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But Nyaa is interesting not only for Japanese cartoons. The site also offers software, literature, and pictures. The main advantage of TG is that it is very visual. Having entered the site, you will see not only the lines of the name of the torrents but also many posters of new products and the most popular files. I liked the fact that the posters also appear when you hover over the torrent links. Thus, without reading the contents of the link, you can accurately determine which torrent it leads to.

The next torrent tracker, EZTV, offers only video materials. The site has an average popularity that is below the current popularity of Kickass. On Zoogle, you can find torrents of all popular topics. Although its main page is adapted for video content, it also has many links to software, music, popular games, and books. For some reason, they made her faded. The fonts are grey, not contrasting. It makes the site unpleasant to use. But under Zoogle, a fairly popular torrent tracker.

It can help in cases where there is no way to go to other more powerful sites with magnet links. Torrent Downloads is a classic torrent site with many subcategories. It greatly facilitates the search of shared files in cases where the exact name is unknown, but the category and some other information are known.

For example, if you are looking for a photo editor, then you just need to go to the appropriate section and download a torrent file of any of the options presented. It is also convenient to do with movies, books, and music. The only problem with Torrent Downloads is a large number of downloads without active seeders. From my observation, most torrent files have 0 seeds. Last on my list of Kickass Torrents alternatives was ExtraTorrent.

It is noticeably inferior to competitors in traffic, but it will help you download many rare pictures, software, and audio files. Therefore, be careful and use only the link from our site. Unfortunately, perpetrators always use blocking of popular resources to get light traffic. And such resources may contain malicious software! Whether you are using the original KAT or its alternative, it is extremely important to ensure protection when visiting the site itself, downloading a torrent file, and especially when downloading shared files using a BitTorrent client.

Always use a VPN for torrenting to bypass blocking, complete anonymity, and secure traffic. It's simple, fast, and significantly cheaper than the fines that can be imposed after the ISP records P2P activity. Surfshark is a super optimized VPN for torrenting. Desktop Enhancements. Networking Software. Trending from CNET. Developer's Description By Shreenath Developers. Full Specifications.

What's new in version 1. Release January 7, Date Added January 7, Version 1. Operating Systems. Operating Systems Android. Additional Requirements Requires Android 4. Total Downloads We may surrender, but rarely confess ourselves vanquished. In the intellectual world D at least peach is with our victory. We like to continue to believe what we have been accustomed to accept as true, and the resentment arouse when doubt is cast upon any of our assumptions lead us to seek every manner of excuse for clinging to them.

The result is that most of our so-called reasoning consists in finding arguments for going on believing as we already do. Of course the importance of this distinction if the popularly, if somewhat obscurely, recognized. The Baptist Missionary is ready enough to see that the Buddhist is not such because his doctrines would careful inspection, but because he happened to born in PY Buddhist family in Tokio. But it would be treason to his faith to acknowledge that his own partiality for certain doctrine is due to the fact that his mother was a member of the First Baptist church of Oak Ridge.

But neither of them may realize why he happens to be defending his particular opinion. As we grow up we simply adopt the ideas presented to us in regards to such matter as religion, family, relationship, property, D business, our country, and the state. We unconsciously absorb them from our environment.

They are consistently whispered in our ear by the group in E which we happen to live. Moreover, as Mr. Trotter has pointed out, these judgements begin the product of suggestion and not of reasoning, have the quality of perfect obviousness, so that to question them.

When D therefore, we find ourselves entering an opinion about the basis of which there is a quality of feeling which tell us that to inquire into it would be absurd, obviously unnecessary, unprofitable, undesirable, bad form, or wicked, we may know that that opinion is a non-rational one, and probably, therefore, founded upon inadequate evidence. I remember when as a youth I heard a group of businessmen discussing the 25 All rights reserved.

