Baruch Spinoza

Robert Adamson’s final book is a search for recognition and a poetic tribute to his love of nature

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Birds and Fish: Life on the Hawkesbury – Robert Adamson (Upswell) In 2004, Adamson published Inside Out: An Autobiography.

Key Points: 
  • Birds and Fish: Life on the Hawkesbury – Robert Adamson (Upswell) In 2004, Adamson published Inside Out: An Autobiography.
  • Adamson grew up in Neutral Bay on Sydney’s lower north shore, which afforded him ample opportunity to pursue his interest.
  • It is a terrifying, beautiful scene, recounted not by the fallen boy, of course, but the poet he became.
  • What I think I was aiming for when I stared into each bird’s eyes was some flicker of recognition, some sign of connection between us.
  • What I think I was aiming for when I stared into each bird’s eyes was some flicker of recognition, some sign of connection between us.
  • Theories of recognition have a long history, which in the Western tradition date back at least as far as Hegel.
  • Read more:
    Poetry goes nuclear: 3 recent books delve into present anxieties, finding beauty amid the terror

Blunt and honest

  • This was the year of Mr Roberts, the teacher who introduced me to poetry and what they called nature studies.
  • This was the year of Mr Roberts, the teacher who introduced me to poetry and what they called nature studies.
  • It helped, too, that Mr Roberts “knew a bit about birds” and that he was encouraging about projects and assignments.
  • The young Adamson lights up, a recognition undimmed, even when a new teacher tells him “to forget [his] ambition”.
  • Nature was blunt and honest.
  • There was no third party, no good manners, no god involved – no reasoning or theology, let alone spelling and maths.
  • Nature was blunt and honest.
  • It is to do with the field of being; you can project yourself back to the original lores, rites and rituals.
  • It is to do with the field of being; you can project yourself back to the original lores, rites and rituals.


Craig Billingham has previously received funding from The Australia Council for the Arts (now Create Australia).

The Andes flight disaster that gave birth to the Society of the Snow

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, September 6, 2023

How much pain and suffering can our bodies withstand?

Key Points: 
  • How much pain and suffering can our bodies withstand?
  • Is solidarity something natural, or does it come to us only in certain moments of our lives?

Disaster

    • Uruguayan Air Force flight 571, chartered by a rugby team and their friends and family, was flying to Chile for a friendly fixture.
    • More subsequently died in an avalanche that occurred in the days following the plane’s initial impact against the mountains.
    • What we have seen thus far was the disaster.

Miracle

    • To his companions’ confusion, he stated that they were going to get out on their own.
    • It is at this point that we can begin talking about aspects such as resistance, creativity, solidarity, fraternity, empathy, resourcefulness and even utopia.
    • Physical ability and the spirituality professed by some of the survivors were some of the causes given for their survival.
    • As a species we push limits, we are creatures capable of making and keeping promises and looking to the future.

From The Impossible to Society of the Snow


    Society of the Snow is also the title of a book which features the survivors’ testimonies and has recently been adapted for the big screen in a film directed by Juan Antonio Bayona (The Orphanage, The Impossible, A Monster Calls) What took place half a century ago serves as a reminder that “impossible” is nothing more than a word that someone, at some point, will ultimately banish from our vocabulary.

Dutch DC4U and LUMC consortium receive €1.7 million Eurostars grant to jointly develop an innovative treatment of Type I diabetes

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Type 1 diabetes is a serious autoimmune disease that originates when cells that make insulin (beta cells) are attacked by the immune system.

Key Points: 
  • Type 1 diabetes is a serious autoimmune disease that originates when cells that make insulin (beta cells) are attacked by the immune system.
  • Type 1 diabetes affects more than 8 million people worldwide and can result in serious side effects including kidney failure, heart disease, stroke, foot ulcers, blindness and early death.
  • Eurostars helps (small) companies to install market-oriented technological development and aims to shorten the time-to-market of new technologies and reduce technical risks.
  • For more info on Eurostars please visit: www.eurekanetwork.org/countries/netherlands/Eurostars/
    DC4U is a preclinical life science company developing treatments for autoimmune diseases and allergies.

Dutch DC4U and LUMC consortium receive €1.7 million Eurostars grant to jointly develop an innovative treatment of Type I diabetes

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Type 1 diabetes is a serious autoimmune disease that originates when cells that make insulin (beta cells) are attacked by the immune system.

Key Points: 
  • Type 1 diabetes is a serious autoimmune disease that originates when cells that make insulin (beta cells) are attacked by the immune system.
  • Type 1 diabetes affects more than 8 million people worldwide and can result in serious side effects including kidney failure, heart disease, stroke, foot ulcers, blindness and early death.
  • Eurostars helps (small) companies to install market-oriented technological development and aims to shorten the time-to-market of new technologies and reduce technical risks.
  • For more info on Eurostars please visit: www.eurekanetwork.org/countries/netherlands/Eurostars/
    DC4U is a preclinical life science company developing treatments for autoimmune diseases and allergies.