Monday, May 30, 2022

Basic timeline of Aldous Huxley

This post is a basic timeline of writer Aldous Huxley (1894-1963). There are 17 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1894: Born in Godalming, England
  • 1913: Enrolls at Balliol College, Oxford
  • 1916: Volunteers for the British Army
  • 1920's: Works at Brunner and Mond chemical plant
  • 1921: Publishes Chrome Yellow
  • 1928: Publishes Point Counter Point
  • 1932: Publishes Brave New World
  • 1937: Moves to Los Angeles, California
  • 1939: Publishes After Many a Summer
  • 1942: Publishes The Art of Seeing
  • 1945: Publishes The Perennial Philosophy
  • 1952: Publishes The Devils of Loudun
  • 1953: First mescaline experience
  • 1954: Publishes Doors of Perception
  • 1960: Becomes a visiting professor at MIT
  • 1962: Publishes Island
  • 1963: Died at age 69 in Los Angeles, California

Basic timeline of George Orwell

This post is a basic timeline of writer George Orwell (1903-1950). There are 23 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1903: Born in Motihari, British India
  • 1904: Moves to Henley-on-Thames, England
  • 1917: Becomes a King's Scholar at Eton College
  • 1922: Joins the Indian Imperial Police in Burma
  • 1927: Moves to London, England
  • 1928: Moves to Paris, France
  • 1929: Moves to Suffolk, England
  • 1932: Becomes teacher at Hawthorns High School in London
  • 1933: Publishes Down and Out in Paris and London
  • 1934: Publishes Burmese Days
  • 1935: Publishes A Clergyman's Daughter
  • 1936: Publishes Shooting an Elephant
  • 1936: Publishes Keep the Aspidistra Flying
  • 1936: Joins the Spanish Civil War
  • 1937: Moves to Greenwich, England
  • 1937: Publishes The Road to Wigan Pier
  • 1938: Publishes Homage to Catalonia
  • 1939: Publishes Coming Up for Air
  • 1940: Publishes Inside the Whale
  • 1945: Publishes Animal Farm
  • 1946: Publishes Critical Essays
  • 1949: Publishes Nineteen Eighty-Four
  • 1950: Died at age 46 in London, England

Basic timeline of William Shakespeare

This post is a basic timeline of writer William Shakespeare (1564-1616). There are 32 events listed below chronologically.

  • Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, England (1564)
  • Titus Andronicus (1588-1593, estimate)
  • The Comedy of Errors (1589-1595, estimate)
  • The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1589-1593, estimate)
  • The Taming of the Shrew (1590-1592, estimate)
  • Henry VI, Part 1 (1591, estimate)
  • Romeo and Juliet (1591-1595, estimate)
  • Richard II (1595, estimate)
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (1595-1596, estimate)
  • The Merchant of Venice (1596-1599, estimate)
  • Much Ado About Nothing (1598-1599, estimate)
  • All's Well That Ends Well (1598-1608, estimate)
  • Julius Caesar (1599)
  • As You Like It (1599, estimate)
  • Henry V (1599, estimate)
  • Hamlet (1599-1601, estimate)
  • Twelfth Night (1601-1602, estimate)
  • Troilus and Cressida (1602, estimate)
  • Othello (1603, estimate)
  • Measure for Measure (1603-1604, estimate)
  • Coriolanus (1605-1608, estimate)
  • Macbeth (1606, estimate)
  • King Lear (1606, estimate)
  • Anthony and Cleopatra (1607, estimate)
  • Pericles, Prince of Tyre (1609, co-author)
  • Sonnets (1609)
  • The Winter's Tale (1610-1611, estimate)
  • The Tempest (1610-1611, estimate)
  • Cymbeline (1611, estimate)
  • Henry VIII (1613, co-author with John Fletcher)
  • The Two Noble Kinsmen (1613-1614, co-author with John Fletcher)
  • Died at age 52 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England (1616)

Sources

Basic timeline of Kurt Vonnegut

This post is a basic timeline of writer Kurt Vonnegut (1922-2007). There are 22 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1922: Born in Indianapolis, Indiana
  • 1940: Enrolls at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York
  • 1943: Enlists in the United States Army
  • 1945: Enrolls at the University of Chicago
  • 1945: Begins working for the City News Bureau of Chicago
  • 1940's: Begins working as a writer for General Electric
  • 1952: Publishes Player Piano
  • 1959: Publishes The Sirens of Titan
  • 1961: Publishes Harrison Bergeron
  • 1962: Publishes Mother Night
  • 1963: Publishes Cat's Cradle
  • 1968: Publishes Welcome to the Monkey House
  • 1969: Publishes Slaughterhouse-Five
  • 1970: Writes play Happy Birthday, Wanda June
  • 1973: Publishes Breakfast of Champions
  • 1976: Publishes Slapstick
  • 1985: Publishes Galápagos
  • 1987: Publishes Bluebeard
  • 1991: Publishes Fates Worse Than Death
  • 1997: Publishes Timequake
  • 2005: Publishes A Man Without a Country
  • 2007: Died at age 84 in New York City

Basic timeline of John Milton

This post is a basic timeline of writer John Milton (1608-1674). There are 17 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1608: Born in London, England
  • 1625: Enrolls at Christ's College, Cambridge
  • 1632: Moves to Hammersmith, London
  • 1637: Writes Lycidas
  • 1638: Goes on tour of France and Italy
  • 1644: Publishes Areopagitica
  • 1645: Publishes L'Allegro
  • 1645: Publishes Il Penseroso
  • 1649: Publishes The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates
  • 1649: Publishes Eikonoklastes
  • 1652: Publishes Defensio pro Populo Anglicano
  • 1659: Publishes A Treatise of Civil Power
  • 1660: Publishes The Ready and Easy Way to Establish a Free Commonwealth
  • 1667: Publishes Paradise Lost
  • 1671: Publishes Paradise Regained
  • 1673: Publishes When I Consider How My Light is Spent
  • 1674: Died at age 65 in London England

Sunday, May 29, 2022

Basic timeline of Jane Austen

This post is a basic timeline of writer Jane Austen (1775-1817). There are 14 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1775: Born in Steventon, England
  • 1783: Moves to Oxford, England for education
  • 1785: Enrolls in boarding school in Reading, England
  • 1787-1793: Writes Juvenilia collection of works
  • 1794: Writes Lady Susan (published posthumously)
  • 1800: Moves to Bath, England
  • 1803: Writes Northanger Abbey (published posthumously)
  • 1809: Moves to Chawton, England
  • 1811: Publishes Sense and Sensibility
  • 1813: Publishes Pride and Prejudice
  • 1814: Publishes Mansfield Park
  • 1816: Publishes Emma
  • 1817: Writes Persuasion (published posthumously)
  • 1817: Died at age 41 In Winchester, England

Basic timeline of Virginia Woolf

This post is a basic timeline of writer Virginia Woolf. (1882-1941). There are 13 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1882: Born in London, England
  • 1897: Enrolls at King's College London
  • 1910: Moves to Firle, England
  • 1915: Publishes The Voyage Out
  • 1918: Moves to Lewes, England
  • 1925: Publishes Mrs Dalloway
  • 1927: Publishes To the Lighthouse
  • 1928: Publishes Orlando
  • 1929: Publishes A Room of One's Own
  • 1931: Publishes The Waves
  • 1937: Publishes The Years
  • 1941: Publishes Between the Acts
  • 1941: Died age age 59 in Lewes, England

