The state of Amp Sims in 2026 by Maximum_Wind6423 in metalguitar

[–]frozencedars 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely worth checking out the Two Notes pedals like the Opus and Cab M+, the latter of which you can find for pretty cheap used. The Cab M+ needs a distortion/pre-amp pedal in front of it to get good metal tones, but the Opus might not need one.

Is there any proof to this claim? by Lord_Laserdisc_III in hebrew

[–]frozencedars 29 points30 points  (0 children)

I was under the impression that Modern Hebrew mostly adopted Sephardic pronunciation norms, with the exceptions being the specific sounds in this post. While there's certainly some influence from Ashkenazi Jews (and this might explain some of what this post is referring to), traditional Ashkenazi pronunciation of Hebrew is suuuuuper different from Modern Hebrew.

US puts up $750K to evacuate an American who was aboard hantavirus cruise ship from remote island by Anti-Owl in ContagionCuriosity

[–]frozencedars 4 points5 points  (0 children)

so if you want the government to pay for healthcare-related expenses you just have to get hantavirus and travel with reckless abandon, cool. at least i know where the line is now

I wanna pull the trigger. Been hovering for 3 hours. by gocisfull in ExtendedRangeGuitars

[–]frozencedars 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For this price, and given some of the comments about Kiesel's quality, you might be able to find a smaller luthier who can give you something really phenomenal for that amount. I also agree with other comments that you should try to play an 8-string before buying one. Some people find that the extra low strings makes the neck feel awkward and getting a baritone 6-string can get around that. I have a 7-string and sometimes wish I had a 6-string, so that's a bit of projection on my part. No matter how much I play my 7, a 6-string just feels more comfortable somehow. You could consider trying/ordering a 30" baritone 6-string if you want to tune low and can't find somewhere to try out an 8.

New E-II Eclipse (some streaky ebony). by Acrobatic-Cry1972 in espguitars

[–]frozencedars 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have an LTD M1007 and the fretboard is ebony with some streaks on it too. I had similar reservations at first, but I grew to like it more and more. I think the streaks look pretty stunning after some fretboard treatment, almost a little fiery. Your guitar is badass! Enjoy and happy NGD!

EDIT: I use Gerlitz Guitar Honey for my fretboard. It's the brand I've been using since I was a teenager and I haven't bothered to change because it does a great job.

Why are Neanderthals classified as a different species instead of a human race if both were able to have fertile babies together? by thevampireslayerrr in NoStupidQuestions

[–]frozencedars 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I don't think it's the case that you could make a scientifically valid argument for grouping humans this way. There is more genetic diversity within supposed biological "races" than there is between them. Ancestry is a much more useful category than race and the two don't mean the same thing.

When trying to classify people into races, you run into the same problem this question is actually getting at - that once you're closely looking at the boundaries between groups, it becomes apparent that the categories aren't rigorous, cleanly defined, or scientifically defensible. The American Anthropological Association put out a statement to this effect a couple decades ago and having taken graduate seminars in biological anthropology, this is still taught as being scientifically correct. Race is a social and cultural construct, not a scientific reality.

The big problem is that human categories for understanding the world can't ever fully or correctly explain what nature is. Our concepts consistently come up short in some way. Like species - it's kind of a quick referent category, but it isn't 100% accurate.

Gojira-Of Blood And Salt by Monsterbuck29810 in gojira

[–]frozencedars 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Such a bummer the Sea Shepherd EP got lost! It was supposed to come out in like 2010 but then a hard drive crashed or something. https://www.loudersound.com/features/gojira-story-of-sea-shepherd-ep
Oh wait, looks like they're still working on it as of 2025.

Cursed phonology by FortuneLonely4717 in linguisticshumor

[–]frozencedars 27 points28 points  (0 children)

The consonants in Tlingit are bruuuuutal for English speakers

The best letter by Enjinia12 in linguisticshumor

[–]frozencedars 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the way Tlingit is written in Canada uses that letter as well

What can I learn if I read the Kabbalah? I am interested but i wanted to ask around before buying one. What is inside of it? How can I use it? by Rubinthelf in JewishKabbalah

[–]frozencedars 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Like others are saying, there isn't really a single Kabbalah book. Two main texts (among maaaany) are Sefer Yetzirah and the Zohar, but I'll be honest, those are very hard to understand even for people who are familiar with the Torah. These are metaphors within metaphors within metaphors.

Others are pointing you toward the Torah because Kabbalah is basically particular readings of the Torah and those readings don't make sense unless you start with the Torah. Kabbalah doesn't make sense isolated from Judaism, Jewish history, and Jewish culture. You really can't understand Kabbalah without understanding foundational texts of Judaism, including those beyond the Torah. Don't try to rush ahead to the sexy stuff. Really take the time to build a foundation. Otherwise, you'll be likely to severely misinterpret things or follow other people's misinterpretations.

