Lovynthesis

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Lovynthesis

Lovynthesis

@Lovynthesis

Reading the world, writing the unseen | ज्ञान भय का प्रतिरोध है। 🍂🕊🍁.......!!!

New Delhi Katılım Mart 2026
238 Takip Edilen135 Takipçiler
Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
Whale milk is exceptionally energy-dense, with a very high fat concentration that supports rapid growth in calves. Its thick, emulsified consistency helps it remain cohesive rather than dispersing quickly in seawater. This property allows calves to nurse effectively underwater without significant nutrient loss. Such adaptation is a result of evolutionary optimization for survival in a fully aquatic environment.
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Earth
Earth@earthcurated·
Whale milk is extraordinarily rich—containing up to 50% fat—making it so thick and dense that it doesn’t readily disperse in water. This unique consistency allows whale calves to feed efficiently underwater.
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
@yimikaaaa It reveals how human emotions are not isolated but interconnected through empathy. We don’t just observe others’ joy—we subtly participate in it. This shared feeling blurs the boundary between self and other. In that moment, happiness becomes less personal and more collective.
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yimika|
yimika|@yimikaaaa·
do you ever get secondhand happiness? like someone is happy so you’re happy because they’re happy
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
Such lights, often reported during earthquakes in Turkey and Greece, are known as earthquake lights (EQL). They are thought to arise from stress-induced electrical charges in rocks that become ionized and escape into the atmosphere. These charges can excite air molecules, producing transient luminous emissions under specific geological and atmospheric conditions. While still under study, the phenomenon is considered a rare electro-physical effect linked to tectonic stress and crustal deformation.
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Earth
Earth@earthcurated·
Unusual beams of light were observed in the skies over Turkey and Greece during the Aegean Sea earthquake. This phenomenon is believed to occur when powerful electrical charges build up in the Earth’s crust, ionizing the surrounding air and producing visible flashes or streaks of light.
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
@yimikaaaa Live while moments still belong to you, not just your duties. Memories are richer investments than anything stored in a bank. Time lost to hesitation rarely returns with interest. A life unseen is far heavier than a wallet once emptied.
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yimika|
yimika|@yimikaaaa·
Don't be afraid to spend money on concert tickets and travel. Be afraid of growing old and realizing the only place you ever went was work.
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
“Quantum immortality” is a speculative idea tied to the Many-worlds interpretation—it’s not a tested or accepted result of physics. In real science, Quantum mechanics predicts probabilities of outcomes, not a conscious “shift” into surviving timelines. Philosophically, it raises questions about identity—if countless versions exist, which “you” actually persists? So it’s less a claim about immortality, and more a thought experiment about observation, chance, and what it means to exist.
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Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
🚨: Quantum Immortality suggests that you can’t die, because every time you “die,” you shift into a universe where you survived
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
Physically, there are only wavelengths of light—what we call color arises when a mind interprets them. Without eyes or a perceiving brain, the world would still have light, but not “red” or “blue” as experience. As John Locke argued, color is a secondary quality—real in perception, not in objects alone. So colors exist as potential in the universe, but come alive only when something can see.
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
Do colors exist without eyes to see them?
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
Partial cellular reprogramming briefly resets gene expression patterns, restoring youthful function without fully erasing cell identity. By modulating epigenetic markers—the chemical tags that control DNA activity—cells regain repair capacity and metabolic efficiency. The reported “30-year reversal” reflects biological markers, not literal age, and is currently limited to lab-grown cells. It’s promising for regenerative medicine, but safety, stability, and cancer risk must be carefully resolved before real-world use.
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Night Sky Today
Night Sky Today@NightSkyToday·
🚨 : Researchers have managed to reverse the biological age of human skin cells by up to 30 years, effectively turning 53-year-old cells into 23-year-old cells, using a technique called partial cellular reprogramming.
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
At ~67,200 km, Earth appears as a crescent because of the Sun–Earth–observer geometry—only part of the illuminated hemisphere faces the camera. This phase effect is the same physics that gives us lunar phases, just viewed from a different vantage point in space. The thin glowing arc is sunlight scattering through Earth’s atmosphere, revealing its curvature and layered structure. Moments like this turn orbital mechanics into something visible—pure geometry, written in light.
