Do you need to know the secret of Archetype or fortune telling, and you wanted to know how can this science could change your destiny. Now secret is revealed and here it is. Read it once and you will be able to know about your destiny.
The document discusses key concepts in symbolism including duality, opposition, and cycles. It argues that symbolism involves the expression of context rather than just the representation of content. Western culture focuses too much on understanding symbols by analyzing their content rather than appreciating the relationships and sequences between symbols. True meaning is found in the context surrounding cultural objects, not just in the objects themselves. Key aspects of symbolism include duality between opposites, the importance of sequences in cycles, and viewing culture as a medium that transmits symbols rather than just produces them.
Spiritual archetypes are symbolic representations of different aspects of our human experience, and understanding them can help us gain a deeper insight into ourselves and the world around us.
In spiritual terms, an archetype is a universal symbol or pattern that is found across cultures and time periods.
Spiritual archetypes are symbols or patterns that represent different aspects of the human experience. They can help us understand our deepest desires, fears, and motivations, and can provide us with a framework for personal growth and transformation.
This document provides an overview of archetypal criticism as a literary theory. It discusses key concepts such as archetypes, the collective unconscious, and character types. Archetypal criticism examines common symbols, myths, and narrative patterns in literature that are meant to evoke deep, universal responses by tapping into the collective unconscious. Some examples given are the hero's journey monomyth and biblical archetypes like death and rebirth. Contributors to archetypal criticism discussed include Jung, Frye, Rank, and Campbell. The document also outlines strengths like its focus on symbolic meaning, and weaknesses such as criticism that it reduces individual works.
Psychoanalytic criticism analyzes literary texts through the lens of Freudian psychoanalytic theory. It views texts as expressions of unconscious desires and aims to reveal hidden meanings by interpreting symbols and themes. The unconscious, according to psychoanalysis, contains repressed emotions and experiences and finds expression through dreams, artworks, and other creative acts. Surrealist art in particular drew inspiration from dreams and the unconscious in an effort to access untapped creative ideas, rather than for purposes of interpretation or therapy.
Carl Jung expanded Freud's theory of the unconscious to include a collective unconscious shared among all humans. This collective unconscious contains archetypes - common patterns and symbols representing human experiences like heroes and mothers. Jung also described extraverted and introverted personality types, as well as types that make decisions rationally through thinking or feeling, and irrationally through sensation or intuition.
- Carl Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist who founded analytical psychology and broke from Freud's psychoanalytic theory, developing his own theories of the structure and dynamics of personality.
- Jung proposed that the psyche is composed of several interacting systems including the ego, personal and collective unconscious, archetypes like the persona, anima/animus, and shadow.
- A key concept is individuation, the process of integrating all aspects of personality towards unity and self-realization. Jung used case studies, word association tests, comparative mythology research, and dreams in his work.
This document discusses several key theorists and concepts related to representation in media. It outlines semiotics as the study of signs and how meaning is conveyed. Laura Mulvey's 1975 work introduced the concept of the male gaze, where women are represented as passive objects for the male viewer's erotic pleasure. Richard Dyer and Steve Neale built on this, discussing how representations reinforce male dominance and encourage identification with powerful masculine ideals. The document also discusses signifiers, signifieds, stereotypes, and analytical frameworks from Dyer and Neale.
This document discusses stereotypes, their dangers, and how they are naturalized. It defines stereotypes as oversimplified representations of groups that highlight a few characteristics while ignoring many others. Stereotypes are limiting because they suggest characteristics are shared by many when they may depend on social realities, and they are used by dominant groups to describe subordinate ones. The document examines common stereotypes of non-white groups from the past like the "dangerous savage" and the "noble savage" and how these justified white control. It also discusses how stereotypes can negatively impact performance through stereotype threat which depletes cognitive resources and confirms the stereotype. Even positive stereotypes can be harmful by pushing people into narrow roles.
The document discusses key concepts in symbolism including duality, opposition, and cycles. It argues that symbolism involves the expression of context rather than just the representation of content. Western culture focuses too much on understanding symbols by analyzing their content rather than appreciating the relationships and sequences between symbols. True meaning is found in the context surrounding cultural objects, not just in the objects themselves. Key aspects of symbolism include duality between opposites, the importance of sequences in cycles, and viewing culture as a medium that transmits symbols rather than just produces them.
