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How to Taper Off Kratom Safely and Efficiently You might not be aware of it, but there are a number of ways you can taper off kratom. Tapering down is akin to weaning off medication, and you need to make sure you are doing it in the safest and most efficient way possible. By following the steps outlined in this guide, you will avoid the pitfalls of a potentially disastrous taper. The old-fashioned approach to tapering off kratom is to simply stop. That is, take a break from the product, and get your body used to being without it. Although this may sound like a great idea, it isn't a foolproof method. Unless you have a reliable support system, you're more likely to fail. Instead, you need to make a concerted effort to stick to your new regime. The most effective way to do it is by making a plan. For example, you can schedule a block of time each day when you are not consuming kratom. This is a good time to take your vitamins, drink plenty of water, and eat healthy. Also, be sure to find a healthy exercise routine. Getting your body moving will help you relax and burn off some of that kratom, as well as improve your mental health. If you have been using kratom for a while, you will probably need to cut back on your dose. A simple 0.5 gram reduction in your daily dosage is the minimum you should do. As a rule of thumb, it's best to cut your intake by at least one fifth. However, you should be aware that your tolerance level will affect the amount you need to reduce each time. So, it's wise to start a slow and steady pace. Using the right supplement will ensure that you taper off kratom in the best possible way. One of the most beneficial supplements to use while you're phasing out your kratom is D-Phenylalanine, which is a substance that enhances the effects of opioids while lowering your blood pressure and anxiety levels. Other supplements that are worth taking are DLPA, Maca root powder, and liposomal C. While these may not be as glamorous as other supplements, they are worth mentioning because they are effective at helping you taper off kratom in a safe and efficient manner. It's also worth noting that these elixirs are available over the counter. Check out https //kratom.org/guides/ for more details on kratom. Of course, there are a number of other things you should do to successfully taper off kratom. These include, but are not limited to, keeping a detailed journal, drinking plenty of water, and taking a vitamin or supplement that will boost your immune system. All of these items are small measures, but they will go a long way in helping you stay on track. The most effective method for determining the right dosage to taper off kratom involves an assessment of your needs and what you're able to afford. Your doctor can provide you with the most suitable medications to help you through the process.
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GENRE TITLE ARTIST bpm notes CLEAR RATE TECHNO MUSIC TO YOUR HEAD SLAKE 144 769 80%(2009-08-10) Nより道中が若干ムズイがやっぱり同色階段ゲーなので難易度はNと殆ど変わらない。旧六段2曲目で多くの挑戦者を苦しめた。 -- 名無しさん (2008-03-31 22 34 40) 7→1、14→8で撫でれば越せなくはない -- 名無しさん (2010-01-29 11 08 12) ノマゲでもHARDでもそこそこ余裕持ってクリアできれば穴クリアも近いでしょう -- 名無しさん (2011-05-09 00 44 20) Nにも穴にも言えるけど、左ミラーが個人的に楽だった -- 名無しさん (2018-07-18 08 44 25) 名前 コメント
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【検索用 登録タグ K いおぎりょう 曲 重音テト】 作詞:いおぎりょう 作曲:いおぎりょう 編曲:いおぎりょう 唄:重音テト 曲紹介 UTAUのテトさんに歌ってもらいました。 半年間温めてたら知らないうちにSynthesizerVがでてました。 『ボカコレ2023夏』TOP100ランキング参加曲。 歌詞 あれはテンプレートの表情 複製された街路灯 私を見分けるラベルを捨て去って どこか遠くに行きたいの 確かな重さを持つ秒針 薄手のカーテンの陰には天使 瞬い時間を失わないようにそっと 今日もまた机に向かう このまま KEEP YOUR HEADACHES 万物を変えていこうぜ 痛みは己の炎で 焦がしつくすまで待て 音楽は祈りを越え 平熱で容(かたち)が融け お前の光がまだ 世界を照らすと信じてるから! 淺ましい天使にぎゅっと 許されるざるほどの愛を 季節性の焦りを絶つ魔法 も発明家のさりげない嘘 それよりも 見えないものが見たいの 明日は今日より高くに居たいの 私だけみえるこのささやかな感動 苦しみを超えて伝うから このまま KEEP YOUR HEADACHES 万物を変えていこうぜ 痛みは己の炎で 焦がしつくすまで待て 音楽は祈りを越え 平熱で容(かたち)が融け お前の光がまだ 世界を照らすと信じてるから! コメント 名前 コメント
https://w.atwiki.jp/sicpstudygroup/pages/37.html
Exercise2.1 (define (make-rat n d) (let* ((g (gcd n d)) (nn (quotient n g)) (nd (quotient d g))) (if (negative? nd) (cons (- nn) (- nd)) (cons nn nd)))) by iwk (define (make-rat n d) (let ((g (gcd n d))) (if (negative? (* n d)) (cons (- (/ (abs n) g)) (/ (abs d) g)) (cons (/ (abs n) g) (/ (abs d) g))))) by alaskan Exercise2.2 (define (make-point x y) (if (and (exact? x) (exact? y)) (cons x y) (error "Argument not integer"))) (define x-point car) (define y-point cdr) (define (point? p) (and (pair? p) (exact? (car p)) (exact? (cdr p)))) (define (make-segment start end) (if (and (point? start) (point? end)) (cons start end) (error "Argument not point"))) (define (segment? seg) (and (pair? seg) (point? (car seg)) (point? (cdr seg)))) (define (start-segment seg) (if (segment? seg) (car seg) (error "Argument not segment"))) (define (end-segment seg) (if (segment? seg) (cdr seg) (error "Argument not segment"))) (define (midpoint-segment seg) (let* ((start (start-segment seg)) (end (end-segment seg)) (xsum (+ (x-point start) (x-point end))) (ysum (+ (y-point start) (y-point end)))) (make-point (quotient xsum 2) (quotient ysum 2)))) (define (print-point p) (newline) (display "(") (display (x-point p)) (display ",") (display (y-point p)) (display ")")) by iwk Exercise2.3 ;;; 表現1 左下の点と右上の点によって長方形を表現 (define (make-rectangle lb rt) (cons lb rt)) (define (left-bottom rect) (car rect)) (define (right-top rect) (cdr rect)) ;;; 縦の辺の長さ (define (height rect) (abs (- (y-point (left-bottom rect)) (y-point (right-top rect))))) ;;; 横の辺の長さ (define (width rect) (abs (- (x-point (left-bottom rect)) (x-point (right-top rect))))) ;;; 表現2 縦の辺と横の辺によって表現 (辺は線分で表現) (define (make-rectangle h w) (cons h w)) (define (vertical rect) (car rect)) (define (horizontal rect) (cdr rect)) ;;; 縦の辺の長さ (define (height rect) (abs (- (y-point (end-segment (vertical rect))) (y-point (start-segment (vertical rect)))))) ;;; 横の辺の長さ (define (width rect) (abs (- (x-point (end-segment (horizontal rect))) (x-point (start-segment (horizontal rect)))))) ;;; 周囲の長さ と 面積 (define (perimeter rect) (* 2 (+ (height rect) (width rect)))) (define (area rect) (* (height rect) (width rect))) by chrono Exercise2.4 (define (mycdr z) (z (lambda (p q) q))) by iwk Exercise2.5 (define (my-cons a b) (* (expt 2 a) (expt 3 b))) (define (my-car z) (if (even? z) (+ 1 (my-car (/ z 2))) 0)) (define (my-cdr z) (if (= 0 (remainder z 3)) (+ 1 (my-cdr (/ z 3))) 0)) by iriya Exercise2.6 (define zero (lambda (f) (lambda(x) x))) (define (add-1 n) (lambda (f) (lambda (x) (f ((n f) x))))) (add-1 zero) -β- λ f.λ x.(f ((zero f) x)) -β- λ f.λ x.(f ((λ y.y) x)) -β- λ f.λ x (f x) (define one (lambda (f) (lambda (x) (f x)))) (add-1 one) -β- λ f.λ x.(f ((one f) x)) -β- λ f.λ x.(f ((λ y.(f y)) x)) -β- λ f.λ x.