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The Remarkable Basilisks (tetzoo.com)
29 points by sohkamyung on May 25, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments



While that is a thorough article about the "Basilisk" Iguana, I'll bet most readers are more familiar with the monster that when looked at causes the person to die.

That monster was originally a serpent[1], but has evolved in modern literature to any item; and alternatively to turn people into stone when being seen through a reflection, or cause death when an image of them is mentally constructed.

I would assume that you can photograph these creatures and live, though they are actually pretty hard to see in real life due to their camouflage. Far less interesting, but far more friendly.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilisk


>has evolved in modern literature to any item [which can] cause death when an image of them is mentally constructed

The excellent and memorable science fiction short story BLIT [0], by David Langford, is what I think of. In the story, a mathematical process called the Berryman Logical Image Technique produces images that cause segfaults in the primary visual cortex when viewed, and thereby irrevocably crash human minds.

I was introduced to the concept by the excellent The Laundry [2] series by Charles Stross ('cstross here on HN!), which features a dangerous fractal referred to as the Langford Death Parrot.

[0] http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/stories/blit.htm

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BLIT_(short_story)

[2] The Laundry is itself worth reading, being a ha-ha-only-serious examination of a fictional British occult secret service in a world where sufficiently advanced mathematics is indistinguishable from Lovecraftian magic, and the ever-increasing density of transistors on CPUs brings the world ever closer to CASE NIGHTMARE GREEN. The viewpoint character, for much of the series, is a sysadmin.


As mentioned in that Wikipedia page, it is pretty much certain that the many ancient stories about African reptiles (for whom various names were used, including "basilisk"), which cause death to those gazing at them, were all based on the spitting cobras, which will spit venom in the eyes of those who harass them and who look at them, causing great pain and even sometimes blindness or death.


I thought it was going to be about information hazards like Roko's basilisk.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roko%27s_basilisk


Roko's Basilisk is nonsense, and Roko Mijic is a racist sexist nut case.

https://twitter.com/jachiam0/status/1651327867375218688

Just got sexually harassed by the Roko's Basilisk guy lol:

https://www.reddit.com/r/SneerClub/comments/133t856/just_got...


Just reading the name evokes vivid images of its Baldur's Gate incarnation in my mind:

https://baldursgate.fandom.com/wiki/Greater_Basilisk

https://baldursgate.fandom.com/wiki/Lesser_Basilisk

It looks surprisingly similar to that woodblock print in the Wikipedia article


Fun facts I gleaned:

- they live and hunt in trees, on the ground, and in water which makes them hard to classify

- their unique feet that allow water running were probably evolved to run across leaves in arboreal life and not for water

- they are closely related to Iguanas, and more broadly anoles (some of which i have in my own back yard)


I think the're called Jesus Christ in Costa Rica.

It's really funny to see them run on water or on land, they almost look like they are on a bicycle.


Name of the next Wes Anderson film


Can anyone else believe they can run on water? That is nuts.




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