Specifically "Medicine" explores the first six months of his med-school experiance.
Shorthand Phonetics started in early 2004 in a Performance Arts class room in a Christian private school in the obscurity of Sentul, Indonesia when Ababil Ashari (vox, guitar, bass, drum, programming) handed Kevin Yapsir (guitar, vox, programming) a sheet music for Radiohead's "Everything In Its Right Place" to read because Ababil cannot read sheet music. The next day Ababil and Kevin practiced the composition attracting future band members Alvin Lasmana (drum), Alfonsus Tanoto (bass) and Daniel Sastro (guitar). Needless to say, the Radiohead cover attempt was a disaster . Reaction to the album was better than expected.
I'm In Medicine, Love, or the Illusion of the Beginning Symptoms of It. Play album. 10 tracks · 1 September 2007.
Acoustic phonetics is the study of the physical properties of speech sounds. Auditory phonetics is the study of the way people perceive speech sounds, in other words, it investigates the hearing process. Of these three branches of phonetics, the longest established, and until recently the most highly developed, is articulatory phonetics.
But shorthand is still mandatory in some professions. The National Council for the Training of Journalists insists trainees achieve a written speed of 100 words per minute to pass its diploma. It's three times quicker to type out shorthand notes than to listen back to audio recordings, says Mary Sorene, secretary of the British Institute of Verbatim Reporters
875 quotes have been tagged as illusion: Joss Whedon: ‘Very occasionally, if you pay really close attention, life doesn't suck. Some people are magic, and others are just the illusion of it. ― Beau Taplin. tags: illusion, magic, people. But that afternoon he asked himself, with his infinite capacity for illusion, if such pitiless indifference might not be a subterfuge for hiding the torments of love. Gabriel García Márquez, Love in the Time of Cholera. tags: illusion, indifference, love, unrequited-love.
Another love expert, Lucy Brown, a neuroscientist at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, says this drive to be with another person is sort of like our drive toward water and other things we need to survive. Functional MRI studies show that primitive neural systems underlying drive, reward recognition and euphoria are active in almost everyone when they look at the face of their beloved and think loving thoughts. This puts romantic love in the company of survival systems, like those that make us hungry or thirsty," Brown told Live Science in 2011