoic Acid. Steady use is eliminating peripheral neuropathy and who knows what other beneficial side effects for nerves. I had very low expectations, so there was no placebo delusion. Vit B12 also cured motor nerve issues; I am strangely unconcerned whether benefits extend to my brain :)

    With at least 3 smashing successes, here is my very latest way to experiment without going overboard. I keep 3 tiers, with new experiments in the middle to be promoted up or demoted. Top tier is proven and urgent taken about daily. Middle core tier is taken about once weekly so pills run out by expiration. Bottom wind-down tier taken about once per month just because the money was spent and it may have some undetectable benefit. Do not renew those in bottom and dispose when expired.

    I scour the middle core so as not to take so many pills per week. Promote or demote ruthlessly. Try to introduce one new one at a time to be able to assign blame or benefit, maybe at a higher rate at first. Also manage cost. My insurance plan lets me order a few things for free. I wish the beta-sitosterol could be prescribed for me; it seems to only be available added to premium prostate remedies. Expensive on Amazon, and on ebay there are hints some of it is counterfeit. In rigged cases like this, the club warehouses give the only (modest) discount.

    P.S. I realize the above system falsely equates urgency with frequency, while a supplement may be urgent but only needed infrequently. So I have exceptions, for example vit B12 which most bodies recycle for months internally. But in general I strive to take things in less than recommended doses, unless really needed such as to pass pesky lab tests required by insurance.

  8. On 12/18/2021 at 5:09 PM, guy said:

    added medicinal mushrooms to our diet. I really like Reishi mushrooms for better sleep and mental clarity,

    Darn it, I just lost $30 worth dancing out of my shopping cart thru the toddler leg holes. Now my obstinacy may prevent me from investing more into them. I tried cordyceps without apparent results, and same for the NAC family of "life extending" supps, so am thinking of reprioritizing. 

    On one hand I want to focus on supps that made a big difference to me, like vit b12, ALA, and now "naturally derived phytopin" beta-sitosterol (not just for prostrate). I may be adding retinol cream to that after more skin tests.  Furthermore I have a couple of ones to address medical lab test results. On the other hand, I want to prevent proliferation of less obvious winners.

    One way to prune my supplement list is to take a multi one. By a search typo in preparing this post I noticed a combo of about 50 vitamin/supplements that covered more than I need. It was for a very embarrassing men's condition where they threw every conceivable otc treatment at it, but at far less cost of the several I wanted covered. So that would substitute for the inessential supps, and may let me reduce if not end purchases for items that come highly recommended but seem to have little effect, like magnesium, L-arginine, berberine.

    The beta-sitosterol normally comes combined with vit D and weird minerals, but even for this non prostate sufferer of a certain age it can immediately slash restroom visits by 2/3. Now I can go to recreational areas with the ever more vandalized or shut down rest rooms and do carefree stuff like this:

     

  9. I've mentioned this before, but don't miss the chance to try rose petal gelato or better yet sorbetto in Italy. I usually have visited in May, so maybe they mainly offer it this month. Walk around the right hand side of Pantheon and continue past it's rear almost a block. I think it shows up in google maps. Their gelato seems less flavorful than others in neighborhood, so also look for rose elsewhere. In Cefalu Sicily I had rose petal gelato that just launched my tastebuds into orbit. It was on the main square with twin towers:

     

  10. I wonder if there is any evidence how Romans tied their sandals - the final knot rather than the lacing. Was it a common bow tie?

    aid11347739-v4-728px-Tie-Gladiator-Sanda

     

    Maybe you have seen recent videos on how most folks naively tie shoelaces into a slipknot rather than proper one. The slipknot tends to make the bows sit crooked as below, but you can tell best by grabbing the non-loose lace side of the knot and seeing if it slips. Instead of tying the bows an additional time, (ugly and hard to untie) you can just retie it with the initial overhand knot reversed.

    ZUX4HN2NX4DLZZOOT5PJQEKON4.jpg

     

    For more security, I hereby mandate the easy variation "Parisian knot"; maybe the Romans called it the Gaul knot. After making the first bow, wrap it along with your finger twice instead of once before pulling the second bow thru. You may have to adjust it slightly so the double clenching of the bows sits tidy in the middle (check for slip too). Of a dozen bow knots I think it is the cleanest extra grip one, especially worth the effort when you leave it always tied:

    the-parisian-knot-min.jpg

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