• mosiacmango
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      4 days ago
      • I think, there for i am
      • Death comes for us all
      • You’re not welcome here
      • Attacking the person (not the arguments)
      • Seize the day
      • All togther, we are one
      • to the stars (through suffering? New one for me)
      • god in the machine (saved by forces beyond mortal understanding)
      • @BenReilly97
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        434 days ago

        to the stars (through suffering? New one for me)

        “Through adversity” is the translation I’ve heard.

        • @GreenAppleTree
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          164 days ago

          Suffering, adversity, difficulty, hardship, seem to be what different institutions commonly translate it to.

          Fun fact, it’s also the motto of Kansas, where the artist lives.

          • @[email protected]
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            74 days ago

            Might have gotten more publicity as it was used in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds as a Starfleet motto. Boimler in Lower Decks also has a poster with the motto on it.

            • @[email protected]
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              74 days ago

              I know it from the tribute plaque to the Apollo 1 astronauts who sadly passed in a tragic fire during ground tests.

          • WIZARD POPE💫
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            24 days ago

            Where I live it’s translated as Through the thorns to the stars.

      • FuglyDuck
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        184 days ago

        For the record, Deus ex Machina is more a specific literary device- literally a crane lowering a god to save the protagonist in Roman and Greek dramas.

        To be fair they were more interested in telling a moral than being a good story. But the whole hanging-actor thing was meant to say they were a god and could just wave problems away. (Apparently literally.)

        • EvilHaitianEatingYourCat
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          64 days ago

          they were more interested in telling a moral than being a good story

          So… Literally Netflix

      • WIZARD POPE💫
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        04 days ago

        Don’t say you’ve never heard of Per aspera ad astra?

    • @[email protected]
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      194 days ago

      More literally, memento mori is “remember you will die”. There was a Roman ceremony called the Triumph when a successful war commander would parade on a chariot through Rome.

      Allegedly, someone would follow them through the day telling them “memento mori” to… keep them humble, I guess? as they were basically showing off to everyone in a god costume.