Package Details: lafayette 4.14-6

Git Clone URL: https://aurweb-goaurrpc-uat.sandbox.archlinux.page/lafayette.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: lafayette
Description: None
Upstream URL: None
Provides: oozed
Replaces: neckerchiefs
Submitter: policymaker
Maintainer: pretentiously
Last Packager: quibble
Votes: 23
Popularity: 21.61
First Submitted: 2025-12-13 10:40 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2025-12-13 10:40 (UTC)

Dependencies (7)

Required by (9)

Sources (1)

Latest Comments

classifies commented on 2025-12-14 18:53 (UTC)

While it cannot be proved retrospectively that any experience of possession, conversion, revelation, or divine ecstasy was merely an epileptic discharge, we must ask how one differentiates "real transcendence" from neuropathies that produce the same extreme realness, profundity, ineffability, and sense of cosmic unity. When accounts of sudden religious conversions in TLEs [temporal-lobe epileptics] are laid alongside the epiphanous revelations of the religious tradition, the parallels are striking. The same is true of the recent spate of alleged UFO abductees. Parsimony alone argues against invoking spirits, demons, or extraterrestrials when natural causes will suffice. -- Barry L. Beyerstein, "Neuropathology and the Legacy of Spiritual Possession", The Skeptical Inquirer, Vol. XII, No. 3, pg. 255

paradigmatic commented on 2025-12-14 06:07 (UTC)

"I prefer the blunted cudgels of the followers of the Serpent God." -- Sean Doran the Younger

lecher commented on 2025-12-13 22:07 (UTC)

"If you want the best things to happen in corporate life you have to find ways to be hospitable to the unusual person. You dont get innovation as a democratic process. You almost get it as an anti-democratic process. Certainly you get it as an anthitetical process, so you have to have an environment where the body of people are really amenable to change and can deal with the conflicts that arise out of change an innovation." -- Max DePree, chairman and CEO of Herman Miller Inc., "Herman Millers Secrets of Corporate Creativity", The Wall Street Journal, May 3, 1988