(f (f x)) (define two (lambda (f) (lambda (x) (f (f x))))) (define (plus a b) (letrec ((compose (lambda (x y) (lambda (z) (x (y z)))))) (lambda (f) (compose (a f) (b f))))) 具体的にβ変換してみる plus one two -β- λ f. compose (one f) (two f) -β- λ f.λ z.((one f) ((two f) z)) -β- λ f.λ z.((λx.f x) ((λx.ff x) z)) -β- λ f.λ z.((λx.f x) (ff z)) -β- λ f.λ z.(fff z)) = third これは加法になっている。 by iwk Exercise2.7 (define (upper-bound iv) (cdr iv)) (define (lower-bound iv) (car iv)) by iwk Exercise2.8 (define (sub-interval x y) (make-interval (- (lower-bound x) (upper-bound y)) (- (upper-bound x) (lower-bound y)))) by iwk Exercise2.9 The width of an interval is half of the difference between its upper and lower bounds. The width is a measure of the uncertainly of the number specified by the interval. For some arithmetic operations the width of the result of combining two intervals is a function only of the widths of the argument intervals, whereas for others the width of the combination is not a function of the widths of the argument intervals. Show that the width of the sum (of difference) of two intervals is a function only of the widths of the intervals being added (or subtracted). Give examples to show that this is not true for multiplication or division. 一つのintervalのwidthはintervalの上限と下限の差の半分である。そのwidthはintervalによって指定される数の不明確な測度である。いくつかの数値演算において、2つのintervalを組み合わせた結果のwidthはその2つのintervalのwidthできまる関数となる、一方それら以外の数値演算においてはそのようなことは成り立たない。2つのintervalの和(差)のwidthはその加えられた(引かれた)intervalのそれぞれのwidthの関数であることを示せ。さらに積と商においては上記の事柄は成り立たないことを示す例を挙げよ。 (define (width x) (/ (- (upper-bound x) (lower-bound x)) 2.0)) (define (add-width x y) (width (add-interval x y))) ;; add-width (a,b) (c,d) ;; width (add-interval (a,b) (c,d)) ;; width ((+ a c), (+ b d)) ;; (/ (- (+ b d) (+ a c)) 2) ;; (/ (+ (- b a) (- d c)) 2) ;; (+ (/ (- b a) 2) (/ (- d c) 2)) ;; (+ (width (a,b)) (width (c,d))) (define (sub-width x y) (width (sub-interval x y))) ;; sub-width (a,b) (c,d) ;; width (sub-interval (a,b) (c,d)) ;; width ((- b c),(- a d)) ;; width ((+ b (- c)),(+ a (- d))) ;; (/ (- (+ b (- c)) (+ a (- d))) 2) ;; (/ (+ (+ b (- c)) (+ (- a) d)) 2) ;; (/ (+ (- a) b (- c) d) 2) ;; (/ (+ (- b a) (- d c)) 2) ;; (- (/ (- b a) 2) (/ (- d c) 2)) ;; (- (width (a,b)) (width (c,d))) よってadd-interval,sub-intervalは+,-の演算に書き換えられた。= widthの関数となる。 一方mul-intervalは gosh (define x (make-interval 1 4)) x gosh (define y (make-interval 3 5)) y gosh (* (width x) (width y)) 10.0 gosh (width (mul-interval x y)) 11.5 と一致しない。= width の関数とならない div-intervalは内部でmul-intervalを呼び出しているので同様に成り立たない。 Exercise2.10 (define (div-interval x y) (define (span-zero? ival) (let ((product (* (upper-bound ival) (lower-bound ival)))) (and (= ival 0) (negative? ival)))) (if (span-zero? y) (error "the interval spans zero" y) (mul-interval x (make-interval (/ 1.0 (upper-bound y)) (/ 1.0 (lower-bound y)))) by iwk Exercise2.11 Exercise2.12 Exercise2.13 Exercise2.14 Exercise2.15 Exercise2.16
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Thank you. I m honored to be with you today for your commencement from one of the finest universities in the world. Truth be told, I never graduated from college and this is the closest I ve ever gotten to a college graduation. Today I want to tell you three stories from my life. That s it. No big deal. Just three stories. The first story is about connecting the dots. I dropped out of Reed College after the first six months but then stayed around as a drop-in for another eighteen months or so before I really quit. So why did I drop out? It started before I was born. My biological mother was a young, unwed graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. She felt very strongly that I should be adopted by college graduates, so everything was all set for me to be adopted at birth by a lawyer and his wife, except that when I popped out, they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl. So my parents, who were on a waiting list, got a call in the middle of the night asking, "We ve got an unexpected baby boy. Do you want him?" They said, "Of course." My biological mother found out later that my mother had never graduated from college and that my father had never graduated from high school. She refused to sign the final adoption papers. She only relented a few months later when my parents promised that I would go to college. This was the start in my life. And seventeen years later, I did go to college, but I naïvely chose a college that was almost as expensive as Stanford, and all of my working-class parents savings were being spent on my college tuition. After six months, I couldn t see the value in it. I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life, and no idea of how college was going to help me figure it out, and here I was, spending all the money my parents had saved their entire life. So I decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out OK. It was pretty scary at the time, but looking back, it was one of the best decisions I ever made. The minute I dropped out, I could stop taking the required classes that didn t interest me and begin dropping in on the ones that looked far more interesting. It wasn t all romantic. I didn t have a dorm room, so I slept on the floor in friends rooms. I returned Coke bottles for the five-cent deposits to buy food with, and I would walk the seven miles across town every Sunday night to get one good meal a week at the Hare Krishna temple. I loved it. And much of what I stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on. Let me give you one example. Reed College at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. Throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer was beautifully hand-calligraphed. Because I had dropped out and didn t have to take the normal classes, I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif and sans-serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can t capture, and I found it fascinating. None of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. But ten years later when we were designing the first Macintosh computer, it all came back to me, and we designed it all into the Mac. It was the first computer with beautiful typography. If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts, and since Windows just copied the Mac, it s likely that no personal computer would have them. If I had never dropped out, I would have never dropped in on that calligraphy class and personals computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in college, but it was very, very clear looking backwards 10 years later. Again, you can t connect the dots looking forward. You can only connect them looking backwards, so you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something--your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever--because believing that the dots will connect down the road will give you the confidence to follow your heart, even when it leads you