I keep seeing that mantis shrimp comic from The Oatmeal going around. Did you know Radiolab did a terrific podcast about the mantis shrimp’s color spectrum last year?

(This podcast is 1:07:00, fyi.)

Found this on my camera just now — this was a tree in my neighborhood a few weeks ago. If this part of fall lasted longer, I might be more obliging to its existence in general.

Found this on my camera just now — this was a tree in my neighborhood a few weeks ago. If this part of fall lasted longer, I might be more obliging to its existence in general.

jack-sbrokenheart:

alecshao:

Chris Cobb - There is Nothing Wrong in this Whole World (2004), 20,000-book color spectrum

yep

FFFFFFTTTT

YESSSSSS

(Source: likeafieldmouse, via writersrelief)

Radiolab Podcast: Why Isn’t the Sky Blue?
I can’t stop thinking about this. As a lifelong student of Homer and a longtime lover of science, languages and culture, this blew my mind like it hasn’t been blown in what feels like years. Absolutely incredible!

What is the color of honey, and “faces pale with fear”? If you’re Homer—one of the most influential poets in human history—that color is green. And the sea is “wine-dark,” just like oxen…though sheep are violet. Which all sounds…well, really off. Producer Tim Howard introduces us to linguist Guy Deutscher, and the story of William Gladstone (a British Prime Minister back in the 1800s, and a huge Homer-ophile). Gladstone conducted an exhaustive study of every color reference in The Odyssey and The Iliad. And he found something startling: No blue!

Supposedly Gladstone’s chapter on colors in Homer is available here; I will have to take a look at it, because wow.

Radiolab Podcast: Why Isn’t the Sky Blue?

I can’t stop thinking about this. As a lifelong student of Homer and a longtime lover of science, languages and culture, this blew my mind like it hasn’t been blown in what feels like years. Absolutely incredible!

What is the color of honey, and “faces pale with fear”? If you’re Homer—one of the most influential poets in human history—that color is green. And the sea is “wine-dark,” just like oxen…though sheep are violet. Which all sounds…well, really off. Producer Tim Howard introduces us to linguist Guy Deutscher, and the story of William Gladstone (a British Prime Minister back in the 1800s, and a huge Homer-ophile). Gladstone conducted an exhaustive study of every color reference in The Odyssey and The Iliad. And he found something startling: No blue!

Supposedly Gladstone’s chapter on colors in Homer is available here; I will have to take a look at it, because wow.

(via waiting4achange)