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Black Swan (2010)nuovo film di Darren "The Wrestler" Aronofsky
Started By - Luke -, 22 August 2010 10:50 AM
#6
Inviato 22 August 2010 - 05:14 PM
manco morto leggo quello spoiler....
avesse a che anche con questo:
http://en.wikipedia....ack_swan_theory ???
The term black swan was a Latin expression — its oldest reference is in the poet Juvenal expression that "a good person is as rare as a black swan" ("rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cygno", 6.165).[1] It was a common expression in 16th century London as a statement that describes impossibility, deriving from the old world presumption that 'all swans must be white', because all historical records of swans reported that they had white feathers .[2] In that context, a black swan was something that was impossible, or near impossible and could not exist. After the discovery of black swans in Western Australia [3] in 1697, by a Dutch expedition led by explorer Willem de Vlamingh on the Swan River, the term metamorphosed to connote that a perceived impossibility may later be found to exist. Taleb notes that, writing in the 19th century, John Stuart Mill used the black swan logical fallacy as a new term to identify falsification, but only drawing on a London expression.
mah...è Aronofsky...per me difficilmente cagata...uhm a occhio un film sull'ossessione... Potenzialmente molto bello, e ovviamente a rischio cagata
avesse a che anche con questo:
http://en.wikipedia....ack_swan_theory ???
The term black swan was a Latin expression — its oldest reference is in the poet Juvenal expression that "a good person is as rare as a black swan" ("rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cygno", 6.165).[1] It was a common expression in 16th century London as a statement that describes impossibility, deriving from the old world presumption that 'all swans must be white', because all historical records of swans reported that they had white feathers .[2] In that context, a black swan was something that was impossible, or near impossible and could not exist. After the discovery of black swans in Western Australia [3] in 1697, by a Dutch expedition led by explorer Willem de Vlamingh on the Swan River, the term metamorphosed to connote that a perceived impossibility may later be found to exist. Taleb notes that, writing in the 19th century, John Stuart Mill used the black swan logical fallacy as a new term to identify falsification, but only drawing on a London expression.
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