off the well-worn path, and that will make all the difference. My second story is about love and loss. I was lucky. I found what I loved to do early in life. Woz and I started Apple in my parents garage when I was twenty. We worked hard and in ten years, Apple had grown from just the two of us in a garage into a $2 billion company with over 4,000 employees. We d just released our finest creation, the Macintosh, a year earlier, and I d just turned thirty, and then I got fired. How can you get fired from a company you started? Well, as Apple grew, we hired someone who I thought was very talented to run the company with me, and for the first year or so, things went well. But then our visions of the future began to diverge, and eventually we had a falling out. When we did, our board of directors sided with him, and so at thirty, I was out, and very publicly out. What had been the focus of my entire adult life was gone, and it was devastating. I really didn t know what to do for a few months. I felt that I had let the previous generation of entrepreneurs down, that I had dropped the baton as it was being passed to me. I met with David Packard and Bob Noyce and tried to apologize for screwing up so badly. I was a very public failure and I even thought about running away from the Valley. But something slowly began to dawn on me. I still loved what I did. The turn of events at Apple had not changed that one bit. I d been rejected but I was still in love. And so I decided to start over. I didn t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods in my life. During the next five years I started a company named NeXT, another company named Pixar and fell in love with an amazing woman who would become my wife. Pixar went on to create the world s first computer-animated feature film, "Toy Story," and is now the most successful animation studio in the world. In a remarkable turn of events, Apple bought NeXT and I returned to Apple and the technology we developed at NeXT is at the heart of Apple s current renaissance, and Lorene and I have a wonderful family together. I m pretty sure none of this would have happened if I hadn t been fired from Apple. It was awful-tasting medicine but I guess the patient needed it. Sometimes life s going to hit you in the head with a brick. Don t lose faith. I m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did. You ve got to find what you love, and that is as true for work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work, and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven t found it yet, keep looking, and don t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you ll know when you find it, and like any great relationship it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking. Don t settle. My third story is about death. When I was 17 I read a quote that went something like "If you live each day as if it was your last, someday you ll most certainly be right." It made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, I have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself, "If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?" And whenever the answer has been "no" for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something. Remembering that I ll be dead soon is the most important thing I ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life, because almost everything--all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure--these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart. About a year ago, I was diagnosed with cancer. I had a scan at 7 30 in the morning and it clearly showed a tumor on my pancreas. I didn t even know what a pancreas was. The doctors told me this was almost certainly a type of cancer that is incurable, and that I should expect to live no longer than three to six months. My doctor advised me to go home and get my affairs in order, which is doctors code for "prepare to die." It means to try and tell your kids everything you thought you d have the next ten years to tell them, in just a few months. It means to make sure that everything is buttoned up so that it will be as easy as possible for your family. It means to say your goodbyes. I lived with that diagnosis all day. Later that evening I had a biopsy where they stuck an endoscope down my throat, through my stomach into my intestines, put a needle into my pancreas and got a few cells from the tumor. I was sedated but my wife, who was there, told me that when they viewed the cells under a microscope, the doctor started crying, because it turned out to be a very rare form of pancreatic cancer that is curable with surgery. I had the surgery and, thankfully, I am fine now. This was the closest I ve been to facing death, and I hope it s the closest I get for a few more decades. Having lived through it, I can now say this to you with a bit more certainty than when death was a useful but purely intellectual concept. No one wants to die, even people who want to go to Heaven don t want to die to get there, and yet, death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because death is very likely the single best invention of life. It s life s change agent; it clears out the old to make way for the new. right now, the new is you. But someday, not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it s quite true. Your time is limited, so don t waste it living someone else s life. Don t be trapped by dogma, which is living with the results of other people s thinking. Don t let the noise of others opinions drown out your own inner voice, heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary. When I was young, there was an amazing publication called The Whole Earth Catalogue, which was one of the bibles of my generation. It was created by a fellow named Stuart Brand not far from here in Menlo Park, and he brought it to life with his poetic touch. This was in the late Sixties, before personal computers and desktop publishing, so it was all made with typewriters, scissors, and Polaroid cameras. it was sort of like Google in paperback form thirty-five years before Google came along. I was idealistic, overflowing with neat tools and great notions. Stuart and his team put out several issues of the The Whole Earth Catalogue, and then when it had run its course, they put out a final issue. It was the mid-Seventies and I was your age. On the back cover of their final issue was a photograph of an early morning country road, the kind you might find yourself hitchhiking on if you were so adventurous. Beneath were the words, "Stay hungry, stay foolish." It was their farewell message as they signed off. "Stay hungry, stay foolish." And I have always wished that for myself, and now, as you graduate to begin anew, I wish that for you. Stay hungry, stay foolish. Thank you all, very much.
