diplomacysam's poetry clipmarks

Most Pops
see Most Pops
  • See all clipmarks by diplomacysam
  • See all public poetry clipmarks
  •    
     
     
     
       
     
    top scroll end
    78
    POPS
    Librarian Chick Wiki: hundreds of free learning resources
    enbar
    by enbar  4-15-2007    3
     Very cool. I haven't had a chance to dig into more than a few of the links, but looks to be a tremendous resource.
    72
    POPS
    Beautiful China
    rubira
    by rubira  4-8-2006    22
     No Remarks
    51
    POPS
    100 Top Reference Sites
    skwirlinator
    by skwirlinator  9-10-2007    5
     No Remarks
    36
    POPS
    The 10 Greatest Books of All Time
    haraya
    by haraya  1-21-2007    9
      Each individual top 10 list is like its own steeplechase through the international canon. List at the end of the clip, though I find Lev Grossman's intro more interesting.
    33
    POPS
    Tools for Writer's Block
    carlat
    by carlat  2-28-2007    1
     No Remarks
    30
    POPS
    Mystical power - Why Sufi Muslims, could be most valuable allies in the fight against extremism
    einbar
    by einbar  1-31-2009    9
     'In so many lands, reviving Sufi traditions provide an effective bastion against terrorism, much stronger than anything the West could supply by military means alone. The West's best hope for global peace is not a decline or secularization of Islam, but rather a renewal and strengthening of that faith, and above all of its spiritual and mystical dimensions".
    29
    POPS
    110 best books:The perfect library
    Aribeth
    by Aribeth  4-7-2008    10
     No Remarks
    29
    POPS
    The Winter Solstice
    carrerinyes
    by carrerinyes  12-20-2008    3
     ...and space travel. I haven't studied astronomy enough to understand fully how we came to know this. The axis is, after all, an imaginary line. But here's an eloquent perspective on that question from a Candlegrove visitor. Solstice means... standing-still-sun Such precision we have about it now! Winter solstice is when... ...because of the earth's tilt, your hemisphere is leaning farthest away from the sun, and therefore: The daylight is the shortest. The sun has its lowest arc in the sky.
    27
    POPS
    If I Knew
    ChildOfGodForever
    by ChildOfGodForever  1-9-2007    8
     This is why I believe in acting like you love someone and not just wanting them to trust that you love them. Trust is good, but words followed up with actions are better. Trust can fade, memories don't.
    27
    POPS
    Armenia: The Epic Land
    amgumen
    by amgumen  3-26-2008    8
     No Remarks
    25
    POPS
    By imagining many possible worlds fiction can chang our Minds
    einbar
    by einbar  9-3-2009    2
     "For more than two thousand years people have insisted that reading fiction is good for bookyou. Aristotle claimed that poetry—he meant the epics of Homer and the tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, which we would now call fiction—is a more serious business than history. History, he argued, tells us only what has happened, whereas fiction tells us what can happen, which can stretch our moral imaginations and give us insights into ourselves and other people. This is a strong argument for schools to continue to focus on the literary arts, not just history, science, and social studies. But is the idea of fiction being good for you merely wishful thinking?'
    24
    POPS
    Rantings of an Arabian Woman...
    zakisaadeh
    by zakisaadeh  10-30-2006    8
     No Remarks
    22
    POPS
    More free eBooks
    skwirlinator
    by skwirlinator  6-6-2007    3
     No Remarks
    22
    POPS
    Wish You Were Beer
    thisnamecantbetaken
    by thisnamecantbetaken  10-18-2009    12
      Sometimes when I reflect back on all the beer I drink I feel ashamed. Then I look into the glass and think about the workers in the brewery and all of their hopes and dreams. If I didn't drink this beer, they might be out of work and their dreams would be shattered. Then I say to myself, it is better that I drink this beer and let their dreams come true than be selfish and worry about my liver. I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day. Remember: "I" before "E," except in Budweiser. I drink only to make my friends seem interesting. Everybody should believe in something; I believe I'll have another drink. Without question, the greatest invention in the history of mankind is beer. Oh, I grant you that the wheel was also a fine invention, but the wheel does not go nearly as well with pizza. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXdNnw99-Ic
    21
    POPS
    The future of science...is art
    einbar
    by einbar  7-29-2008    1
     "But before any of this can happen, our two existing cultures must modify their habits. First of all, the humanities must sincerely engage with the sciences. Henry James defined the writer as someone on whom nothing is lost; artists must heed his call, and not ignore science's inspiring descriptions of reality. At the same time, the sciences must recognize that their truths are not the only truths. No single area of knowledge has a monopoly on knowledge. As Karl Popper, an eminent defender of science wrote, "It is imperative that we give up the idea of ultimate sources of knowledge, and admit that all knowledge is human; that it is mixed with our errors, our prejudices, our dreams, and our hopes; that all we can do is to grope for truth even though it is beyond our reach." The struggle for scientific truth is long and hard and never ending. If we want to get an answer to our deepest questions—the questions of who we are and what everything is—we will need to draw from both science
    21
    POPS
    Shakespeare is good for your brain
    wildcat
    by wildcat  12-19-2006    2
     fascinating, if true
    21
