19 Things You Should Know About Amelia Earhart

Earhart Famous Pilot

Earhart Famous Pilot

Source: Thing Link

Nearly 80 years ago, Amelia Earhart attempted to circumnavigate the globe with fatal results. Before that, though, she captured the world’s attention by breaking a score of records, expanding popular conceptions of womanhood and writing best-selling books, among a host of other things.

Newly discovered footage of Earhart was recently unearthed, depicting the pilot a few months before her last flight in 1937. The video appears to be shot at Burbank Airport, and features the pilot walking around her Lockheed Electra L-10E. The son of John Bresnik, one of Earhart’s photographers, found the film after going through his deceased father’s belongings. While this discovery will likely prompt another investigation into the exact cause of Earhart’s death, we’re more interested in her life.

Check out these surprisings facts about Amelia Earhart–we guarantee they’ll blow your mind.

Click here to view slideshow

Check out the new black-and-white footage of Amelia Earhart just before her final flight:

Many theories seek to explain just what happened to Amelia Earhart on her fateful journey in 1937. Here’s one of those hypotheses:

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Better Know A Saint: Cyril Of Alexandria

Saint Cyril Lead

Saint Cyril Lead

Source: Wikimedia

Saint Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria between 414 and 444, was a leg breaker for Jesus. During his career, he outmaneuvered and ruined pagan philosophers, Roman politicians, and rival Christians in his quest for ideological purity and ever-greater power within the early Church. That he was eventually canonized for his characteristic single-minded brutality speaks volumes about the spirit of his age.

Early Life

During Christianity’s rough early phase, there was nothing describable as the modern Catholic Church to be found, though men like Cyril were rapidly changing that in the 5th century. When Cyril was born, in about 376, the Christian world was mainly confined to the Mediterranean basin and nearby areas. Within this world were many popes and patriarchs, each reading from his own version of Holy Scripture and perpetually on the brink of open war with rival congregations. Though a broad consensus did exist among Christian bureaucrats, the general disorder of the dying Roman Empire meant that each local pope had a great deal of power, and was sometimes a law unto himself.

Cyril had the great good fortune to be the nephew of one such patriarch, Theophilus of Alexandria. Theophilus, whose name is Greek for “Lover of God,” brought the young Cyril to study with him in Alexandria. Officially, Cyril was to be groomed for a career in the Church, but the politics of the day made it just as likely that Theophilus needed a warm body to offer as a hostage if his rivals turned on him.

Cyril found Alexandria at the height of its glory. Founded seven centuries prior, the city had been consciously designed as the ultimate college town. Alexandria was home to the Pharos, one of the wonders of the world, and to the Great Library, where perhaps half a million books and scrolls were kept, including original copies of Euripides, Sophocles, Democritus (the philosopher who predicted the existence of atoms), and Eratosthenes, who had measured the circumference of the Earth centuries earlier. The city was rich, smart, and virtually the last place in the empire that wasn’t teetering on the brink of collapse. Over half a century, Cyril did what he could to wreck the place.

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History’s Worst Kings: Charles The Mad

King Charles VI Gallery

King Charles VI Gallery

Source: Wikimedia

Unlike republics, which theoretically run by popular consent, absolute monarchies are sanctioned by God, and you don’t get a vote. Since God never makes mistakes, that means monarchies usually don’t have a mechanism for removing bad kings the way republics do for bad presidents. This holds true even when the king is shithouse-rat crazy, starts a civil war in the middle of another war, and regularly hides in cupboards because he believes his body is made out of glass and he’ll break if anybody touches him. Permit us to introduce you to Charles VI of France.

Early Life

King Charles VI Hunting

Source: Wikipedia

Charles was born to the House of Valois in 1368. Unfortunately for him, that was a bad time, and a bad house, to be born into. The general prosperity of the previous century had collapsed in shrieking disaster for France with repeated weather-induced crop failures a few decades earlier, which provoked a struggle over land that became the Hundred Years’ War, which was nicely accented by the 1346 arrival of the Black Death and the attendant loss of around one-third to half of the population.

The world Charles was born into had spent the previous 50 years falling apart, and most of the horrible things we today associate with the Middle Ages – plague, famine, ignorance, bandits roaming the countryside, constant war – really date to this period alone.

In this context, with plague stalking the starving peasantry and an English invasion threatening to gobble up what little was left under the Crown’s authority, France needed a great leader. Charles VI was bred to be that hero, and as a child he was given the best education a Medieval prince could expect. On his father’s death, the 11-year-old Charles became king, with a regency shared among his four uncles. Officially, Charles was eligible to become king in his own right at 14, but the regency lasted until he was 21, letting him finish his education and fully prepare to lead France out of the darkness.

