Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death
483And it's goodbye to the always-enjoyable Robbie Coltraine.
Hopefully a right proper bastard dies next.
Hopefully a right proper bastard dies next.
Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death
485Ah, that's a shame. He was a visiting fellow where I was doing my doctorate.* He was a really entertaining speaker, and gave the full 'French intellectual' thing. Although he was taken to task for some absurd pronouncements (which started early with the subtitle of Laboratory Life), if you skip the grandstanding (which he later regretted) you can get some great insights into the ways the practice of science and technology works and doesn't work.
* Although we didn't have him in the philosophy department, because he was a terrible philosopher
Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death
486RIP Latour. I opened We Have Never Been Modern and Laboratory Life just now on the occasion.
born to give
Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death
487What a legend. This is such a bummer.
Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death
488Leslie Jordan. Bummer, he seemed like a good one..
https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/24/entertai ... index.html
https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/24/entertai ... index.html
Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death
490That's really sad. I just tried to read that, and have stopped after the first few sentences overwhelmed me. Will return when less tired and fragile. Yes, a titan.Clyde wrote: Mike Davis. A titan. https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/5475-m ... -the-state
A quieter, older, more modest in achievement, but still remarkable man died the other day: Brian Robinson, the first Brit to win a stage in the Tour de France. I've been reading about riders of that era, and am consistently impressed by the sheer, stupid grit of that era of cyclist. Ride in peace, as a friend put it.
Gib Opi kein Opium, denn Opium bringt Opi um!