
Students who take notes by hand get better grades than those who use laptops, especially in STEM fields.
Soma Das
69.9K posts


Students who take notes by hand get better grades than those who use laptops, especially in STEM fields.


What kind of mosquito is this?😳😳





In 1863, on a remote Greek island, a worker digging in the ruins of a 2,000 year old sanctuary stopped and shouted to the French diplomat supervising the excavation: "Monsieur, we have found a woman." What he had found was not a woman. It was a giant marble torso. No head. No arms. But a pair of broken wings... She is the Winged Victory of Samothrace, carved around 190 BC. The statue depicts the goddess Nike, the personification of victory in the ancient Greek world. She is shown alighting on the prow of a warship: the moment of triumph caught in stone. The marble is so finely worked that the fabric of her tunic appears wet, pressed against her body by an invisible wind, while heavy folds billow behind her as if still moving. She originally stood high above the Aegean Sea, in the Sanctuary of the Great Gods on the island of Samothrace, set at a deliberate angle to be seen from afar... Charles Champoiseau, the French vice-consul who supervised her excavation, sent her to Paris in pieces. Around 110 fragments were recovered. The head and arms were never found. He thought the grey marble blocks scattered around her were the remains of a tomb, and left them on the island. It took twelve more years before Austrian archaeologists realized those blocks were the prow of the ship she had been standing on. Today, she watches over the top of the Daru Staircase in the Louvre, where ten million people walk up to her every year. There is something almost mystical about her presence — a sense that what is missing is more powerful than what remains. The absent head and arms, the broken wings: they don't weaken her. They free her. She is no longer a goddess in stone. She is the moment of victory itself, and you can finish her story in your own mind... If you enjoyed this, I write a weekly newsletter for over 50,000 readers who love rediscovering history through the beauty of art. You can join us here: james-lucas.com/welcome There is so much more waiting to be seen.