Spiritual archetypes are symbolic representations of different aspects of our human experience, and understanding them can help us gain a deeper insight into ourselves and the world around us.
In spiritual terms, an archetype is a universal symbol or pattern that is found across cultures and time periods.
Spiritual archetypes are symbols or patterns that represent different aspects of the human experience. They can help us understand our deepest desires, fears, and motivations, and can provide us with a framework for personal growth and transformation.
This document provides an overview of archetypal criticism as a literary theory. It discusses key concepts such as archetypes, the collective unconscious, and character types. Archetypal criticism examines common symbols, myths, and narrative patterns in literature that are meant to evoke deep, universal responses by tapping into the collective unconscious. Some examples given are the hero's journey monomyth and biblical archetypes like death and rebirth. Contributors to archetypal criticism discussed include Jung, Frye, Rank, and Campbell. The document also outlines strengths like its focus on symbolic meaning, and weaknesses such as criticism that it reduces individual works.
Psychoanalytic criticism analyzes literary texts through the lens of Freudian psychoanalytic theory. It views texts as expressions of unconscious desires and aims to reveal hidden meanings by interpreting symbols and themes. The unconscious, according to psychoanalysis, contains repressed emotions and experiences and finds expression through dreams, artworks, and other creative acts. Surrealist art in particular drew inspiration from dreams and the unconscious in an effort to access untapped creative ideas, rather than for purposes of interpretation or therapy.
Carl Jung expanded Freud's theory of the unconscious to include a collective unconscious shared among all humans. This collective unconscious contains archetypes - common patterns and symbols representing human experiences like heroes and mothers. Jung also described extraverted and introverted personality types, as well as types that make decisions rationally through thinking or feeling, and irrationally through sensation or intuition.
- Carl Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist who founded analytical psychology and broke from Freud's psychoanalytic theory, developing his own theories of the structure and dynamics of personality.
- Jung proposed that the psyche is composed of several interacting systems including the ego, personal and collective unconscious, archetypes like the persona, anima/animus, and shadow.
- A key concept is individuation, the process of integrating all aspects of personality towards unity and self-realization. Jung used case studies, word association tests, comparative mythology research, and dreams in his work.
This document discusses several key theorists and concepts related to representation in media. It outlines semiotics as the study of signs and how meaning is conveyed. Laura Mulvey's 1975 work introduced the concept of the male gaze, where women are represented as passive objects for the male viewer's erotic pleasure. Richard Dyer and Steve Neale built on this, discussing how representations reinforce male dominance and encourage identification with powerful masculine ideals. The document also discusses signifiers, signifieds, stereotypes, and analytical frameworks from Dyer and Neale.
This document discusses stereotypes, their dangers, and how they are naturalized. It defines stereotypes as oversimplified representations of groups that highlight a few characteristics while ignoring many others. Stereotypes are limiting because they suggest characteristics are shared by many when they may depend on social realities, and they are used by dominant groups to describe subordinate ones. The document examines common stereotypes of non-white groups from the past like the "dangerous savage" and the "noble savage" and how these justified white control. It also discusses how stereotypes can negatively impact performance through stereotype threat which depletes cognitive resources and confirms the stereotype. Even positive stereotypes can be harmful by pushing people into narrow roles.
The document discusses archetypes and their relationship to creative works and pedagogy. It provides an overview of Jungian archetypes like the shadow, wise old man, mother, and explains how archetypes emerge in symbols and influence human experience across cultures. Case studies of To Kill a Mockingbird and Sons and Lovers are presented, showing how racial archetypes impact the former and how denial of the male archetype affects the protagonist in the latter. The document proposes having students map archetypes in texts and outlines creative writing applications involving archetype mapping.
