#Galatea

The Nereids

In Greek mythology, the Nereid/Nereides are sea nymphs (female spirits of the sea/waters), the 50 daughters of Nereus (the “Old Man of the Sea”) & Doris (an Oceanid). They’re sisters of the Nerites. They often accompany Poseidon & can be kind to sailors (as in the Argonauts’ search for the Golden Fleece).

While they’re often grouped together as a group of sea nymphs, they represent the multifaceted nature of the Mediterranean.

The Nereids were distinct from other nymphs. Like the freshwater Naiads or the deep-ocean Oceanids. They were specifically associated with the Aegean Sea. The Nereids symbolized everything beautiful & kind about the sea. Their beautiful voices sang as they danced around their dad. They’re pictured as beautiful women crowned with branches of red coral & dressed in white silk robes trimmed with gold.

They lived with their dad, Nereus, in the depths of a golden palace. While there were 50 sisters, 3 stand out:

  • Thetis, the mom of a legend
    • She was so beautiful & powerful that Zeus & Poseidon courted her. Until a prophecy says that her son would be greater than his dad. To stop this prophecy from upsetting the “cosmic balance” (so Zeus’ power stayed with him), Zeus forced Thetis to marry a mortal king, Peleus. This wedding was the catalyst for the Trojan War. It’s where Eris threw the “Apple of Discord.” Thetis spent her life trying to protect her son, Achilles, from his destiny. She was 1 of the few nymphs to have a significant cult following, particularly in Laconia & Thessaly.
  • Amphitrite, the Queen of the Sea
    • Amphitrite is the “First Lady” of the ocean. Poseidon may be the king, but Amphitrite represents the sea’s actual substance. Legend says that she initially ran away from Poseidon’s romantic advancements. She hid in the Atlas Mountains to get away from Poseidon. Poseidon sent a dolphin to find her & plead his case. The dolphin successfully pleaded Poseidon’s case. She agreed to marry Poseidon. Poseidon put the dolphin in the stars as a reward (the Delphinus constellation).
  • Galatea, the beloved & the bitter
    • She was loved by the giant cyclops, Polyphemus. However, Galatea loved a mortal shepherd named Acis. In a fit of rage, Polyphemus crushed Acis with a boulder. Galatea, using her divine sea powers, transformed her lover’s blood into a river (the River Acis in Sicily) so that he could remain immortal in spirit.

In Homer’s Iliad XVIII, when Thetis cries out in sympathy for the grief of her son, Achilles, for the slain Patroclus, her sisters show up. 4 of her sisters, Cymodoce, Thalia, Nesaea, & Spio, were among the nymphs in the training of Cyrene. Later on, these 4 together with their sisters (Thetis, Melite, & Panopea) were able to help the hero Aeneas & his crew during a storm.

In 1 account, Cassiopeia boasted that her daughter, Andromeda, was more beautiful than the Nereides. The Nereids were livid at Cassiopeia’s claim. Their divine homie, Poseidon, being sympathetic towards them, sent a flood, & a sea monster to the land of the Aethiopians, demanding Andromeda’s sacrifices.

These sea goddesses were also said to reveal the mysteries of Dionysus & Persephone. The Nereids were worshipped in several parts of Greece. More specifically, in seaport towns, such as Cardamyle & the Isthmus of Corinth.

In the ancient world, the Nereids weren’t some fanciful fairy tales. They were a part of a functional religious system. Historical records show that sailors & military commanders (like Alexander the Great) offered sacrifices to the Nereids before going out on dangerous voyages.

The Nereid is the direct ancestor of the modern mermaid. The Greeks usually pictured them as fully human. But later Roman & Hellenistic art began to blend them with fish-like features.

The 3rd largest moon of Neptune is called Nereid. It was discovered in 1949 by Gerard Kuiper. The moon is famous for having 1 of the most eccentric (non-circular) orbits of any moon in the solar system. Also, there’s a “lake” in Antarctica that bears their name.

#Achilles #Acis #AcisRiver #AegeanSea #Aeneas #Aethiopians #AlexanderTheGreat #Amphitrite #Andromeda #Antarctica #AppleOfDiscord #Argonauts #AtlasMountains #Cardamyle #Cassiopeia #Cyclops #Cymodoce #Cyrene #DelphinusConstellation #Dionysus #Doris #Eris #Galatea #GerardKuiper #Greece #GreekMythology #Hellenistic #Homer #Iliad #IsthmusOfCorinth #KingPeleus #Laconia #Mediterranean #Melite #Naiads #Neptune #Nereid #Nereides #Nereus #Nerites #Nesaea #Oceanid #OldManOfTheSea #Panopea #Patroclus #Persephone #Polyphemus #Poseidon #Roman #SeaNymphs #Sicily #Spio #Thalia #Thessaly #Thetis #TrojanWar #Zeus
2026-01-12
I proposed two talks for that event. The one that was not accepted (excerpt below) still feels interesting to me and I might someday develop this more, although by now this argument is fairly well-trodden and possibly no longer timely or interesting to make. I obviously don't have the philosophical chops to make an argument at that level, but I'm fascinated by how this technology is so fervently pushed even though it fails on its own technical terms. You don't have to stare too long to recognize there is something non-technical driving this train. "The technologist with well-curated data points knocks chips of error off an AI model to reveal the perfect text generator latent within" is a pretty accurate description and is why I jokingly suggested someone should register the galate.ai domain the other day. If you're not familiar with the Pygmalion myth (in Ovid), check out the company Replika and then Pygmalion to see what I'm getting at. pygmal.io is also available!

