https://www.ouryachtworld.com/archives/10681
Ended Tuesday and welcomed Wednesday with Kismet (subtitled A Jazz Interpretation by the Mastersounds) an album by The Mastersounds led by vibraphonist Buddy Montgomery with pianist Richie Crabtree, bassist Monk Montgomery and drummer Benny Barth along with guitarist Wes Montgomery featuring performances of tunes originally composed by Alexander Borodin and adapted by Robert Wright and George Forrest for the musical Kismet. The album was recorded in 1958 and released on the World Pacific label.
The Allmusic review by Matthew Greenwald stated: "Overall, an excellent jazz reading of one of the most beloved musicals ever and also an important historical record for Wes Montgomery fans". - Wikipedia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p_tcpeY0AU4&list=PLBsuuWUBCO0UPG43K5jKgJLty934SMnX7&index=1
#Mastersounds #BuddyMontgomery #Vibraphone #WesMontgomery #Borodin #Kismet #Musicals #Music #Jazz #WorldPacific
This Week In Security: Getting Back Up to Speed
K2Node: магия Blueprint или что на самом деле скрывается за нодами в C++
Каждый, кто имел дело с Unreal Engine после 2014, наверняка слышал про скриптовый язык Blueprint. Но что реально происходит под капотом, когда вы таскаете ноды? Как создать свою ноду (и надо ли это вам вообще?) В данной статье я бы хотел разобрать K2Node
https://habr.com/ru/articles/941074/
#unreal_engine_5 #unreal_engine #c++ #K2Node #ue5 #разработка_игр #игры #программирование_игр #blueprint #kismet
Verbrauchertipp: verzichtet auf Gelwaschmittel, Waschperlen und Flüssigwaschmittel oder fragt nach Produkten ohne Diethylentriaminpentakismethylenphosphonsäure.

Erhöhte Glyphosat-Werte in Bayerns Gewässern – doch es ist nicht unbedingt die Landwirtschaft, die sie verursacht. Eine neue Untersuchung von Abwässern in Bayern bestätigt den Verdacht, dass das Glyphosat vor allem aus unseren Waschmaschinen stammt.
Fatalism
Fatalism is the philosophical belief that all events are predetermined & inevitable, making human “free will” basically irrelevant to the ultimate outcome.
Determinism, predestination, & fatalism are often used interchangeably. But there are nuances:
In the Greco-Roman world, Fatalism wasn’t a theory. It was a cosmic reality. The Greeks envisioned fate as 3 sisters: Clotho (the spinner), Lachesis (the allotter), & Atropos (the unturnable, who cut the thread). Even the gods were subject to the Fates.
This created where heroism wasn’t defined by changing one’s fate. But by facing it with dignity. For example, Oedipus tries everything to avoid the prophecy that he’ll kill his dad & marry his mom. His very attempt to flee is what ultimately fulfills it.
The Stoics (like Seneca & Marcus Aurelius) practiced a form of “rational fatalism.” They compared humans to a dog tied to a moving cart. The dog can either trot happily with the cart (accepting fate) or be dragged kicking & screaming. The destination is the same. The only thing you control is your internal attitude.
The most famous challenge to fatalism is the Lazy Argument: If it’s fated that you’ll recover from an illness, you’ll recover whether you call a doctor or not. Philosophers like Chrysippus countered this by arguing that certain outcomes are “co-fated.”
It may be fated that you recover. But it’s also fated that you recover because you called a doctor. Your action is a link in the chain of fate, not an alternative to it.
In Islam, the concept of Qadar emphasizes a balance between divine sovereignty & human responsibility, folk traditions across the Middle East & South Asia have historically leaned toward a “written” destiny (Maktub – “it is written”). This perspective often provided a psychological cushion against the frequent tragedies of the medieval world, like a plagues or invasions.
American culture is infamously anti-fatalistic. The famous “American Dream” is built on the idea that you can pull yourself up by your own bootstraps & be the architect of your own destiny/fortune. However, fatalism does exist in American conscienceness in 2 specific ways:
In modern physics, the Block Universe theory (based on Einstein’s General Relativity) suggests that time is a dimension just like space. If the past, present, & future all exist simultaneously in a “block,” then the future is technically as fixed & unchangeable as the past. If using this view, our perception of “choosing” is just an illusion created by our movement through the time dimension. Essentially this is Scientific Fatalism.
The philosopher Karl Popper once joked that the fatalist is the person who looks both ways before crossing a 1-way street. Deep down, even those who claim the future is a fixed act, though their choices matter.
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#AmorFati #AppalachianFatalism #Atropos #BlockUniverse #BlockUniverseTheory #Calvinists #Chrysippus #Clotho #Determinism #Early20thCentury #Fatalism #Fates #FreeWill #Greeks #Islam #JackLondon #KarlPopper #Kismet #Lachesis #Late19thCentury #LazyArgument #LiteraryNaturalism #Maktub #MarcusAurelius #MiddleEast #ModernFatalism #Moirai #Naturalism #Oedipus #Predestination #Qadar #RationalFatalism #Romanticism #ScientificFatalism #Seneca #SouthAsia #StephenCrane #Stoics #TheOpenBoat