Basic timeline of Charles Dickens

This post is a basic timeline of Charles Dickens (1812-1870). There are 20 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1812: Born in Portsmouth, England
  • 1827: Begins working as a clerk for law office in London
  • 1836: Publishes The Pickwick Papers
  • 1838: Publishes Oliver Twist
  • 1839: Publishes Nicholas Nickleby
  • 1840: Begins writing Master Humphrey's Clock periodical
  • 1842: First visit to the United States
  • 1843: Publishes A Christmas Carol
  • 1845: Becomes editor of Daily News
  • 1846: Establishes Urania Cottage for women
  • 1847: Publishes Dombey and Son
  • 1849: Publishes David Copperfield
  • 1852: Publishes Bleak House
  • 1854: Publishes Hard Times
  • 1856: Publishes Little Dorrit
  • 1858: Goes on reading tour in England, Scotland and Ireland
  • 1859: Publishes A Tale of Two Cities
  • 1861: Publishes Great Expectations
  • 1867: Second visit to the United States
  • 1870: Died at age 58 in Higham, England

Basic timeline of Mark Twain

This post is a basic timeline of writer Mark Twain (1835-1910). There are 17 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1835: Born in Florida, Missouri
  • 1839: Moves to Hannibal, Missouri with family
  • 1851: Begins writing for the Hannibal Journal
  • 1850's: Beings working as a printer in various cities
  • 1863: Begins writing for Territorial Enterprise in Virginia City, Nevada
  • 1865: Publishes The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
  • 1867: Travels to Europe and the Middle East
  • 1969: Publishes The Innocents Abroad
  • 1873: Moves to Hartford, Connecticut
  • 1873: Publishes The Gilded Age
  • 1876: Publishes The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • 1881: Publishes The Prince and the Pauper
  • 1883: Publishes Life on the Mississippi
  • 1884: Publishes Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  • 1889: Publishes A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court
  • 1895: Begins world lecture tour
  • 1910: Died at age 74 in Redding, Connecticut

List of New York City boroughs

This post is a list of the New York City boroughs. There are 5 boroughs listed below alphabetically. Source: visittheusa.com

  • Bronx
  • Brooklyn
  • Manhattan
  • Queens
  • Staten Island

Saturday, May 28, 2022

List of chapters in the Bhagavad Gita

This post is a list of chapters in the Bhagavad Gita. There are 18 chapters listed below.
  1. Arjuna's Grief
  2. Yoga of Knowledge
  3. Karma Yoga
  4. Renunciation of Action
  5. Yoga of True Renunciation
  6. Yoga of Meditation
  7. Knowledge and Wisdom
  8. Imperishable Brahman
  9. The Royal Secret
  10. Divine Glories
  11. The Cosmic Form
  12. Yoga of Devotion
  13. The Field and Its Knower
  14. The Yoga of Gunas
  15. Yoga of the Supreme Spirit
  16. Divine and Devilish Estates
  17. The Threefold Path
  18. Liberation Through Renunciation

Collection of simplicity quotes

This post is collection of quotes about simplicity. There are 8 quotes listed below alphabetically by last name.

Albert Einstein (1879-1955, physicist):
1. "It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience." (On the Method of Theoretical Physics, 1933)

Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976, physicist):
2. "Even for the physicist, the description in plain language will be the criterion of the degree of understanding that has been reached." (Physics and Philosophy, 1958)

David Hilbert (1862-1943, mathematician):
3. "...it is ingrained in mathematical science that every real advance goes hand in hand with the invention of sharper and simpler methods..." (Mathematical Problems, 1900)

John Kenneth Galbraith (1908-2006, economist):
4. "Do not be alarmed by simplification, complexity is often a device for claiming sophistication, or for evading simple truths." (The Age of Uncertainty, 1977)

Isaac Newton (1642-1727, physicist):
5. "Truth is ever to be found in simplicity and not in the multiplicity and confusion of things." (Quoted in the Religion of Isaac Newton by Frank Manuel)

William of Ockham (1287-1347, philosopher):
6. "When you have two competing theories that make exactly the same predictions, the simpler one is the better." (AZQuotes.com)

Ptolemy (100-170 AD, mathematician):
7. "We consider it good principle to explain the phenomena by the simplest hypothesis possible." (Quoted in the Science of Conjecture by James Franklin)

John Searle (1932-now, philosopher):
8 ."Where questions of style and exposition are concerned I try to follow a simple maxim: if you can't say it clearly you don't understand it yourself." (Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind, 1993)

List of quotes by person posts: 2022

This post is a list of quotes by person posts for this blog in 2022. The general theme of these posts is knowledge and the internet. There are 51 posts listed below chronologically. This post was last updated December 31st, 2022.

    January
    February
    March
    April
    May

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Basic timeline of Michel Foucault

This post is a basic timeline of philosopher Michel Foucault (1926-1984). There are 15 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1926: Born in Poitiers, France
  • 1946: Enrolls at École Normale Supérieure
  • 1951: Begins teaching at École Normale Supérieure
  • 1955: Moves to Sweden and works at the University of Uppsala
  • 1958: Moves to Warsaw, Poland
  • 1960: Becomes professor at the University of Clermont-Ferrand
  • 1961: Publishes The History of Madness
  • 1963: Publishes The Birth of the Clinic
  • 1966: Publishes The Order of Things
  • 1966: Begins teaching at the University of Tunis
  • 1969: Publishes The Archaeology of Knowledge
  • 1975: Publishes Discipline and Punish
  • 1976: Publishes The History of Sexuality
  • 1980: Becomes visiting professor at the University of California, Berkeley
  • 1984: Died at age 57 in Paris, France

Terence McKenna: Magic - language quotes

This post is a collection of quotes about the language from Terence McKenna in a бor video titled Magic. I recommend listening to the video at this link. There are 3 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "This is what those elves in hyperspace are trying to push us toward. Remember how I said, they sing objects into existence? ...It's that in order to get the ambiguity out of language we are going to have to go to a wider bandwidth. And the wider bandwidth is visual." (28:55)

2. "The only way you can transcend the ambiguity of language is if you turn it into something beheld." (31:30)

3. "And notice that when we talk about language, our notions of clarity, there it is, our notions of clear speaking are all visual metaphors. If you think you think you really understand somebody, then you say, 'I see what you mean'." (32:12)

Basic timeline of Niels Bohr

This post is a basic timeline of physicist Niels Bohr (1885-1962). There are 11 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1885: Born in Copenhagen, Denmark
  • 1903: Enrolls at Copenhagen University
  • 1911: Publishes Studies on the Election Theory of Metals
  • 1913: Publishes the Bohr model of the atom
  • 1920: Establishes the Institute of Theoretical Physics
  • 1922: Receives the Nobel Prize in Physics
  • 1943: Escapes from Denmark during World War II
  • 1943: Begins working for the Manhattan Project
  • 1950: Writes letter to the United Nations for nuclear energy
  • 1952: Pledges to support CERN
  • 1962: Died at age 77 in Copenhagen, Denmark