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Latest in space
Latest in space@latestinspace·
🚨 This was the Artemis II crew's view this morning from 41,756 miles (67,200 km) up No human has seen a crescent Earth in full since 1972
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
For Friedrich Nietzsche, art is not escape but salvation—“we have art lest we perish of the truth.” It lets us bear reality by reshaping it into something livable. Through imagination, we don’t flee life—we deepen it. In art, we become more than one self, and thus, more fully human.
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love drops
love drops@lovedropx·
“I believe art is utterly important. It is one of the things that could save us. We don’t have to rely totally on experience if we can do things in our imagination... It’s the only way in which you can live more lives than your own. You can escape your own time, your own sensibility, your own narrowness of vision.” ~ Mary Oliver
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
@forallcurious Some truths don’t argue—they simply reveal themselves. What we deny from the ground becomes undeniable from the stars. The farther we go, the clearer we see what was always there. And in that view, doubt quietly dissolves into wonder.
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
BREATHTAKING🚨: Image of Earth captured by Artemis II from space that clearly shows EARTH is NOT FLAT!
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
@BallysBoots He didn’t call twice for the answer—he called twice for certainty. Sometimes doubt echoes louder than truth, even when it’s already heard. You gave him “Texas,” but he needed to believe it himself. It’s funny how the mind double-checks what the heart already knows.
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Bally's Boots
Bally's Boots@BallysBoots·
My friend was at a pub quiz and phoned me. He asked, “What's the second biggest state in the USA?" I said "Texas." He rang off and next minute I got a text from him saying, “What's the second biggest state in the USA?”
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Lovynthesis retweetledi
Hesse Philosophy
Hesse Philosophy@HermannHessed·
“Morality is simply the attitude we adopt towards people we personally dislike.” ― Oscar Wilde
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
@Kgothatsoxo Wild how people reduce whole lives to a headline— A$AP Rocky and Rihanna become a story before they’re even heard. Fame amplifies rumors faster than truth can walk. Sometimes what’s “insane” isn’t the act—but how quickly we decide it’s real.
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KUTTTHROAT⚔️
KUTTTHROAT⚔️@Kgothatsoxo·
ASAP Rocky cheating on a billionaire and baby mama of three is insane ngl
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
Yeah… that’s the quiet cruelty of the industry—showing up fully for something that never fully shows up for you. Simone Ashley did the work, carried the moment, believed in the story— only to find her presence erased in the final cut. It’s a reminder that visibility isn’t always control, and sometimes the hardest part isn’t rejection—it’s being unseen after being all in.
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bog affleck ☁️
bog affleck ☁️@bogbodied·
hey remember when simone ashley did all that press for F1 before finding out they cut her from the movie entirely
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
To read, for Friedrich Nietzsche, is not to consume but to transform. Slowness becomes a discipline where meaning ripens rather than rushes. A true reader does not chase conclusions, but dwells within questions. In that patience, the text stops being words—and becomes an awakening.
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Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
Nietzsche on how to actually read: “A reader who has not learned to read slowly will never understand my books. One must learn to see, one must learn to think, one must learn to speak and write: the goal in all three is a noble culture. To read well, that is to read slowly, deeply, looking cautiously before and aft, with reservations, with doors left open, with delicate eyes and fingers.”
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
If space can bend, then limits were never as solid as we believed. What once lived only in equations now begins to whisper of reality. It’s a reminder that imagination is often just truth, waiting its turn. And perhaps the universe isn’t distant—it’s simply unfolding slower than our dreams.
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
🚨: Scientists have revealed that a physical warp drive, once purely theoretical, could now be feasible.
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Lovynthesis
Lovynthesis@Lovynthesis·
It’s like standing before the universe as Ludwig Wittgenstein imagined—seeing the pieces, but never the full grammar of the game. For Friedrich Nietzsche, the mystery isn’t a flaw but an invitation to create meaning anyway. Albert Camus would call it absurd—yet insist we play on, aware and defiant. And in the spirit of Søren Kierkegaard, perhaps faith is simply choosing a move without ever knowing the rules.
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Prof. Feynman
Prof. Feynman@ProfFeynman·
Imagine that the gods are playing some great game and you don't know the rules of the game, but you're allowed to look at the board, at least from time to time.
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