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■サザン I AM YOUR SINGER 休符 ド レ ミ ー ファ ミ レ ミ レ ド ー シ ー ー シ 名前 コメント
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Deliberate Practice The Secret of Getting Good Fast 計画的訓練 より早くうまくなる秘密 !-- 訳注 Deliberate Practiceは Deliberate Practiceで検索して出てきたものと 関係があるのか? http //lifehacking.jp/2010/01/deliberate-practice/ https //www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWuaQ84kGwI http //www.proko.com/deliberate-practice-the-secret-of-getting-good-fast/ After finishing the 2 demos in my last video, I realized that I made a big mistake in the drawings. 前回のビデオにおいて、二つの実演を行ったわけですが、 終わった後、私はドローイングにおいて大きな間違いを犯したことに 気づきました。 It’s the same mistake in both of them! 二つの実演両方で同じ間違いを犯してしまいました! I made the gesture too stiff. とても固くて動きのないジェスチャーを描いてしまいました。 Both of the reference images are very dynamic, but my drawings are not. 資料の画像は両方とも大変躍動的なのですが、 私のドローイングはそうではありません。 So, I thought this would be a great opportunity to address an important topic. それで、 私は、今回の間違いは 大変重要な項目を提供する大変良い機会だと 考えたわけです。 How to practice correctly and what to do when you make mistakes. どうやって正確に練習するか、 そして 間違った時に何をするのか ということです。 In fact making mistakes is a big part of practicing correctly. 実際、 間違うということは、 正しく練習することの 重要な部分を占めています。 When you make a mistake, (not if, but when you make a mistake) like I did with these drawings, analyze the mistake. あなたが間違えたとき、 (たとえそうでないとしても) 私がこれらのドローイングで犯したような間違いですが、 間違いを分析しましょう。 Don’t ignore it. このことを無視しないでください。 Figure out exactly what you did wrong and imagine in your mind what it would look like if you did it right. 何を間違ったのか見つけ出し、 もし正しく描いたとしたらどのように見えるのか 想像してみてください。 Then redraw it! そのあと、描き直してください! Draw the same thing, but this time, don’t make that same mistake. 同じものを描くのです。 しかし今回は、 同じ間違いを犯さないでください。 If you end up making the same mistake, then repeat the process. もし同じ間違いを犯す結果になってしまうのなら、 もう一度過程を繰り返しましょう。 Analyze your mistake, and try again. 間違いを分析し、 そして再び描きます。 Do it until you get it right. 良くなるまで繰り返してください。 That’s how you improve - not by practicing the same mistakes over and over again, but by fixing your mistakes. これが、あなたを改善させる方法です。 同じ間違いを何度も繰り返す練習をするのではなく、 あなたの間違いを改善するのです。 It’s better to do 1 drawing over and over, fixing your mistakes, than doing 10 different drawings and ignoring the mistakes. 一つのドローイングを、 間違いを直しながら 何回も繰り返すのがよりよいでしょう。 10の異なるドローイングを、ミスを無視しながら 描くよりもです。 So, I’m going to take my own advice and redo these drawings correctly. ですので、私自らそのアドバイスを受け入れ、 試しにこれらのドローイングを修正してみましょう。 Example 1 例1 Let’s starts with the first one. 最初の一枚から始めましょう。 Very extreme extension in the lumbar section. 腰椎部分に大変極端な伸展があります。 The pelvis is tilted forward, so we’re seeing a lot of the top plane of the cylinder. 骨盤は前方へ傾いているので、 骨盤を簡易化した円筒のてっぺんの面がより多く見えます。 Sides, showing the tilt. 側面は傾いて見えます。 And a bottom plane. そして底の面です。 Sometimes I like to add a centerline in there to show which way the front is pointing. 時々、 私はセンターラインを加えるのが好きです。 円筒形の平面がどっちを向いているのか示すためです。 And an angle between the ASIS landmarks. 上前腸骨棘の間の角度も考えます。 ASIS =anterior superior iliac spine 上前腸骨棘 Ok, so the relationship of the pelvis and rib cage is really important in this one, so before I do the spine, I want to find some gesture lines and a rough shape for the rib cage. はい、 骨盤と胸郭の関係は今回のドローイングでは大変重要ですので、 脊椎を描く前に、 ジェスチャーラインを見つけ、 胸郭のラフな形を描いておきたいと思います。 This will help me with placement of the spine. これは脊椎を置くとき大変助けになります。 Now Ill add the lumbar section with the extreme curvature pointing back. 次に、 後方に向かって大きく湾曲した 腰椎部分を描き加えます。 Add the thoracic section. 胸椎部分を加えます。 And that continues into the cervical section. そして胸椎部分は頸椎部分へつながっています。 That hole in the top of the rib cage isn’t visible from this angle since we’re looking up at the rib cage. 胸郭のてっぺんのこの穴はこのアングルからは見えません。 我々は今は胸郭を見上げているからです。 So this cylinder is going to be really flat. よって、この円筒形は大変平らになっています。 Angle of the sternum. 胸骨の角度。 Angle of the thoracic arch. 胸郭のアーチの角度。 And then follow that bottom rib around the back of the spine to the other side. 脊椎の周りをまわりながら反対側へ向かっている 肋骨の一番下を追いましょう。 And complete the thoracic arch. そして胸郭のアーチを終えましょう。 Forgot about some cross contour lines at the section divisions to help show which way the spine cylinder is pointing. 脊椎の円筒形がどっちの方向を向いているかを 見えやすくするために、 いくつかの交わっている等高線は無視しましょう。 Finally the skull. 最後に、頭蓋骨です。 It’s almost side view, but we’re looking up at it, so we will see a little bit of the bottom of the jaw… Side plane… Divide the front plane into thirds… And side plane of the jaw. 殆ど真横に見えます。 しかし、我々は今見上げていますので、 あごの底が少し見え、 側面、 前面を三つに分け、 最後は顎の側面です。 Now that looks much better than my first attempt. さて、最初のドローイングより良くなったと思います。 Definitely more dynamic gesture. 明らかにより躍動的なジェスチャーになりました。 Example 2 例2 My first attempt at this one was also too stiff. So, let’s try it again and make it dynamic. 私の最初のドローイングは、またもや固くて動きに欠けたものでした。 ですので、 もう一回挑戦し、より躍動的なものにしましょう。 The pelvis is tilted and the rib cage really thrusts forward. 骨盤は傾き、 胸郭は明らかに前に突き出ています。 That looks pretty good. 良くなりました。 Now let’s add the lumbar section of the spine. 腰椎部分を加えましょう。 Starts out pointing forward and then curves up to get that back extension. 最初の方では前を向き、 そして後方へ伸展するためにカーブしています。 Notice how I’m showing the top and bottom caps of the cylinder. 私がどのように円筒形の蓋を見せているかに 注意を払ってください。 This forces me to think about it as a 3d form rather than just curvy lines. 蓋の形をちゃんと描くためには、 単なる曲線ではなく 三次元の形を考えなければなりません。 Finding the relationship between the pelvis and rib cage. 骨盤と胸郭の間の関係を見つけてください。 A really important angle in this pose is the left edge from the pelvis to the ribcage. このポーズの大変重要な角度は、 骨盤から胸郭へ向かう、画面に向かって左側の輪郭です。 See how the muscles stretch tight there? どれぐらい筋肉がピンと伸ばされているか見えますか? This angle is really important to get right, otherwise I won’t capture that dynamic gesture. この角度を把握することは大変重要です。 さもなければこの躍動的なジェスチャーをつかみ損ねるでしょう。 Thoracic section leaning back. 胸椎部分は後ろへ傾いています。 Imagining the bottom rib swinging around the spine. 脊椎の周りに肋骨の底が回り込んでいることを しっかり想定してください。 And then add the thoracic arch to the bottom of the sternum… そして、胸郭のアーチを胸骨の底へ加えます。 And completing the shape of the rib cage. そして胸郭の形は完成です。 The cervical section leans to the right. 頸椎部分は右へ傾いています。 Start the construction of the head using the Loomis method. ルーミスメソッドを使いながら頭を描き始めます。 