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Title: Collection of the Best Mathematics and Science Stuff | Abakcus

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This periodic chart doesn’t care about tidy boxes—it cares about what you actually find on Earth. Prof. William F. Sheehan’s 1970 design scales each element by its relative abundance, turning chemistry into a quick reality check: the elements you meet every day dominate the map, while the rare ones shrink into the background.

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A curated selection of geometry books that speak equally to mathematicians and designers, where structure, proportion, and visual thinking meet on the page. These are not books chosen for decoration, but for the way they train the eye, discipline intuition, and reveal how mathematical ideas and design logic quietly share the same foundations.

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When you’re walking through a city in Switzerland, your eyes drift upward without you noticing. Not to the shop windows—toward the space under a second- or third-floor window. Because up there, you might see a small “right of passage” someone has built for their cat: two pieces of wood, a few steps, sometimes a thin […]

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Marie Curie’s laboratory notebooks are still radioactive more than a century later, not as a myth, but as a physical reminder of how modern physics was born. Written at a time when radiation was barely understood, these pages capture both a scientific revolution and the human cost that came with it.

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Electricity is usually invisible and obedient, but Lichtenberg figures reveal its true character. Trapped inside clear acrylic, lightning branches, hesitates, and leaves behind frozen fractal paths that show how nature really thinks when no one is watching.

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