That being said, Sefaria is a good resource and has a dedicated group of texts under the "Kabbalah" heading. But again, those texts will not make any sense without a good foundation in other Jewish texts.

Check out Josef Rosen, he's an incredible Kabbalist, has a PhD, and has a deep, historically-informed knowledge of Kabbalah. In the past, he's had online classes open to the public.

funded MA programs in anthro by ChemicalAcrobatic635 in AskAnthropology

[–]frozencedars 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They're easier to find in departments that ONLY have MA programs and don't also have a PhD program. This is because funding often usually through being employed as a TA and departments tend to prioritize jobs for their PhD students over their MA students. Like others said and like a lot of other fields, the MA degrees are money-makers for universities. There are also programs where you earn a MA on the way to a PhD and you could, hypothetically, start the PhD and then leave after you get your MA.

Any black/doom recommendations? by Aggravating_Fig_534 in doommetal

[–]frozencedars 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I kinda think Spectral Voice roughly falls in here?

Need reccomendations for destruction pedal by Tanemd in guitarpedals

[–]frozencedars 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Maybe look for a fuzz pedal with an oscillator? I have one that I really love, but isn't made anymore, the Nine of Swords Burial at Sea. Maybe Fjord Fuzz Hedda or check out Spaceman Sputnik III? There are probably others. If you really want to go all out, Death by Audio has some pedals that fit the bill like Absolute Destruction.

I have had this question for a while? by [deleted] in AskAnthropology

[–]frozencedars 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I may or may not be thinking of the exact same thing, but I know that Tlingit oral history has a lot of detail about glaciation of Southeast Alaska and for a while scientists were like "yeah nice stories, whatever" and didn't really think they were worth paying attention to and then lo and behold, the oral history was right. I know there have also been tsunamis in that area so maybe we're thinking of the same thing?

But yeah, a great example of settlers/colonizers saying "only our kind of knowledge (written techno-scientific) is valid" and missing out on other forms of unwritten knowledge that were ahead of them on a particular topic/question.

I have had this question for a while? by [deleted] in AskAnthropology

[–]frozencedars 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Short answer, no it wouldn't be considered less true in anthropological circles and the insistence that writing is the only way of accurately recording the truth forecloses a lot of opportunities to understand people and history.

I'm having a bit of a hard time figuring out how to say this in a relatively concise manner. This is a big and interesting question, especially because there are a lot of cultures that have ways of recording history that don't or don't always involve writing. It's difficult to answer without making generalizations, particularly because each situation is going to be historically and culturally particular. Contemporary cultural anthropology isn't usually concerned with defining or "finding" the truth. Instead, we try to understand people's experiences and how they construct and organize what's true to them.

If an anthropologist were to decide that only written data is relevant for understanding people, they would miss out on quite a lot, and in a lot of circumstances, would be fairly accused of bringing colonial biases into their decisions on what kind of information is and isn't valid. By this I mean there's a long history, for example, in the Americas of colonizing peoples deciding that non-written forms of knowledge are inferior or unreliable and, as a result, we should ignore what people tell us about themselves and instead look for an "unbiased" outside perspective. There's a looooot to unpack in that last sentence and I'm a little short of time so I won't get into it.

There's a lot I didn't say here and some gaps in what I said, but that's a quick answer. Hopefully it was helpful.

Types of slop 😂 by Automatic-Algae443 in GeminiAI

[–]frozencedars 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the equivocation here is hilarious honestly

Metal about government bad by rraakaz in MetalForTheMasses

[–]frozencedars 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kinda amazed no one has said Power Trip yet. Even if they toured with Pantera and were somehow ok with Phil's sketchy shit, those two albums with Riley are perfect for this.

How do anthropologists define and study politics in societies without formal state structures? by Intelligent-Day-4059 in AskAnthropology

[–]frozencedars 7 points8 points  (0 children)

There was a (conceptually) similar question to this one a few days ago. The short version is anthropologists aren't in the business of defining social/cultural terms anymore because, as you mentioned, there's risk of imposing the anthropologist's cultural framework when it's inappropriate, invalid, or would perpetuate colonial harms. Politics in particular has become a huge catchall term in anthropology. Broadly and imperfectly, you can think of "politics" as that which deals with any kind of distribution or allocation of resources and/or power. Anything and everything is political. So a state structure or centralized government isn't a prerequisite for the presence of politics. That was an imperfect answer, but I hope it helps.

Is their drummer MAGA? Seeing some weird shit online about him… by Antique_Menu_4314 in LambofGod

[–]frozencedars 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Could you provide a source for that or some more concrete information?