- The joy of being 80
- The Heart Attack Grill – carnivores only
- Post on Scott Adam’s recovery Spasmodic Dysphonia – check out the comments for a flame war on whether the hardware-sofware distinction is relevant to the brain!
- New spoken word night in sheffield. I liked this from the first night
- Bristol for sale
- ‘Wilkinson said not playing made him feel that he didn’t exist.’ – Sad and worrying article about what career-threatening injury does to an obsessional sportsman.
- ‘The Wellingtons of Good Luck’ (well that’s what i think the translation should be)
- Experimental music in Sheffield gig guide
- Peril Hill (myspace), experimental sheffield anti-folk band
- Homage to Thomas Pynchon by Ian Rankin
- Ad complaint against Virgin Trains not upheld – I think we could fairly summarise the argument as: because the racist stereotype already exists in popular culture, it is okay to copy and promote it (as long as it is in a fun way)
- Why the Chinese idiogram for crisis does not mean ‘danger and opportunity’
- Fantastic Ashtanga instruction in Sheffield, England
These sly corbies are birds of death
Three greasy brother crows wheel, beak to heel, cutting a circle into the bruised and troubled sky, making fast, dark rings through the thicksome bloats of smoke.
For so long the lid of the valley was clear and blue but now, by God, it ROARS. From where ah lie the clouds look prehistorical, belching forth great faceless beasts that curl ‘n’ die, like that, above.
And the crows – they still wing, still wheel, only closer now – closer now – closer now to me.
These sly corbies are birds of death. They’ve shadowed me all mah life. It’s only now that ah can reel them in. With mah eyes.
Ah think ah could almost remember how to sleep on this soft, warm circle of mud, for mah rhythms differ. They do.
Sucked by the gums of this toothless grave, ah go – into this fen, this pit, though ah fear to get mah kill-hand wet. In truth and as ah speak, the two crows have staked out mah eyes – like a couple of bad pennies they wheel and wait, while the rolling smoke curls and dies above, and ah see that it turns darker now and ah am but one full quarter gone – unner – or nearly and gaining.
This is the introduction to Nick Cave’s And The Ass Saw The Angel. I was baby-sitting my friend Jim’s youngest, Felix, the other day and I read it to him. He listened in (rapt) silence and then started to cry. But when he’d had a bit to recover he seemed willing to have another go at it:
climate care and airmiles don’t mix
My housemate Helen sent this to Scottish and Southern energy the other day:
Dear Southern Electric,
Thank you for your kind letter (customer account ref 3779898016, QBAY/ SR999B) asking why I am leaving you. I’m afraid I must cite irreconcilable differences (and the fact that I’ve found someone better, who I think takes me seriously). I started to have doubts about the relationship a few months ago, when you sent me a leaflet with a nice picture of a dolphin and a caption about fighting climate change the easy way, alongside an advert for free airmiles. It was your green credentials that attracted me to you in the first place, but I began to feel that the green tarif wasn’t expressing the real you, and that in fact you are as happy to destroy the planet as the next company if there is money in it.
Then someone showed me an article in the Ecologist magazine, which told me that Ecotricity spent around
Defying Hitler
From: Defying Hitler: a memoir, by Sebastian Haffner, written in 1939, published in 2001:
In a regular sequence, new ’emergency decrees’ appeared every six months, each yet again reducing salaries, pensions, social benefits, and finally even private wages and rates of interest. Each was the logical consequence of the last one, and each time Bruning [German Chancellor 1930-1932], clenching his teeth, imposed the painful logic. Many of Hitler’s most effective instruments of torture were first introduced by Bruning – such as ‘safeguarding foreign reserves’, which made travel abroad impossible, and the ‘Reich flight tax’, which did the same for emigration. Even the beginnings of the restriction of the freedom of the press and the gagging of parliament can be traced to Bruning. Yet, paradoxically, his actions were rooted in the convincion that he was defending the Republic. Understandably, the republicans began to ask themselves whether there was anything left to defend.
To my knowledge, the Bruning regime was the first essay and model of a form of government that has since been copied in many European countries: the semi-dictatorship in the name, and in defence, of democracy against fully-fledged dictatorship… the inevitable forerunner of the very thing it is supposed to prevent: its discouragement of its own supporters; the way it undermines its own position; its acceptance of a loss of freedom; its lack of ideological weapons against enemy propaganda; the way it surrenders the initiative; and its collapse at the final moment when the issue is reduced to a simple question of power.
