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Are there ‘rules’ for conveying emotion through art?

Futurum

Culture and biology “For thousands of years, art has been used to communicate the experiences and emotions of daily life,” says Dr Claudia Damiano, previously a Postdoctoral Researcher at GestaltReVision Lab, KU Leuven, in Belgium, and now Research Associate at Toronto’s Department of Psychology.

Biology 89
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Indoor STEM Activities for Kids

STEM Sport

To foster this critical ability, here are five DIY coding activities that creatively teach coding concepts without the need for a computer: Binary Code Bracelets: Create bracelets with beads in two colors to represent names coded in binary. It’s an engaging way to connect the abstract world of coding with a tangible, creative project.

STEM 52
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Urban farming for urban families

Futurum

Meet David I majored in anthropology and biology at university. I took courses with a biological anthropologist who inspired me to study how humans use biology and culture to adapt (or not) to stressful environments such as food scarcity, extreme temperatures, and common diseases. Urban farms exist in cities all over the world.

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Supporting small farms: how protecting local farms can protect local communities

Futurum

This project will include hands-on food safety demonstrations, computer literacy training and local farm visits. Pathway from school to small farms outreach • Studying science subjects at school is important. Many topics within biology, chemistry and geography could come in handy, including ecology, plant biochemistry and soil science.

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The Physicalization of Metamathematics and Its Implications for the Foundations of Mathematics

Stephen Wolfram

We can think of the ruliad as the entangled limit of all possible computations—or in effect a representation of all possible formal processes. Many of these consequences are incredibly complicated, and full of computational irreducibility. But now we can make a bridge to mathematics. So is something similar happening with mathematics?