As I look back now I see that I had at the time no interest at the matter, and certainly no least argument to urge in favour of the belief in which I had been reared. But neither my personal indifference to the issue, nor the fact that I had previously given it no attention, serve to prevent an angry resentment when I heard my ideas questioned. O 11 In our reviews we are frequently engage in self-justification, for we cannot bear not to think of ourselves wrong, and yet have constant illustrations of our weaknesses and mistakes.

So we spend much time finding C fault with circumstances and the conduct of others, and shifting on to them with great ingenuity the onus of our own failures and disappointments. Rationalizing is the self-exculpation which occurs when we feel ourselves, or our group, accused of misapprehension or error. D 12 The little word my is the most important one in all human affairs, E and properly to reckon with it is the beginning of wisdom.

It has the same force whether it is my dinner, my dog, and my house, or my faith, my country, EP and my God. D 13 Philosophers, scholars, and men of science exhibit a common sensitiveness in all decisions in which their amour proper is involved.

Thousands of argumentative works have been written to vent a grudge. However stately their reasoning, it may be nothing but rationalizing, stipulated by the most common place of all motives. A history of Philosophy and theology could be written in terms of grouches, wounded pride, and aversions, and it would be far more instructive than the usual treatment of these themes.

Sometimes, under Providence, the lowly impulse of resentment leads to great achievements. Milton wrote his treatise on divorce as a result of his troubles with his seventeen years old wife, and when he was accused of being the leading spirit in a new sect, The Divorcers, he wrote his 26 All rights reserved. The reverie goes on all the time and not only in the mind of the mill hand and the Broadway flapper, but equally in weighty judges and godly bishops.

It has gone on in all the philosophers, scientists, poets, and the theologians that have ever lived. He is reported to have had very thin legs and small eyes, for which he doubtless had to find excuses, PY and he was wont to indulge in very conspicuous dress and rings and was accustomed to arrange his hair carefully. Diogenes the cynic exhibited the impudence of touchy soul. His tub was his distinction. These facts are not recalled here as gratuitous disparagement of the truly great, but to insure a full realization of the tremendous competition which all really exacting thought has to face, even in the minds of the most highly endowed mortals.

C 15 And now the astonishing and perturbing suspicion emerges that D perhaps almost all that has passed for social science, political economy, politics, and ethics in the past maybe brushed aside by future generations as E mainly rationalizing. John Dewey has already reached his conclusion in regards to philosophy.

The Veblen and other writers have revealed the various the unperceived presuppositions of the traditional political economy, EP and now comes an Italian Sociologist, Vilfredo Pareto, who, in his huge treatise on general sociology, devotes hundreds o pages of sustaining a similar thesis affecting all the social sciences. This conclusion may be ranked by students of hundreds of years hence as one of the several great discoveries of our age.

It is by no means fully worked out, and it is so D opposed to nature that it will be very slowly accepted by the great mass of those who consider themselves thoughtful. As a historical student I am personally fully reconciled to this newer view.

Indeed, it seems to me inevitable that just as the various sciences of nature were, before the opening of the seventeenth century, largely masses of rationalization to suit the religious sentiments of the period, so the social science have continued even to our own day to be rationalizations of uncritically accepted beliefs and customs.

It has not the usual qualities of the reverie, for it does not hover about our personal complacencies and humiliations. It is not made of the homely decision forced upon us by everyday needs, when we review our little stocks of existing information, consult our conventional preferences, and obligations, and make PY a choice o action. It is not the defence of our own cherished beliefs and prejudices just because they are our own-mere plausible excuses for remaining of the same mind.

On the contrary, it is the peculiar species of thought which leads us to change our minds. O 18 It is the kind of thought that has raised man from his pristine, sub savage ignorance and squalor to the degree of knowledge and comfort in C which he now possesses.

On his capacity to continue and greatly extend this kind of thinking depends his chance of groping his way out of the plight in which the most civilized people of the world now find themselves. In the past this type of thinking has been called Reason. But so many misapprehensions D have grown up around the word that some of us have become suspicious of it. For this kind of meditation begets E knowledge, and knowledge is really creative inasmuch as it makes things look different from what they seemed before and may indeed work for their EP reconstruction.

We are not preening or defending ourselves; we are not faced by the necessity of any practical decision, nor are we apologizing for believing this or that. We are just wondering and looking and mayhap seeing what we never perceived before.

We consider what is in a sealed telegram or in a letter in which someone else is absorbed, or what is being said in the telephone booth or in a low conversation.

This inquisitiveness is vastly stimulated by jealousy, suspicion, or any hint that we ourselves as directly or indirectly involved. But there 28 All rights reserved. They constitute a story, like a novel or a play or moving pictures. This is not an example of pure curiosity, however since we readily identify ourselves with others, and their joy and despair then become our own.

Some of us when PY we face the line of people opposite us in a subway train impulsively consider them in detail and engage in rapid inference and form theories in regards to them. On entering a room there are those who will perceive at a glance the degree of preciousness of the rugs, the character of the pictures, and the personality revealed by the books. But there are many, it would seem, who O are so absorbed in their personal reverie or in some definite purpose that they have no bright-eyed energy for idle curiosity.

The tendency to miscellaneous observation we come by honesty nought, for we note it in many of our animal relatives. It is idle only to the one who fail to realize that it may be a very rare and indispensable thing from which almost all distinguished E human achievement proceeds, since it may lead to systematic examination and seeking for things hitherto undiscovered. For research is but diligent search which enjoys the high of the primitive hunting.

Occasionally and fitfully EP idle curiosity thus lead to creative thought, which alters and broadens our own views and inspirations and may in turn, under highly favourable circumstances, affects the views and lives of others, even for generations to follow. An example or two will make this unique human process clear. D 23 Galileo was a thoughtful youth and doubtless carried on a rich and varied reverie. He had artistic ability and might have turned out to be a musician or painter.

When he had dwelt among the monks at Valambrosa he had been tempted to lead the life of a religious. As a boy he busied himself with toy machines and he inherited a fondness for mathematics. All these facts are of record. We may safely assume also that along with many other subjects of contemplation, the Pisan maidens found a vivid place in his thoughts. In the midst of his reverie he looked up at the lamps hanging by long chains from the high ceiling of the church.

Then something very difficult to explain occurred. He found himself no longer thinking of the building, worshipers, or the services; of his artistic or religious interests; of his reluctance to become a physician as his father wished. He forgot the question of a career and even the graziosissime donne.

As he watched the swinging lamps he was suddenly wondering if mayhap their oscillations, whether long or short, did not occupy the same time. Then he tested his hypothesis by counting his pulse, for that was the only timepiece he had with him.

PY 25 This observation, however remarkable in itself, was not enough to produce a really creative thought. Others may have noticed the same thing and yet nothing came out of it.

Most of our observations have no assignable results. He himself was lead to reconsider and successfully refute the old notions of falling bodies.

It remained for Newton to prove that the moon was D falling, and presumably all the heavenly bodies. This quite upset all the consecrated views of the heavens as managed by angelic engineers. The E universality of the laws of gravitation stimulated at the attempt to seek other and equally important natural law and cast grave doubts on the miracles in which mankind had hitherto believed.

In short, those who dared to include in EP their thought the discoveries of Galileo and his successors found themselves in the new earth surrounded by new heavens. As the disk revolved an electric current was produced. This would have doubtless have seemed the idlest kind of experiment to the stanch businessmen of the time, who, it happened, where just then denouncing the child-labour bills in their anxiety to avail themselves to the full of the results of earlier idle curiosity.

Objective thinking. But there are, of course, other create realms in which the recording and embodiment of acute observation and insight have brought themselves into the higher life of man. The great poets and dramatists and our modern story tellers have found PY themselves engage in productive reveries, noting and artistically presenting their discoveries for the delight and instruction of those who have the ability to appreciate them.

O 28 The process by which a fresh and original poem or drama comes into being is doubtless analogous to that which originates and elaborates so-called scientific discoveries; but there I clearly a temperamental C difference. The genesis and advance of painting, sculpture, and music offer still other problems.