This document discusses how the body can represent the shadow side of oneself. It begins by discussing how the body contains sensations, memories, and impulses that feel foreign and unexplained to one's conscious mind. It then describes how autistic children in particular experience violent sensations that they feel they must control through compulsive behaviors or by projecting the sensations onto external "shadows." The document suggests the body hides aspects of oneself that are consciously denied, like anger, anxiety, or needs, and reflects one's rejected sides. It posits the body holds the record of energies that have been murdered and rejected until the body becomes deadened and unavailable. For those who can read it, the body reveals what one dare not speak and expresses
Oscar Wilde Essays. Amazon.com: The Essays and Non-Fiction of Oscar Wilde Ann...Brandy Johnson
Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde. Oscar Wilde: A Collection of Critical Essays 20th Century Views .... Amazon.com: Essays of Oscar Wilde Essay index reprint series .... Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde Read amp; Co. Books. Oscar Wilde, Selected Essays and Poems Oscar Wilde, Select Flickr. Oscar wilde essays pdf. Oscar Wilde. 2019-03-02. The Essays of Oscar Wilde Very Rare 1916 Ed Red and Gold Etsy Essay .... Amazon.com: The Writings of Oscar Wilde: Essays, Criticisms and Reviews .... Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde OverDrive: ebooks, audiobooks, and .... Oscar Wilde - A Collection of Critical Essays 1969 Critical essay .... Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde: New eBay. Oscar Wilde - Essays, Criticisms and Reviews - 1901 - Catawiki. Amazon.com: The Essays and Non-Fiction of Oscar Wilde Annotated with a .... Amazon.com: The Essays of Oscar Wilde 9781502349071: Wilde, Oscar: Books. Oscar Wilde: Essays: Der Sozialismus und die Seele des Menschen, Aus .... Essays and Lectures: Oscar Wilde: 9781535387439: Amazon.com: Books. Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde 2014, Paperback 9781496174666 eBay. The Writings of Oscar Wilde: University Edition 14 Volume Set Oscar .... OSCAR WILDE BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE,OSCAR WILDE AUTHOR STUDY,WHAT DID OSCAR .... The Essays of Oscar Wilde: Oscar Wilde: 9781522724216: Amazon.com: Books. The Works of Oscar Wilde: Essays, Critisms and Reviews by Wilde, Oscar .... Essays and Lectures Oscar Wilde English - PDF ePub Kindle. Oscar wilde essays and story 1910. PDF quot;Oscar Wilde Our Contemporaryquot;: Review of Approaches to Teaching .... Oscar Wilde The Essays of Oscar Wilde First issued in Etsy. Oscar Wilde : A Collection of Critical Essays Paperback Jonathan .... Oscar wilde - GCSE English - Marked by Teachers.com. An Age of Surfaces: Deceptive Exteriors and Flawed Interiors in Oscar ... Oscar Wilde Essays Oscar Wilde Essays. Amazon.com: The Essays and Non-Fiction of Oscar Wilde Annotated with a ...
This document provides an assignment submission on the topic of symbolism. It includes an introduction defining symbolism and discussing its role in constructing reality. The document then defines symbolism, provides quotes about symbolism, discusses the roles and significance of symbolism as well as characteristics of symbols. It examines the social functions of symbolism and why symbolism is necessary. Finally, it provides examples of symbolic activities in religions like Islam, Hinduism, Christianity and other domains.
Carl Jung disagreed with Freud on several aspects of psychoanalysis, leading him to develop his own theory called analytic psychology. Jung believed in a collective unconscious that is inherited and contains archetypes - primordial symbols and images like myths that are shared among all humans. Freud saw the unconscious as personal, but Jung argued it sits above a deeper collective layer of consciousness. Jung introduced the concepts of archetypes like The Shadow, Anima/Animus, and The Self to describe patterns in the collective unconscious. Other archetypes include family roles, story characters, and animal symbols that recur across cultures.
What are Archetypes, and How Do They Reflect the World Around Us?
Archetypes are the most basic form of human connection. They are the foundations for all story plots and literary devices. Archetypes have existed since the beginning of time and have been used in storytelling to explain phenomena in nature, society, and the world around us.
This document discusses archetypes, which are universal symbols that represent aspects of human nature. Archetypes include common characters like The Hero, The Mother, and The Villain that appear across different cultures. The document provides descriptions of 12 archetypes including The Hero, who struggles against evil to restore order; The Mother, who nurtures and guides; and The Mentor, who advises the main character. It suggests that archetypes can help people develop personal narratives by reflecting on which roles they and others play in their lives.
This document discusses perspectives on the self and identity from various disciplines. It covers several key topics:
- The self can be influenced by both society and culture. It has both a public "personne" face and private "moi" identity. Culture shapes how people see and present themselves.
- Language acquisition and social interaction play a major role in self-development from childhood onward. Children learn social norms and roles by internalizing conversations with others.
- The family one is born into significantly impacts self-development, as families provide early learning and relationships critical for becoming a fully realized person.