Basic timeline of Fyodor Dostoevsky

This post is a basic timeline of writer Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881). There are 12 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1821: Born in Moscow, Russia
  • 1838: Enrolls at Nikolayev Military Engineering Institute
  • 1843: Becomes a lieutenant engineer
  • 1846: Publishes Poor Folk
  • 1849: Arrest and sent to exile for reading banned works
  • 1854: Released from prison
  • 1864: Publishes Notes from Underground
  • 1866: Publishes Crime and Punishment
  • 1868: Publishes The Idiot
  • 1871: Publishes Demons
  • 1879: Publishes The Brothers Karamazov
  • 1881: Died at age 59 in Saint Petersburg, Russia

Basic timeline of James Joyce

This post is a basic timeline of writer James Joyce (1882-1941). There are 11 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1882: Born in Dublin, Ireland
  • 1887: Moves to Bray, Ireland with family
  • 1898: Enrolls at University College
  • 1905: Moves to Trieste, Italy
  • 1914: Publishes Dubliners
  • 1915: Moves to Zürich, Switzerland
  • 1916: Publishes A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
  • 1920: Moves to Paris, France
  • 1922: Publishes Ulysses
  • 1939: Publishes Finnegans Wake
  • 1941: Died at age 58 in Zürich, Switzerland

Monday, May 23, 2022

Basic timeline of Karl Popper

This post is a basic timeline of philosopher Karl Popper (1902-1994). There are 16 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1902: Born in Vienna, Austria-Hungary
  • 1919: Joins Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria
  • 1922: Enrolls at the University of Vienna
  • 1925: Enrolls at Pädagogisches Institut
  • 1928: Receives doctorate in psychology
  • 1930-1933: Writes The Two Fundamental Problems of the Theory of Knowledge
  • 1934: Publishes The Logic of Scientific Discovery
  • 1937: Begins lecturing at the University of New Zealand
  • 1944: Publishes The Poverty of Historicism
  • 1945: Publishes The Open Society and Its Enemies
  • 1946: Becomes reader at the London School of Economics
  • 1949: Becomes professor at the University of London
  • 1956: Publishes Realism and the Aim of Science
  • 1963: Publishes Conjectures and Refutations
  • 1969: Retires from the University of London
  • 1994: Died at age 92 in London, England

Basic timeline of Willard Van Orman Quine

This post is a basic timeline of philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine (1908-2000). There are 14 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1908: Born in Akron, Ohio
  • 1932: Receives PhD from Harvard University
  • 1932: Becomes Harvard Junior Fellow
  • 1936: Publishes Truth by Convention
  • 1940's: Serves in the U.S. Navy during World War II
  • 1948: Publishes On What There Is
  • 1951: Publishes Mathematical Logic
  • 1951: Publishes Two Dogmas of Empiricism
  • 1956: Publishes Quantifiers and Propositional Attitudes
  • 1960: Publishes Word and Object
  • 1969: Publishes Epistemology Naturalized
  • 1974: Publishes The Roots of Reference
  • 1980: Publishes Elementary Logic
  • 2000: Died at age 92 in Boston Massachusetts

Basic timeline of Thomas Kuhn

This post is a basic timeline of philosopher Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996). There are 13 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1922: Born in Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1940: Receives degree in physics from Harvard University
  • 1948: Begins teaching at Harvard University
  • 1957: Publishes The Copernican Revolution
  • 1956: Begins teaching at the University of California, Berkeley
  • 1961: Publishes The Function of Measurement in Modern Physical Science
  • 1962: Publishes The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
  • 1964: Begins teaching at Princeton University
  • 1977: Publishes The Essential Tension
  • 1979: Begins teaching at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • 1982: Receives George Sarton Medal
  • 1987: Publishes Black-Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity
  • 1996: Died at age 73 in Cambridge Massachusetts

Basic timeline of Marshall McLuhan

This post is a basic timeline of media theorist Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980). There are 19 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1911: Born in Edmonton, Canada
  • 1915: Moves to Winnipeg, Canada with family
  • 1928: Enrolls at the University of Manitoba
  • 1934: Enrolls at the University of Cambridge
  • 1936: Becomes teaching assistant at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • 1937: Begins teaching at Saint Louis University
  • 1944: Begins teaching at Assumption College
  • 1946: Begins teaching at the University of Toronto
  • 1950's: Establishes academic journal Explorations with Edmund Carpenter
  • 1951: Publishes The Mechanical Bridge
  • 1962: Publishes The Gutenberg Galaxy
  • 1963: Establishes the Centre for Culture and Technology
  • 1964: Publishes Understanding Media
  • 1967: Begins teaching at Fordham University
  • 1967: Publishes The Medium is the Massage with Jerome Angle
  • 1968: Moves back to the University of Toronto
  • 1968: Publishes War and Peace in the Global Village
  • 1970: Publishes From Cliché to Archetype
  • 1980: Died at age 69 in Toronto, Canada

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Basic timeline of the Scientific Revolution

This post is a basic timeline of the Scientific Revolution. There are 16 events listed below alphabetically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1543: Nicolaus Copernicus publishes De revolutionibus orbium coelestium
  • 1543: Andreas Vesalius publishes On the Structure of the Human Body
  • 1576-1580: Tycho Brahe's Uraniborg astronomical observatory is constructed
  • 1600: William Gilbert publishes De Magnete
  • 1609: Johannes Kepler publishes Astronomia nova
  • 1610: Galileo Galilei publishes The Starry Messenger
  • 1620: Francis Bacon publishes Novum Organum
  • 1628: William Harvey publishes De Motu Cordis
  • 1632: Galileo Galilei publishes Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo
  • 1637: René Descartes publishes Discourse on the Method
  • 1660: Royal Society is established
  • 1660's: Antonie van Leeuwenhoek begins publishing microscope observations
  • 1661: Robert Boyle publishes The Sceptical Chymist
  • 1687: Isaac Newton publishes Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica
  • 1690: Christiaan Huygens publishes Treatise on Light
  • 1704: Isaac Newton publishes Opticks

Basic timeline of Dmitri Mendeleev

This post is basic timeline of chemist Dmitri Mendeleev (1834-1907). There are 17 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1834: Born in Verkhnie Aremzyani, Russia
  • 1849: Travels from Siberia to western Russia with mother
  • 1849: Gets rejected from Moscow University
  • 1850: Enrolls at the Main Pedagogical Institute in Saint Petersburg
  • 1855: Moves to the Crimean Peninsula
  • 1855: Becomes science master at the 1st Simferopol Gymnasium
  • 1857: Moves back to Saint Petersburg
  • 1861: Publishes Organic Chemistry
  • 1864: Becomes professor at the Saint Petersburg Technological Institute
  • 1865: Becomes professor at Saint Petersburg State University
  • 1867: Discovers the periodic table
  • 1868: Publishes Principles of Chemistry
  • 1882: Receives Royal Society's Davy Medal
  • 1892: Elected Foreign Member of the Royal Society
  • 1905: Receives Royal Society's Copley Medal
  • 1905: Elected to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
  • 1907: Died at age 72 in Saint Petersburg, Russia

Basic timeline of Charles Darwin

This post is a basic timeline of biologist Charles Darwin (1809-1882). There are 18 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1809: Born in Shrewsbury, England
  • 1825: Works as an apprentice doctor
  • 1825: Enrolls at the University of Edinburgh Medical School
  • 1828: Enrolls at Christ's College, Cambridge
  • 1831: Graduates from Cambridge
  • 1831: Leaves on voyage of the HMS Beagle
  • 1836: Returns to England from voyage
  • 1839: Publishes The Voyage of the Beagle
  • 1842: Publishes The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs
  • 1853: Receives Royal Society's Royal Medal
  • 1859: Publishes On the Origin of Species
  • 1862: Publishes Fertilisation of Orchids
  • 1864: Receives Royal Society's Copley Medal
  • 1868: Publishes The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication
  • 1871: Publishes The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex
  • 1872: Publishes The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals
  • 1881: Publishes The Formation of Vegetable Mould, through the Actions of Worms
  • 1882: Died at age 73 in Down, England

Basic timeline of Sigmund Freud

This post is a basic timeline of psychologist Sigmund Freud (1856-1939). There are 21 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1856: Born in Příbor, Austrian Empire
  • 1860: Moves to Vienna, Austria
  • 1873: Enrolls at University of Vienna
  • 1877: Begins studying brains at Ernst Brücke's laboratory
  • 1879: Serves in the military for one year
  • 1881: Qualifies as a doctor of medicine at University of Vienna
  • 1884: Publishes On Aphasia: A Critical Study
  • 1885: Three-month fellowship in Paris with Jean-Martin Charcot
  • 1886: Opens clinical practice in Vienna
  • 1895: Publishes Studies on Hysteria
  • 1899: Publishes The Interpretation of Dreams
  • 1901: Publishes The Psychopathology of Everyday Life
  • 1905: Publishes Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
  • 1905: Publishes Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria
  • 1908: Vienna Psychoanalytic Society is established
  • 1910: International Psychoanalyical Association is established
  • 1917: Publishes Introduction to Psychoanalysis
  • 1923: Publishes The Ego and the Id
  • 1930: Receives the Goethe Prize
  • 1938: Leaves Vienna after Nazi Germany annexes Austria
  • 1939: Died at age 83 in London, England

Saturday, May 21, 2022

Basic timeline of Ernest Hemingway

This post is a basic timeline of writer Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961). There are 20 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1899: Born in Oak Park, Illinois
  • 1918: Becomes an ambulance driver in World War I
  • 1918: Injured during World War I and returned home
  • 1919: Moves to Toronto, Canada
  • 1919: Begins writing for the Toronto Star
  • 1920: Moves to Chicago, Illinois
  • 1922: Begins traveling around Europe
  • 1926: Publishes The Sun Also Rises
  • 1928: Moves to Kansas City, Missouri
  • 1929: Publishes A Farewell to Arms
  • 1937: Goes to Spain to report on the Spanish Civil War
  • 1940: Publishes For Whom the Bell Tolls
  • 1944: Goes to Europe to report on World War II
  • 1947: Receives Bronze Star for bravery
  • 1953: Receives Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
  • 1943: Receives Nobel Prize in Literature
  • 1946: Begins writing The Garden of Eden
  • 1952: Publishes The Old Man and the Sea
  • 1959: Moves to Ketchum, Idaho
  • 1961: Died at age 61 in Ketchum, Idaho

Basic timeline of Paul Dirac

This post is a basic timeline of physicist Paul Dirac (1902-1984). There are 13 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1902: Born in Bristol, England
  • 1921: Receives degree in engineering from the University of Bristol
  • 1921: Enrolls at St. John's College, Cambridge
  • 1925: Begins research for the Royal Commission for the Exhibition 1851
  • 1928: Proposes the Dirac equation
  • 1930: Publishes The Principles of Quantum Mechanics
  • 1932: Becomes professor at Cambridge
  • 1933: Receives Nobel Prize in Physics
  • 1964: Publishes Lectures on Quantum Mechanics
  • 1966: Publishes Lectures on Quantum Field Theory
  • 1970: Becomes professor at Florida State University
  • 1974: Publishes Spinors in Hilbert Space
  • 1984: Died at age 82 in Tallahassee, Florida

Basic timeline of Franz Kafka

This post is a basic timeline of writer Franz Kafka (1883-1924). There are 12 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1883: Born in Prague, Kingdom of Bohemia
  • 1901: Enrolls at the Deutsche Karl-Ferdinands-Universität
  • 1906: Receives Doctor of Law degree
  • 1907: Begins working at Assicurasioni Generali
  • 1908: Begins working at the Worker's Accident Insurance Institute
  • 1911: Begins writing Amerika
  • 1913: Publishes The Judgment
  • 1914: Begins writing The Trial
  • 1915: Publishes The Metamorphosis
  • 1922: Publishes A Hunger Artist
  • 1922: Begins writing The Castle
  • 1924: Died at age 40 in Kierling, Austria

Basic timeline of Gilles Deleuze

This post is a basic timeline of philosopher Gilles Deleuze (1925-1995). There are 15 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1925: Born in Paris, France
  • 1944: Enrolls at Sorbonne in Paris
  • 1953: Publishes Empiricism and Subjectivity
  • 1957: Begins teaching at the University of Paris
  • 1960: Begins teaching at the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique
  • 1962: Publishes Nietzsche and Philosophy
  • 1964: Becomes professor at the University of Lyon
  • 1968: Publishes Difference and Repetition
  • 1969: Publishes The Logic Sense
  • 1969: Begins teaching at the University of Paris VIII
  • 1972: Publishes Anti-Oedipus with Félix Guattari
  • 1980: Publishes A Thousand Plateaus with Félix Guattari
  • 1987: Retires from the University of Paris VIII
  • 1991: Publishes What is Philosophy?
  • 1995: Died at age 70 in Paris, France

Basic timeline of Alexander Grothendieck

This post is a basic timeline of mathematician Alexander Grothendieck (1928-2014). There are 21 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1928: Born in Berlin, Prussia
  • 1939: Begins living an internment camp with family
  • 1945: Enrolls at University of Montpellier, France
  • 1948: Begins studying in Paris, France
  • 1953: Begins studying at the University of São Paul, Brazil
  • 1958: Becomes professor at the Institut des hautes études scientifiques
  • 1960: Publishes Éléments de géométrie algébrique
  • 1966: Receives the Fields Medal
  • 1970: Temporarily retires from scientific research
  • 1980: Begins writing La Longue Marche à travers la théorie de Galois
  • 1983: Publishes Pursuing Stacks
  • 1984: Proposes research project Esquisse d'un Programme
  • 1984: Begins work at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
  • 1986: Publishes Récoltes et semailles
  • 1987: Publishes La Clef des Songes
  • 1988: Declines Crafoord Prize
  • 1988: Formally retires from research
  • 1990: Writes Lettre de Bonne Nouvelle
  • 1991: Moves to Lasserre, France
  • 1991: Publishes Les Dérivateurs
  • 2014: Died at age 86 in Saint-Lizier, France

Basic timeline of Jacques Derrida

This post is a basic timeline of philosopher Jacques Derrida (1930-2004). There are 14 events listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • 1930: Born in El Biar, Algeria
  • 1946: Enrolls at the Lycée Louis-le Grand in Paris, France
  • 1956: Receives grant to study at Harvard University
  • 1960: Begins teaching at the Sorbonne in Paris, France
  • 1966: Gives lecture Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences
  • 1967: Publishes Speech and Phenomena
  • 1967: Publishes Of Grammatology
  • 1967: Publishes Writing and Difference
  • 1972: Publishes Margins of Philosophy
  • 1983: Co-founds Collège international de philosophie
  • 1984: Becomes professor at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris, France
  • 1986: Becomes professor at University of California, Irvine
  • 1993: Publishes Specters of Marx
  • 2004: Died at age 74 in Paris France

Friday, May 20, 2022

List of person timeline posts

This post is a list of person timeline posts for this blog. There are 96 people listed below by topic and chronologically by year of birth. This post was last updated June 26th, 2022.

    Art (5)

    Biology (1)

    Chemistry (4)

    Economics (7)

    History (8)

    Internet and computers (1)

    Literature (16)

    Mathematics (6)

    Philosophy (30)

    Physics (15)

   Psychology (2)

    Sports (1)

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Stephen Downes: personal education

This post is a collection of quotes from Stephen Downes about personal education in a lecture with the Chang School in 2015. I recommend watching to the interview at this link. There are 8 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "What is the best model for learning? What is the best organization? What is the best structure? What is the best design? What is the best, indeed technology?" (1:11)

2. "The right model is to stop attempting to design learning and education and technology for people, and to create mechanisms that enable them to do it themselves." (5:08)

3. "We have to look at learning as something that is not done for us but is something that we do... We have to look at education as a reclamation project of owning our own learning again." (6:17)

4. "Personalized is something that people to do for you. Personal is something you do for yourself." (7:24)

5. "[Personal] is built and based on your own needs and desires and its self-organizing."(7:59)

6. "Reclaimed learning is network learning. Instead of all meeting together in a common institution, in a learning management system, we connect directly to each other peer to peer in networks of our own design, our own creation." (8:46)

7. "Think of [collectivism] as the projection of one's own neural network out into the social network." (11:59)

8. "[Cooperation] is a meeting of people who exchange mutual value but they come from a different place. They're trying to do different things. They're interacting in a syntactic way when each person has their own content, their own idea of reality, their own way of thinking, their own things that they want to do." (14:30)

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

5R activities of Open Educational Resources

This post is a list of the 5R activities of open educational resources (OER) proposed by David Wiley. Source: nsufl.libguides.com

  • Retain
  • Reuse
  • Revise
  • Remix
  • Redistribute

Monday, May 16, 2022

Henry Jenkins: participatory culture

This post is a collection of quotes from Henry Jenkins about participatory culture in a lecture with the India Culture Lab in 2015. I recommend watching the interview at this link. There are 4 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "It actually goes back to the 1920's, this idea that a fan community can be a visible participant in what the story's about..." (1:58)

2. "In Convergence Culture, I ended with this idea that we were learning to play through our relationship with popular culture skills, capacities, social connections that we would use to change the world in the future." (1:00:11)
 
3. "...we are seeing that the ability of remix, to recirculate stories of popular culture is making a difference in struggles for social justice and equality around the world. And those stories become really powerful tools for changing the hearts and minds of society." (1:00:29)

4. "We need a lot of models for what we mean by co-creation. We should be skeptical of each new model figuring out which way they're encouraging equitable stakes and which ways they're not. And we can't celebrate any given model right away but we all should be open to seeing how things play out and what emerges from those models as they're taking shape." (1:27:00)

Sunday, May 15, 2022

Gregg Gillis (Girl Talk): interview at Bonnaroo

This post is a collection of quotes from Gregg Gillis (also known as Girl Talk) in an interview with Moe Trains Eats. Gregg Gillis is an American electronic music producer best known for mashups and sampling. I recommend watching to the interview at this link. There are 3 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "I don't feel morally opposed to what I'm doing. I really feel like the music is just kind of promoting other music and its not affecting anyone's sales or anything like that." (23:22)

2. "You can either manipulate physical media that other people did and kind of make something new out of it. Or you can manipulate ideas and to me its very similar." (23:44)

3. "I know I'm sampling. I'm blatant. I'm as obvious as I can be. But at the same time you can really make new music out of samples..." (25:46)

Top 10 largest asteroids in the Solar System

This post is a list of the top 10 largest asteroids in the Solar System by diameter. Source: astronoo.com
  1. Ceres: 974 km
  2. Pallas: 582 km
  3. Vesta: 572 km
  4. Hygiea: 530 km
  5. Sylvia: 384 km
  6. Hektor: 370 km
  7. Europa: 360 km
  8. Eunomia: 357 km
  9. Davida: 357 km
  10. Interamnia: 350 km

List of Solar System planets by rotation period

This post is a list of Solar System planets by rotation period on its own axis. There are 8 planets listed below by shortest to longest rotation period. Source: NASA

  • Mercury: 1,408 hours (58 Earth days)
  • Venus: 5,832 hours (243 Earth days)
  • Earth: 24 hours
  • Mars: 25 hours
  • Jupiter: 10 hours
  • Saturn: 11 hours
  • Uranus: 17 hours
  • Neptune: 16 hours

List of Solar System planets by orbital period

This post is a list of Solar System planets by orbital period around the Sun. There are 8 planets listed below by shortest to longest orbital period. Source: spaceplace.nasa.gov

  • Mercury: 88 days
  • Venus: 225 days
  • Earth: 365 days
  • Mars: 687 days
  • Jupiter: 4,333 days (~ 12 years)
  • Saturn: 10,759 days (~ 29 years)
  • Uranus: 30,687 days (~ 84 years)
  • Neptune: 60,190 days (~ 165 years)

Top 40 largest objects in the Solar System

This post is a list of the top 40 largest objects in the Solar System by radius. If the object is a moon, the planet is also provided. Source: Wikipedia
  1. Sun: 695 thousand km
  2. Jupiter: 69 thousand km
  3. Saturn: 58 thousand km
  4. Uranus: 25 thousand km
  5. Neptune: 24 thousand km
  6. Earth: 6.3 thousand km
  7. Venus: 6.0 thousand km
  8. Mars: 3.3 thousand km
  9. Ganymede: 2.6 thousand km (Jupiter)
  10. Titan: 2.5 thousand km (Jupiter)
  11. Mercury: 2.4 thousand km
  12. Callisto: 2.4 thousand km (Jupiter)
  13. Io: 1.8 thousand km (Jupiter)
  14. Moon: 1.7 thousand km (Earth)
  15. Europa: 1.5 thousand km (Jupiter)
  16. Triton: 1.3 thousand km (Neptune)
  17. Pluto: 1.1 thousand km
  18. Eris: 1.1 thousand km
  19. Haumea: 798 km
  20. Titania: 788 km (Uranus)
  21. Rhea: 763 km (Saturn)
  22. Oberon: 761 km (Uranus)
  23. Iapetus: 735 km (Saturn)
  24. Makemake: 715 km
  25. Gonggong: 615 km
  26. Charon: 606 km (Pluto)
  27. Umbriel: 584 km (Uranus)
  28. Ariel: 578 km (Uranus)
  29. Dione: 561 km (Saturn)
  30. Quaoar: 560 km
  31. Tethys: 533 km (Saturn)
  32. Sedna: 498 km
  33. Ceres: 469 km
  34. Orcus: 458 km
  35. Salacia: 423 km
  36. 2002 MS4: 400 km
  37. 2002 AW197: 384 km
  38. Varda: 373 km
  39. 2013 FY27: 370 km
  40. Ixion: 354 km