Training And High Hopes

Charles With Scribe

Source: Pinterest

On coming to power, in 1380, Charles had a few nasty surprises waiting for him. For one thing, his uncles turned out to be thieves who looted the treasury Charles’ father had painstakingly built up. The only way to keep the government running was with increasingly extortionate taxes, which provoked open revolt in the provinces. It took Charles six years to oust his uncles, while they continued to suck the treasury dry. By 1386, Charles had brought back his father’s advisors and driven his uncles far from Paris. Finally ready to face the English threat, Charles began his rise to the greatness France expected from him.

And then he went insane.

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10 Of The World’s Most Fascinating Unsolved Problems

Fascinating Unsolved Problems Space

Besides the ubiquitous “If a tree falls in the forest” logic problem, innumerable mysteries continue to vex the minds of practitioners across all disciplines of modern science and humanities.

Questions like “Is there a universal definition of ‘word’?”, “Is color in our minds or does it exist physically inherent to objects in the world around us?” and “What is the probability that the sun will rise tomorrow?” continue to plague even the most astute of minds. Pulling from medicine, physics, biology, philosophy and mathematics, here are some of the most fascinating unanswered questions in the world — do you have the answer to any of them?

Why Do Cells Commit Suicide?


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Source: Giphy

The biochemical event known as apoptosis is sometimes referred to as “programmed cell death” or “cellular suicide.” For reasons that science has yet to fully grasp, cells appear to have the ability to “die off” in a highly regulated, anticipated way that is entirely different from necrosis (cell death caused by disease or injury). Somewhere between 50-80 billion cells die as a result of programmed cell death in the average human body every single day, but the mechanism behind it and even the intent is not widely understood.

On the one hand, too much programmed cell death leads to atrophy of muscles and has been implicated in diseases that cause extreme but otherwise unexplained muscular weakness, whereas too little apoptosis allows cells to proliferate, which can lead to cancer. The general concept of apoptosis was first described by German scientist Karl Vogt in 1842. Much progress has been made in understanding it, but the process’s deeper mysteries still abound.

The Computational Theory Of Mind


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Source: Giphy

Some scholars liken the activities of the mind to the way a computer processes information. As such, the Computational Theory of Mind was developed in the mid-1960s, when man and machine first began to grapple with one another’s existence in earnest. Put simply, imagine that your brain is a computer and your mind is the operational system that it runs.

When put into the context of computer science, it’s a riveting analogy to make: in theory, programs produce outputs based solely on a series of inputs (external stimuli, sight, sound, etc.) and memory (which here means both a physical hard drive and our psychological memory). Programs are run by algorithms which have a finite number of steps, repeated according to the receipt of various inputs. Like the brain, a computer must make representations of what it cannot physically compute–and this is one of the major supportive arguments in favor of this particular theory.

However, Computational Theory differs from the Representational Theory of the Mind in that it allows that not all states are representational (like depression) and thus are not going to respond to computational-based treatment. The problem is more a philosophical one than anything else: the computational theory of mind works well, except when it comes to defining how to “reprogram” brains that are depressed. We can’t reboot ourselves to factory settings.

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The End Was Nigh: Failed Doomsday Prophecies Throughout Time

Failed Doomsday Predictions End Man

The world has been about to end for a long time. In fact, if there’s a single philosophical idea that runs like a connecting thread through thousands of years of history, it’s that we definitely don’t have thousands of years left to live. People have been predicting the end of the world – any day now – since before we started smelting iron. The study of humanity’s indecent eagerness to see the world end is so common, it has its own name: eschatology.

Like other outmoded philosophical speculations (suck it, Diogenes), eschatology – which is defined as the study of “death, judgment, heaven and hell” – has never produced a single useful outcome, unless you count easy jobs for the failed prophets who still make a soft living by telling us all the end is nigh.

It’s one thing to promote a vague sense that the world doesn’t have long to live, but some of the more ambitious doomsayers have been rash enough to set an actual date for the event. This is tricky business; you want to set a date that’s close enough to scare the bejesus out of people who have a good credit rating, but not so close that you’ll eventually be exposed and maybe jailed for fraud.

Even the longest-term projections, however, must eventually come to pass, and the world’s persistent failure to die counts as negative data on the reliability of such predictions. Here are a few highlights from this ancient industry.

Religious Visions of the End

Failed Doomsday Prophecies May

Source: The Epoch Times

Any discussion of doomsday prophecies must begin with various religious attempts to foresee the end. While it would be wrong to use cranks and eccentrics to paint all religions with a broad brush, the fact that these beliefs are inherently irrefutable creates a wide field for frauds to make things up as they go along.