(p71-72)The next day [after Hitler appointment as Reichschancellor on 30th January 1933] this turned out to be the general opinion of the intelligent press [that Hitler’s government would not last long]. It is curious how plausible an argument it is, even today [in 1939], when we know what came next. How could things turn out so completely differently? Perhaps it was just because we were all so certain that they could not do so – and relied on that with far too much confidence. So we neglected to consider that it might, if the worst came to the worst, be necessary to prevent the disaster from happening.
(p90)After all that, I do not see that one can blame the majority of Germans who, in 1933, believed that the Reichstag fire was the work of the Communists. What one can blame them for, and what shows their terrible collective weakness of character clearly for the first time during the Nazi period, is that this settled the matter. With sheepish submissiveness the German people accepted that, as a result of the fire, each one of them lost what little personal freedom and dignity was guaranteed by the constitution; as though it followed as a necessary consequence. If the Communists had burned down the Reichstag, it was perfectly in order that the Government took ‘decisive measures’!
Next morning I discussed these matters with a few other Referendars [junior court officials in training to be judges]. All of them were very interested in the question of who had committed the crime, and more than one of them hinted that they had doubts about the official version; but none of them saw anything of out the ordinary in the fact that, from now on, one’s telephone would be tapped, one’s letters open and one’s desk might be broken into. ‘I consider it a personal insult,’ I said, ‘that I should be prevented from reading whichever newspaper I wish, because allegedly a Communist set light to the Reichstag. Don’t you?’
(p101)Strangely enough, it was just this automatic continuation of ordinary life that hindered any lively, forceful reaction against the horror. I have described how the treachery and cowardice of the leaders of the opposition prevented their organisation from being used against the Nazis or offering any resistance. That still leaves the question why no individuals ever spontaneously opposed some particular injustice or iniquity they experienced, even if they did not act against the whole. (I am not blind to the fact that this charge applies to me as much as to anyone else.)
It was hindered by the mechanical continuation of normal daily life. How different history would be if men were still independent, standing on their own two feet, as in ancient Athens. Today they are yoked to the details of their work and daily timetable, dependent on a thousand little details, cogs in a mechanism they do not control, running steadily on rails and helpless if they become derailed. Only the daily routine provides security and continuity. Just beyond lies a dark jungle. Every European of the twentieth century feels this in his bones and fears it. It is the cause of his reluctance to do anything that could ‘detail’ his life – something audacious or out of the ordinary. It is this lack of self-reliance that opens the possibility of immense catastrophes of civilisation like the rule of the Nazis in Germany.
(p114)What is history, and where does it take place?
If you read ordinary history books – which, it is often overlooked, contain on ly the scheme of events, not the events themselves – you get the impression that no more than a few dozen people are involved, who happen to be ‘at the helm of the ship of state’ and whose deeds and decisions form what is called history. According to this view, the history of the present decade [the 1930s] is a kind of chess game among Hitler, Mussolini, Chiang Kai-Shek, Roosevelt, Chamberlain, Daladier, and a number of other men whose names are on everybody’s lips. We anonymous others seem at best to be the objects of history, pawns in the chess game, who may be pushed forward or left standing, sacrificed or captured, but whose lives, for what they are worth, take place in a totally different world, unrelated to what is happening on the chessboard, of which they are quite unaware.
It may seem a paradox, but it is nonetheless the simple truth, to say that on the contrary, the decisive historical events take place among us, the anonymous masses. The most powerful dictators, ministers, and generals are powerless against the simultaneous mass decisions taken individually and almost unconsciously by the population at large. It is characteristic of these decisions that they do not manifest themselves as mass movements or demonstrations. Mass assemblies are quite incapable of independent action. Decisions that influence the course of history arise out of the individual experiences of thousands or millions of individuals.
…
These are what I want to write about. You cannot get to grips with them if you do not track them down to the place where they happen: the private lives, emotions and thoughts of individual Germans. They happen there all the more since, having cleared the sphere of politics of all opposition, the conquering, ravenous state has moved into formally private spaces in order to clear these also of any resistance or recalcitrance and to subjugate the individual. There, in private, the right is taking place in Germany. You will search for it in vain in the political landscape, even with the most powerful telescope. Today the political struggle is expressed by the choice of what a person eats and drinks, who he loves, what he does in his spare time, whose company he seeks, whether he smiles or frowns, what he reads, what pictures he hangs on his walls. It is here that the battles of the next world war are being decided in advance. They may sound grotesque, but it is the truth.
