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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

multiverse

[ muhl-ti-vurs ]

noun

a hypothetical collection of identical or diverse universes, including our own.

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More about multiverse

Multiverse, a combination of the common prefix multi– and (uni)verse, nowadays means a hypothetical collection of identical or diverse universes, ours included, a sense first suggested in 1952 by the Austrian physicist Erwin Schr繹dinger (18871961). Multiverse, however, was coined by the American psychologist and philosopher William James (18421910). Multiverse to James was an alternative to or an opposite of universe and meant the universe imagined as lacking order, unity, or a single ruling and guiding power. James used multiverse in a lecture Is Life Worth Living? in 1895.

how is multiverse used?

Multiverse proponents advocate the idea that there may exist innumerable other universes, some of them with totally different physics and numbers of spatial dimensions; and that you, I and everything else may exist in countless copies.

Heinrich P瓣s, "Quantum Monism Could Save the Soul of Physics," Scientific American, March 5, 2019

Ten days before he died, Stephen Hawking sent one more written insight out into the cosmosa paper, co-written with physicistThomas Hertogof the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium,tackling the problem of a multiverse.

Sarah Kaplan, "One of Stephen Hawking's final scientific acts: Tackling the multiverse," Washington Post, May 3, 2018
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

hamartia

[ hah-mahr-tee-uh ]

noun

the character defect that causes the downfall of the protagonist of a tragedy; tragic flaw.

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More about hamartia

In Greek the noun 堯硃鳥硃娶喧穩櫻 means failure, fault, error (of judgment), guilt, sin. Hamartia, if familiar at all, will be familiar as the term that the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384322 b.c.) uses in his Poetics for the personal defect or frailtythe tragic flawthat brings about the ruin of a prosperous or eminent man who is neither utterly villainous nor totally good, like, for instance, Oedipus. 晨硃鳥硃娶喧穩櫻 is a derivative of the verb 堯硃鳥硃娶喧獺紳梗勳紳 (of a spear) to miss the mark, (in general) to fail in ones purpose, fall short, go wrong. 晨硃鳥硃娶喧獺紳梗勳紳 with its derivatives and related words, like about 60 percent of Greek vocabulary, has no known etymology. Hamartia entered English in the late 19th century.

how is hamartia used?

Every person was felt to have his or her hamartiaa tragic flaw, or potential for error in judgment that would frequently destroy an otherwise promising career. The most common among these flaws was hubris ….

James P. Atwater, "Letter to the Editor: The President's Men,"New York Times,August 29, 1982

… his hamartia (“error”) leads to the loss of all that matters to him, as well as to a puncturing of his former worldview.

Mark Buchan, "Sophocles with Lacan," A Companion to Sophocles, 2012
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

versify

[ vur-suh-fahy ]

verb

to relate, describe, or treat (something) in the form of poetry.

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More about versify

Versify comes via Old French versifier from Latin 措梗娶莽勳款勳釵櫻娶梗 to write or compose verse. 博梗娶莽勳款勳釵櫻娶梗 is partly composed of the noun versus a line of writing, a line of poetry, a sequence of notes. The basic meaning of versus is a circular movement (in a dance), twirl and is a derivative of the verb vertere to turn, revolve, pass through a cycle. The combining form –款勳釵櫻娶梗 means doing, making, causing and ultimately derives from the verb facere to make, build, construct. Versify entered English in the 14th century.

how is versify used?

… the energetic singer who cannot repress the impromptu urge to versify the mundane things going on around him.

Franklin D. Lewis, "Introduction," Rumi: Swallowing the Sun, 2008

He served in Africa, southern France and Italy during World War II, a period that he said led him to “versify in earnest.”

Harrison Smith, "Richard Wilbur, American poet who twice won the Pulitzer Prize, dies at 96," Washington Post, October 15, 2017
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar