Stephen Moriarty (@s_moriarty1) 's Twitter Profile
Stephen Moriarty

@s_moriarty1

28 | Múinteoir | 🇮🇪🇻🇦

ID: 420522073

calendar_today24-11-2011 18:55:48

18,18K Tweet

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owen cyclops (@owenbroadcast) 's Twitter Profile Photo

watching toddlers gain knowledge of qualities: a toddler realizes their food is too hot. they know “hotness”. but they have no idea that heat slowly dissipates. the food simply “is hot”. so they just keep shoving the hot food into their mouth, determined to overcome. fascinating.

Kitten 💖🐈 (@kitten_beloved) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The expectation that children will be part of public life is incredibly important to the experience is being a parent, and the decline in this default expectation is troubling and ominous

Mike Bird (@birdyword) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is giving me the really strong impression that when Amazon actually starts releasing new James Bond films, the living will envy the dead

Boze the Library Owl 😴🧙‍♀️ (@sketchesbyboze) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You could waste weeks reading these self-help books or you could learn psychology from George Eliot, social relations from Jane Austen, morality from Dostoevsky, redemption from Dumas, the nature of good and evil from folklore & myth.

The Critical Drinker (@thecriticaldri2) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What's the point? Bond's Walther PPK is as much an intrinsic part of his character as the tuxedo and vodka Martinis. You gonna edit out the smoking, drinking and gambling next?

Wayne Bradshaw (@nonwaynewayne) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The story of the decline of the humanities is that the humanities ate Biblical hermeneutics, then sociology ate the humanities. Literature tried to save itself by becoming creative writing and that, too, was eaten by sociology. History went digital and was eaten by sociology

James Marriott (@j_amesmarriott) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Another vignette from the post-literate society. Reading books used to be something a lot people did for fun - now it is a specialist skill that has to be taught by universities

Another vignette from the post-literate society. Reading books used to be something a lot people did for fun - now it is a specialist skill that has to be taught by universities
Marika Cobbold (@marikacobbold) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Apparently universities are having to teach English literature students how to concentrate for long enough to read lengthy novels. I have to ask, what makes a person who's incapable of reading long novels decide that studying literature at degree level is for them?

LindyMan (@paulskallas) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most likely, true health and longevity involves periodic attempts at poisoning yourself at low dosages with lindy substances