Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle

2.3K posts

Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle banner
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle

Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle

@mudittta

bhagwan bharose

udaipur Katılım Ağustos 2025
9 Takip Edilen11 Takipçiler
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle
do people realise how mad it is a 40M pounds on a guy who has 1 year left on his contract? no top club is in for him , this is the same situation like ugarte , everyone who had a good eye was against this signing . anyway i hope bruno leaves this club and join big club
MS15@Sarfo15M

Does it matter what order the midfield signings come in? I think Utd fans are doing a bit too much, I kinda get that people might be unsure of Ederson quality but it’d probs the easiest deal hence why it’s done first?

English
0
0
1
51
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle retweetledi
Wak.
Wak.@WakoCD_·
Another thing that annoys me is how allergic Ederson is to receiving centrally while under pressure— often peels alongside CB’s or into half-spaces. Considering our MDF’s are so close together & how vertical they’re required to play under Carrick, I don’t get it…
曼联球迷@_Utdbaki

Ederson vs Bologna (Last appearance for Atalanta)

English
56
28
327
68.3K
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle retweetledi
Yahya
Yahya@UtdYahz·
A midfielder who can score goals but can’t pass to save his life and an energetic midfielder who’s average at most things welcome back Mctominay and Fred
Yahya tweet mediaYahya tweet mediaYahya tweet mediaYahya tweet media
English
35
63
733
48.1K
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle retweetledi
Yadu
Yadu@Yaduvam·
Yadu tweet media
ZXX
3
25
437
4.3K
liam liam liam
liam liam liam@horsebox98·
Omg Southampton have a 50% sell on clause on Fernandes😭😭😭😭😭 West ham are FUCKED
English
68
671
28.1K
1.5M
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle retweetledi
Rohan Pandey
Rohan Pandey@khoomeik·
as indians become the largest demographic online, sheer market forces for engagement drive every account to either sanskritposting or racism
bubble boi@bubbleboi

I’ve been reading the Vedas a lot recently, and what’s stood out is how it doubles as an encyclopedia as well as a religious text. Astronomy, medicine, mathematics, metallurgy, linguistics, are all woven through hymns and rituals as one body of knowledge. Simply calling it “religious” forces it into a Western category that didn’t have the apparatus to recognize what it actually was. It’s closer to a tradition of formalized epistemology in which metaphysics, observation, and language form one continuous inquiry, which as a result led Indian civilization to develop along a fundamentally different path because of it. You can see the effect most clearly in the sciences. Around 600 BCE, the Vedic record describes a surgical procedure that matches modern rhinoplasty and is still foundational to reconstructive surgery today. Centuries before Western Europe stopped treating eclipses as supernatural, Indian scholars had calculated the circumference of the earth within 0.2% and explained eclipses as shadows. Centuries before Plato and Aristotle rejected atomism, the Vedic tradition already held that matter is composed of indivisible particles combining into binary and triatomic compounds, transformable by heat. The first formal rules for zero and negative arithmetic appear in the Vedas, along with infinite-series derivations of π, sine, and cosine centuries before Newton and Leibniz. The interesting question is how did they get so much right, so early? My best guess is language. The Vedic tradition is unique compared to other oral traditions as it demanded letter-perfect oral transmission across generations. Around 500 BCE, scholars composed a generative grammar of Sanskrit called Panini so rigorous it anticipates Backus-Naur form, the notation that defines programming languages today, by 2,500 years. Sanskrit is recursive, rule-based, and built to minimize ambiguity. It reads more like mathematics than English. When you think in a language built like that, the precision of the language becomes the precision of your reasoning. The West didn’t formalize this until much later. Kant argued our categories of understanding shape what we can know, Wittgenstein wrote that the limits of language are the limits of one’s world, and Kripke showed that naming doesn’t just describe things, it constitutes what they mean and how we can reason about them. All three touch the same insight which is that thought is downstream of language. The Vedic tradition operated on that insight thousands of years earlier. To the point that they built a whole language first and used it to think clearly about everything else after. I find that all really fascinating.

English
17
69
827
48.6K
Rohan #throwwilcoxinbermudatriangle retweetledi
11tial
11tial@11tial·
Bruno Fernandes - 21 Assists
English
4
95
678
14.5K