- Bad genes, bad people and a crisis of punishment?
- Addiction and disease: My comments on the TIME Science blog
- Changing attitudes about mind and responsibility: Patricia Hearst
- Diminished responsibility: the next cultural battleground
- Free Will RIP - The Economist on preemptive punishment
- Marketarianism (Label)
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
Calvin, free will and me
Monday, March 01, 2010
How I discover people to follow - on Google Reader
So now I'm enjoying enlisting new unpaid specialists to sort and manage the world's information flow for me. It's like having my own team of incredibly expensive super-smart uber-analysts -- except I don't pay them anything.
Mwaahh-ha-ha-ha!
Ok, so maybe the evil laughter is a bit much. After all, they're free to follow what I share, and we're all feeding the hivemind. It who laughs last is Skynet, as the saying goes.
How do I use Google reader to enlist my witting info-drones?
I look for the "like" link on posts that I like a lot, but that don't have many other "likes". I then click the "like" link and scan the names and associated metadata, looking for people who are different from me -- different nationality, age, gender, profession, etc. Then I look at their shared items. If they've shared interesting things that are new to me, I follow them. I also add them to my special "x-reader" group which allows them to comment on anything I share (should they decide to follow me, though most will not).
None of this worked reliably a month ago, but it works now.
My "People you follow" section is now becoming my strongest information source. I'm able to follow fewer feeds directly, as I now outsource the processing chore to my fellow minions.
Quite nice, really.
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My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Tea is the gateway drug to Militia movement
When a people are prepared to believe, beliefs are powerful and fungible.
I thought of that story when I read David Barstow's epic study of the all-white Tea Party movement. The Tea Party movement is rife with fear and rumor, and it is ready to believe.
The Tea Party had its roots in the GOP, but now it's largely lead by Glenn Beck. Wildly popular with a part of the GOP base the Tea Party is a threat to the corporate heart of the GOP - and Beck's Mormonism is an issue for GOP evangelicals.
So the Tea Party is mixed blessing for the GOP. That's a problem, but it's not the big problem.
The real problem is that the Tea Party is proving to be a "gateway drug" to the pro-terrorist Militia movement and a wide range of the far right fringe parties. Timothy McVeigh wannabes are warming up, just as they did for Clinton.
Challenging times.
See also:
- Glenn Beck's white nationalist fans - Glenn Beck - Salon.com
- The fears of the GOP base - last defenders of America
- The roots of Klan 2.0 and 912 – A justified fear of change
- Palin, Noonan, and the fears of euro America
- Historian wanted: The American Liberty League and 1930s Fascism
- Frank Rich - The Axis of the Obsessed and Deranged - NYTimes.com
Snitty Apple Console message
2/28/10 10:32:19 AM [0x0-0x294294].com.microsoft.Excel[6407] Sun Feb 28 10:32:19 Stanford-MacBook-2.local Microsoft Excel[6407]: The function `CGPDFDocumentGetMediaBox' is obsolete and will be removed in an upcoming update. Unfortunately, this application, or a library it uses, is using this obsolete function, and is thereby contributing to an overall degradation of system performance. Please use `CGPDFPageGetBoxRect' instead.
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Reflections on friends who vote GOP
These are fundamental differences. A good and generous person may feel they owe nothing to the weak save what they choose to give. That person is a natural supporter of the GOP. These are legitimate distinctions
We usually think of Faith in terms of Deities, but there can also be a Faith in Markets. Faith, by definition, is not amenable to discussion. If you believe the true duty of all men is to serve a particular deity, then your first political choice must be to support the Party closest to your deity. If you believe that Markets are infallible, then you must support a Party that shares your belief.
The chasm of Faith is a legitimate distinction between the GOP and the Democrats. Even religious Democrats tend to accept theological tolerance -- even when that tolerance is theologically inconsistent. The GOP has a much stronger claim to the Christian fundamentalist vote.
