Spider-Man 2099 by J.G. Jones
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O III Reich
LiberpazQue assustador...
Fotos do arquivo da LIFE, de Hugo Jaeger, fotógrafo pessoal de Adolf Hitler.
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As HQs dos irmãos Cafaggi
Lu e Vitor Cafaggi estarão no próximo sábado na Itiban, às 17h, pra bate-papo com o público e sessão de autógrafos da Graphic MSP Turma da Mônica – Laços.
Que tal então conhecer melhor a produção dos dois? Abaixo resenhas das obras que eles já publicaram. Também é possível encontrar histórias do Vitor na Fierro Brasil 2 e no MSP 50. Divirta-se e compareça no sábado!
Valente para sempre, de Vitor Cafaggi, resenha do delfin, no blog do Universo HQ.
Valente para todas, de Vitor Cafaggi, resenha de Liber no Interrogação.
Mix Tape, de Lu Cafaggi, resenha do Flávio no Vortex Cultural.
DuoTone, de Vitor Cafaggi, outra resenha do Flávio no Vortex Cultural.
E duas resenhas de Turma da Mônica – Laços, uma pra cada irmão: a do Lucas, no Melhores do Mundo e a do Erico Assis, no Omelete.
The True Science of Parallel Universes, Animated
Choose-your-own-adventure realities, black holes, and other cosmic escapism.
Some of the greatest minds in science and the humanities have wondered — and attempted to answer — why the universe exists. That is, our universe, the universe, in the singular. But while it might be alluring to imagine what it would be like to live in a universe of ten dimensions, reality is at once simpler and more complex. From the wonderful MinutePhysics — who have previously explored whether the universe has a purpose, why the color pink doesn’t exist, how science education is stuck in the 19th century, why the past is different from the future, and why it’s dark at night — comes a lesson in science and semantics that distills the various hypotheses of parallel universes:
We must remember that physics is science, not philosophy, and in our attempts to explain the universe that we observe, we have to make claims that can in principle be tested — and then test them.
There is, however, plenty of room for philosophy in science — look no further than Jim Holt’s fantastic, mind-bending, and oddly soothing Why Does the World Exist?: An Existential Detective Story, one of the best philosophy books of 2012.
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