23 de dezembro de 2014

Vida




Sandra, a 29-year-old orangutan, looks out from her enclosure at Buenos Aires' zoo. Sandra has been cleared to leave the zoo she has called home for 20 years after a court ruled she was entitled to more desirable living conditions. Argentina's Association of Professional Lawyers for Animal Rights (AFADA) filed a 'habeas corpus' writ (a form of legal redress against unlawful imprisonment) arguing she was 'suffering an unwarranted confinement.' The AFADA is in the process of securing Sandra's release to transfer her to a sanctuary where she is expected to live a more comfortable and happy life, lawyers said.

Moisés



"Moses Receiving the Law", William Blake (1780)

O Mar


(Cumbria)

"Ida" de Pawel Pawlikowski



Trailer (2014)

Marilyn Monroe



19 de dezembro de 2014

Herodes, o Grande


37–4 BCE

"Das Lied von der Erde"



5. "Der Trunkene im Frühling" ("The Drunken Man in Spring")

Benny Morris



"Israeli Arabs refuse to join a Palestinian state"

Rússia



15 de dezembro de 2014

"Das Lied von der Erde"



4. "Von der Schönheit" ("Of Beauty")

Moses Montefiore




Jesus da Nazaré


"The Sacrament of the Last Supper", Salvador Dali (1955)

14 de dezembro de 2014


Earth faces sixth ‘great extinction’ with 41% of amphibians set to go the way of the dodo

Analysis for prestigious Nature magazine sounds alarm on the way that human activity, from overfishing to agriculture, is forcing a vast number of species to vanish from the wild.

Tasmanian tiger
A Tasmanian tiger in captivity, circa 1930, shortly before the species became extinct.
 

A stark depiction of the threat hanging over the world’s mammals, reptiles, amphibians and other life forms has been published by the prestigious scientific journal, Nature. A special analysis carried out by the journal indicates that a staggering 41% of all amphibians on the planet now face extinction while 26% of mammal species and 13% of birds are similarly threatened.
Many species are already critically endangered and close to extinction, including the Sumatran elephant, Amur leopard and mountain gorilla. But also in danger of vanishing from the wild, it now appears, are animals that are currently rated as merely being endangered: bonobos, bluefin tuna and loggerhead turtles, for example. In each case, the finger of blame points directly at human activities. The continuing spread of agriculture is destroying millions of hectares of wild habitats every year, leaving animals without homes, while the introduction of invasive species, often helped by humans, is also devastating native populations. At the same time, pollution and overfishing are destroying marine ecosystems.
“Habitat destruction, pollution or overfishing either kills off wild creatures and plants or leaves them badly weakened,” said Derek Tittensor, a marine ecologist at the World Conservation Monitoring Centre in Cambridge. “The trouble is that in coming decades, the additional threat of worsening climate change will become more and more pronounced and could then kill off these survivors.”
The problem, according to Nature, is exacerbated because of the huge gaps in scientists’ knowledge about the planet’s biodiversity. Estimates of the total number of species of animals, plants and fungi alive vary from 2 million to 50 million. In addition, estimates of current rates of species disappearances vary from 500 to 36,000 a year. “That is the real problem we face,” added Tittensor. “The scale of uncertainty is huge.”
Advertisement
In the end, however, the data indicate that the world is heading inexorably towards a mass extinction – which is defined as one involving a loss of 75% of species or more. This could arrive in less than a hundred years or could take a thousand, depending on extinction rates.
The Earth has gone through only five previous great extinctions, all caused by geological or astronomical events. (The Cretaceous-Jurassic extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was triggered by an asteroid striking Earth, for example.) The coming great extinction will be the work of Homo sapiens, however.
“In the case of land extinctions, it is the spread of agriculture that has been main driver,” added Tittensor. “By contrast it has been the over-exploitation of resources – overfishing – that has affected sealife.” On top of these impacts, rising global temperatures threaten to destroy habitats and kill off more creatures.
This change in climate has been triggered by increasing emissions – from factories and power plants – of carbon dioxide, a gas that is also being dissolved in the oceans. As a result, seas are becoming more and more acidic and hostile to sensitive habitats. A third of all coral reefs, which support more lifeforms than any other ecosystem on Earth, have already been lost in the last few decades and many marine experts believe all coral reefs could end up being wiped out before the end of the century.
Similarly, a quarter of all mammals, a fifth of all reptiles and a seventh of all birds are headed toward oblivion. And these losses are occurring all over the planet, from the South Pacific to the Arctic and from the deserts of Africa to mountaintops and valleys of the Himalayas.
A blizzard of extinctions is now sweeping Earth and has become a fact of modern life. Yet the idea that entire species can be wiped out is relatively new. When fossils of strange creatures – such as the mastodon – were first dug up, they were assumed to belong to creatures that still lived in other lands. Extant versions lived elsewhere, it was argued. “Such is the economy of nature,” claimed Thomas Jefferson, who backed expeditions to find mastodons in the unexplored interior of America.
Then the French anatomist Georges Cuvier showed that the elephant-like remains of the mastodon were actually those of an “espèce perdue” or lost species. “On the basis of a few scattered bones, Cuvier conceived of a whole new way of looking at life,” notes Elizabeth Kolbert in her book, The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History. “Species died out. This was not an isolated but a widespread phenomenon.”
Since then the problem has worsened with every decade, as the Nature analysis makes clear. Humans began by wiping out mastodons and mammoths in prehistoric times. Then they moved on to the eradication of great auks, passenger pigeons – once the most abundant bird in North America – and the dodo in historical time. And finally, in recent times, we have been responsible for the disappearance of the golden toad, the thylacine – or Tasmanian tiger – and the Baiji river dolphin. Thousands more species are now under threat.
In an editorial, Nature argues that it is now imperative that governments and groups such as the International Union for Conservation of Nature begin an urgent and accurate census of numbers of species on the planet and their rates of extinction. It is not the most exciting science, the journal admits, but it is vitally important if we want to start protecting life on Earth from the worst impacts of our actions. The loss for the planet is incalculable – as it is for our own species which could soon find itself living in a world denuded of all variety in nature. As ecologist Paul Ehrlich has put it: “In pushing other species to extinction, humanity is busy sawing off the limb on which it perches.”