List of tracks on Feed the Animals (2008) by Girl Talk

This post is a list of tracks on Feed the Animals (2008) by Girl Talk. Source: discogs.com
  1. Play Your Part (Pt. 1)
  2. Shut the Club Down
  3. Still Here
  4. What It's All About
  5. Set It Off
  6. No Pause
  7. Like This
  8. Give Me a Beat
  9. Hands in the Air
  10. In Step
  11. Let Me See You
  12. Here's the Thing
  13. Don't Stop
  14. Play Your Part (Pt. 2)

List of tracks on Night Ripper (2006) by Girl Talk

This post is a list of tracks on Night Ripper (2006) by Girl Talk. Source: discogs.com
  1. Once Again
  2. That's My DJ
  3. Hold Up
  4. Too Deep
  5. Smash Your Head
  6. Minute by Minute
  7. Ask About Me
  8. Summer Smoke
  9. Friday Night
  10. Hand Clap
  11. Give and Go
  12. Bounce That
  13. Warm It Up
  14. Double Pump
  15. Overtime
  16. Peak Out

Saturday, May 14, 2022

Collection of David Bowie songs

This post is a collections of songs by David Bowie. There are 10 songs listed below alphabetically.

  • Changes
  • Five Years
  • Heroes
  • Life on Mars
  • Modern Love
  • Space Oddity
  • Starman
  • Under Pressure
  • Young Americans
  • Ziggy Stardust

Friday, May 13, 2022

Lila Tretikov: The Open Mind interview

This post is a collection of quotes from Lila Tretiokov in an interview with Alexander Hefner and The Open Mind in 2016. Tretiokov was the executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation from 2014 to 2016. I recommend watching to the interview. There are 2 quotes listed below chronologically. Sources: YouTubeThe Open Mind: Generation of KnowledgeWNET Group

1. "So as we progress, and develop those different types of [artificial] intelligences, and as we understand our own human mind, how do we actually enhance how we think about ourselves, about our society, about our planet and how do we evolve as a species?" (4:20)

2. "It could be visual, it could be auditorial, it could at some point maybe tactile. Right? Who knows what we're going to do in the future. And of course there's words, and text, and symbols, and numbers and all of those things that enable us to learn much better, enable us to really build on top of that new discoveries, and learn more, and truly explore and go as far as we want." (22:28)

List of original Beanie Babies

This post is a list of the original Beanie Babies in 1994. There are 9 Beanie Babies listed below alphabetically. Source: Wikipedia

  • Brownie the Bear
  • Chocolate the Moose
  • Flash the Dolphin
  • Legs the Frog
  • Patti the Platypus
  • Pinchers the Lobster
  • Splash the Whale
  • Spot the Dog
  • Squealer the Pig

Wayne Mackintosh: Flexible Learning NZ interview - educational resources

This post is a collection of quotes about educational resources from Wayne Mackintosh in an interview with Simon Atkinson and Flexible Learning NZ in 2021. I recommend watching to the interview at this link. There are 3 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "There is no form of educational delivery more cost-effective, more scalable, or more sustainable than open education." (2:44)

2. "OER (Open Educational Resources) are defined by UNESCO as learning, teaching, and research materials in any format and medium that: reside in the public domain or released under an open license, that permits no-cost access, plus permission for others to re-use, repurpose, adapt, and redistribute." (3:40)

3. "One can think about OER as building a parallel learning universe and being able to support learners who would never have the resources ever to come and study at your institution." (36:23)

List of locations in Super Mario Sunshine (2002)

This post is a list of locations in Super Mario Sunshine (2002). There are 8 locations listed below chronologically. Source: fandom.com
  1. Bianco Hills
  2. Ricco Harbor
  3. Gelato Beach
  4. Pinna Park
  5. Sirena Beach
  6. Noki Bay
  7. Pianta Village
  8. Corona Mountain

Thursday, May 12, 2022

List of zones in Sonic 3D Blast (1996)

This post is a list of zones in Sonic 3D Blast (1996). There are 8 zones listed below chronologically. Source: fandom.com
  1. Green Grove
  2. Rusty Ruin
  3. Spring Stadium
  4. Diamond Dust
  5. Volcano Valley
  6. Gene Gadget
  7. Panic Puppet
  8. Final Fight

List of building options in Sim Tower (1994)

List of items in Sim Tower (1994). There are 25 building options listed below alphabetically and by star rating. Source: fandom.com

    1 star
  • Condo
  • Fast food place
  • Floor
  • Lobby
  • Office
  • Stairs
  • Standard elevators

    2 star
  • Housekeeping
  • Security
  • Service elevator
  • Single hotel room

    3 star
  • Cinema
  • Escalator
  • Express elevator
  • Hotel suite
  • Medical center
  • Parking ramp
  • Parking spot
  • Party hall
  • Recycling center
  • Restaurant
  • Retail shop
  • Twin hotel room

    4 stars
  • Metro station

    5 stars
  • Cathedral

List of locations in Runescape (December 2001 update)

This post is a list of locations in Runescape in the December 2001 update. There are 24 locations listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Al Kharid
  • Barbarian Village
  • Champions Guild
  • Chaos Temple
  • Cooks Guild
  • Draynor Manor
  • Draynor Village
  • Dwarven Mine
  • Edgeville
  • Falador
  • Goblin Village
  • Graveyard (Wilderness)
  • Ice Mountain
  • Jail
  • Lava Maze (Wilderness)
  • Lumbridge
  • Mining Guild
  • Monastery
  • Palace
  • Port Sarim
  • Rimmington
  • Ruins (Wilderness)
  • Varrock
  • Wizard's Tower

Matt DeCarlo: RU Tartan interview - educational resources

This post is a collection of quotes about educational resources from Matt DeCarlo in an interview with Wesley Wallace and the RU Tartan in 2019. I recommend watching to the interview at this link. There are 2 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "One of the ideas that I really latch onto a lot is the idea of a non-disposable assignment or renewable assignment... Where I see scholarship going is a more collaborative approach where students are building durable, public artifacts of their learning." (29:31)

2. "So you have students creating resources with faculty members. You have students creating their own resources and creating almost like a brand for themselves and creating a space where they can share that stuff with other people." (30:26)

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Colin Wilson and the unknown

Colin Wilson (1931-2013) was an English writer best known for his contributions to existentialism and philosophy. The rest of this post is some quotes from Wilson.