Anyway:
ChatGPT and related applications are presented as inevitable and unquestionably good. However, Herbert Simon’s bounded rationality, especially in its more modern guise of ecological rationality, stresses the prevalence of “less is more” phenomena, while scholars like Arvind Narayanan (How to Recognize AI Snake Oil) speak directly to AI itself. Briefly, there are times when simpler models, trained on less data, constitute demonstrably better systems than complex models trained on large data sets. Narayanan, following Joseph Weizenbaum, argues that tasks involving human judgment have this quality. If creating useful tools for such tasks were truly the intended goal, one would reject complex models like GPT and their massive data sets, preferring simpler, less data intensive, and better-performing alternatives. In fact one would reject GPT on the same grounds that less well-trained versions of GPT are rejected in favor of more well-trained ones during the training of GPT itself.

How then do we explain the push to use GPT in producing art, making health care decisions, or advising the legal system, all areas requiring sensitive human judgment? One wonders whether models like GPT were never meant to be optimal in the technical sense after all, but rather in a metaphysical sense. In this view an optimized AI model is not a tool but a Platonic ideal that messy human data only approximates during optimization. As a sculptor with well-aimed chisel blows knocks chips off a marble block to reveal the statuesque human form hidden within, so the technologist with well-curated data points knocks chips of error off an AI model to reveal the perfect text generator latent within. Recent news reporting that OpenAI requires more text data than currently exists to perfect its GPT models adds additional weight to the claim that generative AI practitioners seek the ideal, not the real.
#AI #GenAI #GenerativeAI #GPT#ChatGPT #OpenAI #Galatea #Pygmalion
Jean-Louis Bouzoujlbouzou
2025-03-24

Acis Galatea and polyphemus
Medici Fountain
Luxembourg Gardens
Paris

"The Medici Fountain was originally created in the seventeenth century in the Luxembourg gardens for Maria de’ Medici, Queen of France. The romantic fountain is decorated with allegorical statues."
aviewoncities.com/paris/medici



This image features a striking sculpture that captures a dramatic moment. At the top, a muscular figure, likely representing a powerful deity or force, looms with an imposing presence. His robust stance and intense posture suggest an act of strength or defiance, perhaps conveying themes of struggle or triumph.
Below him, another figure reclines gracefully in a more serene pose. This contrast creates a rich narrative tension between strength and vulnerability. The figure appears to be cradling a smaller form, enhancing the sense of protection or nurturing amidst turmoil.
The textures of the sculptures add to the depth of the piece, showcasing intricate details that evoke a sense of realism despite the stylized representations. The monochromatic palette invests the image with a timeless quality, allowing viewers to focus on the emotional weight and dynamics of the scene without the distraction of color.
Overall, the interplay of the figures could suggest a story of conflict, love, or coexistence, inviting contemplation on the duality of human experience. The viewer might reflect on the balance between power and tenderness, evoking a rich tapestry of interpretations based on individual perceptions and emotions.
Jean-Louis Bouzoujlbouzou
2025-03-10

Paris – Medici Fountain – Acis And Galatea
(Lovers)

One of my favorite places in Paris… I came to read near the basin...

"The Medici Fountain was originally created in the seventeenth century in the Luxembourg gardens for Maria de’ Medici, Queen of France. The romantic fountain is decorated with allegorical statues."



aviewoncities.com/paris/medici

The image showcases a beautifully carved marble sculpture of Acis and Galatea, set against a dark backdrop that amplifies its intricate details. At the center, two figures embrace in an intimate pose, their bodies skillfully rendered to evoke a sense of movement and tenderness. The texture of the marble highlights the play of light and shadow, enhancing the emotional connection between the figures.
The fountain setting adds a serene ambiance, suggesting a moment frozen in time. Water trickles gently around the sculpture, emphasizing a theme of life and continuity. The surrounding architecture, though faint, hints at grandeur and history, lending a timeless quality to the scene.
Interpretively, this sculpture could symbolize love, desire, or the beauty of human connection. The contrast between the softness of the figures and the hardness of the marble might also speak to the enduring nature of love amid the transient aspects of life. Overall, the image invites viewers to reflect on the nuances of passion and permanence.
云五 | 古希腊消灭内耗的神yun5s@go5.dev
2024-11-17

#Galatea 作者 Madeline Miller

Galatea 是希腊神话里Pygmalion 的雕像,因为他爱上了自己的雕像,爱神让他的雕像变成人。这个短篇是从雕像的角度重新讲述的故事。

2024-06-12

So-called ‘lucky’ people tend to have more family, friends, mentors, teachers, etc. that may subconsciously 'expect' more of them and encourage curiosity / achievement.