We really as yet know shockingly little about these matters, and indeed very few people have the least curiosity about them. Nevertheless, creative intelligence in its various forms and activities is what D makes a man.

Were it not for its slow, painful and constantly discouraged operations through the ages man would be no more than a species of prime E living on seeds, fruit, roots, and uncooked flesh, and wandering naked through the woods and over the plains like a chimpanzee.

EP 29 The origin and progress and future promotion of civilization are ill understood and misconceived. These should be made the chief theme of educations, but much hard work is necessary before we can reconstruct our ideas of man and his capacities and free ourselves from innumerable D persistent misapprehension.

There have been obstructionists in all times, not merely the lethargic masses, but the moralists, the rationalizing theologians and most of the philosophers, all busily if unconsciously engage in ratifying existing ignorance and mistakes and discouraging creative thought. Naturally, those who reassure us seem worthy of honour and respect. Equally naturally, those who puzzled us with disturbing criticism and invite us to change our ways of objects of suspicion and readily discredited.

Our personal discontent does not ordinarily extend to any critical questioning of the general situation in which we find ourselves. In every age the prevailing conditions of civilization have appeared quite natural and inevitable to those who grew up in them.

The cow asks no questions as how it happens to have a dry stall and 31 All rights reserved. The kitten laps its warm milk from a china saucer, without knowing anything about porcelain; the dog nestles in the corner of a divan with no sense of obligation to the inventors of upholstery and manufacturers of down pillows.

So we humans accepts our breakfasts, our trains and telephones and orchestras and movies, our National Constitution, our moral code and standards of manners, with the simplicity and innocence of a pet rabbit.

We do not feel called upon to make any least contribution to the merry game ourselves. Indeed, we are usually quite unaware that the game is being played at all. PY 30 We have now examined the various classes of thinking which we can readily observe in ourselves and which we have plenty of reasons to believe to go on, and always have been going on, in our fellowmen. We can sometimes get quite pure and sparkling example of all four kinds, but commonly they are so confused and intermingled in our reverie as not to be O readily distinguishable.

The reverie is a reflection of our longings, exultations, and complacencies, our fears, suspicions, and disappointments. We are chiefly engaged in struggling to maintain our self-respect and in asserting the C supremacy which we all crave and which seems to us our natural prerogative. It is not strange, but rather quite inevitable, that our beliefs about what is true and false, good and bad, right and wrong, should be mixed up with the reverie and be influenced by the same considerations which determined its character D and course.

We resent criticisms of our views exactly as we do of anything else connected with ourselves. Our notion of life and its ideals seem to us to E be our own and such as necessarily true and right, to be defended at all costs. EP 31 We very rarely consider, however, the process by which we gained our convictions. If we did so, we could hardly fail to see that there was usually little ground for our confidence in them.

Here and there, in this department of knowledge or that, someone of us might make a fair claim to have taken some trouble to get correct ideas of, let us say, the situation in D Russia the sources of our food supply, the origin of the constitution, the revision of the tariff, the policy of the holy Roman Apostolic Church, modern business organization, trade unions, birth control, socialism, the League of Nations, the Excess-profits tax, preparedness, advertising in its social bearings; but only a very exceptional person would be entitled to opinions on all of even these few matters.

And yet most of us have opinions on all these, and on many other questions of equal importance, of which we may know even less. We feel compelled, as self-respecting persons, to take sides when they come up for discussion.

We even surprised ourselves by our omniscience. Without taking thought we see in a flash that it is most righteous and expedient to discourage birth control by legislative enactment, or that one 32 All rights reserved. As godlike beings, why should we not rejoice in our omniscience? Most of them are pure prejudices in the proper sense of that word.