- Gender also influences the self, as it determines in part how people see themselves in the world, though
Carl Jung founded analytical psychology and disagreed with Freud's theories about sexuality. Jung believed in a collective unconscious containing archetypes inherited across generations. He proposed that the psyche is made of the conscious mind and unconscious parts like the personal unconscious, collective unconscious, anima/animus, shadow, and self. Jung used dream analysis and helped patients understand themselves to independently solve problems and cope with their environment. His theories contributed to understanding personality development and designing education to realize students' potential.
Carl Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who founded analytical psychology. He studied under Sigmund Freud but later separated from Freud to develop his own theories. Jung believed that archetypes from religion, mythology and dreams provided clues to the human unconscious mind. He introduced concepts such as the shadow, anima/animus, and the self. Jung differed from Freud in believing that exploring the unconscious could help treat both mentally ill and neurotypical patients.
This document discusses a mythopoetic inquiry approach to clinical skills. A mythopoetic inquiry creates an alternate narrative to the dominant story by writing the narrative as it is lived. It has its own logic while also connecting to reality. Artmaking can bridge imagination and reality in this liminal process. A mythopoetic inquiry assumes there is an underlying alternate story influencing the inquirer, nudging them to participate more consciously with its logic. The experience of the practitioner is the true meaning, as they travel through images that arise in their journey with different voices. Steps proposed for entering one's own mythopoetic inquiry include deep democracy, archetypal activism, and the diaphoric imagination.
The document provides an overview and summary of the book "Herd: How to change mass behaviour by harnessing our true nature" by Mark Earls. It discusses how the book challenges traditional views of consumer behavior and mass psychology by arguing that people should be viewed as members of a collective "herd" rather than as individuals. The summary is broken into three parts:
1. It provides background on the author and describes the book's central thesis that people are intrinsically influenced by one another and marketing should view consumers as a collective herd rather than individuals.
2. It discusses chapters from the book explaining how human behavior is similar to other social animal species like chimpanzees and how people have an "
The technology uses reclaimed CO₂ as the dyeing medium in a closed loop process. When pressurized, CO₂ becomes supercritical (SC-CO₂). In this state CO₂ has a very high solvent power, allowing the dye to dissolve easily.
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
PPT on Direct Seeded Rice presented at the three-day 'Training and Validation Workshop on Modules of Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Technologies in South Asia' workshop on April 22, 2024.
The document discusses archetypes and their relationship to creative works and pedagogy. It provides an overview of Jungian archetypes like the shadow, wise old man, mother, and explains how archetypes emerge in symbols and influence human experience across cultures. Case studies of To Kill a Mockingbird and Sons and Lovers are presented, showing how racial archetypes impact the former and how denial of the male archetype affects the protagonist in the latter. The document proposes having students map archetypes in texts and outlines creative writing applications involving archetype mapping.
This document discusses how the body can represent the shadow side of oneself. It begins by discussing how the body contains sensations, memories, and impulses that feel foreign and unexplained to one's conscious mind. It then describes how autistic children in particular experience violent sensations that they feel they must control through compulsive behaviors or by projecting the sensations onto external "shadows." The document suggests the body hides aspects of oneself that are consciously denied, like anger, anxiety, or needs, and reflects one's rejected sides. It posits the body holds the record of energies that have been murdered and rejected until the body becomes deadened and unavailable. For those who can read it, the body reveals what one dare not speak and expresses
Oscar Wilde Essays. Amazon.com: The Essays and Non-Fiction of Oscar Wilde Ann...Brandy Johnson
Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde. Oscar Wilde: A Collection of Critical Essays 20th Century Views .... Amazon.com: Essays of Oscar Wilde Essay index reprint series .... Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde Read amp; Co. Books. Oscar Wilde, Selected Essays and Poems Oscar Wilde, Select Flickr. Oscar wilde essays pdf. Oscar Wilde. 2019-03-02. The Essays of Oscar Wilde Very Rare 1916 Ed Red and Gold Etsy Essay .... Amazon.com: The Writings of Oscar Wilde: Essays, Criticisms and Reviews .... Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde OverDrive: ebooks, audiobooks, and .... Oscar Wilde - A Collection of Critical Essays 1969 Critical essay .... Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde: New eBay. Oscar Wilde - Essays, Criticisms and Reviews - 1901 - Catawiki. Amazon.com: The Essays and Non-Fiction of Oscar Wilde Annotated with a .... Amazon.com: The Essays of Oscar Wilde 9781502349071: Wilde, Oscar: Books. Oscar Wilde: Essays: Der Sozialismus und die Seele des Menschen, Aus .... Essays and Lectures: Oscar Wilde: 9781535387439: Amazon.com: Books. Essays and Lectures by Oscar Wilde 2014, Paperback 9781496174666 eBay. The Writings of Oscar Wilde: University Edition 14 Volume Set Oscar .... OSCAR WILDE BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE,OSCAR WILDE AUTHOR STUDY,WHAT DID OSCAR .... The Essays of Oscar Wilde: Oscar Wilde: 9781522724216: Amazon.com: Books. The Works of Oscar Wilde: Essays, Critisms and Reviews by Wilde, Oscar .... Essays and Lectures Oscar Wilde English - PDF ePub Kindle. Oscar wilde essays and story 1910. PDF quot;Oscar Wilde Our Contemporaryquot;: Review of Approaches to Teaching .... Oscar Wilde The Essays of Oscar Wilde First issued in Etsy. Oscar Wilde : A Collection of Critical Essays Paperback Jonathan .... Oscar wilde - GCSE English - Marked by Teachers.com. An Age of Surfaces: Deceptive Exteriors and Flawed Interiors in Oscar ... Oscar Wilde Essays Oscar Wilde Essays. Amazon.com: The Essays and Non-Fiction of Oscar Wilde Annotated with a ...
This document provides an assignment submission on the topic of symbolism. It includes an introduction defining symbolism and discussing its role in constructing reality. The document then defines symbolism, provides quotes about symbolism, discusses the roles and significance of symbolism as well as characteristics of symbols. It examines the social functions of symbolism and why symbolism is necessary. Finally, it provides examples of symbolic activities in religions like Islam, Hinduism, Christianity and other domains.
Carl Jung disagreed with Freud on several aspects of psychoanalysis, leading him to develop his own theory called analytic psychology. Jung believed in a collective unconscious that is inherited and contains archetypes - primordial symbols and images like myths that are shared among all humans. Freud saw the unconscious as personal, but Jung argued it sits above a deeper collective layer of consciousness. Jung introduced the concepts of archetypes like The Shadow, Anima/Animus, and The Self to describe patterns in the collective unconscious. Other archetypes include family roles, story characters, and animal symbols that recur across cultures.
What are Archetypes, and How Do They Reflect the World Around Us?
Archetypes are the most basic form of human connection. They are the foundations for all story plots and literary devices. Archetypes have existed since the beginning of time and have been used in storytelling to explain phenomena in nature, society, and the world around us.
This document discusses archetypes, which are universal symbols that represent aspects of human nature. Archetypes include common characters like The Hero, The Mother, and The Villain that appear across different cultures. The document provides descriptions of 12 archetypes including The Hero, who struggles against evil to restore order; The Mother, who nurtures and guides; and The Mentor, who advises the main character. It suggests that archetypes can help people develop personal narratives by reflecting on which roles they and others play in their lives.
This document discusses perspectives on the self and identity from various disciplines. It covers several key topics:
- The self can be influenced by both society and culture. It has both a public "personne" face and private "moi" identity. Culture shapes how people see and present themselves.
- Language acquisition and social interaction play a major role in self-development from childhood onward. Children learn social norms and roles by internalizing conversations with others.
- The family one is born into significantly impacts self-development, as families provide early learning and relationships critical for becoming a fully realized person.
- Gender also influences the self, as it determines in part how people see themselves in the world, though
Carl Jung founded analytical psychology and disagreed with Freud's theories about sexuality. Jung believed in a collective unconscious containing archetypes inherited across generations. He proposed that the psyche is made of the conscious mind and unconscious parts like the personal unconscious, collective unconscious, anima/animus, shadow, and self. Jung used dream analysis and helped patients understand themselves to independently solve problems and cope with their environment. His theories contributed to understanding personality development and designing education to realize students' potential.
Carl Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who founded analytical psychology. He studied under Sigmund Freud but later separated from Freud to develop his own theories. Jung believed that archetypes from religion, mythology and dreams provided clues to the human unconscious mind. He introduced concepts such as the shadow, anima/animus, and the self. Jung differed from Freud in believing that exploring the unconscious could help treat both mentally ill and neurotypical patients.
