Kirsten Slater 🔫🤫

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Kirsten Slater 🔫🤫

Kirsten Slater 🔫🤫

@DrSlater06

Build mastery. Solve problems. Shape the future.

Mars Katılım Aralık 2009
116 Takip Edilen6.6K Takipçiler
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Kirsten Slater 🔫🤫
Kirsten Slater 🔫🤫@DrSlater06·
Every profitable trading strategy is just a variant of this (on your higher timeframe): 1. Higher timeframe is at the start of a trend. 2. You enter a trade on the wick of that higher timeframe candle. Come trade with me: whop.com/tpm @tpm_aaron1 @tpm_trading
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Dailyscienceinfo
Dailyscienceinfo@NatureScienceA1·
Clearest image ever taken of Mars' North Pole. Yes that's water ice.
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Latest in Cosmos
Latest in Cosmos@latestincosmos·
Orion😍
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Paul
Paul@paulwilsonimage·
If you'd like to read more about some images you can via my SuperRare profile superrare.com/artwork/eth/0x…
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Dailyscienceinfo
Dailyscienceinfo@NatureScienceA1·
NASA just shared the most detailed view of Moon in its true & natural color and breaking the internet. Just look at the detail here, this whole view is over 705 GB.
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Scandinavian Aesthetics
Scandinavian Aesthetics@ScandinavianAE·
Senja, Norway 🇳🇴
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Earth
Earth@earthcurated·
🌩️ Iceland putting on a dramatic show ! When wild storms sweep across the island with howling winds, pounding rain, and massive waves crashing against the black sand beaches. Dark clouds blanket the rugged landscapes, turning fjords and mountains into an epic, moody masterpiece.
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Paul
Paul@paulwilsonimage·
Photos of the Milky Way arch as seen from New Zealand ✨
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🍂
🍂@Lovandfear·
“I want to talk about everything with at least one person the way I talk about things with myself.” — Fyodor Dostoevsky
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Earth
Earth@earthcurated·
Natures light show over the lofoten islands, Norway ✨
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Milky Way galaxy rising above Monument Valley.
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Scandinavian Aesthetics
Scandinavian Aesthetics@ScandinavianAE·
Iceland 🇮🇸
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Wonder of Science
Wonder of Science@wonderofscience·
Breathtaking timelapse of the night sky over New Zealand by photographer Michael Shainblum.
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The Astronomy Guy
The Astronomy Guy@astrooalert·
My biggest dream: to gaze at the Earth from space, at least once in my life before I die... Can you Imagine the feeling one must experience?
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N A T U R E
N A T U R E@Globe32048·
French, Alps
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Earth
Earth@earthcurated·
Where the cliffs meet the sea and clouds drift low over Senja In Norway 🇳🇴
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The Astronomy Guy
The Astronomy Guy@astrooalert·
Milky Way from Antarctica😍
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The Culturist
The Culturist@the_culturist_·
If you're living through a great decline, how should you personally live and act in the midst of it? This is the question at the heart of "The Lord of the Rings," and it's best answered by the scene following the death of Boromir. After Boromir gives his life to save the Hobbits from Saruman's Orcs, the Fellowship is in tatters. With time against them, Merry and Pippin swept away by the enemy, and Frodo passing out of their control, Aragorn and company make a decision that seems strange. They pause to mourn Boromir's passing with a proper ritual. To many readers, this feels entirely reckless. Their "best" course of action is surely to prioritize what is most urgent: that the fate of their quest hangs in the balance. We recognize that, in any "normal" context, it would be wrong to let Boromir's body lie out in the open, but the nature of their mission surely doesn’t allow for the luxury of a funeral — right? But the fact that abandoning Boromir's body is wrong in normal times is precisely why it is wrong even now. At the heart of LOTR is the idea that moral decisions lie beyond their immediate context: some things just are wrong and others right, and once context becomes an arbiter of that distinction, you've lost your grip on what it means to be good. Aragorn's next statement helps us understand this further: "I would have guided Frodo to Mordor and gone with him to the end; but if I seek him now in the wilderness, I must abandon the captives to torment and death. My heart speaks clearly at last: the fate of the Bearer is in my hands no longer." Aragorn makes yet another decision to halt progress on the greater mission in favor of that which speaks directly to his heart: he will pursue Merry and Pippin, rather than sacrifice them for the "more important" quest. Tolkien's heroes recognize that they are not in control of everything. They cannot force the Ring to be unmade through their own will to power, and they're aware that their universe is guided by forces beyond their own and of their enemies. All they do is done in that humility, and they are bound by moral laws beyond themselves. Indeed, Middle-earth is guided not just by the opposing wills of Good and Evil but by another, providential force beyond the material. It is precisely because Tolkien's heroes believe in objective good that they can trust that a great, providential turn in fortune — a "eucatastrophe" — is around the corner. To believe in the objective good is to live in accordance with destiny, and to act on what is inherently good at all times, and to die for it if necessary. To live in submission to divine providence is to recognize that the right actions also lie in the little things, and that you yourself play only a small part in the grand story. A good world is brought into being by small acts of courage and kindness, even when they seem superfluous in the wider context of your quest... theculturist.io/subscribe
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