Unknown


"All men are stuck in a kind of fog. They're surrounded by a wall of fog. They think this is perfectly normal but its not." (The Black Room, 1957)

"Boredom is basically a feeling of narrowness, and surely a narrow vision is bound to be less true than a broad one?" (The Misfits: A Study of Sexual Outsiders, 1988)

"The heart, oddly enough, seems to be the essential organ concerned. When we are in a hurry or doing something we dislike, we clench the heart, exactly like clenching a fist and nothing can get in. When we are filled with a sense of multiplicity and excitement we somehow 'open' the heart and allow reality to flow in." (Beyond the Occult, 1988)

Saturday, May 7, 2022

Terence McKenna: Timewave - internet quotes

This post is a collection of quotes about the internet from Terence McKenna in a бor video titled Timewave. I recommend listening to the video at this link. There are 4 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "Well I think that the real impact of the internet is art and that we have not yet begun to communicate with each other. We are so used to small mouth noises and text and we have the habits hammered into us by mass media, which are consumptive habits." (1:04:11)

2. "Collage is a unique, 20th century form of art. And it deconstructs culture and it has all kinds of adumbrations and echoes and resonances built into it. Hypertextualizing collage through image mapping to built vast multi-leveled hyper collage-like environments is something I want to do." (1:06:07)

3. "You should do your version. Everybody should understand, you have this little place where you can build and display your dreams... There is this place now which is a window into your soul that you can put online. And my website will become more and more me until to will be more me than I am." (1:06:55)

4. "This becomes an enormous database for learning, for understanding, for feeling what it is to be human." (1:08:44)

List of Daft Punk albums

This post is a list of Daft Punk albums as of May 7th, 2022. There are 10 albums listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

    Studio albums
  • Homework (1997)
  • Discovery (2001)
  • Human After All (2005)
  • Random Access Memories (2013)

    Live albums
  • Alive (1997)
  • Alive (2007)

    Soundtrack albums
  • Tron: Legacy (2010)

    Remix albums
  • Daft Club (2003)
  • Human After All: Remixes (2006)
  • Tron: Legacy Reconfigured (2011)
  • Homework (Remixes) (2022)

List of Beatles albums

This post is a list of Beatles studio albums. There are 22 albums listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia

  • Please Please Me (1963)
  • With the Beatles (1963)
  • Introducing... The Beatles (1964)
  • Meet the Beatles! (1964)
  • Twist and Shout (1964)
  • The Beatles' Second Album (1964)
  • The Beatles' Long Tall Sally (1964)
  • A Hard Day's Night (1964)
  • Something New (1964)
  • Beatles for Sale (1964)
  • Beatles '65 (1964)
  • Beatles VI (1965)
  • Help! (1965)
  • Rubber Soul (1965)
  • Yesterday and Today (1966)
  • Revolver (1966)
  • Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967)
  • Magical Mystery Tour (1967)
  • The White Album (1968)
  • Yellow Submarine (1969)
  • Abbey Road (1969)
  • Let It Be (1970)

Terence McKenna: Language Can Do Anything

This post is a collection of quotes from Terence McKenna in a We Plants Are Happy Plants video titled Language Can Do Anything. I recommend listening to the video at this link. There are 3 quotes listed below chronologically.

1. "What should be done? The answer is art has to be created on a massive scale, a small scale, everywhere all the time. That is the way to reach all these people." (1:30)

2. "Language can do anything... Let us build a ladder of words, an analogical engine, a bark of verses, a wagon of phrases... And these kind of structures are really to my mind ultimately to be seen as words." (4:02)

3. "...we must receive, transmit and conquertize the word in order to create a forward escape out of the contradictions in the world that are the legacy of bad language that's brought us this far. Its a healing of language" (5:09)

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Collection of c-button items in Zelda: Ocarina of Time (1998)

This post is a collection of c-button items in Zelda: Ocarina of Time (1998). This list does not include masks. There are 45 items listed below by type and alphabetically. Source: zeldadungeon.net

    General (17)
  • Bomb
  • Bombchu
  • Boomerang
  • Bottle
  • Deku Nut
  • Deku Stick
  • Fairy Bow
  • Fairy Ocarina
  • Fairy Slingshot
  • Hookshot
  • Lens of Truth
  • Longshot
  • Magic Bean
  • Megaton Hammer
  • Ocarina of Time
  • Weird Egg
  • Zelda's Letter

    Bottle items (11)
  • Big Poe Spirit
  • Blue Fire
  • Blue Potion
  • Bug
  • Fairy
  • Fish
  • Green Potion
  • Lon Lon Milk
  • Poe Spirit
  • Red Potion
  • Ruto's Letter

    Arrows (3)
  • Fire Arrow
  • Ice Arrow
  • Light Arrow

    Great Fairy items (3)
  • Din's Fire
  • Farore's Wind
  • Nayru's Love

    Trading sequence (11)
  • Broken Goron's Sword
  • Claim Check
  • Cojiro
  • Eyeball Frog
  • Odd Mushroom
  • Odd Potion
  • Poacher's Saw
  • Pocket Cucco
  • Pocket Egg
  • Prescription
  • World's Fienest Eye Drops

List of mini-games in Mario Party (1998)

This post is a list of minigames in Mario Party (1998). There are 50 mini-games listed below alphabetically and type. Source: fandom.com

    4-Player (24)
  • Balloon Burst
  • Bombs Away
  • Box Mountain Mayhem
  • Bumper Balls
  • Buried Treasure
  • Cast Always
  • Coin Block Blitz
  • Crazy Cutter
  • Face Lift
  • Grab Bag
  • Hammer Drop
  • Hot Bob-omb
  • Hot Rope Jump
  • Key-pa-Way
  • Mario Bandstand
  • Musical Mushroom
  • Mushroom Mix-Up
  • Platform Peril
  • Running of the Bulb
  • Shy Guy Says
  • Skateboard Scamper
  • Slot Car Derby
  • Tipsy Tourney
  • Treasure Divers

    1 vs. 3 (10)
  • Bash 'n' Cash
  • Bowl Over
  • Coin Block Bash
  • Coin Shower Flower
  • Crane Game
  • Paddle Battle
  • Pipe Maze
  • Piranha's Pursuit
  • Tightrope Treachery
  • Tug o' War

    2 vs. 2 (5)
  • Bobsled Run
  • Bombsketball
  • Deep Sea Divers
  • Desert Dash
  • Handcar Havoc

    1-Player (11)
  • Bumper Ball Maze (unlockable)
  • Ghost Guess
  • Ground Pound
  • Knock Block Tower
  • Limbo Dance
  • Memory Match
  • Pedal Power
  • Shell Game
  • Slot Machine
  • Teetering Towers
  • Whack-a-Plant

List of tracks in Hydro Thunder (1999)

This post is a list of tracks in Hydro Thunder (1999). There are 13 tracks listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Arctic Circle
  • Castle Von Dandy (arcade-only)
  • Catacomb (arcade-only)
  • The Far East
  • Greek Isles
  • Hydro Speedway (arcade-only)
  • Lake Powell
  • Lost Island
  • New York Disaster
  • Nile Adventure (unlockable)
  • Ship Graveyard
  • Thunder Park
  • Venice Canals

List of locations in Cruis'n USA (1994)

This post is a list of locations in Cruis'n USA (1994). There are 14 locations listed below alphabetically. Sources: fandom.com

  • Appalachia
  • Arizona
  • Beverly Hills
  • Chicago
  • Death Valley
  • Golden Gate Park (unlockable)
  • Grand Canyon
  • Indiana (unlockable)
  • Iowa
  • LA Freeway
  • Redwood Forest
  • San Francisco (unlockable)
  • US 101
  • Washington, DC (unlockable)

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

List of characters in Tony Hawk's Pro Skater (2000)

This post is a list of characters in Tony Hawk's Pro Skater (2000). There are 13 characters listed below alphabetically by last name. Source: fandom.com

  • Bob Burnquist
  • Kareem Campbell
  • Private Carrera (unlockable)
  • Officer Dick (unlockable)
  • Rune Glifberg
  • Tony Hawk
  • Bucky Lasek
  • Rodney Mullen
  • Chad Muska
  • Andrew Reynolds
  • Geoff Rowley
  • Elissa Steamer
  • Jamie Thomas