This document discusses a mythopoetic inquiry approach to clinical skills. A mythopoetic inquiry creates an alternate narrative to the dominant story by writing the narrative as it is lived. It has its own logic while also connecting to reality. Artmaking can bridge imagination and reality in this liminal process. A mythopoetic inquiry assumes there is an underlying alternate story influencing the inquirer, nudging them to participate more consciously with its logic. The experience of the practitioner is the true meaning, as they travel through images that arise in their journey with different voices. Steps proposed for entering one's own mythopoetic inquiry include deep democracy, archetypal activism, and the diaphoric imagination.
The document provides an overview and summary of the book "Herd: How to change mass behaviour by harnessing our true nature" by Mark Earls. It discusses how the book challenges traditional views of consumer behavior and mass psychology by arguing that people should be viewed as members of a collective "herd" rather than as individuals. The summary is broken into three parts:
1. It provides background on the author and describes the book's central thesis that people are intrinsically influenced by one another and marketing should view consumers as a collective herd rather than individuals.
2. It discusses chapters from the book explaining how human behavior is similar to other social animal species like chimpanzees and how people have an "
Similar to Archetype Readings, fortune telling Secret Revealed (1).pdf (12)
The technology uses reclaimed CO₂ as the dyeing medium in a closed loop process. When pressurized, CO₂ becomes supercritical (SC-CO₂). In this state CO₂ has a very high solvent power, allowing the dye to dissolve easily.
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
PPT on Direct Seeded Rice presented at the three-day 'Training and Validation Workshop on Modules of Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Technologies in South Asia' workshop on April 22, 2024.
Or: Beyond linear.
Abstract: Equivariant neural networks are neural networks that incorporate symmetries. The nonlinear activation functions in these networks result in interesting nonlinear equivariant maps between simple representations, and motivate the key player of this talk: piecewise linear representation theory.
Disclaimer: No one is perfect, so please mind that there might be mistakes and typos.
dtubbenhauer@gmail.com
Corrected slides: dtubbenhauer.com/talks.html
The debris of the ‘last major merger’ is dynamically youngSérgio Sacani
The Milky Way’s (MW) inner stellar halo contains an [Fe/H]-rich component with highly eccentric orbits, often referred to as the
‘last major merger.’ Hypotheses for the origin of this component include Gaia-Sausage/Enceladus (GSE), where the progenitor
collided with the MW proto-disc 8–11 Gyr ago, and the Virgo Radial Merger (VRM), where the progenitor collided with the
MW disc within the last 3 Gyr. These two scenarios make different predictions about observable structure in local phase space,
because the morphology of debris depends on how long it has had to phase mix. The recently identified phase-space folds in Gaia
DR3 have positive caustic velocities, making them fundamentally different than the phase-mixed chevrons found in simulations
at late times. Roughly 20 per cent of the stars in the prograde local stellar halo are associated with the observed caustics. Based
on a simple phase-mixing model, the observed number of caustics are consistent with a merger that occurred 1–2 Gyr ago.
We also compare the observed phase-space distribution to FIRE-2 Latte simulations of GSE-like mergers, using a quantitative
measurement of phase mixing (2D causticality). The observed local phase-space distribution best matches the simulated data
1–2 Gyr after collision, and certainly not later than 3 Gyr. This is further evidence that the progenitor of the ‘last major merger’
did not collide with the MW proto-disc at early times, as is thought for the GSE, but instead collided with the MW disc within
the last few Gyr, consistent with the body of work surrounding the VRM.
The binding of cosmological structures by massless topological defectsSérgio Sacani
Assuming spherical symmetry and weak field, it is shown that if one solves the Poisson equation or the Einstein field
equations sourced by a topological defect, i.e. a singularity of a very specific form, the result is a localized gravitational
field capable of driving flat rotation (i.e. Keplerian circular orbits at a constant speed for all radii) of test masses on a thin
spherical shell without any underlying mass. Moreover, a large-scale structure which exploits this solution by assembling
concentrically a number of such topological defects can establish a flat stellar or galactic rotation curve, and can also deflect
light in the same manner as an equipotential (isothermal) sphere. Thus, the need for dark matter or modified gravity theory is
mitigated, at least in part.