When doing this, I like to compare the cranium to the sternum. このことをやっている時、 私は頭蓋(cranium、顎の骨を除いた部分(たぶん))を胸骨と 比較するのが好きです。 They should be about the same size. それらは大体同じサイズのはずです。 Remember to consider foreshortening. 短縮遠近法のことは考慮に入れておいてください。 If the heads is leaning toward the camera, the cranium might be bigger than the sternum. もし頭がカメラに向かって傾いているのなら、 頭蓋は胸骨より大きく見えるでしょう。 And if it’s leaning away, the cranium might be smaller than the sternum. そして、もし頭が後ろへ傾いているなら、 頭蓋は胸骨より小さく見えるでしょう。 Extreme up tilt on this one. このモデルは極端に上方へ傾いています。 So, the brow ridge will be all the way up here. よって、眉山は、この辺りまで上がるでしょう。 nose here. 鼻はここ。 and chin here. そしてあご先はここです。 Then I can connect the jaw shape to the chin. その後、あごの形を顎先へつなげます。 Clean up some contour lines. 等高線を清書します。 And add a center line. そして中心線を加えます。 And just for fun, let’s add the angle between the ASIS landmarks. そして余談ですが、 上前腸骨棘の間の角度を描き加えてみます。 In the next lesson on the pelvis, I’ll show you why this angle is so important. 次の骨盤の授業で、 この角度がなぜ重要かお見せしましょう。 Ok, I think that looks pretty good! はい、大変良くなったように見えます。 If you did the assignments last week, go back and see if there’s anything that you can improve. もしあなたが先週の課題をやったなら、 何か改善できることがないか見直して見ましょう。 Do them over and over again until they seem easy! 簡単に見えるまで何度もやり直してください! Critiques !--訳注 ここからビデオの音声と不一致-- For additional help, watch my critique session on the spine. 追加の教材として、 生徒が描いた脊椎の課題に対する批評を見てください。 I go over student submitted work and provide insights on how they can improve their assignment examples. 私は生徒が行った課題を確認し、 彼らの課題をどのように改善することができるかを 提供しています。 If you’re posting your drawings, use hashtag #proko and don’t forget to follow me on Facebook and Instagram. If you like this video, share it with your friends, and if you want to be updated about new videos subscribe to the Proko newsletter. Filed in Anatomy ? Videos
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A Terrible Boar When you reach Level 10 (?), this series of missions will begin, granting you a few nice things to build for your Outpost. It also contains the introduction of Cassidy, who will show off how useful a Sharpshooter can be. A Terrible Boar - Part 1 Unlocked upon reaching Level 10 or less (previously 14 before 2.1 Patch) Visit the Boar Plains Defeat 4 Wild Boars Reward 325 XP, 100 XP per battle Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 2 A Terrible Boar - Part 2 Visit Recoil Ridge Reward 750 XP Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 3 A Terrible Boar - Part 3 Turn in 300 Gold Reward 50 XP Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 4 A Terrible Boar - Part 4 Available when the player returns to their outpost from Recoil Ridge. Go back to Recoil Ridge Reward 750 XP Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 5 A Terrible Boar - Part 5 Visit Recoil Ridge Save the Orchard! The player has to fight the Raiders encounter to save the orchard, with the help of Cassidy. 1 is rewarded after the battle. Reward 500 XP, unlocks Dragonfruit Orchard Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 6 A Terrible Boar - Part 6 Build a Dragonfruit Orchard Collect 1 Dragonfruit Note that this mission cannot be completed until Level 14 due to the Dragonfruit Orchard s level requirement. Reward 750 XP Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 7 A Terrible Boar - Part 7 Build 1 Noisy Chainsaw Build 1 Impact Wrench Build 1 Rivet Gun Bug Warning Do not attack groups in the "Boar Badlands" without progressing normally, or you may inadvertently cause the following mission to become unable to be completed. Reward 50 XP* Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 8 UNLOCKS How to Kill People From Quite a Long Way... MadRabbit1 2012-05-06 A Terrible Boar - Part 8 Visit the Boar Plains Capture 2 Boar Matriarchs. Reward 50 XP* Next Mission A Terrible Boar - Part 9 Note The Boar Matriarchs will drop 1 Tooth each. A Terrible Boar - Part 9 Build 1 Boar Pen Reward 1250 XP Next Mission Boar-B-Cue, andThe Empire is Glued Together Recommendation Go ahead and build 2 Boar Pens because the next quest will take at least 3 DAYS to complete if you try to do it with one. This is versus the 24 hours to build a Boar Pen. The choice is yours, depending on how much of a rush you are in. Boar-B-Cue Make 4 90% Boar-Meat Hotdogs Make 2 Deli-Sliced Boar Meat Reward 1750 XP, and yet another delicious meal for your troops. Also unlocks Sharp Shooter
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Why we need cryonics? (Title) A turning point in human history (Article) Cryonics preservation technology is incomplete. However, I expect that preservation technology will be complete after 2040. If cryonics does not damage cells when preserving patients, it may be safe to resuscitate in the future. Completion of preservation technology is a major invention. This is a major turning point in human history. So now it makes sense to prepare for the future use of cryonics. ●●● (Title) Mankind needs cryonics until 30 years later. (Article) In the near future, human technology will evolve, and humanity will be able to create eyes, feet, and organs. I predict that by 2035, humankind will be able to make human organs. But even if I create an organ and replace it with a new one, I can only extend my lifespan by 10-30years. We must not be illusioned.. Because human beings are made of many cells. Our body is not only an organ. Since cells also deteriorate, we cannot avoid dying. I think. Medical technology will not be able to achieve immortality until around 2060. Even if we make organs, we cannot become immortal. So cryonics technology is needed until ~2060. We do not seek short happiness, but eternal life, happiness, peace and love. I simulate. Suppose a man saved $ 50,000. If he pays $ 50,000 for an organ exchange in the future, his money will disappear. He cannot do cryonics in the future. Also, if his other organs are damaged, he will have to pay another fee to create a new organ. Our money is limited. So I don t make organs. I can buy it but, I do not buy it.Don t move my money to do cryonics. The disadvantage of cryonics is that the cells are destroyed when frozen. But technology is evolving. I think