#NAVINFLUOR-- last time it was an interesting chart which remains interesting
Dedicated to
@madav1401
. https://t.co/IL4AYpqopP
#NAVINFLUOR-- Again interesting chart and pattern.
— VVikas Kumaarr (@flyingvikas129) April 6, 2021
Dedicated to @madav1401 . pic.twitter.com/Kg0uiKqPjh
More from VVikas Kumaarr
#DeepakNtr - Can this be a Runway Gap and remain unfilled for some time going forward?
— VVikas Kumaarr (@flyingvikas129) July 31, 2021
Only market knows the right Answer.#flyingvikas #technical #nse #trading #Keepitsimple#Cadlestick #Gap #Breakout #BREAKOUTSTOCKS #stokes #trading pic.twitter.com/VFjbwGl0kD
More from Navinfluorine
On my Radar for Tomorrow and Going forward.
Plan your Trade, Trade your Plan.
#flyingvikas #technical #nse #trading #Keepitsimple
#Cadlestick #Gap #Breakout #BREAKOUTSTOCKS #stokes #trading https://t.co/h5MrVDXOHS
#NAVINFLUOR-- last time it was an interesting chart which remains interesting
— VVikas Kumaarr (@flyingvikas129) July 7, 2021
Dedicated to @madav1401
. https://t.co/IL4AYpqopP pic.twitter.com/Ej0rw6NcX0
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I'll begin with the ancient history ... and it goes way back. Because modern humans - and before that, the ancestors of humans - almost certainly originated in Ethiopia. 🇪🇹 (sub-thread):
The famous \u201cLucy\u201d, an early ancestor of modern humans (Australopithecus) that lived 3.2 million years ago, and was discovered in 1974 in Ethiopia, displayed in the national museum in Addis Ababa \U0001f1ea\U0001f1f9 pic.twitter.com/N3oWqk1SW2
— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) November 9, 2018
The first likely historical reference to Ethiopia is ancient Egyptian records of trade expeditions to the "Land of Punt" in search of gold, ebony, ivory, incense, and wild animals, starting in c 2500 BC 🇪🇹
Ethiopians themselves believe that the Queen of Sheba, who visited Israel's King Solomon in the Bible (c 950 BC), came from Ethiopia (not Yemen, as others believe). Here she is meeting Solomon in a stain-glassed window in Addis Ababa's Holy Trinity Church. 🇪🇹
References to the Queen of Sheba are everywhere in Ethiopia. The national airline's frequent flier miles are even called "ShebaMiles". 🇪🇹
As someone\u2019s who\u2019s read the book, this review strikes me as tremendously unfair. It mostly faults Adler for not writing the book the reviewer wishes he had! https://t.co/pqpt5Ziivj
— Teresa M. Bejan (@tmbejan) January 12, 2021
The meat of the criticism is that the history Adler gives is insufficiently critical. Adler describes a few figures who had a great influence on how the modern US university was formed. It's certainly critical: it focuses on the social Darwinism of these figures. 2/x
Other insinuations and suggestions in the review seem wildly off the mark, distorted, or inappropriate-- for example, that the book is clickbaity (it is scholarly) or conservative (hardly) or connected to the events at the Capitol (give me a break). 3/x
The core question: in what sense is classics inherently racist? Classics is old. On Adler's account, it begins in ancient Rome and is revived in the Renaissance. Slavery (Christiansen's primary concern) is also very old. Let's say classics is an education for slaveowners. 4/x
It's worth remembering that literacy itself is elite throughout most of this history. Literacy is, then, also the education of slaveowners. We can honor oral and musical traditions without denying that literacy is, generally, good. 5/x