Immersive Learning That Works: Research Grounding and Paths ForwardLeonel Morgado
We will metaverse into the essence of immersive learning, into its three dimensions and conceptual models. This approach encompasses elements from teaching methodologies to social involvement, through organizational concerns and technologies. Challenging the perception of learning as knowledge transfer, we introduce a 'Uses, Practices & Strategies' model operationalized by the 'Immersive Learning Brain' and ‘Immersion Cube’ frameworks. This approach offers a comprehensive guide through the intricacies of immersive educational experiences and spotlighting research frontiers, along the immersion dimensions of system, narrative, and agency. Our discourse extends to stakeholders beyond the academic sphere, addressing the interests of technologists, instructional designers, and policymakers. We span various contexts, from formal education to organizational transformation to the new horizon of an AI-pervasive society. This keynote aims to unite the iLRN community in a collaborative journey towards a future where immersive learning research and practice coalesce, paving the way for innovative educational research and practice landscapes.
ESA/ACT Science Coffee: Diego Blas - Gravitational wave detection with orbita...Advanced-Concepts-Team
Presentation in the Science Coffee of the Advanced Concepts Team of the European Space Agency on the 07.06.2024.
Speaker: Diego Blas (IFAE/ICREA)
Title: Gravitational wave detection with orbital motion of Moon and artificial
Abstract:
In this talk I will describe some recent ideas to find gravitational waves from supermassive black holes or of primordial origin by studying their secular effect on the orbital motion of the Moon or satellites that are laser ranged.
1. Archetype Readings and fortune telling
Secret Revealed
Archetypes are the form given to some of the experiences and memories of our early ancestors.
This implies that we do not develop in isolation from the rest of society, but that the cultural
context affects us in the most privacy. , to convey thought schemes and experiences of the
inherited.
However, if we focus on the individual, archetypes become emotional and behavioral patterns
that make sense of our hearing sensations, images, and perceptions as a whole. In a way, for
Jung, archetypes accumulate deep within our collective unconscious to form a pattern that gives
meaning to what happens to us.
Symbols and myths , understood to be in all known cultures, All human societies think and act
from a cognitive and emotional basis that is not dependent on the experiences of each
individual or the individual differences that come to them. In this way, the presence of
archetypes, a collective unconscious , also activates the part that the unconscious personally
does on individuals.
2. How are archetypes expressed?
Archetypes or fortune telling are, in a way, patterns of images and recurring symbols that
appear in different forms in all cultures, and this has a side to it that is inherited from generation
to generation. An archetype is a piece that gives shape to some of this inherited collective
unconscious.
By definition these images are universal . They can be recognized in the cultural manifestations
of different societies, as well as in speech, the behavior of people and, of course, in their
dreams. This means that they can be embedded and isolated in all kinds of human products,
because culture influences everything we do, even without realizing it.
Archetypes make certain roles and functions seem as prominent to certain psychoanalysts as
they do to products of culture. Odyssey and the movie matrix . Of course, the existence of
archetypes goes far beyond art criticism and is often used by some therapists to detect internal
conflicts between the unconscious and the conscious part of the mind.
3. Are there archetypes of fortune telling?
Yes There are certain ways to classify different archetypes . For example, there are archetypal
events such as birth or death, archetypal themes such as creation or revenge, and archetypal
figures such as the wise old man and the virgin.
Some examples of archetypes
Some of the main archetypes are listed below:
1. Animus and Anima
hostility is the masculine side of the female personality and the soul is the archetype of the
feminine in the mind of man. Both are concerned with ideas associated with gender roles.
2. Mother
It allows us to identify maternal behaviors and images that our maternal ancestors lived through.
3. Dad
The archetype father represents an authority figure who offers Jung a guide on how to live life
based on his example.
4. 4 people
The archetype person represents the side of our public image that we want to share with other
parties.
5. Shadow
Unlike with the person, the shadow represents all those things that we want to remain hidden,
either because it is morally reprehensible or because it is too sincere.
6. Hero
The hero is a power figure characterized by fighting against the Shadow, that is, holding
together everything that should not invade the social space in such a way as to be completely
unharmed. In addition, the hero is ignorant, because his determination causes him not to stop
himself from constantly dwelling on the nature of what he is fighting.
7. Sage
His role is to unconsciously explain society to the hero. In a way, it sheds light on the path of the
archetypal sage Hero named after him .
8. Trickster
His archetype is the trickster or trickster, with his jokes and violation of pre-established norms,
showing how vulnerable the laws that explain things are. It lays traps and paradoxes in the
hero's path.
Do you need to know?
Free Archetype Reading Reveals Your Personality Quirks, Innate Talents, And Hidden
Weaknesses