Tribe
Humans support their Tribe. It is especially hard for a member of a powerful Tribe to see its time is passing. The GOP is the Party of the White Tribe, and in particular of the White Male Tribe. The Democratic Party has a much blurrier Tribal identity, but if you're non-White or Gay or Lesbian it's a natural home.
The GOP and Dems are separated by chasms of Fact, Faith, Values and Tribe. The chasm of Fact seems easiest to cross, but often choices of Fact serve needs of Faith, Values and Tribe. Good persons, by reasons especially of Faith, Values and Tribe, may feel my party is less than sane.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Surviving corporate life - stand or sleep
Stand Up While You Read This! - Olivia Judson - NYTimes.com
...It doesn’t matter if you go running every morning, or you’re a regular at the gym. If you spend most of the rest of the day sitting ... you are putting yourself at increased risk of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, a variety of cancers and an early death. In other words, irrespective of whether you exercise vigorously, sitting for long periods is bad for you...... Several strands of evidence suggest that there’s a “physiology of inactivity”: that when you spend long periods sitting, your body actually does things that are bad for you....
... consider lipoprotein lipase. This is a molecule that plays a central role in how the body processes fats; it’s produced by many tissues, including muscles. Low levels of lipoprotein lipase are associated with a variety of health problems, including heart disease. Studies in rats show that leg muscles only produce this molecule when they are actively being flexed (for example, when the animal is standing up and ambling about). The implication is that when you sit, a crucial part of your metabolism slows down.
How siestas help memory: Sleepy heads | The Economist
... It has already been established that those who siesta are less likely to die of heart disease. Now, Matthew Walker and his colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, have found that they probably have better memory, too. A post-prandial snooze, Dr Walker has discovered, sets the brain up for learning....
... The ideal nap, then, follows a cycle of between 90 and 100 minutes. The first 30 minutes is a light sleep that helps improve motor performance. Then comes 30 minutes of stage 2 sleep, which refreshes the hippocampus. After this, between 60 and 90 minutes into the nap, comes rapid-eye-movement, or REM, sleep, during which dreaming happens. This, research suggests, is the time when the brain makes connections between the new memories that have just been “downloaded” from the hippocampus and those that already exist—thus making new experiences relevant in a wider context.Wireless headsets mean we can do calls easily while standing, pacing, even doing some light weight lifting -- or perhaps while going for a walk (though not with an AT&T iPhone - the connection will drop). Siestas are tougher. There's much to be said for working remotely ...
The benefits to memory of a nap, says Dr Walker, are so great that they can equal an entire night’s sleep. He warns, however, that napping must not be done too late in the day or it will interfere with night-time sleep. Moreover, not everyone awakens refreshed from a siesta.
The grogginess that results from an unrefreshing siesta is termed “sleep inertia”. This happens when the brain is woken from a deep sleep with its cells still firing at a slow rhythm and its temperature and blood flow decreased. Sara Mednick, from the University of California, San Diego, suggests that non-habitual nappers suffer from this more often than those who siesta regularly. It may be that those who have a tendency to wake up groggy are choosing not to siesta in the first place. Perhaps, though, as in so many things, it is practice that makes perfect.
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My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Fallows on the Nexus One - feel the fear Apple
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Canada v USA - bring it on
Team Canada brings down Russia (Montreal Gazette)Canada next faces the winner of the Sweden-Slovakia game. The US beat Switzerland so they play the Czech-Finland winner.... At the Olympics, Canada hadn’t defeated the Russians in any form -- as Russia, the Soviet Union or United teams since 1960, that black-and-white TV era when Canada was represented by Harry Sinden and his fellow Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen. Canada’s overall Olympic record against Russia just improved to 2-9.
Yes, it’s been 50 years since Canada celebrated an Olympic win over this nation, and if that number rings a bell, it should. It was also 50 years between Olympic gold hockey medals when Canada won at Salt Lake City in 2002.
The rise of software rental (aka software as service)
- no ads
- automatic backup of older notes
- create notes by email
- RSS feed
- Unlimited API Usage (free limit is 2,000 API requests/day)
- Moving Palm notes to Toodledo via CSV file - what worked. (Hard!)