humanity will overcome this within 15 years. The invention of freezing that does not damage cells is the most important invention in human history. This is a major turning point for humanity. Cryonics is still important for humanity. ●●● (Title) Technology evolves very fast. (Article) We are destined to age and die. But if medical evolution is in time, we will be saved. By the way, the first mobile phone of mankind appeared 30 years ago. At that time, mobile phones could only make calls. However, today s mobile phones are like personal computers. In just 30 years, no one has ever predicted that a mobile phone will evolve. Not only mobile phones but also medicine, technology, everything evolves at a tremendous speed. The future is always beyond our expectations. Human civilization developed rapidly after inventing the language. The invention of words has become a turning point in human civilization. After words, the invention of artificial intelligence is the turning point. Artificial intelligence rapidly completes and ends civilization. Great inventions, which humans could only do once every 100 years, can be invented once every 10 years, once a year, and once an hour. The intervals are shorter and we are surprisingly faster.. The future is always evolving faster than we can imagine.Of course, the patient s revival from Cryoncs will be fast. We have the potential. So we must not give up. The future is not decided. Our future is something we make on our own. Let s try to expand our future possibilities. ●●● (Title) Cryonics that protect us from reincarnation risk. (Article) There is a risk for us to die. Suicide does not solve the current suffering. We may not die even if we die. What happens when I die?Will I disappear all? Or go to heaven? Or will I be reborn? We don t know what will happen. When I die, my memory is erased and I can t meet my family and friends again. If everything goes away, there is no problem. But if I am reborn again, there may be various difficulties. I was born on Earth or another planet, and all my memories are erased. In fact, we don t have an old memory now. I can t remember where I was before I was born. Where will I be next time I wake up? Am I a human or a fish or an insect? Is the planet I live in peaceful? Or it may be during the war. This suffering of ours may continue when we are reborn after death. So I do cryonics. It s a miracle that I exist. It is a miracle that I was born as a human. I want to keep this miracle. We do not want to lose this miracle moment. I want to see my family and friends again after 200 years. ●●● (title) Strange people (article) People ask me strange questions. They say that if we cryonics the patient, freezing will destroy the cells and prevent them from being revived in the future. Does a patient who has died resuscitate? I think these are strange questions. I don t think anyone should answer this question. Because this is a problem for all of us. This is the problem we need to solve together. They want to call cryonics impossible. I think it is a big mistake. We live to make the impossible possible. This is the significance of our existence. It s very stupid that they ask those who are striving. Those who ask this question are bystanders. What happens if they can prove that cryonics are impossible? Will technology evolve? Can they save the lives of cryonic patients? I think so. They won t move if their homes are burnt. We a bucket and water to put out the fire when our home gets burned. We move desperately We move anyway. There is no reason here. It is the same as this. If we don t try, there will be no result. If we don t try, nothing changes and doesn t move. We continue to try it now, 100 years, and 200 years later. I will not stop trying. Until the result comes out. Until our heart stops. What we try is proof that we are alive. This is the answer. ●●● (title) Compare caries and cryonics. (article) People treat tooth decay, but why are they afraid of cryonics? When we have a tooth decay, we use anesthesia and machines to treat it artificially. We don t think we re destined to be caries. We do not think that God made our teeth decayed. If we do not treat tooth decay, our pain will grow. We can no longer eat and eventually die. I was seriously decayed and could now die at the age of 35. This is the end of my life. But I did not die after treating my teeth. I think that treating people with tooth decay is an artificial extension of life. I think that treating people with tooth decay is an artificial extension of life. So it is contradictory for the masses to fear cryonics. Did our teeth become decayed because God decided? So, if we treat caries, have we gone against God s decision? What is the difference between caries and death? Perhaps that borderline was just created by mankind himself. It may be a human delusion. I think it is very contradictory. All life on earth lives to live.Similarly, we humans should live to live. We do cryonics to live. It is not a sin that we try to live. Neither treatment of caries nor cryonics is sin. ●●● (Title) The right requirements for you to do cryonics. (Article) Cryonics is advantageous if you are in the late age to freeze you. Which do you think is better if you die in 2020 or if you die in 2050? The answer is 2050. The reason is that 2050 is more advanced than 2020 frozen storage technology. You are stored with new technology than now. Technology evolves without stopping. So you should live long, even one year. The later you revive, the better you will be. If you resuscitate in 2080, the technology is still incomplete. You have to die again. But if you get revived in 2200, the technology has evolved so much. You will not die again and will not bother. Also, as of 2050, if you have $ 50,000 or $ 200,000, which will make you live longer? If you prepare a lot of money, you have a lot of options. Saving money every day is important. In addition, the number of your friends is important. You have 100 better friends than 5 friends. If there are many people who love and help you, you can survive. They will help you in the future. These totals will greatly influence the probability of your survival in the future. Get ready for the future now. You must not regret in the future! ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● なぜクラオニクスは必要なのか? Why we need cryonics? (Title) 人類の歴史の分岐点 A turning point in human history (Article) クライオニクスの保存技術は未完成です。しかし、私は2040年以降には保存技術が完成すると予想します。 Cryonics preservation technology is incomplete. However, I expect that preservation technology will be complete after 2040. もし、クライオニクスが患者様を保存する時に細胞を傷つけなければ、未来で安全に蘇生できるかもしれない。 If cryonics does not damage cells when preserving patients, it may be safe to resuscitate in the future. 保存の技術の完成は、大発明です。これは人類の歴史上、大きな分岐点なります。 Completion of preservation technology is a major invention. This is a major turning point in human history. だから今、私たちが将来にクライオニクスを使うための準備をすることに、意義がある。 So now it makes sense to prepare for the future use of cryonics. ●●● (Title) 人類は30年後まで、クライオニクスが必要だ。 Mankind needs cryonics until 30 years later. (Article) 人類は近い将来、医療技術は進化し、人類は目、足、臓器を作りだすことができます。 In the near future, human technology will evolve, and humanity will be able to create eyes, feet, and organs. 私は2035年までに、人類は人間の臓器を作ることができると予測しています。 I predict that by 2035, humankind will be able to make human organs. しかし、私が臓器を作り、新しい臓器と交換した場合ですら、私は寿命を10〜30しか延長することはできません。私たちは錯覚してはいけません。 But even if I create an organ and replace it with a new one, I can only extend my lifespan by 10-30. We must not be illusioned.. なぜなら人間は多くの細胞でできているからです。 私たちの体は臓器だけではありません。 Because human beings are made of many cells. Our body is not only an organ. 細胞も劣化するため、私たちが死ぬことは避けられません。 Since cells also deteriorate, we cannot avoid dying. 私は考えます。 医療技術は2060年頃まで不老不死を実現できないだろう。 I think. Medical technology will not be able to achieve immortality until around 2060. 私たちが臓器を作ったとしても、不老不死になることはできません。そのため、〜2060年までクライオニクス技術が必要です。 Even if we make organs, we cannot become immortal. So cryonics technology is needed until ~2060. 私たちは短い幸福を求めず、永遠の命、幸福、平和と愛をを求めます。 We do not seek short happiness, but eternal life, happiness, peace and love. 私は予想します I simulate. 男性が5万ドルのお金を蓄えたとします。 彼が将来、臓器を5万ドル払い交換すると、彼のお金は消えます。彼は将来クライオニクスを行うことはできません。 Suppose a man saved $ 50,000. If he pays $ 50,000 for an organ exchange in the future, his money will disappear. He cannot do cryonics in the future. また、彼の他の臓器が傷ついた場合、新しい臓器を作成するために彼は別の費用を支払う必要があります。 私たちのお金は限られています。 Also, if his other organs are damaged, he will have to pay another fee to create a new organ. Our money is limited. だから私は臓器を作りません。 私はそれを買うことができますが、私はそれを買いません。クライオニクスをするために私はお金を動かさない。 So I don t make organs. I can buy it but, I do not buy it.Don t move my money to do cryonics. クライオニクスの欠点は、凍結すると細胞が破壊されることです。 The disadvantage of cryonics is that the cells are destroyed when frozen. しかし、技術は進化しています。 私は人類は15年以内にこれを克服すると思います。 But technology is evolving. I think humanity will overcome this within 15 years. 細胞を傷つけない凍結の発明は、人間の歴史の中で最も重要な発明です。 The invention of freezing that does not damage cells is the most important invention in human history. これは人類にとって大きな分岐点です。 This is a major turning point for humanity. クライオニクスはまだまだ人類にとって重要な役割があります。 Cryonics is still important for humanity. ●●● (Title) 技術が進化するスピードはとても速い Technology evolves very fast. (Article) 私たちの運命は、老化して死ぬことです。しかし、もし医学の進化が間に合うのなら、私たちは救われるでしょう。 We are destined to age and die. But if medical evolution is in time, we will be saved. ところで、人類の最初の携帯電話は30年前に登場しました。 By the way, the first mobile phone of mankind appeared 30 years ago. 当時の携帯電話は通話しかできませんでした。しかし、今の携帯電話はまるでパソコンです。 At that time, mobile phones could only make calls. However, today s mobile phones are like personal computers. わずか30年の間に、これまで携帯電話が進化すると誰も予測することはできませんでした。 In just 30 years, no one has ever predicted that a mobile phone will evolve. 携帯電話だけでなく、医学、技術、すべてが途方もない速度で進化しています。 Not only mobile phones but also medicine, technology, everything evolves at a tremendous speed. 未来の姿は、いつも私たちの予想を超えます。 The future is always beyond our expectations. 人類は言語を発明した後、文明が急速に発展しました。 Human civilization developed rapidly after inventing the language. 言葉の発明は、人類の文明の分岐点になりました。言葉の次に、人工知能の発明が分岐点になります。 人工知能が自ら考えて、沢山の発明を短時間でします。それが急速に文明を完成させて終わらせます。 The invention of words has become a turning point in human civilization. After words, the invention of artificial intelligence is the turning point. 人工知能が自ら考えて、沢山の発明を短時間でします。それが急速に文明を完成させて終わらせます。 Artificial intelligence rapidly completes and ends civilization. これまで100年に1回しかなかった素晴らしい発明は、10年に1回、1年に1回、1時間に1回発明することができます。 Great inventions, which humans could only do once every 100 years, can be invented once every 10 years, once a year, and once an hour. その間隔は短くなり、私たちが驚くほど速くなります。 The intervals are shorter and we are surprisingly faster.. 未来は常に、私たちが想定する以上のスピードで進化しています。 もちろん、患者様のCryoncsからの復活も速いでしょう。 The future is always evolving faster than we can imagine.Of course, the patient s revival from Cryoncs will be fast. 私たちには可能性がある。 We have the potential. だから、私たちは諦めてはいけません。 私たちの未来は決まっていません。 私たちの未来は私たちが自分で作るものです。 So we must not give up. The future is not decided. Our future is something we make on our own. さあ、私たちの未来の可能性を広げるために試みましょう。 Let s try to expand our future possibilities. ●●● (Title) 私たちを生まれ変わりのリスク守ってくれるクライオニクス。 Cryonics that protect us from reincarnation risk. (Article) 死にはリスクがあります。 There is a risk for us to die. 自殺は現在の苦しみを解決しません。私たちは死んでも終わらないかもしれません。 Suicide does not solve the current suffering. We may not die even if we die. 私たちは死ぬと何が起こりますか?私たちは消える?または天国に行きますか?それとも私は生まれ変わりますか? What happens when I die?Will I disappear all? Or go to heaven? Or will I be reborn? 私たちは何が起こるかわかりません。私が死ぬと、私の記憶は消去され、家族や友人と再会することはできません。 We don t know what will happen. When I die, my memory is erased and I can t meet my family and friends again. もし全てが消えるのなら、問題ありません。 If everything goes away, there is no problem. しかし、私が再び生まれ変わった場合、さまざまな困難があるかもしれません。 But if I am reborn again, there may be various difficulties. 私は地球や別の惑星で生まれ、私が今持っている記憶はすべて消されてしまいます。 I was born on Earth or another planet, and all my memories are erased. 実際、今では古い記憶はありません。私は生まれる前にどこにいたか思い出せません。 In fact, we don t have an old memory now. I can t remember where I was before I was born. 私たちが次に目を覚ますとき、どこに行きますか?私は人間ですか、魚ですか、昆虫ですか? Where will I be next time I wake up? Am I a human or a fish or an insect? 