Hey

Actually you can find more works at immuniselectrun.deviantart.com, check it out :D

Jiuzhaigou - O melhor texto que li em 2009.

Este comment vai ser excepcionalmente escrito em português porque se trata de um caso excepcionalmente único, admito, andei muito tempo à espera de ler o que li hoje na revista mensal do National Geographic, foi algo espectacularmente intenso, explícito e arrebatante, parabéns desde já ao autor e ao tradutor, agradeço por terem conseguido passar para o papel o que já andava há algum tempo na minha mente de uma forma que me seria impossível fazer.

O seguinte texto é parte de uma matéria intitulada “Rumo ao Paraíso Industrializado Jiuzhaigou” presente na referida revista. Foi escrito por Edward Hoagland. Eis a transcrição:

“ … A solidão quase se transformou num prazer residual, agora que o equipamento electrónico nos pode acompanhar para todo o lado. Porém, não estaremos nós a tomar o planeta de empréstimo aos nossos filhos? E, se é isso que estamos a fazer, não deveríamos deixá-lo em estado habitável? Nem marxismo nem budismo rebateriam tal argumento, se o conceito do que se considera habitável não fosse tão volátil.

Se nos consideramos superiores a todas as outras formas de vida, se nos mostramos capazes de prescindir delas, se ninguém liga aos poucos peixes que restam sem ser nas lagoas de aquicultura, às cristas montanhosas sem turbinas eólicas nos cumes, aos campos nevados ou às cotovias-dos-prados, então as poucas pessoas que ligam mesmo e querem descansar da confusão urbana poderão ver-se obrigadas a comprar filmes da vida selvagem para os seus ecrãs gigantes. As vendas de virtualizações em vídeo poderão até ser fantásticas porque, de facto, a nossa preferência pela virtualização está a aumentar rapidamente. Mas as filas de cidadãos continuaram a ser lentamente empurradas, como em Jiuzhaigou, sobre as passadeiras de madeira e a comprar recordações aos habituais vendedores ambulantes instalados no final do percurso dos autocarros. O padrão arlequinesco das réplicas de pandas, tal como o camuflado do tigre, chegou para ficar. Listados à maneira da selva mas criados em cativeiro, os felinos são presença obrigatória nos jardins zoológicos e o mesmo sucederá aos pandas depois de as árvores desaparecerem, à semelhança das réplicas de mosteiros tibetanos, com fachadas correctamente produzidas, mas sem monges no interior.”

Paranoic

It’s an awkward sensation,

You can’t even recognize yourself anymore,

It’s like you take place of someone else,

It’s creepy,

Confusing,

And makes you tired at all.


How could this happen to me?

I’m going crazy right now,

Anybody can save me?

Is there a light in the end of that tunnel?

Everything seems so dark right here.


This is undoubtedly the weight of my sins,

The heavy load of my past and present.


My bones are broken,

My breathe,

Wheezing,

My mind,

Lost.


I try to touch,

And there,

Another problem,

Another paranoia,

Another insanity,

Another nightmare.


Save me please,

I beg you.


Change my mind and

All this will be gone,

Change my mind,

Change my reality,

Change this strange being I became.


I need Inspiration,

I need …

????Maundering???? (this should be the intro info:P)

Today is one of those days when I wanna write something and my thoughts simply just fly away or something else. Write free my mind, it’s like thirst or hunger, I’m compulsive about writing but I was not always this. First I write ‘cuz I like words, combinations, I think about a text like an equation, I think math and language have a lot in common. I love math so I love write. I love all the logic involved in although with the write I can go a little further than with math ‘cuz I’m not restricted to pre-established rules, ok you got me, in language we have rules too but more flexible, I explain, Math is logic, no logic, no math, got it? About writing, well, it’s not always like that, I can write something very personal that nobody can understand, something made through my own rules, today I’m breaking rules, give me a break ;). The second reason I write is because wait! What’s language in the end? It’s a tool we use to understand each other, to express something in a way that can be more or less understandable. This text for example it may not make any sense to the reader but for the writer It does. Part of my incense is between the lines I wrote and ll write, the other one I’m afraid I can’t describe. It fascinates me: how you move something from your mind to the paper, how you are able to write what you think, and how amazing is when the other understands it perfectly, it takes a touch of geniality too. Well, I think, unfortunately, few are those who use this instrument, I mean, those who recognize it as essential to our life, I must confess, I would die without words and without sounds, these are the little vices I have, I forgot one! My friendly numbers! In a time when everything seems crumbling down, our fragile economy, they are being stabbed from behind although is so simple as 1+1=2, I prefer not to comment it ‘cuz I’m here to talk about… what really? I forgot, I’m maundering :). I’m not writing in my birth language, just a note, and I explain, in our short life, we can’t lost the chance to expand our horizons, unfortunately, the country where I was born is not, how can I say, the ideal place to be to someone like me, a thinker, curious, no nationalist. I say goodbye and hope to see you around, here, in this site, you can find interesting matters about science, mostly, ‘cuz its my big big love, did I tell you I prefer a relationship with science than with someone?:O joking :P do not be eluded, I don’t wanna change your mind with partiality, I just wanna find mine :D.

Hall of fame

Louis Pasteur

Birthday date: 27th December, 1822

The truth is surprising: as young, Louis Pasteur was a lazy student. His teachers never thought he was quite clever, as ahead he would show.

