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#Transdisciplinary
happywebdesign · 1 year
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https://www.snohetta.com/
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hilite-head · 5 days
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YELLOWTERROR x NYC Performance Series
April 2024 CHINA🇨🇳 “The Red Dragon, Part 1” Location: Dragon Fest, Manhattan (NYC’s largest annual outdoor Chinese food & culture festival) BBQ walks through Dragon Fest and the subway wearing handmade Tsam Buddhist deity mask “Rainbow Serpent Avatar Wo/Man with Million Faces” with shaman spirit stick in hand, dressed in traditional red as an homage to the lunar year of the fiery dragon and as…
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Sometimes I am just admiring the versatility of pixels and how it is probably the most useful in all types of art. Pixels are used in beading, cross-stitch, knitting patterns and probably other types of handcrafts that I am not familiar with. So pixels are a transdisciplinary art form.
Also pixel art is, in my opnion, relatively easy to make. You only need some understanding of how forms and shapes work and you can go at it! Of course pixels can be limiting but the size of your work/pixels can be changed to your desire and determines how pixelated your art becomes, so really it is how much you are limiting yourself.
I really admire the work of Brandon James Greer, he makes awesome pixel art and has great explanation on pixel art and how he works on his youtube channel. He really opened my eyes to the use pixels and started to make me think about how pixels can be used in different ways/things.
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hislop3 · 1 year
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Pastoral Care and Risk Management
In 2001, the Association for Professional Chaplains honored me with their Distinguished Service Award for my work in expanding the impact of professional chaplaincy and programs of pastoral care/ ministry in specialized healthcare settings. This was (and remains for me) a huge honor. Yet, since that time, a little over twenty years ago, programs of pastoral care, Clinical Pastoral Education, and…
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trans-atelier · 2 years
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Audio blog 072022: About transdisciplinarity, and why we need it in artistic research, learning and practice.
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michaelgarfield · 2 years
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After over a week of continuous tweaking, my Midjourney prompt exploring "The Second Coming of the Cambrian Explosion" — an A.I. exploration of design space for the mashup of Old World cathedrals with New World prehistoric fossils and Strange New World automation — started spitting out sacred texts. Or, rather, the covers of unwritten sacred texts I would like to read... 🐠🕍📚 #aiart #aiartist #midjourney #midjourneyart #promptism #paleontology #scienceart #artscience #nondisciplinary #transdisciplinary #cambrian #burgessshale #fossils #futurefossils #santafeart (at Santa Fe, New Mexico) https://www.instagram.com/p/CfMlg8XuiaR/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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lordsisterxotome · 2 years
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Your girl got into her honors program!! 
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joshgelbhere · 14 days
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ninaqueissner · 3 months
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@linda-weiss @tempe-corals
Amazing realization of a similar idea I had which was to sonify the oceans's temperature data in the beginning of our project looking for Medusa /Temporäre Permanenz.
‘Common Grounds’ is an artistic-scientific research exploring strategies for sonifying environmental data. Initiated in 2020 by the Sono-Choreographic Collective and Julia Boike, head of Energy- and Water fluxes research group at the Alfred-Wegener-Institut Potsdam. Through 2025 this research asks how a long-term collaboration between climate science and sonic arts can be translated into public experiences that offer embodied, sensorial connections to the fragile complexity of planetary systems.
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criticalcoreskill · 1 year
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Problem-solving skills are essential for anyone who wants to lead a successful and balanced life. By taking the time to identify the root cause of a problem, brainstorm possible solutions, and choose the best option, you can empower yourself to effectively manage any problem that comes your way.