Pat Robertson

We’re not going to bother with him, though he did predict Armageddon in print. Twice. Source: Cinema Slasher

One of the earliest End Times prophecies we have detailed accounts of came from the Essenes, a Jewish sect active in the first century AD. The Essenes predicted the advent of Zion, going so far as to mint coins announcing the event, sometime between 66 and 70 AD. Of course, they were at war with the Roman Empire at the time, so in a sense the world did end – for them.

In the late fourth century, Martin of Tours predicted the end would come by the year 400. Writing with the sublime confidence common to idiots, Martin claimed: “There is no doubt that the Antichrist has already been born. Firmly established already in his early years, he will, after reaching maturity, achieve supreme power.” For the record, assuming the Antichrist was born in 375, he would be 1,640 years old as of this writing.

Round numbers are attractive to fakes for the same reason your One Direction MP3s cost $1.49, rather than an even $1.50. Human brains have trouble with numbers, so a bunch of zeroes feels oddly comforting. Maybe this is why Hippolytus of Rome, Sextus Julius Africanus, and Irenaeus all predicted the Apocalypse for 500 AD. Their method was based on the non-existent dimensions of Noah’s Ark, which is famous for not actually having existed, and probably being physically impossible besides.

Noahs Ark

Pictured: Not a photograph.
Source: Wallpapers in HQ

Speaking of round numbers, it doesn’t get rounder than 1000, which was the date predicted by Pope Sylvester II in the fourth century. Ironically, there was a Pope Sylvester III, who was born in the year 1000, amid riots caused by panicky idiots who didn’t know that even the Catholic Church doesn’t place Christ’s birth in the year 0, seeing as how there was no year 0 in the Western calendar, which is another thing the rioters probably didn’t know. Eschatological scientists learned from this mistake and revised their estimates to 1,000 years from Jesus’ death, rather than birth. Nothing happened in 1033 AD, either.

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The Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition Has Returned (And We’re Excited)

Large Weston Room London

Summer Exhibition 2015

A preview of the 2015 Summer Exhibition. Source: Telegraph

At the Summer Exhibition, thousands of pieces of art drape the walls, carefully pieced together like a jigsaw puzzle. Various rooms house art of all mediums—sculptures, paintings, media and statues—each with a different theme. As a tradition, “restorative” beef stew is served during the hanging, and unlike most exhibitions, people are able to purchase the art that they admire.

Painting Private View at the Royal Academy, 1881

Painted by William Powell Frith, “A Private View at the Royal Academy, 1881” depicts a group of high-class Victorians taking a private tour of the 1881 Summer Exhibition. Source: Wikipedia


The Summer Exhibition at London’s Royal Academy of Arts has been around for centuries. Since 1769, what’s now the oldest and largest open-submission exhibition has offered the public a snapshot of the time’s best contemporary art. This year’s Summer Exhibition is said to be filled with “room after room” of color and variety. Coordinated by Michael Craig-Martin, the exhibition will showcase 1,200 works from both emerging and established artists, each piece chosen based on merit alone.

The 2015 exhibition will run from June 8 through August 16. In the meantime, these photos will show you how the Summer Exhibition has changed even in the past decade.
Click here to view slideshow

The Royal Academy of Arts was established 247 years ago, after King George III allowed the group to create a society dedicated to promoting the “Arts of Design.” Over the next 100 years, the RA exhibited works in various structures, including the Somerset House (below). Finally, in 1867, the Royal Academy of Arts moved to Burlington House, where they remain to this day. A pretty sweet deal—their contract mandates an annual rent of £1 for 999 years—helped seal the deal on their new digs.

Somerset House Royal Academy

This re-imagined painting depicts a Summer Exhibition that was held at the Somerset House. Source: 3144

Despite the historic significance of the Royal Academy and its Summer Exhibition, in recent years the showcase has received substantial criticism. Critics have labelled past exhibitions “chaotic” and “overwhelming,” recommending that Academicians either reduce the number of works being displayed or take greater care when curating the various rooms.

Some changes have been made to accommodate these concerns. At the 2014 Summer Exhibition, each room was hung by a single Academician with one theme or idea in mind. Some reviewers found that this change made it easier to parse through the thousands of pieces of art being displayed.

Here’s a short introduction to last year’s Exhibition and the various themes that drove it:

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Before Techies, There Were Hippies: Haight-Ashbury In 1967

haight ashbury 1967 intersection

haight ashbury 1967 intersection

The intersection of Haight and Ashbury, San Francisco in 1967. Source: Mashable

In 1967, as American air raids wreaked havoc on Vietnamese soil, in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury neighborhood it was the Summer of Love.