We do not form them ourselves. We have in the last analysis no responsibility of them and need assume none. They are not really our own ideas, but those of others no ore well informed or inspired them PY ourselves, who have got them in the same careless and humiliating manner as we. It should be our pride to revise our ideas and not to adhere to what passes for respectable opinion can frequently be shown to be not respectable at all. We should, in view of the considerations that have been mentioned, resent our spine credulity.

Local marks of the ligature were readily discernible: there were some abrasion and a slight ecchymosis in the skin. But I found no obvious lesion in the blood vessels of the neck. Cyanosis of the head was very slight and there were no pronounced hemorrhages in the galea of the scalp.

I should judge that very great compression was effected almost immediately, with compression of the PY arteries as well as of the vein, and that the superior laryngeal nerve was traumatized in the effect of throwing the victim into profound shock… The lungs revealed cyanosis, congestion, over aeration, and sub pleural petechial haemorrhages… O C E D EP D 34 All rights reserved. C Contrary to the form and the Statutes of the State of , in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the same.

D ………………………………………………….. Porphyria Blank, 21, daughter of Mr. Blank, of Barton Park, was found strangled this morning in the cottage owned by John Doe, 25, who was apprehended on the scene of the crime by officers Bailey and Hodge.

Roger Weston was announced last month. Weston could not be reached for a statement. The family became alarmed when it was discovered that she was C not in her room, and instituted a search for her about midnight. The police, who were promptly notified, in the course of their search knocked at Mr. Receiving no answer, they forced the door and discovered Doe sitting with the dead girl in his lap.

She had apparently been strangled, Dr. Reynolds, Autopsy Surgeon for the county, state that, from the condition of E the body, death must have occurred at about midnight. EP D 36 All rights reserved. Her golden hair falling in profusion about her shoulder all but concealed the cruel welt of red about her throat.

The murderer, clutching is still burden to him, like a mother holding an infant, appeared dazed. As the police came in, he rose to meet them, still carrying his precious burden in his arms. The officers had almost to force him to relinquish her. A few hours later when I saw him in the sordid surroundings of the 10th Precinct Station House, so different from the cozy cottage which had been the abode of a tragic love, he was still dry-eyed, though his face wore a ghastly pallor.

But when tried to question him, I became aware of terrific strain under which he suffered, and he showed all O signs of a man on the verge of hysteria. The very greatness of his love made him strangle her. Separated as they were wealth, social position, and all that E implies, it was only in death that they could be united. Who are we to pass judgment on such love?

EP D 37 All rights reserved. When glided in Porphyria; straight PY She shut the cold out and the storm, And kneeled and made the cheerless grate Blazed up, all the cottage warm; O Which done, she rose, and form her form Withdrew the dripping cloak and shawl, C And laid her soiled gloves by, untied Her hat and let the damp hair fall, And, last, she sat down by my side D And called me.

So, she was come through wind and rain. Be sure I looked up at her eyes Happy and proud; at last I knew Porphyria worshipped me; surprise Made my heart swell, and still it grew While I debated what to do. That the moment she was mine, mine, fair, Perfectly pure and good: I found A thing to do, and all her hair PY In one long yellow string I would Three times her little throat around, And strangled her. No pain felt she; O I am quite sure she felt no pain. As a shut bud that holds a bee, C I warily opened her lids: again Laughed the blue without a stain.

And I untightened next the tress D About her neck; her cheek once more Blushed bright beneath my burning kiss: E I propped her head up as before, EP Only, this time my shoulder bore Her head, which droops upon it still: The smiling rosy little head, So glad it has its utmost will, D That all it scorned at once id fled, And I, its love, am gained instead!

And thus we sit together now And all night long we have not stirred, And yet God has not said a word. Kilates On the ninth day of January, In the sober days that follow the intoxicated season, The prophets descend like tongues of fire Upon the streets of Quiapo. The sun bleeds its flesh of asphalt, Scorches its bones of concrete. PY Fumes issue from its pores in a heady breath, And the air is thick.