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leadingincontext · 2 years
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Transdisciplinary Thinking Leads to Better Decisions
Transdisciplinary Thinking Leads to Better Decisions
By Linda Fisher Thornton There’s a problem that people don’t talk about often enough. In the quest to understand things, we have divided up content and areas of science and our world in general into categories that we label (like biology, art, and psychology for example) and think of as separate. People study inside these realms intensely until they become experts in them. The problem is that…
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talonabraxas · 7 months
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The ancient Caduceus symbol used by the modern medical establishment symbolizes on a esoteric level the alchemical process. The staff represents the spinal column which correlates with the Sushumna Nadi channel of yogic esoteric anatomy. The two ascending spirals of snakes represent the solar and lunar currents known as the ida and pingala of the kundalini life force. The spiral pattern is similar to the spirals of the human DNA. The symbolism of Jacobs Ladder or Stairway to Heaven corresponds with the Staff of Life.The sphere at the top of the staff represents the energy center of the brain or the seventh chakra also known as the thousand petaled lotus. The Wings at the top of the staff is the culmination of the alchemical process. This represents freedom or liberation of the soul from the cycle of birth and death. One transcends the bonds of ego and bodily identification. The spirit is released from the confines of matter. Ultimately, this is the unfoldment of consciousness where by one realizes ones self to be infinite also known as self-realization.
Arion Love; Alchemy - The Science of Enlightenment
Caduceus The Mystical Art of Nicomedes Gómez
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spectrometrie · 2 months
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i'm getting increasingly frustrated with academia and its little closed off world pretending to reach outside of its bounds. presenting your data over and over again to more or less the same people, so what? you can add a "public speaking" line to your resume? so you can get (max) one question about it? you can add "transdisciplinary" and "collective" and "inclusive" or other pr science buzzwords to your research but where does it lead? what the fuck is my impact except the gross CO2 emissions i generate because of flights i have to take to present in "international" conferences for niche ass subdisciplines that brag about being eco-conscious with its bamboo forks and costs 500$ to attend so you can end up published in a "high impact factor" journal praising open-science behind a paywall
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mindblowingscience · 6 months
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Mature spermatozoa are characterized by a head, midpiece and a long tail for locomotion. Now, researchers from the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) and the Transdisciplinary Research Unit "Life & Health" at the University of Bonn have found that a loss of the structural protein ACTL7B blocks spermatogenesis in male mice. The cells can no longer develop their characteristic shape and remain in a rather round form. The animals are infertile. The results of the study have now been published in the journal Development. Male sperm cells are constantly produced in large quantities in the testicles during so-called spermatogenesis. In this process, the typical elongated sperm cells are formed from round germ cells. This enormous change in shape requires the fine tuned reorganization of specialized structural proteins. One of these structural proteins is ACTL7B.
Continue Reading.
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aquestcalledcj · 15 days
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UVM Food Systems Program
I've started a tumblr blog because I wanted a way to document this time in my life. I didn't expect to go to Vermont, much less grad school, and to be honest at one point, college was way off the radar.
The idea of this program is to help students like myself become problem solvers and critical thinkers with tools to be able to help resolve food systems related issues using a transdisciplinary and systems thinking approach. Examples of said issues include but are not limited to:
Examining supply chain shortages
The health and safety of farmworkers and food in which they harvest.
Equitable Distribution and Fair Labor Practices
Building Climate Change Resilience
Reducing Food Waste
Dramatic increases in food insecurity and more...
Some interesting facts about this program is that it is supported by 43 affiliated faculty from 6 different colleges representing 16 departments/disciplines and University of Vermont is the first school ever to offer a degree in Food Systems.
The Food Systems Graduate Program at the University of Vermont studies the inter-connected actors and processes in the modern food system, from production through disposal, and the opportunities for closing this loop. Food systems are inherently built on multiple, intersectional inequalities, and as researchers, scholars, practitioners, and community members, the program use diverse methodological and disciplinary orientations to study and address these inequalities.
During my time here I would like to make my research actionable- something that can not only be found, but be used to affect positive change in the food system.
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bpod-bpod · 26 days
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New Viewing Platform
A new system that allows trans-scale optical imaging of large field of view and volume so that cells in whole organs and tissues can be mapped dynamically
Read the published research article here
Video from work by Taro Ichimura and colleagues
Transdimensional Life Imaging Division, Institute for Open and Transdisciplinary Research Initiatives, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan
Video originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in bioRxiv, February 2024 (not peer reviewed)
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