A series of natural and political events would transpire before Haight-Ashbury would become the epicenter of the “Free Love” mentality. It was one of the only areas spared from the fires sparked by the 1906 earthquakes, which meant that the neighborhood retained its charming Victorian architecture, if not its staunch sensibilities. Nevertheless, after the middle class left in the 1950s to relocate to the suburbs, Haight-Ashbury subsequently fell into disrepair.

A proposed freeway through the neighborhood in the 1950s led to a further decline in property values. Even though the freeway plans were cancelled, the damage had already been done–at least when viewed under a more conservative lens: low rents had attracted the beatniks, with the hippies soon to follow.

The hippie movement revolved around the exploration of alternative lifestyles and an overall rejection of societal rules. Engaging in Eastern Spiritualism, free love, and “mind expanding” drugs, the lifestyle soon drew the country’s disenchanted youth to the neighborhood, marked by the intersection of Haight and Ashbury.

haight ashbury 1967 guitar

Source: Mashable

Musicians such as The Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, and Jefferson Airplane moved in, too, and record stores openly sold psychedelic drugs and marijuana right beside their LPs. Exotic stores filled the streets, representing a hodge lodge of interests and identities: the unique counter-culture had found a thriving home.

As happens in life, though, love and happiness too had an expiration date in Haigh-Ashbury. With youth streaming in by the thousands (spurned by the continual media coverage) Haight-Ashbury soon found itself filled past capacity; this lead to widespread homelessness and drug-related health problems.

By October of 1967, the remaining residents held a highly-publicized mock funeral for “The Death of the Hippie.” Within two years–following several violent and tragic events such as the Manson murders and the killings at Kent State and The Altamont Music Festival–the hippie movement would largely fade away from the American consciousness.

Today, San Francisco has been overtaken by a culture of a different kind–start-up loving techies. While low rents and Jerry Garcia-quoting hippies have all but disappeared from San Francisco and Haight-Ashbury, we look back on a time when both were commonplace in the ‘hood:

Click here to view slideshow

Images courtesy of Michael Ochs/Getty Images.

Want more on hippies and San Francisco? Check out our galleries on life in a hippie commune as well as vintage San Francisco, as well as this short news clip on 1967 San Francisco:

The post Before Techies, There Were Hippies: Haight-Ashbury In 1967 appeared first on All That Is Interesting.

“Freedom” In China: 26 Years After The Tiananmen Square Massacre

Chineses Protesters vs. Troops

Tiananmen Square Massacre

Source: Mashable

Twenty six years ago, thousands of Chinese troops entered Tiananmen Square and opened fire on unarmed protesters. As many as one million demonstrators–mostly university-age liberals–had gathered there in the weeks prior, seeking both political and economic reforms. While the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) had silenced previous demonstrations, the violent retaking of the Square was so brutal that it earned the name the Tiananmen Square Massacre.


We still don’t know how many people died at Tiananmen Square in 1989, as the Chinese government has done everything in its power to suppress and forget about the activities that took place that day. While official records say that 241 people lost their lives, most estimates suggest that number is much higher. A doctor at the time said that 500 lives were lost, while a radio announcer reported the Tiananmen death toll at more than 1,000 people.

Chineses Protesters vs. Troops

Source: ABC

It’s interesting to see the way things have and haven’t changed over the past two and a half decades in China. Freedom House, an independent organization dedicated to promoting freedom around the world, labeled China as “Not Free” in their 2014 Freedom in the World report, giving the country almost the lowest score possible–in nearly every category (see their ranking methodologies and definitions here). A number of factors contribute to the country’s lack of freedom, but most can be boiled down to the Chinese government.

The government’s grip on its constituents is strong and unyielding. With the current climate, there are few opportunities for people to speak out and enact change. The Chinese Communist Party has a monopoly on political power: organized opposition is illegal, and independent political parties are strictly forbidden. Those who participate in such organizations face jail time or injuries just for speaking their minds. The CCP’s complete domination over the government and, therefore, the policies that guide the country, ensure that only they can make the rules.

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Housewives Before WW2: Women On The Cusp Of Transformation

american housewife 1941 plate hanging

Hanging a china plate as decoration while Tony plays. Source: Mashable

We’ve written before on the ways war has inspired countless technical innovations that we take for granted every day, but haven’t focused too much on the ways it has transformed the home and its accompanying gender roles. In this arena, one surprising “accomplishment” of World War II was the way it catalyzed the average American woman’s move from the home and to the marketplace, where she found remunerative work–and where she more often than not stayed.