He studied physics and chemistry in Paris and chemistry was even the discipline in which we got a lower grade. Despite of that, later, He became a wise teacher and was one of the bigger scientists of ever, a genius of science. Only through one huge thirst of knowledge and an inexhaustible will of work the immortality was conquered and the death was defeated.

Facing all the expectations, the success arrived much early. With twenty six years he discovered the secret of crystals and a few time later he realized that the air we breathe it’s full of very small beings, He called them the invisible giants. Perhaps Pasteur already knew that these beings, apparently armless, were responsible for much part of the diseases shown in living beings. For sure he knew that the microorganisms used to enter in our organism with the purpose of unleash diseases. It was not easy to prove such theory in a time when all scientists thought that microorganisms were fruit of our own organism and not from outside. He wouldn’t give up anyway, He even bottled air to prove it, under the laugh of his colleagues , of course they didn’t even guess that what he was doing would become indispensable to his theory: none living being, including microorganisms, can appear in the world without descend from at least other of the same specie. In the course of his experiences, Pasteur could show up that microorganisms live in the air and reproduce themselves, entering in our body when they “feel” we are weakened and is the best shot to take. This was a very important discovery but his greatest feat, vaccine, would take more time to be created.

Before it, he helped the French farmers, solving a big problem: the quick sourness of wine. He observed microscopically the wine and found some kind of very short vegetation, called yeasts. Therefore, the yeasts were spoiling the wine, making it vinegary. Pasteur understood that wasn’t possible to take out those little creatures, they had to be killed and the only possible way: heat them up. The problem lied in the fact that the wine couldn’t heat up to high temperatures because it would change its quality. Persistent, Pasteur made a lot of experiences and found the solution: it was only necessary rise the wine’s temperature about sixty degrees centigrade to kill the microorganisms. These experiences gave rise to a much known process called pasteurization.

Pasteur was, undoubtedly, a chemistry genius and started to be called to solve the riddles that more nobody could. There was even a time when he was asked to find the origin of a plague which was killing thousands of silkworms. Pasteur, after some research, figured out that the butterfly was transmitting to her own eggs the disease and hence died so many of them. It was necessary to exterminate all larvae, butterflies and eggs which weren’t healthy. He had saved the French Industry of Silk and now, he’s stories of success were told not only in France but also abroad.

Modest, simple and not vain, Pasteur used to say that he only worked to help mankind. But, the fact of two of his sons have died with typhoid fever explain the dedication to Medicine and to studies about diseases caused by microorganisms.

Carbuncle was one of the first diseases studied by Pasteur. In that time, were dying many animals, mostly sheep due this disease. He discovered the responsible microorganism and made an experience: vaccinated twenty five sheep with the germ which caused the disease and left other twenty five sheep for vaccinate. Then he infected them all with the microorganism which made they feel sick. Happened that all vaccinated sheep survived and the others died. This was the first success of vaccination. However, he refused money to patent the medicine.

He wondered if would be worthwhile try to apply the same principles in the cure of human diseases. About 1880 Pasteur started to study the rage disease (affect animals, especially dogs, and normally is transmitted to humans by a nibble). Firstly, he discovered the rage virus. Then he used its “good” part to create an antidote and transformed it into a vaccine. Later, He started to inoculate it in the dogs but he didn’t have the courage to do the same in humans, until when on 6th July, 1885, a woman knocked on his door. She was carrying a boy with nine years old that was bitten by a dog fourteen times. The mother begged him to heal her son but the scientist didn’t want to experiment the serum in the kid named Joseph Meister because so far he never had used the vaccine in humans. However, once there was no other solution, eventually the kid would die with or without the inoculation, he applied the first of twelve anti-rage vaccines. During many weeks, the scientist and boy’s family feared the worst but in the end, Joseph Meister survived. From that time, people that had been bitten by raged dogs started to go to his laboratory asking for help. They came from different places of France and even from abroad although doctors didn’t recognize the worthwhile of Pasteur, what’s unthinkable, even because before his investigations, the only medicine available against rage was a spike in hot coal to burn the dog’s bite.

The vaccines were a huge triumph to medicine. Without them it’s difficult even think in survival.

Pasteur Institute:

The success of anti-rage vaccine was so enormous that the French Academy of Sciences decided to build one Institution dedicated only to laboratorial investigation. The Pasteur Institute was established in 1888 and is nowadays one of the most known centers of scientific investigation.

Curiosity – The HIV virus was isolated for the first time in these laboratories. This Institution without profitable ends was presided by Louis Pasteur until his death (28th September, 1895) and has a team of scientists that globally has eight Nobel Prizes in Medicine.

Microscope:

Nobody knows for sure who created it. Generally, its invention is attributed to Hans Janssen, Dutch glasses manufacturer, and his son Zacarias, in the year of 1590. However, will have been the Dutch Anton van Leeuwenhoek, that lived between 1632 and 1723, who made the first microscopic observations. He was a textile trader that used to mount lends. It was precisely through curved glasses that he mounted in a rudimental microscope that he saw little creatures which were walking along the drops of rain, vinegar and saliva. He was not a scientist but woke up the interest of scientific community. The first microscope had only one lend and so it couldn´t amplify very much.