#history

girlofthesea@diasporasocial.net

#german #history #us #folk #art
Mermaid Fraktur. German
- Small painting of a Mermaid done in early Fraktur style. Ink, Watercolor & graphite on the inside of an old book cover. It looks like it has been cared for and handed down from generation to generation
- Fraktur is a highly artistic and elaborate illuminated folk art created by the Pennsylvania Dutch, named after the Fraktur script associated with it. Most Fraktur were created between 1740 and 1860.
- The Pennsylvania Dutch Pennsylvanisch Deitsche also referred to as Pennsylvania Germans, are an ethnic group in Pennsylvania and other regions of the United States, predominantly in the Mid-Atlantic region of the nation. They largely descend from the Palatinate region of Germany, and settled in Pennsylvania during the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. While most were from the Palatinate region of Germany, a lesser number were from other German-speaking areas of Germany and Europe, including Baden-Württemberg, Hesse, Saxony, and Rhineland in Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the Alsace–Lorraine region of France.
- The Pennsylvania Dutch spoke Palatine German and other South German dialects, intermixing of Palatine, English, and other German dialects, which formed the Pennsylvania Dutch language as it is spoken today.
The Pennsylvania Dutch name has caused confusion. People couldn't pronounce Deutsch and it became "Dutch"- associating the people with the Dutch, rather than Germany.

harryhaller@diasp.eu

"You've Got To Be Carefully Taught" - SOUTH PACIFIC (1958)
South Pacific received scrutiny for its commentary regarding relationships between different races and ethnic groups. In particular, "You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught" was subject to widespread criticism, judged by some to be too controversial or downright inappropriate for the musical stage. Sung by the character Lieutenant Cable, the song is preceded by a line saying racism is "not born in you! It happens after you’re born..."

Rodgers and Hammerstein risked the entire South Pacific venture to include the song in the production. After the show's debut, it faced legislative challenges regarding its decency and supposed Communist agenda. While the show was on a tour of the Southern United States, lawmakers in Georgia introduced a bill outlawing entertainment containing "an underlying philosophy inspired by Moscow." One legislator said that "a song justifying interracial marriage was implicitly a threat to the American way of life." Rodgers and Hammerstein defended their work resolutely. James Michener, upon whose stories South Pacific was based, recalled, "The authors replied stubbornly that this number represented why they had wanted to do this play, and that even if it meant the failure of the production, it was going to stay in."https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You%27ve_Got_to_Be_Carefully_Taught

#music #film #musical #southpacific #racism #rodgershammerstein #usa #history

psychmesu@diaspora.glasswings.com

https://mastodon.online/@globalmuseum/112418976080478584 globalmuseum@mastodon.online - Did you know that in 1884 that the first production-standard electric car capable of being reproduced and sold to the public was unveiled? Did you know that in the early 1900s 1/3 of all vehicles on the road were electric? They started to quickly disappear around 1920 with the introduction of petrol and Henry Ford.
Ferdinand Porsche produced an electric vehicle called 'P' in 1898.

This pic is a group of working EV trucks in the UK plugged in in 1917. #electricvehicles #cars #history

rhysy@diaspora.glasswings.com

All Things Must Balance

An interesting look at the relation between the philosophy of economics and more general world views of medieval Europe. Doesn't really address the root causes and often reads like the "pseud's corner" snippets in Private Eye, using unnecessary pseudo-intellectual rhetoric which makes simple statements become overly-complicated for no reason. Still, interesting.

How does the definition of what is ‘natural’ shift radically within an intellectual culture? How does the unthinkable become thinkable – the unimaginable imaginable? What is it that causes vital new questions to rise to the surface and potent new answers to be envisaged and argued?

Well, let's start with economics.

At the root of traditional usury theory lay the demand for the maintenance of a perfect one-to-one equality between exchangers: for the lender to demand back from the borrower even one penny more in return was defined as manifest usury... Medieval writers employed many rationalisations to condemn usury and to insist that any violation of one-to-one equality in the loan is tantamount to a violation of both the divine and the natural order. Of these, the most common held that money is inert and sterile by its nature and, therefore, for money to grow by itself or to multiply itself still represents a clear violation of the natural order, instituted by God.

I guess they saw money as like animals ? God wouldn't allow anything to go extinct, and apparently money was the same thing. The past is certainly a foreign country. Anyway, this couldn't last :

True, he Godfrey [of Fontaines] admits, in most contracts of buying and selling, neither party can ever know, for certain, the value of the goods they are exchanging. Nor can they know, at the time of exchange, which party might benefit more from the exchange in the long term. Doubt, he recognises, is inescapable. Yet Godfrey was suddenly able to imagine, and to argue, that the very condition of shared uncertainty in itself produces an aequalitas sufficient to render exchanges licit and non-usurious. The unshakeable requirement for aequalitas in exchange has been met, he argues, as long as there exists an equal measure of doubt on the part of both buyer and seller.

In utter contrast to traditional claims for the sterility of all money, Olivi asserts that money, when in the form of commercial capital, is naturally fruitful, expansive and capable of multiplying, in its essence... Olivi has come to recognise that it is the very nature of capital to multiply, he judges that merchants who buy and sell money for a fluctuating agreed-upon price do so without committing a sin against either nature or God, and thus, without committing the sin of usury.