Just two months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, LIFE Magazine ran a piece by photographer William C. Shrout covering the duties of the typical, middle class American mother and housewife, a figure whose June Cleaver associations are becoming more mythical with each passing decade.

Shrout followed young Jane Amberg of Kanakee, Illinois and documented her as she happily buzzed around the house, completing myriad tasks while her husband, Gilbert, was at work. Jane was just 21 when she and Gilbert married, which believe it or not was considered an average age to get married at the time.

In 1941, full-time mothers and housewives kept up thirty million households, filling sometimes 18 hour days (including weekends) with chores such as cooking, cleaning, chauffeuring, sewing, laundry and childcare–and doing it all with very little help and zero wages. As stated in LIFE, “They are responsible for making a greater number of attractive homes, raising better-fed and clothed children and managing the highest standard of mass home living that the world has ever known.”

american housewife 1941 cookie serving

Lunch and cookies are served on a day Gilbert is home from the office. Source: Mashable

On top of daily chores, housewives were also expected to attend the every beck and call of their husbands, as well as those of visiting friends, co-workers, and acquaintances–no doubt conjuring up countless awful Jell-O salad molds we’ve seen on retro Pinterest boards. Outside the home, they were expected to be their husband’s “best girl” and behave accordingly in public.

The status quo would soon change following the attack on Pearl Harbor. Men left town to serve in World War II, requiring women to take up even more responsibilities. Some women embraced the role shift and their ability to work outside of the home and for pay, with others finding the transition more difficult than others (fun fact: that’s where the Myers-Briggs test comes from).

During this five-year span, the number of women with jobs outside of the home rose by five million, with women composing 36 percent of the workforce. At the end of the war, most women reported to the Department of Labor that they planned on keeping their current jobs. The Jane Amsbergs of the country had found a larger economy–stemming from the Greek word “oikonomia” or household management–to clean up. See a slice of Jane’s life below:

Click here to view slideshow

The post Housewives Before WW2: Women On The Cusp Of Transformation appeared first on All That Is Interesting.

Housewives Before WW2: Women On The Cusp Of Transformation

american housewife 1941 plate hanging

Hanging a china plate as decoration while Tony plays. Source: Mashable

We’ve written before on the ways war has inspired countless technical innovations that we take for granted every day, but haven’t focused too much on the ways it has transformed the home and its accompanying gender roles. In this arena, one surprising “accomplishment” of World War II was the way it catalyzed the average American woman’s move from the home and to the marketplace, where she found remunerative work–and where she more often than not stayed.

Just two months before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, LIFE Magazine ran a piece by photographer William C. Shrout covering the duties of the typical, middle class American mother and housewife, a figure whose June Cleaver associations are becoming more mythical with each passing decade.

Shrout followed young Jane Amberg of Kanakee, Illinois and documented her as she happily buzzed around the house, completing myriad tasks while her husband, Gilbert, was at work. Jane was just 21 when she and Gilbert married, which believe it or not was considered an average age to get married at the time.

In 1941, full-time mothers and housewives kept up thirty million households, filling sometimes 18 hour days (including weekends) with chores such as cooking, cleaning, chauffeuring, sewing, laundry and childcare–and doing it all with very little help and zero wages. As stated in LIFE, “They are responsible for making a greater number of attractive homes, raising better-fed and clothed children and managing the highest standard of mass home living that the world has ever known.”

american housewife 1941 cookie serving

Lunch and cookies are served on a day Gilbert is home from the office. Source: Mashable

On top of daily chores, housewives were also expected to attend the every beck and call of their husbands, as well as those of visiting friends, co-workers, and acquaintances–no doubt conjuring up countless awful Jell-O salad molds we’ve seen on retro Pinterest boards. Outside the home, they were expected to be their husband’s “best girl” and behave accordingly in public.

The status quo would soon change following the attack on Pearl Harbor. Men left town to serve in World War II, requiring women to take up even more responsibilities. Some women embraced the role shift and their ability to work outside of the home and for pay, with others finding the transition more difficult than others (fun fact: that’s where the Myers-Briggs test comes from).

During this five-year span, the number of women with jobs outside of the home rose by five million, with women composing 36 percent of the workforce. At the end of the war, most women reported to the Department of Labor that they planned on keeping their current jobs. The Jane Amsbergs of the country had found a larger economy–stemming from the Greek word “oikonomia” or household management–to clean up. See a slice of Jane’s life below:

Click here to view slideshow

The post Housewives Before WW2: Women On The Cusp Of Transformation appeared first on All That Is Interesting.