    POPS
    Poetry Comes from Our Tree-Climbing Ancestors
    wildcat
    by wildcat  6-1-2008    5
     No Remarks
    20
    POPS
    First They Came For The Jews
    Socratoad
    by Socratoad  11-24-2006    5
     No Remarks
    19
    POPS
    Fun/Interesting Stuff for Writers (lots of links!)
    RiverRed
    by RiverRed  2-27-2007   
     No Remarks
    19
    POPS
    Telling A 15 Billion Year Story In 3 1/2 Minutes
    Mohir
    by Mohir  10-2-2008    1
     No Remarks
    19
    POPS
    was William Shakespeare a Jewish Woman ???
    syncopath
    by syncopath  5-28-2008    5
     "The theory rests largely on the circumstances of Bassano's life, which Hudson contends match, much better than William Shakespeare's did, the content of "Shakespeare's" work." "He is so convinced of Bassano's authorship that he formed a theater company, The Dark Lady Players, to bring out, through performance, the true meanings of the plays as, he argues, Bassano intended them." (For more details, visit www.darkladyplayers.com.)
    18
    POPS
    Synesthetes - people who hear colors, see flavors ...
    einbar
    by einbar  10-25-2008    2
     "For people of a poetic bent, this is quite useful: You get to tell your date that her eyes glow like the moon, hair ripples like the ocean and skin is smoother than a friendly corporate takeover. (Fine, I'm not a poet.) But life wasn't always so romantic. The arts are a latter-day human characteristic, one that requires a certain amount of security and stability to flourish. So how did it develop? To help our ancestors climb trees, said Ramachandran. Doing so requires a vision-informed mental map of the branches before us, as well as a touch-informed mental map of our limbs' positions. Somehow these have to correlate. Which is quite a trick, when you think about it."
    18
    POPS
    An Impromptu Press Conference With God
    thisnamecantbetaken
    by thisnamecantbetaken  2-8-2008    8
      My 'Ways' are only mysterious because you spend all your time following celebrities instead of studying science. Every answer is in quantum physics and DNA. Figure it out.
    18
    POPS
    Beautiful Women in Beautiful Dresses by J.W. Waterhouse
    JohnWaterman
    by JohnWaterman  10-13-2008    5
      - oh and a mermaid
    17
    POPS
    Poem: After A While.
    ruptured
    by ruptured  4-14-2007    3
     No Remarks
    17
    POPS
    The Prophet - Kahlil Gibran
    carrerinyes
    by carrerinyes  5-23-2009    7
     It was such a treat to find this site. You can read a chapter from the book set to music. He is my favourite poet by far :)
    17
    POPS
    Online Rhyming Dictionary for Poetry and Songwriting
    sohil
    by sohil  5-24-2007    3
     What rhymes with orange? challenge, expunge, lozenge, lunge, orange, plunge, scavenge, sponge :)
    17
    POPS
    Your Brain On Words
    carrerinyes
    by carrerinyes  9-27-2009    2
     There is no one brain part which when taken away would suddenly rob you of your ability to read. We rely on the same old brain — the same brain that we inherited from our Homo Sapiens ancestors 200,000 years ago when they appeared in Africa. This means that the same brain that hunted wildlife and walked thru Ice Ages is the same brain that can now read a book a day.
    17
    POPS
    Iranian Govt. Destroys Sufi Center
    Gul Agha
    by Gul Agha  3-16-2009    3
     No Remarks
    17
    POPS
    55 Ways to have Fun with Google
    Djiezes
    by Djiezes  7-4-2006    2
     No Remarks
    17
    POPS
    One of First GREAT IRISH LADIES
    righthand
    by righthand  11-30-2007    12
     my thanks to Rubybella
    17
    POPS
    Love after Love
    abailart
    by abailart  9-13-2008    2
     No Remarks
    16
    POPS
    What is a Cat?
    thisnamecantbetaken
    by thisnamecantbetaken  7-1-2009    11
      Cat: Ethereal music wreathed in mystery. Much, much more at the source. :)
    16
    POPS
    Science meets Poetry at ESOF2008
    wildcat
    by wildcat  7-22-2008   
     lucky he who could attend
    15
    POPS
    The Jews and the 'Genitals'
    CrazyRedHead
    by CrazyRedHead  11-24-2007    2
     No Remarks
    15
    POPS
    50 Ways to Be Romantic on the Cheap
    Newfman
    by Newfman  7-2-2007    6
     The rest are at the site....
    15
    POPS
    Love Vaccine
    balthazarus
    by balthazarus  1-13-2009    2
     "mouselike creatures are among the small minority of mammals — less than 5 percent — who share humans’ propensity for monogamy. When a female prairie vole’s brain is artificially infused with oxytocin, a hormone that produces some of the same neural rewards as nicotine and cocaine, she’ll quickly become attached to the nearest male. A related hormone, vasopressin, creates urges for bonding and nesting when it is injected in male voles (or naturally activated by sex). After Dr. Young found that male voles with a genetically limited vasopressin response were less likely to find mates, Swedish researchers reported that men with a similar genetic tendency were less likely to get married" :) so after all it is all in the chemistry...
    14
    POPS
    The Romance of Objects
    einbar
    by einbar  1-23-2009    1
     "If we attend to young scientists' romance with objects, we are encouraged to make children comfortable with the idea that falling in love with things is part of what we expect of them. We are encouraged to introduce the periodic table as poetry and LEGOs as a form of art."
    14
    POPS
    Absinthe
    delirium
    by delirium  10-28-2007    1
     No Remarks
    14
    POPS
    Colossal Apollo statue unearthed in Turkey
    wiccantexan
    by wiccantexan  9-10-2009    2
     No Remarks
    — end of the list —

    diplomacysam poetry

    loading clips...
    Filter
    rss tools
    Clipmarks
    About   Clippers   Privacy   EULA   Copyright   Site Map

    OK