‘Unlucky’ people may have fewer people giving them encouragement.

These persons perceived as ‘lucky' also somehow seem more enthused towards curiousity and achievement.

Then there are people who purely make ‘luck’ for themselves regardless of their environment with their own expectations.

#pygmalion #galatea #selfFulfilling

Daniel Pomarèdepomarede
2024-04-11

of ♆: Despina, Galatea, Larissa, Proteus
of⛢: Cressida, Juliet, Portia, Belinda, Puck

These are the targets of a spectrophotometry study of small Neptunian and Uranian moons using JWST, to characterize their surface compositions, by M. Belyakov and co-authors
arxiv.org/abs/2404.06660

BookreviewsBookreviews
2024-02-26

Million Dollar Marriage. Katy Evans — review
What impressed me about Katy Evans' book? Read on.

I’ve been wanting to read Katy Evans’ book for a long time, because I read something on a similar topic on the app titled “Journey’s End” and I literally cried with laughter there 🤣
Did Katy Evans’ book delight me as much?

Read more: medium.com/@book87reviews/mill

EssAeEmEssAeEm
2024-02-14

According to Ovid, Galatea the sea-nymph fell in love with Acis, son of Pan, but their relationship was cut short by the cyclops Polyphemus, who also pined after Galatea. In an act of jealousy, Polyphemus hurled a massive rock at Acis, crushing him under it.

🎨 : François Perrier

Painting by François Perrier depicting Acis and Galatea being ferried across the water by their attendants while being  watched from the shore by the cyclops Polyphemus
Bufale.net :verified:factcheck@mastodon.uno
2023-10-21

Per la rubrica #retro di #ShadowsPlay l'inquietante storia di #TwinkleNoraRockMe.
Come al solito troppo lunga per un messaggio su #Mastodon, vi preghiamo quindi di leggerla.

C'è un moderno #Pigmalione, l'autore di #LaSpadadiKingArthur che ad un certo punto della sua vita diventa ossessionato dalla sua #Galatea, l'improbabile eroina #Nora.

Il resto? Peggiora soltanto

bufale.net/twinkle-nora-rock-m

Christopher LovegroveCalmgrove@bookstodon.com
2023-06-04

Review of #MadelineMiller's short story #Galatea (2013), bringing the story of the statue brought to life to a satisfying conclusion. #bookstodon wp.me/p2oNj1-7bq

Imaginary Ronka 🇨🇿🇬🇧🏳️‍🌈RonkaL11@universeodon.com
2023-04-14

The play #Galatea is going to be performed at the #Brighton festival, UK from 5-21 May.

You may have never heard of this play. It was written by John Lyly, Shakespeare's contemporary. It was first performed in 1588 before Queen Elizabeth 1.

This play is a comedy, similar in genre to Midsummer Night's Dream. There are multiple subplots and many charters but the main plot is:

- The God Neptune demands every 5 years that local villagers sacrifice to him the most beautiful virgin
- 2 fathers, independently, fear their daughters could be chosen
- Dads came up with the same plan, dress up the girls as boys and send them to hide in woods
- Girls run into each other, believing each other is a boy & end up falling in love
- The secret is revealed, but the girl still declare a love for each other
- The Goddess Venus grant them a wish & turns on of the girls to a boy

So in how many US states this 535 years old English play can’t be performed if minors are in the audience? 😄

2023-02-17

RT @galatea_project: 🔵Participants of the #GALATEAFinalEvent

Virginie Perron from @EU_EISMEA is in charge of the #GALATEA project.

She will talk about the impact of the Innosup program on clusters and SMEs and new funding opportunities for SMEs from the European Commission.

👇More info👇

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/EU_EISMEA/sta

2022-12-21

RT @galatea_project: 🔵𝗚𝗔𝗟𝗔𝗧𝗘𝗔 𝗙𝗜𝗡𝗔𝗟 𝗘𝗩𝗘𝗡𝗧 🔵
📅 March 7th and 8th 2023
📍 Marseille (@LaCoqueNumeriq )

Save the date and join us to discover the results of #GALATEA and meet the innovative SMEs. Conferences, B2B meetings, networking cocktail and much more👇

galateaproject.eu/event/galate

🐦🔗: n.respublicae.eu/EU_EISMEA/sta

irarre 🦄💛🤍🖤💜🌈Irarre@xarxa.cloud
2022-12-21

Terminado #LaCancionDeAquiles de #MadelineMiller me encanta la mitología y la forma en la que Madeline escribe.
Me he leído #Circe #Galatea y me leeré todo lo que siga escribiendo Miller. Qué maravilla.

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.07
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst