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1,329 results for the search term: second life
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201
POPS
Life Explained
chela13
by chela13  7-6-2006    16
 So True
132
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7 Tips to Simplify Your Life
coecoe321
by coecoe321  1-23-2007    6
 No Remarks
126
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The Dalai Lama's Recommendations for You
smilesalad
by smilesalad  1-27-2007    6
 Another list to put on the wall
117
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Ten cognitive distortions that mess you up
enbar
by enbar  1-21-2007    11
 David Burns is a pioneer in popularizing the cognitive-behavioral approach to mood therapy developed by Aaron Beck. As someone who has struggled on and off with crippling depression my whole life, I have found this list of "cognitive distortions" pretty useful in reframing certain elements of my thinking.
70
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Dalai Lama - Buddhist guide to life
missmelq
by missmelq  3-28-2007    12
 Did't have quite enought room to get the last couple mentioned....
70
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Worlds 2nd richest man
flyingsoulo
by flyingsoulo  1-1-2007    11
 No Remarks
56
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500 Mostly Useless Facts
kankamuso
by kankamuso  1-10-2007    5
 
48
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My second "clipiversary"
invictus
by invictus  11-10-2007    28
 Yes, it's been 2 years today. Thanks for everything, guys...
48
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Steal my content, please!
ericskiff
by ericskiff  12-15-2007    11
 I completely agree with Scoble on this one, although I can understand why people who make their living directly from their creations have a hard time letting go of the fear of giving away at least some of the rights to their content. Cory Doctorow began releasing all of his literary work under creative commons licenses years ago, allowing people to freely download and distribute his work under some light provisos. I downloaded and read "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom" on my palm pilot, freely and legally, and was hooked. Because of that, I've read a huge amount of his writing, become a mammoth fan, and will likely purchase every book he publishes. I've also published everything I've written, shot, and produced under a similar license. While that certainly hasn't brought me traditional commercial success, it has definitely accelerated serendipity countless times for me, and if you trace out the effects of those 'lucky' events, it's helped shape both my career and life.
44
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Dalai Lama’s 18 rules for living
JohnWaterman
by JohnWaterman  6-22-2008    6
 # Once a year, go someplace you’ve never been before. # Remember that the best relationship is one in which your love for each other exceeds your need for each other. # Judge your success by what you had to give up in order to get it.
42
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A Computer Geek Loved A Girl
thisnamecantbetaken
by thisnamecantbetaken  10-29-2007    11
 Cute. :)
39
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Instructions for Life
mihla
by mihla  12-11-2006    5
 These are good for any millennium!
35
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just loved this...wanted to share with you...
mugofcoffee
by mugofcoffee  8-24-2007    10
 How did you do? The point is, none of us remembers the headliners of yesterday. These are no second-rate achievers. They're the best in their fields. But the applause dies. Awards tarnish. Achievements are forgotten. Accolades and certificates are buried with their owners.
33
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Startling scientific discovery
kwonsu
by kwonsu  4-6-2007    7
 The study fails to mention that the element is abundant in Federal and State buildings
31
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T-Shirt quotes: funny, interesting & thoughtful!
mugofcoffee
by mugofcoffee  4-22-2007    4
 No Remarks
31
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Life is SH*T
abailart
by abailart  4-29-2008    21
 No Remarks
30
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Viruses can catch colds, says study that redefines life itself
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  8-10-2008    1
 Prof La Scola and his colleagues were surprised to spot a smaller type of virus attached to the virus-making factory inside infected cells. The new virus - Sputnik - was unable to infect cells by itself but seemed to hijack the larger to achieve its infectious aims. By regulating the growth and death of plankton, giant viruses - and satellite viruses such as Sputnik - could be a major influence on ocean nutrient cycles and climate. "These viruses could be major players in global systems," Nature is told by Prof Curtis Suttle, an expert in marine viruses at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
30
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Kids' Ideas About Love
kwonsu
by kwonsu  4-20-2007    4
 No Remarks
29
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The Worst Analogies Ever Written in a High School Essay
bdvs128
by bdvs128  3-30-2007    4
 No Remarks
29
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She's a one-in-six-billion miracle
BobbyDelray
by BobbyDelray  1-25-2008    12
 No Remarks
27
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Poverty and the Brain
wildcat
by wildcat  11-7-2008    1
 "The point is that poverty isn't just an idea, or a state of mind: it actually warps the mind. Some brains never even have a chance." deserves a second thought
27
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Polygamy is the key to a long life
Mohir
by Mohir  8-19-2008    11
 Men, by contrast, can reproduce well into their 60s and even 70s and 80s, and most researchers assumed this explained their longevity. But Lummaa and colleague Andy Russell wondered whether other factors explained the long lifespan of men, such as a grandfather effect. If female survival is the main explanation for male longevity, then monogamous and polygamous men would live for about the same length of time. Instead, it seems that fathering more kids with more wives leads to increased male longevity. Men, then, live long because they're fertile well into their grey years. The explanation could be both social and genetic. Men who continue fathering kids into their 60s and 70s could take better care for their bodies because they have mouths to feed. But evolutionary forces acting over thousands of years could also select for longer-lived men in polygamous cultures.
26
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Torley's awesome Clipmarks review
invictus
by invictus  11-4-2006    24
 Our new fellow clipper Torley wrote an excellent review of Clipmarks. Congrats Torley, and welcome to Clipmarks!