- Appigo Notebook is coming to the iPhone
- Kiss your Google Notebook good-bye
- Palm to iPhone migration - address book and notes (Aug 2008 - dated)
- Toodledo gets it
- Appigo and Toodledo – nasty emergent design flaw makes a mess of my iPhone Notes and Tasks
- Evernote's import/export test (updated)
- Simplenote - Google Chrome extension gallery (Johnston - Canada)
- Notational Velocity (OS X) - sync locally expose, spotlight, search (Zachary Schneirov - Russia)
- Simplenote Chrome plug-in: search, edit. (Jan Andersson - Sweden)
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics - explained
Eons ago my peers used to puzzle over the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics. Back in the 1960s an essay on the topic by Merci Cooper ended with this conclusion …
… The miracle of the appropriateness of the language of mathematics for the formulation of the laws of physics is a wonderful gift which we neither understand nor deserve….
Why is it that the “the great book of the universe is written in the language of mathematics” (Galileo Galilei)?
In a recent In Our Time programme on Mathematics' Unintended Consequences I heard, from one guest, a personally persuasive explanation. It’s a fundamentally anthropic explanation that goes something like this:
- Entities that can do mathematics arise as a consequence of natural selection.
- Natural selection can only occur in regions of a universe that have interacting and persistent patterns (perhaps including recursion).
- So a universe containing mathematicians will also be a pattern-based universe.
- Mathematics is a process for describing and manipulating patterns.
- Therefore mathematics is a language that can describe pattern-based universes, including our own.
I’m good with that.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
OS X defect: The missing uninstaller
FAQ: Installing and Uninstalling [CrashPlan Support Site]
...Mac OSX: Open the installer.dmg file and run the uninstaller.
Windows: Use Add/remove programs.
AIDS, South Africa, Lysenko and Climate Change Denial - when ideology trumps science
In an article talking on the hopeful prospect of controlling HIV through a combination of screening and treatment, we are reminded of one of the great tragedies of the 20th century -- how the ideology of Mandela's African National Congress tarnished his personal legacy and, far more importantly, led the premature death of millions ...
Blanket HIV testing 'could see Aids dying out in 40 years' | World news | guardian.co.uk
... More than 30 million people are infected with HIV globally and two million die of the disease each year...
... The disease is overwhelmingly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa, which accounts for a quarter of all HIV/Aids cases globally. Half of these are in South Africa....
Saturday, February 20, 2010
IOT Radiation: Gamma and X-rays
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My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
The Houben story - things that are too good to be true
Trapped in his own body for 23 years - the coma victim who screamed unheard | World news | The GuardianThe article refers to the results of a new brain scan that showed normal activity. Houben had been "locked in", but conscious. The story received international attention. It seemed plausible to me, though horrifying. The implications were obvious for the care of other persons in a vegetative state.
For 23 years Rom Houben was imprisoned in his own body. He saw his doctors and nurses as they visited him during their daily rounds; he listened to the conversations of his carers; he heard his mother deliver the news to him that his father had died. But he could do nothing. He was unable to communicate with his doctors or family. He could not move his head or weep, he could only listen.
Doctors presumed he was in a vegetative state following a near-fatal car crash in 1983. They believed he could feel nothing and hear nothing. For 23 years...
No miracle as brain-damaged patient proved unable to communicate | Science | The Guardian
It seemed to be a medical miracle: the car crash victim assumed for 23 years to be in a coma who was suddenly found to be conscious and able to communicate by tapping on a computer.
The sceptics said it was impossible – and it was. The story of Rom Houben of Belgium, which made headlines worldwide last November when he was shown to be "talking", was today revealed to have been nothing of the sort.
Dr Steven Laureys, one of the doctors treating him, acknowledged that his patient could not make himself understood after all. Facilitated communication, the technique said to have made Houben's apparent contact with the outside world possible, did not work, Laureys declared...