This is why I think that by telling my seemingly private insignificant story I am writing real history, perhaps even the history of the future.
(p152-152)
Links for 6th of November 2006
- Software solutions to distraction while writing (Guardian)
- The invention of beauty
- Our Brand Is Crisis
- Hear Jarvis Cocker’s new song ‘Running the World’ here
- The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: Gil Scott Heron (YouTube)
- Briefing on ethical standing of UK supermarkets (Waitrose came top)
- myspace.com/mintypumpkin
- ‘Am I genuinely eccentric? Or am I just wearing a funny hat?’ (Tom Waits interview in the Guardian)
- US Presidential Speeches Tag Cloud
- Poke: ‘Well, imagine the bonzo dog band and Cake go on holiday to Russia. They rent a flat on the shores everything’s going fine, they’re listening to Burt Bacharach when Nick Cave comes round to borrow a cup of sugar but Tom Waits has already taken it all and he’s using it to create gypsy brass sounds out of a dead cat that’s stuck in a drainpipe. Not only that but the 17 hippies are out in the barn picking fights with Gogol Bordello because they can’t agree if the Beatles are better than the Kinks, but of course we ALL know the anwer to that question … and that’s what we sound like, give or take.
- Classics in the History of Psychology: Keller Breland and Marian Breland (1961) The misbehavior of organisms, American Psychologist, 16, 681-684.
The Poor Availability of Psychological Research Data for Reanalysis.
American Psychologist, Volume 61, Issue 7
Wicherts, Jelte M.; Borsboom, Denny; Kats, Judith; Molenaar, DylanThe origin of the present comment lies in a failed attempt to obtain, through e-mailed requests, data reported in 141 empirical articles recently published by the American Psychological Association (APA). Our original aim was to reanalyze these data sets to assess the robustness of the research findings to outliers. We never got that far. In June 2005, we contacted the corresponding author of every article that appeared in the last two 2004 issues of four major APA journals. Because their articles had been published in APA journals, we were certain that all of the authors had signed the APA Certification of Compliance With APA Ethical Principles, which includes the principle on sharing data for reanalysis. Unfortunately, 6 months later, after writing more than 400 e-mails–and sending some corresponding authors detailed descriptions of our study aims, approvals of our ethical committee, signed assurances not to share data with others, and even our full resumes-we ended up with a meager 38 positive reactions and the actual data sets from 64 studies (25.7% of the total number of 249 data sets). This means that 73% of the authors did not share their data. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)
Quote #173
You always know the mark of a coward. A coward hides behind freedom. A brave person stands in front of freedom and defends it for others.
Henry Rollins, Talk is Cheap (2003)
look into my eye
This is a picture of the back of one of my eyes:
The light patch in the center is the blindspot, where the optic nerves gather to exit the retina (on their journey to the rest of the brain). Obviously I was a little disappointed that I couldn’t make out individual rod and cone photoreceptors, like wot I seen in textbooks, but apparently the dark patch off to the left is the fovea, with the darkening being caused by the increased photoreceptor density.
Quote #172
Curiosity is insubordination in its purest form
Vladimir Nabokov, quoted in Azar Nafisi’s Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books
This code takes a random entry from my movabletype blog archive and diplays it. You can see it working here http://idiolect.org.uk/notes/random_entry.php
Quote #171
Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed. The entire universe need not arm itself to crush him. A vapor, a drop of water suffices to kill him. But, if the universe were to crush him, man would still be more noble than that which killed him, because he knows that he dies and the advantage which the universe has over him, the universe knows nothing of this.
