"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

#Spooktober 18: Madame de Montespan and the Witchcraft Scandal of 1677

When we talk about witch hunts, the mind usually goes to remote and muddy villages where poor old practitioners, mostly focused on healing with herbs and indulging their neighbours’ tantrums, were fiercely snatched away from their lives and persecuted on someone’s whim. This is of course true, but it’s not the whole truth: some major scandals involving witchcraft swept the European courts between the XVI and the XVII Century, shifting power and causing turmoil amongst the people implicated. One of these scandals was the so-called Affair of the Poisons, which implicated an incredible amount of members of the upper aristocracy and created turmoil at the court of King Louis XIV, involving dozens of people, including the king’s official mistress, Madame de Montespan.

You can read the story, and see a funny chart, today on my Patreon.

architecture, engineering and construction

BIM and Facility Management, with a little help from LEGO and AI

There is a question we often forget to ask, and it became the centrepiece of a three-hour workshop I delivered last week at Politecnico di Milano as part of a BIM Management master’s programme. When an information model is delivered to the client,how do we

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Osamu Dazai’s The Student and Other Stories

The collection I have, features three stories: The Student (Joseito), Applause (Kassai), and The Tale of Urashima (Urashimasan). They’re very different, not so much in mood (it’s Dazai Osamu after all) but in scope and purpose, and that makes this book a little weird. The

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Osamu Dazai’s The Student and Other Stories

The collection I have, features three stories: The Student (Joseito), Applause (Kassai), and The Tale of Urashima (Urashimasan). They’re very different, not so much in mood (it’s Dazai Osamu after all) but in scope and purpose, and that makes this book a little weird. The

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