And from medieval economic theory we turn a corner into something very different.

He [Jean Buridan] then reasons that, given the spherical nature of the Earth, and given that all earth falls naturally toward the Earth’s centre (as Aristotle maintained), and given the great over-abundance of water with respect to land and, finally, assuming along with Aristotle that the Universe is eternal, he is led to ask why, in the fullness of time, should any portion of land remain dry above the waters and habitable?

It's all very Olber's Paradox, but with geology instead.

To answer this question, indeed, even to ask this question, Buridan imagines the whole of Earthly nature as an integrated physical system in dynamic equilibrium (to put it in modern terms). He then invents an elaborate physical explanation, which, as he writes, ‘seems probable to me and by means of which all appearances could be perpetually saved.’ He views the totality of geological displacement over eternity as a grand self-balancing system, functioning entirely on physical principles. As a consequence, he speculates that while parts of earth are being continually washed into the sea at multiple parts of the globe, an identical quantity of earth is being raised above the circle of the waters at other parts, eventually accumulating there to produce the very same mountainous heights that are being worn down elsewhere. Indeed, he explains the current existence of high mountains on Earth as the natural product of the perpetual cycle of erosion and accumulation in eternal equilibrium.

#History
#Philosophy
#Economics
#Geology

https://aeon.co/essays/how-socioeconomic-equalisation-generates-new-ideas-of-balance

faab64@diasp.org

Researchers have found the #Pythagorean theorem on ancient #Babylonian clay tablets that predate Pythagoras by 1,000 years! The tablets were discovered in what is now Iraq and date back to the Old Babylonian period (1900-1600 BC). They contain mathematical calculations and diagrams that use the principles of the Pythagorean theorem to solve problems related to land surveying, construction and astronomy.
More about this amazing discovery: https://hasanjasim.online/unearthing-history-pythagorean-theorem-discovered-on-clay-tablet-preceding-pythagoras-by-1000-years/

#Mathematics #History #Science #Archeology

christophs@diaspora.glasswings.com

First Dog Doctors: Canine Healthcare Practitioners in the Eighteenth-Century Medical Marketplace | Social History of Medicine | Oxford Academic

The question of when dogs became the recipients of veterinary care has long been debated; current scholarship does not acknowledge the long tradition of canine healthcare provided by irregular specialists prior to the late nineteenth century. This article reveals, however, that eighteenth-century Britain was home to a thriving canine medical marketplace. Among its key actors were ‘dog doctors’—individuals without formal healthcare training who regularly treated and healed dogs. This article offers the first historical account of the eighteenth-century dog doctor, contextualising and reappraising his identity, clients and services. It focusses on the dynamic career of the celebrity practitioner John Norborn, who proudly self-identified as a ‘dog doctor’ when the term was considered an insult. In doing so the article considers the conditions in which specialist care for dogs first developed and argues for a new chronology of canine veterinary medicine.

#dogs #science #history

https://academic.oup.com/shm/advance-article/doi/10.1093/shm/hkae012/7651016?login=false

faab64@diasp.org

May 8, 1945: While the French celebrated the end of WW2 and Nazi occupation, they continued to occupy Algeria and other colonies.

From May 8 - May 22, French troops killed up to 45,000 Algerians taking part in anti-colonial protests in Sétif, Guelma and other Algerian cities.

#France #History #May8 #Algeria #Politics

faab64@diasp.org

They actually think they have a valid argument here.

It's just unbelievable. Remember some 30 years ago I was having a discussion with a coworker who was part of the evangelical church of "Livets Ord" in Sweden about the intifada and he was using the same argument and claiming that IDF soldiers shooting Palestinians was justified because they were defending themselves against those throwing stones at them.

And also justifying the order or Israeli PM to break the arms and legs of palestinians to prevent them from protesting as "non violent measure".

And of course after October 7, these people think the whole history of Occupation and ethnic cleansing of palestinians is nothing and the conflict started on October 7 that justifies Israeli destruction of Gaza and the ongoing Genocide.

#Israel #Gaza #Politics #Genocide #History #Protests #HabraraArmy #Inhunanity #Hypocrisy

girlofthesea@diasporasocial.net

#medical #diseases #history
Photograph: Nurses in San Francisco Sewing Masks. 1918-1919. Influenza Epidemic

CONTAGION - Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c72Pt575fnA

- Fortunately, I saw this movie before Covid hit in 2020. It is astounding! I also read the South China Morning Post. There were early reports of a contagious respiratory disease. A small, red light, the size of a Christmas tree ornament was flashing.
When Covid was in full force, US officials, especially the Center for Disease Control (CDC) totally fucked up. I knew the history of major respiratory diseases in America, and the idiotic anti-masks groups. I refreshed my memory and read about those historical events again. History was repeating itself.
- To the best of my knowledge, I knew what to do, and avoid. I never contracted Covid. The ignorance I experienced during the worst of Covid was everywhere. It was high and wide, even in medical environments, no masks, crowded areas, little to no ventilation. I realized I was in ‘The Land of You’re On Your Own’.
History is going to repeat itself.