26
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The Nose, an Emotional Time Machine
einbar
by einbar  8-6-2008    5
 Importantly, the olfactory cortex is embedded within the brain’s limbic system and amygdala, where emotions are born and emotional memories stored. That’s why smells, feelings and memories become so easily and intimately entangled
25
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A 'fit' of panic is good when bad things happen
wiccantexan
by wiccantexan  10-23-2007    3
 No Remarks
25
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Startling new scientific discovery
sythieskuer
by sythieskuer  12-16-2006    7
 No Remarks
25
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Five Innovations that Will Change Our Lives Over the Next Five Years
wildcat
by wildcat  12-19-2007   
 From IBM
25
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History Your Mama Didn't Tell You
AtlLiberal
by AtlLiberal  10-8-2007    7
 From the article: "Columbus and his men also used the Taino as sex slaves: it was a common reward for Columbus’ men for him to present them with local women to rape. As he began exporting Taino as slaves to other parts of the world, the sex-slave trade became an important part of the business, as Columbus wrote to a friend in 1500: “A hundred castellanoes (a Spanish coin) are as easily obtained for a woman as for a farm, and it is very general and there are plenty of dealers who go about looking for girls; those from nine to ten (years old) are now in demand.” It seems Chris was a naughty, naughty boy.
25
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For Tall People, 'Now' Is Really The Past
einbar
by einbar  5-20-2009    4
 Tall people experience the world a little later than short people.
24
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14,000 year-old tool kit of an ancient man
invictus
by invictus  12-13-2007    1
 He did not have screwdrivers, knives, pinchers or drills in his bag of course but the contents of the bag shows he was well equipped for many things in prehistoric life. Interesting discovery.
24
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Gender-bending avatars inspire less trust
wildcat
by wildcat  7-7-2007    5
 interesting, can we test this theory on clipmarks?
24
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More Evidence for a Revolutionary Theory of Water
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  7-4-2008   
 The current study is the most recent addition to a growing body of evidence for a new theory about the structure of liquid water. In 2004, Nilsson and colleagues sparked controversy with a paper published in Science that suggested the tetrahedral model of water was incorrect. Nilsson agrees that the debate is far from settled and that much work remains before a clear picture of liquid water emerges. "Over the last decade or so we have discovered that materials once considered homogeneous exhibit complex nanoscale order," said Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory director Jo Stöhr. "In my view, the work on water is yet another example of the actual complexity of matter, this time within a simple liquid. Modern X-ray work appears to be triggering a new understanding of liquids and we may have only seen the beginning of a paradigm shift in our understanding."
23
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Anne Frank: The Only Existing Film Images Surfaces on YouTube
chestnut501
by chestnut501  10-2-2009    4
 “The museum has had the footage for some time, but thought YouTube (YouTube) would be a good platform to show the film and the other films about her life. It’s another way to bring the life of Anne Frank to the attention of younger people, and all people worldwide.”
22
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Evolution of Life Was Stalled for 2 Billion Years
thisnamecantbetaken
by thisnamecantbetaken  3-29-2008    4
 No Remarks
22
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Don't Try to Be the Best (Top 25% is Good Enough)
Kore7
by Kore7  7-24-2007    1
 A little diversification of your top skills can go a long way in life when you combine them. True?
21
POPS
Transformers - The Nature of Alien Life
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  8-23-2008   
 The driving factor is a pragmatic desire to improve mental capacity. Alien beings may have already reached a point in their evolution where, having exhausted the potential of their biological brains, they have taken the next logical step and opted for robotic brains equipped with artificial intelligence. This brain swap may not be as far off for humans as one might think. In only a few decades, the computer revolution here on Earth has produced supercomputers capable of performing more than a quadrillion calculations per second. According to research by Hans Moravec, an artificial-intelligence expert at Carnegie Mellon University, that rate trumps the human brain’s estimated top speed of 100 trillion calculations per second. Some scientists speculate that in a few decades, an event called the technological singularity will occur, and machines armed with computer brains will become sentient and surpass human intelligence. Civilizations equipped with technology light-years ahead
21
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Two rams and a woman
Antara
by Antara  2-14-2009    1
 No Remarks
21
POPS
The end of Death
Aribeth
by Aribeth  8-15-2009    4
 The psychologist Ernest Becker wrote in his pulitzer prize winning book, “The Denial of Death,” that in the face of an acute and agonizing awareness of his mortality, man has developed three main devices to sustain his sanity.These illusions act as temporary solutions to the problem of death. The Religious Solution The Religious Solution invents the concept of God and projects onto him the power to grant us what we all really want: the ability to bestow eternal life on ourselves an our loved ones; to be freed from disease, decay and death. The Romantic Solution The second illusion Becker identifies - when we no longer believe in God, we then turn our lovers into gods and goddesses.When in love, man can “forget himself in the delirium of sex, and still be marvelously quickened in the experience”. We are temporarily relieved from the drag of “the animality that haunts our victory over decay and death.” When in love, we become immortal gods.
21
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The first evidence for a belief in the region for the soul - found in Turkey
einbar
by einbar  11-29-2008    8
 What is it with humans and the idea of a soul? "It might also be an evolutionary strategy that takes us away from the anxieties of self-consciousness. Once fully modern humans knew they could die, it probably made sense to pretend that no one really died but that some part of us lived on into the cosmos. Given the vagaries of ancient life, it probably also made sense to invent souls that had the power to haunt and cause harm to explain all the bad stuff in life".
21
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Is Life finely tuned, or a cosmic accident
pokkets
by pokkets  10-22-2007    6
 If there is 1/1Billion chance of there being the right properties in a 'Big Bang' to create life, then you just need 1 Billion 'Big Bangs' . One of the threads on theory regarding the presence of life in the Universe. Having such inadequate information to come to any conclusions there are a number of projections, but it seems the best education we are getting, is in the the development of more and more sophisticated instruments and measuring techniques. We may keep opening doors only to find more doors. Or someone may find a key, while they were looking for something else.
— end of the list —
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