List of civilizations in Age of Empires II (1999)

This post is a list of civilizations in Age of Empires II (1999). There are 42 civilizations listed below alphabetically and chronologically by expansion. Source: fandom.com

    0. The Age of Kings (1999)
  • Britons
  • Byzantines
  • Celts
  • Chinese
  • Franks
  • Goths
  • Japanese
  • Mongols
  • Persians
  • Saracens
  • Teutons
  • Turks
  • Vikings

    1. The Conquerors (2000)
  • Aztecs
  • Huns
  • Koreans
  • Mayans
  • Spanish

    2. The Forgotten (2013)
  • Hindustanis
  • Incas
  • Italians
  • Magyars
  • Slavs

    3. The African Kingdoms (2015)
  • Berbers
  • Ethiopians
  • Malians
  • Portuguese

    4. Rise of the Rajas (2016)
  • Burmese
  • Khmer
  • Malay
  • Vietnamese

    5. Definitive Edition (2017)
  • Bulgarians
  • Cumans
  • Lithuanians
  • Tatars

    6. Lords of the West (2020)
  • Burgundians
  • Sicilians

    7. Dawn of the Dukes (2021)
  • Bohemians
  • Poles

    8. Dynasties of India (2022)
  • Bengalis
  • Dravidians
  • Gurjaras

List of characters in SSX 3 (2003)

This post is a list of characters is SSX 3 (2003). There are 10 characters listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Allegra
  • Elise
  • Griff
  • Mac
  • Kaori
  • Moby
  • Nate
  • Psymon
  • Viggo
  • Zoe

List of characters in Soulcalibur II (2002)

This post is a list of characters in Soulcalibur II (2002). There are 25 characters listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Assassin
  • Astaroth
  • Berserker
  • Cassandra
  • Cervantes
  • Charade
  • Heichachi
  • Ivy
  • Kilik
  • Link
  • Lizardman
  • Maxi
  • Necrid
  • Mitsurugi
  • Nightmare
  • Raphael
  • Seung Mi-na
  • Sophitia
  • Spawn
  • Taki
  • Talim
  • Voldo
  • Xianghua
  • Yungsung
  • Yoshimitsu

List of characters in Super Smash Bros. Brawl (2008)

This post is a list of characters in Super Smash Bros. Brawl (2008). There are 35 characters listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Bowser
  • Captain Falcon
  • Charizard / Ivysaur / Squirtle
  • Diddy Kong
  • Donkey Kong
  • Falco
  • Fox
  • Ganondorf
  • Ice Climbers
  • Ike
  • Jigglypuff
  • King Dedede
  • Kirby
  • Link
  • Lucario
  • Lucas
  • Luigi
  • Mario
  • Marth
  • Meta Knight
  • Mr. Game & Watch
  • Ness
  • Olimar
  • Pit
  • Peach
  • Pikachu
  • R.O.B.
  • Samus / Zero Suit Samus
  • Snake
  • Sonic
  • Toon Link
  • Wario
  • Wolf
  • Yoshi
  • Zelda / Sheik

List of major golf championships

This post is a list of major golf championships. There are 9 events listed below. Source: thegolfnewsnet.com

    Men's
  • Masters: April
  • Men's PGA Championship: May
  • U.S. Open: June
  • Open Championship: July

    Women's
  • Chevron Championship: March - April
  • U.S. Women's Open: May - June
  • Women's PGA Championship: June
  • Evian Championship: July
  • Women's British Open: July - August

List of tennis Grand Slams

This post is a list of tennis Grand Slams. There are 4 events listed below chronologically. Source: tennisct.com

  • Australian Open: January
  • French Open:  May - June
  • Wimbledon: June - July
  • US Open: August - September

List of epochs in Empire Earth (2001)

This post is a list of epochs in Empire Earth (2001). There are 14 epochs listed below chronologically. Source: fandom.com
  1. Prehistoric
  2. Stone
  3. Copper
  4. Bronze
  5. Dark
  6. Middle
  7. Renaissance
  8. Imperial
  9. Industrial
  10. Atomic
  11. Modern
  12. Digital
  13. Nano
  14. Space

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

List of sports in Wii Sports Resort (2009)

This post is a list of sports in Wii Sports Resort (2009). There are 12 sports listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Air Sports
  • Archery
  • Basketball
  • Bowling
  • Canoeing
  • Cycling
  • Frisbee ®
  • Golf
  • Power cruising
  • Swordplay
  • Table tennis
  • Wakeboarding

List of items in Chip's Challenge (1989)

This post is a list of items in Chip's Challenge (1989). There are 6 items listed below alphabetically. Source: wiki.bitbuster.club

  • Chip
  • Fire boots
  • Flippers
  • Ice skates
  • Key
  • Suction boots

List of worlds in Banjo-Kazooie (1998)

This post is a list of worlds in Banjo-Kazooie (1998). There are 11 worlds listed below chronologically (including the starter world* and hub world**). Source: fandom.com

  • Spiral Mountain*
  • Gruntilda's Lair**
  • Mumbo's Mountain
  • Treasure Trove Cove
  • Clanker's Cavern
  • Bubblegloop Swamp
  • Freezeezy Peak
  • Gobi's Valley
  • Mad Monster Mansion
  • Rusty Bucket Bay
  • Click Clock Wood

Monday, May 2, 2022

List of stages in Vigilante 8: 2nd Offense (1999)

This post is a list of stages in Vigilante 8: 2nd Offense (1999). There are 8 stages listed below alphabetically. Source: fandom.com

  • Alaskan Pipeline, Alaska
  • Ghastly Bayou, Louisiana
  • Launch Site, Florida
  • Meteor Crater, Arizona
  • Nuclear Plant, Minnesota
  • Pacific Harbor, California
  • Steel Mill, Pennsylvania
  • Winter Games, Utah

List of books in the Harry Potter series

This post is list of books in the Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling. There are 7 books listed below chronologically. Source: Wikipedia
  1. Philosopher's Stone (1997)
  2. Chamber of Secrets (1998)
  3. Prisoner of Azkaban (1999)
  4. Goblet of Fire (2000)
  5. Order of the Phoenix (2003)
  6. Half-Blood Prince (2005)
  7. Deathly Hallows (2007)

List of Star Wars films

This post is a list of Star Wars films as of May 2nd, 2022. There are 12 films listed below by chronologically by series. Source: Wikipedia

    Episodes 4-6
  • A New Hope (1977)
  • The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
  • Return of the Jedi (1983)

    Episodes 1-3
  • The Phantom Menace (1999)
  • Attack of the Clones (2002)
  • Revenge of the Sith (2005)

    Episodes 7-9
  • The Force Awakens (2015)
  • The Last Jedi (2017)
  • The Rise of Skywalker (2019)

    Anthology films
  • Rogue One (2016)
  • Solo (2018)

    Animated
  • The Clone Wars (2008)

List of traditional chakras in Hinduism

This post is a list of traditional chakras in Hinduism. There are 7 chakras listed below. Source: arhantayoga.org

  • Sahasrara - Crown
  • Ajna - Third Eye
  • Vishuddha - Throat
  • Anahata - Heart
  • Manipura - Navel
  • Svadhishthana - Sacral
  • Muladhara - Root