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@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2025-09-07 16:14:59

"""
Customarily, the honour of having liberated hysteria from the ancient myths about a displacement of the uterus goes to Le Pois and Willis. Jean Liebaud, translating or rather adapting Marinello’s work for the seventeenth century, still accepted (with a small number of caveats) the idea of a spontaneous movement of the womb. If it moved, it was “to be more at ease; not that this came about through prudence, nor was it a conscious decision or an animal stimulus, but by a natural instinct, to safeguard health and to have the pleasure of something delectable.” The idea that it could change its place and move around the body, bringing convulsions and spasms everywhere it travelled, had been abandoned, for it was now taken to be ‘tightly held in place’ by the cervix, ligaments, vessels and the sheath of the peritoneum; yet in some senses it could change its location. “The womb therefore, even though it is tightly fixed to the parts that we have described and cannot easily change its place, still manages to roam, making strange, petulant movements around the woman’s body. These diverse movements include ascensions and descents, convulsions, wanderings and prolapses. It can wander up to the liver, spleen, diaphragm, stomach, chest, heart, lung, throat and head.” Physicians of the classical age are more or less unanimous in refusing this explanation.
[…] Yet these analyses were not sufficient to break the theme of an essential link between hysteria and the womb. But the link is now conceived in different terms. It is no longer considered to be the trajectory of a real displacement through the body, but rather a sort of mute propagation through the paths of the organism and its functional proximities. It cannot be said that the seat of the malady has become the brain, nor that thanks to Willis a psychological explanation of hysteria was now possible. But the brain does take on the role of a relay that distributes a malady whose origins are visceral, and the womb brings it on just as the other viscera do. Up until the end of the eighteenth century, and Pinel, the uterus and the womb are still present in the pathology of hysteria, but thanks to a privileged diffusion by the humours and nerves, not because of any particular prestige of their nature.
"""
(Michel Foucault, History of Madness)

@kurtsh@mastodon.social
2025-11-05 20:47:29

I really need to remember not to take multivitamins on an empty stomach.
#nausea

@arXiv_csCE_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-03 11:26:53

Electromechanical computational model of the human stomach
Maire S. Henke, Sebastian Brandstaeter, Sebastian L. Fuchs, Roland C. Aydin, Alessio Gizzi, Christian J. Cyron
arxiv.org/abs/2509.02486

@hynek@mastodon.social
2025-10-31 08:40:16

Affinity going to shit as expected would've been so much easier to stomach if Apple wouldn't be neglect-killing Pixelmator at the same time. :( We went from two alternatives to zero.
affinity.studio/get-affinity

@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-09-01 15:18:08

Series B, Episode 04 - Horizon
BLAKE: [Rubs his stomach and neck] Zen, check systems status.
ZEN: Confirmed.
blake.torpidity.net/m/204/94 B7B4

Claude 3.7 describes the image as: "This image appears to be from a classic science fiction television series from the late 1970s/early 1980s. The scene takes place in what looks like a spacecraft interior with metallic walls and futuristic design elements typical of that era's production values.

The shot captures four individuals in a tense moment. One person in a yellow outfit is being examined or assisted by another wearing a distinctive cream-colored outfit with unusual puffed shoulders or…
@DamonHD@mastodon.social
2025-10-31 09:40:12

A pleasant read, about a place I know a (very) little:
notesfromasmallcroftbythesea.w

@davej@dice.camp
2025-10-29 20:44:14

My chemistry professor posed a similar problem, but he had us calculate how many molecules of Hitler were in the average glass of water. I can’t remember the exact number—this was roughly 30 years ago—but I *think* it was around 100.
I won a Mars bar for getting the answer correct, and it was back when I could stomach the things. Washed it down with 100 or so Hitler molecules, too, with a schooner of beer to chase it.

@UP8@mastodon.social
2025-09-25 17:14:57

🤢 Acid-resistant artificial mucus improves gastric wound healing in animals
medicalxpress.com/news/2025-09

@arXiv_csCL_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-15 10:40:51

BoN Appetit Team at LeWiDi-2025: Best-of-N Test-time Scaling Can Not Stomach Annotation Disagreements (Yet)
Tomas Ruiz, Siyao Peng, Barbara Plank, Carsten Schwemmer
arxiv.org/abs/2510.12516

@Tuxramus@social.linux.pizza
2025-10-31 23:05:29

Happy Halloween! 🎃 I'm trading my health bar for a stomach ache tonight. Join my Halloween Food Special, where I try tons of unusual treats. Costume on, gag reflex off! #Halloween #FoodChallenge #Twitch

@grumpybozo@toad.social
2025-09-20 20:17:53

Umm... No thanks, I'm good like this. flipboard.com/@npr/health-930k

@trezzer@social.linux.pizza
2025-09-19 18:48:15

Good news. I had another tape of music videos. Let’s see how many Duran Duran videos I can stomach before this is no longer fun.

@mlncn@social.coop
2025-10-17 22:25:20

Buying out tamale carts is good praxis. Now let's pay every immigrant working in meatpacking to stay away from work and also stay safer from ICE kidnappings and torture and destruction of families and livelihoods… and see how long this country's stomach can take what its heart has been stomaching.

@detondev@social.linux.pizza
2025-09-12 15:51:02

i had to clip it im sorry yall it leaves too much of a pit in my stomach

the governor of utah saying notices bulges owo whats this question mark
@malik@Mastodon.Social
2025-08-11 07:32:56

Ein Glück trinke ich keinen Kaffee.
noc.social/@todayilearned/1150

This venomous fish is invading the Mediterranean.
One solution? Eat them.

While the Mediterranean,
like any sea,
teems with non-native species,
the ⭐️lionfish is almost singularly damaging,
and it has the potential to upend a vast marine environment that has sustained civilizations for millennia.
It devours shrimp, crabs and smaller fish,
its stomach swelling 30-fold during a feeding frenzy.
It is also a hardened survivor, capable of g…

@arXiv_qbioNC_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-23 10:20:40

A tutorial on electrogastrography using low-cost hardware and open-source software
Evgeniya Anisimova, Sameer N. B. Alladin, Styliani Tsamaz, Edwin S. Dalmaijer
arxiv.org/abs/2509.17260