Mahler


Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection", Leonard Bernstein

Terrorismo


"My trip to Al-Qaeda", Lawrence Wright (Trailer)

Vida



Two-year-old Samson, a Barbary lion, undergoing a (big) CAT scan at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Pedro Nunes



13 de dezembro de 2014

"Das Lied von der Erde"


3. "Von der Jugend" ("Of Youth")

Jesus da Nazaré



"Legends, Fictions, and Manuscripts that Illustrate Christ's Story", Bart Ehrman

Tamar


"Judah and Tamar", school of Rembrandt (1650-60)

Isaac Babel




"Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts. The whole earth is full of his glory."

Isaiah 6:3

12 de dezembro de 2014

"The Congress" de Ari Folman



Trailer (2014)

Vida



A photo of a southern stingray taken just below the surface of the water  in Grand Cayman.

Joaquim Carreira



O padre Joaquim Carreira abrigou judeus durante a ocupação nazi de Roma, entre Setembro de 1943 e Julho de 1944, quando era reitor do Colégio Pontifício Português da capital italiana. Será o quarto português a entrar na lista do Yad Vashem, o Memorial do Holocausto de Jerusalém.

Antes do antigo reitor, já três portugueses tinham sido declarados "Justos" pelo Yad Vashem, numa lista com mais de 25 mil nomes. Para além de Aristides de Sousa Mendes, o cônsul que em Bordéus atribuiu vistos a mais de dez mil judeus em fuga (e cuja história é a única de um português contada no site do Yad Vashem), está lá Carlos Sampayo Garrido, embaixador em Budapeste que deu documentos portugueses a centenas de judeus e os colocou em residências da embaixada. Um terceiro nome aparece listado como francês — trata-se do operário português que salvou uma menina judia em França, José Brito Mendes, e que tinha dupla nacionalidade. Os “Justos” recebem uma medalha cunhada com o seu nome e um certificado de honra, para além de terem os seus nomes acrescentados ao Mural de Honra do Jardim dos Justos do Memorial do Holocausto. O Yad Vashem pode ainda “conceder a cidadania honorária ou a cidadania póstuma se já tiverem morrido”. A cerimónia de entrega da medalha e do certificado a familiares do padre Carreira ainda não está marcada, mas deverá acontecer na primeira metade de 2015, na embaixada de Israel em Lisboa.

9 de dezembro de 2014

Vida



An orange painted frogfish (Antennarius pictus) - measuring the size of a golf-ball - waits to ambush prey disguised as a sponge (Bitung, North Sulawesi, Indonesia)

"The Death of Klinghoffer"



Official Met Trailer

Morte



A company is offering a funeral service which is out of this world - by sending the ashes of loved ones into space. Ashes travel up on a weather balloon, with GoPro cameras attached so people can watch, before being scattered at the edge of space. The particles will hang around in the atmosphere for a while before falling back to Earth as part of rain or snowfall.
 

8 de dezembro de 2014

Ben-Gurion



"Being Ben-Gurion", Anita Shapira

"Das Lied von der Erde"



2. "Der Einsame im Herbst" ("The Lonely One in Autumn")

 

James Kugel



"The Book of Jubilees: the Oldest Commentary on the Book of Genesis"

Aharon Barak



"Waltz With Bashir"



"Waltz with Bashir", Ari Folman (2008)

7 de dezembro de 2014

4 de dezembro de 2014

Portbou



"Das Lied von der Erde"



1. "Das Trinklied vom Jammer der Erde" ("The Drinking Song of Earth's Misery")

 

Guerra



"Gaza, the IDF Code of Ethics, and the Morality of War", Moshe Halbertal

Shilo


 "The Tabernacle Plateau"