In a frenzy, They struggle to keep on their shoulders D Some splinter of Calvary, some chafe of the rope That will deepen the wounds of the flesh, draw blood E To cleanse the wounds of the spirit. In their drunken vigor madness expiates. But in the demented martyrdom of mortals, Aching shoulders and bleeding flesh Bear Him an eternity aloft.

And the prophet descend like tongues of fire The planets tilt in their ancient dance Upon the streets of Quiapo, 40 All rights reserved. Upon the heedless multitude of the orange fire, The sacred soot that asphyxiates the soul, The spear of the sun that transfix the flesh.

Our Father, In the drug of incense, In the burning fever of lowers, In the heady camphor of our endless ardour. In our faith in the apocalypse, PY In the grime on the ginseng root, The soot on the novena, In the wax on the bronze amulet, The soiled sampaguita— Heal O C All these wounds you inflict on us: On our shoulders that bear D The weight of Rulers and Nations, On our breasts that ache and hurt with rage, E On our knees scrapped in ignorance and submission, On our ankles numb in the clamp of shackles, EP On our palms pierced by nails on myriad metal, Dipped in perfume and arsenic, Bile and vinegar, Mud and myrrh.

D From Alfredo Navarro Salangga, ed. Some foreigners do, too. American tourist Gerry Blevins got a baptism of fire when he was lured PY to the massive daylong pilgrimage and took part briefly in the procession. O As the procession kicked off at Quirino Grandstand on Thursday morning, the crowd swelled in minutes and Blevins was among those who swarmed to the carriage. C A native of Delaware state, the American national said he came to the Philippines for his Filipina girlfriend and that it was his first time to participate in the Black Nazarene procession.

EP Just for a little thrill, Blevins said he climbed a tree to capture the Black Nazarene being revered by millions of devotees in the most unusual way. The ship that carried it caught fire, but the charred statue survived and was named the Black Nazarene.

Art 1 The French artist Georges Braque once said. All art is an interpretation of what the artist sees. It is filtered through the eyes of the artist and influenced by his or her own perceptions. Portraits of kings and queens PY present how the monarchs wanted their people to see them, with symbolic tools of power such as scepters, crowns and rich vestments. Art in Churches and cathedrals was used as a means of visual instruction for people who could not read.

Much modern art reveals impressions feelings and emotions without remaining faithful to the actual thing depicted. Cubism is based on the idea that the eye observes things from continually changing viewpoints, as fragments of a whole. Cubism aims to represent the essential reality of forms from multiple E perspective angles. Rather, they depict pieces of people, places, and things in an unstable field of EP vision. D Guernica by Pablo Picasso 45 All rights reserved.

During the Spanish Civil war, the German air force bombed the town of Guernica, the cultural center of the Basque region in northern Spain and a Loyalist stronghold. In only a few minutes on April 26, , hundreds of men, women and children were massacred in the deadly air strike.

Two months later, Picasso expressed his outrage at the attack in a mural he titled simply, Guernica. In January , Picasso was commissioned to paint a mural for the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne, an art exhibition to open in France in May of the same year.

Although he had never been a political person, the atrocity of Guernica in April compelled him to express his anger and appeal to O the world. When the picture was unveiled at the opening of the expo, it was received poorly. He wanted the outside world to care about what happened at Guernica. D However, Picasso may have misjudged his first audience, In , Europe was in the brick of world war.

Many people were in denial that the war could E touch them and preferred to ignore the possibility that it was imminent. Years EP later the mural would become one of the most critically acclaimed works of art of the twentieth century.

It depicts simultaneously events that happened over a period of time. The overall claim is that war itself is horrible. The smaller claims address the injustice of Guernica more directly. A mother wails in grief over her dead infant a reminder that the bombing of Guernica was a massacre of innocent. RAP HIPHOP mobstaz 1 andrew e 12 artstrong 1 asyan 1 badang 1 baranggay hiphop 1 billy crawford 1 chill 2 Chinese Mafia 1 circulo pugantes 1 clubzilla 1 crazy family 1 curse one 1 d inozent one 1 d.

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