私が住んでいる惑星は平和ですか?またはそれは戦争中かもしれません。 Is the planet I live in peaceful? Or it may be during the war. 私たちのこの苦しみは、死後に生まれ変わった時も継続するかもしれません。 This suffering of ours may continue when we are reborn after death. だから私はクライオニクスを行います。私が存在するのは奇跡です。私が人間として生まれたのは奇跡でした。 So I do cryonics. It s a miracle that I exist. It is a miracle that I was born as a human. 私たちはこの奇跡を続けたい。この奇跡の瞬間を失いたくありません。 I want to keep this miracle. We do not want to lose this miracle moment. 私は200年後、また家族や友人に再び会いたいです。 I want to see my family and friends again after 200 years. ●●● (title) 奇妙な人々 Strange people (article) 人々は奇妙な質問を私にします。 People ask me strange questions. 彼らは、もし患者様をクライオニクスすれば、冷凍により細胞が壊れて、未来で蘇生することができないと私に言います。 They say that if we cryonics the patient, freezing will destroy the cells and prevent them from being revived in the future. 一度死んだ患者が生き返るのか? Does a patient who has died resuscitate? 私はこれらを奇妙な質問だと思います。 I think these are strange questions. 私は誰もこの質問には答えるべきでないと思います。 I don t think anyone should answer this question. なぜなら、これは私たちみんなの問題だからです。 Because this is a problem for all of us. これは、私たちがみんなで解決するべき問題です。 This is the problem we need to solve together. 彼らは、クライオニクスを不可能だと言いたい。 They want to call cryonics impossible. 私はそれは大きな間違いだと思います。 I think it is a big mistake. 私たちは不可能を、可能にするために生きている。 We live to make the impossible possible. これが私たちが存在する意義です。 This is the significance of our existence. 彼らが、努力している人にその質問をすることは非常に愚かです。 It s very stupid that they ask those who are striving. この質問をする人たちは、傍観者です。 Those who ask this question are bystanders. もし彼らがクライオニクスにより蘇生することが不可能だと証明できたとして、何が起こりますか? What happens if they can prove that cryonics are impossible? 技術は進化しますか? Will technology evolve? 彼らは、クライオニクスをした患者様の命を救うことはできますか? Can they save the lives of cryonic patients? 私は思います。彼らはもし自宅が焼けていても、動けないだろう。 I think so. They won t move if their homes are burnt. 私たちは家が焼けたら、バケツと水を使って火を消します。 We use a bucket and water to put out the fire when our home gets burned. 私たちは必死に、動く。 We move desperately 私たちはとにかく動く。 We move anyway. ここに理屈は必要ない。 There is no reason here. これと同じことです。 It is the same as this. 私たちは試みないと結果は生まれない。 If we don t try, there will be no result. 私たちが試みなければ、何も変えられないし、動かない。 If we don t try, nothing changes and doesn t move. 私たちは、今も、100年後も、200年後も試み続ける。 We continue to try it now, 100 years, and 200 years later. 私は試みを止めない。 I will not stop trying. 結果が出るまで。 Until the result comes out. 私たちの心臓が止まるまで。 Until our heart stops. 私たちが試みることは、私たちが生きていることの証だ。 What we try is proof that we are alive. それが答えだ。 This is the answer. ●●● (title) (提出済み) 虫歯とクライオニクスの比較 Compare caries and cryonics. (article) 人々は虫歯を治療するが、なぜクライオニクスを怖がるのか? People treat tooth decay, but why are they afraid of cryonics? 私たちは虫歯になると、麻酔や機械を使い、人工的にそれを治療します。 When we have a tooth decay, we use anesthesia and machines to treat it artificially. 私たちは、虫歯になったことを運命だと思いません。 We don t think we re destined to be caries. 私たちは神様が私たちの歯を虫歯にしたとも考えない。 We do not think that God made our teeth decayed. もし、私たちが虫歯を治療しなければ、私たちの痛みは大きくなる。 If we do not treat tooth decay, our pain will grow. 私たちは食べることができなくなれば、やがて死にます。 We can no longer eat and eventually die. 私は虫歯が深刻なり、今、35歳で死ぬかもしれなかった。 I was seriously decayed and could now die at the age of 35. これは、私の命が終わる時です。 This is the end of my life. しかし、私は歯を治療して死ななかった。 But I did not die after treating my teeth. 私は人々が虫歯の治療をすることは、人工的な延命だと思う。 I think that treating people with tooth decay is an artificial extension of life. 私は、虫歯の治療とクライオニクスの本質が同じだと思う。 I think that treating people with tooth decay is an artificial extension of life. だから、大衆の人々がクライオニクスを恐れるのは矛盾しています。 So it is contradictory for the masses to fear cryonics. 私たちの歯は、神様が決めたから虫歯になったのでしょうか? Did our teeth become decayed because God decided? では、もし私たちが虫歯を治療したら、私たちは神様の決断に逆らったことになりますか? So, if we treat caries, have we gone against God s decision? 虫歯と死の違いは何でしょうか? What is the difference between caries and death? もしかすると、その境界線は、人類が自ら作っただけなのかもしれない。 Perhaps that borderline was just created by mankind himself. 人類がした妄想のかもしれない。 It may be a human delusion. 私はとても矛盾していると思います。 I think it is very contradictory. 全ての地球の生物は生きるために生きる。私たち人類も、生きるために生きる。 All life on earth lives to live.Similarly, we humans should live to live. 私たちは生きるためにクライオニクスをする。 We do cryonics to live. 私たちが生きようとすることは罪ではありません。 It is not a sin that we try to live. 虫歯の治療も、クライオニクスも罪ではありません。 Neither treatment of caries nor cryonics is sin. ●●● (Title) あなたがクライオニクスをするのに適切な要件 The right requirements for you to do cryonics. (Article) クライオニクスは、あなたを冷凍保存する年代が遅いと有利になります。 Cryonics is advantageous if you are in the late age to freeze you. あなたは、2020年に死ぬ場合と、2050年に死ぬ場合、どちらが有利だと思いますか? Which do you think is better if you die in 2020 or if you die in 2050? 答えは2050年です。理由は、2020年の冷凍保存技術よりも、2050年の方が進化しているからです。あなたは今よりも、新しい技術で保管されます。 The answer is 2050. The reason is that 2050 is more advanced than 2020 frozen storage technology. You are stored with new technology than now. 技術は止まることなく進化します。 Technology evolves without stopping. だから、あなたは一年でも長く、長生きするべきです。 So you should live long, even one year. あなたが蘇生する時代が、遅ければあなたは有利になります。 The later you revive, the better you will be. もし、あなたが2080年に蘇生すると、まだ技術は未完成です。あなたは再び死ななければいけません。 If you resuscitate in 2080, the technology is still incomplete. You have to die again. しかし、もしあなたが2200年に蘇生すれば、技術はとても進化しています。あなたは再び死なないし、困らない。 But if you get revived in 2200, the technology has evolved so much. You will not die again and will not bother. また、あなたが2050年の時点で、50,000ドル持っている場合と200,000ドルを持っている場合、どちらがあなたが長生きできるでしょうか? Also, as of 2050, if you have $ 50,000 or $ 200,000, which will make you live longer? あなたが沢山のお金を準備すれば、あなたは沢山の手段を選べる。毎日のお金の貯金は需要だ。 If you prepare a lot of money, you have a lot of options. Saving money every day is important. さらに、あなたの友人の数が重要です。 In addition, the number of your friends is important. あなたは、あなたの友達が、5人より100人の方が良い。 You have 100 better friends than 5 friends. あなたを愛し、助けてくれる人が沢山いれば、あなたは生き残るとができます。彼らは将来、あなたを助けてくれます。 If there are many people who love and help you, you can survive. They will help you in the future. これらの総合計点が、未来のあなたが生存できる確率に大きく影響します。 These totals will greatly influence the probability of your survival in the future. 今、未来に備えて準備をしましょう。あなたが未来で後悔しないために! Get ready for the future now. You must not regret in the future!