All our dignity then, consists in thought. By it we must elevate ourselves, and not by space and time which we cannot fill. Let us endavour then, to think well; this is the principle of morality.Blaise Pascal Pensees 347
I dreamt that I caught a coach to leave london, but instead of heading north it headed south. We had been kidnapped by government agents, they were taking us to a secret lab where they would conduct sinister experiments on us. When we arrived I dived back into the coach and attempted to ram the barricades. Army squads appeared, shooting at me. I was hit. The scene blanked out and then restarted immediately – but i knew in another location, and some time later. Now i was restrained and those sinister government scientists approached with their sinister operating tools. The drilling begin and a sheet of blood feel over my vision. The scene blanked again and then, next, I knew that i was looking out of the eyes of the robot into which my brain at been inserted. The scientists were using my brain as the control system for an experimental bio-robot! I knew that i was condemned to look out of the eyes of the robot, as it roamed the world doing the sinister bidding of the sinister government. I was to commit horrors over which i would have no control, but which I would have to watch.
I think i need to stop reading so much Philip K Dick.
Quote #170
42 is not an anwser, it’s an error code. the universe is saying ‘Error 42: meaning to universe not found’
links for 14th of October 2006
- ‘Last night there were skinheads on my lawn (YouTube)
- Homepage of Rodrigo Quian Quiroga of Halle Berry neuron fame
- ‘Unlike British men burdened by the class system and a debilitating need to be ironic, Australian men are open and straightforward, from inviting newcomers to their country out for a drink to breaking that British taboo by chatting at the urinals’
- Threads – the nuclear holocaust film set in Sheffield
- http://code.google.com/p/fictionprocessor/ i need this
- ‘
There are some films so awful, of such insidious dishonesty and mediocrity, that their existence is a kind of scandal.’ After this review I think I may now be able to forgive Peter Bradshaw his review of Lord of the Rings in 2001 - In the clutches of harrier jasmin
- ‘Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics’
- Alex Fradera is in print (twice!)
- CT discussion about torture (in which the left once again demonstrates that it cannot conceive of itself being wrong)
- How the colour of the pill affects the placebo effect for different things
- Funny: www.losanjealous.com/nfc/ and http://xkcd.com/c152.html
Quote #169
in the future,
looking up,
we’ll not be sure which are stars
and which are searchlights on other planets
Unknown (to me) poet from last night’s spoken word antics
the world before men
This is the World just before men. Too violently pitched alive in constant flow ever to be seen by men directly. They are meant only to look at it dead, in still strata, transputrefied to oil or coal. Alive it was a threat: it was Titans, was an overpeaking of life so clangorous and mad, such a green corona about Earth’s body that some spoiler had to be brought in before it blew the Creation apart. So we, crippled keepers, were sent out to multiply, to have dominion. God’s spoilers. Us. Counter-revolutionaries. It is our mission to promote death. The way we kill, the way we die, being unique among the Creatures. It was something we had to work on, historically and personally. To build from scratch up to its present status as reaction, nearly as strong as life, holding down the green uprising. But only nearly as strong.
Thomas Pynchon, Gravity’s Rainbow, p720
The Opponent-Process Theory of Acquired Motivation is that, if i’ve got it right, any innate releaser will be habituated to. The removal of the stimulus involves an opposite reaction (for pleasurable stimuli, pain; for painful stimuli, pleasure at their removal). Habituation results in the exaggeration of this opponent-process evoked reaction, and so stimuli which might previously have been avoided have the capacity to become innately rewarding, thus widening the space of stimuli that can reinforce behaviour.
Another feature of the opponent-process theory warrents comment. It is obviously a puritan’s theory. It argues for the existence of psychological mechanisms for the automatic or autonomic control of affect, such that repeated pleasures lose a lot of their pleasentness and make one potentially capable of new sources of suffering; in the same vein, repeated aversive events lose a lot of their unpleasentness and make one potentially capable of new sources of pleasure. The philosophical implications of such a theory should be obvious.
Solomon, Richard L.
Working for Moloch
the cleaners are scrubbing the Institute lavatories
because women are supposed to do that.the girls are typing in the Institute offices
because women are dedicated and carefulthe women are assembling printed circuits
because woman are good at delicate work
and women’s eyes are expendablethe young men are doing their PhDs
because young men are obedient and ambitious
and someone wants warheads
laser rangefinders
hunt and destroy capabilities
multichannel night seeking radar
and science is neutralback home the wives of the PhD students are having babies
because women are maternal and loving
and who else can have children but women?at the top of the tower the old men and the middle aged men
and sometimes one woman professor
meet to form plans, cadge funds and run the place
because obedient young men turn into obedient old men
and it’s all for the good of the country
and defence funds are good for science
and science is neutral
and no one notices Moloch.the woman bring them
clean toilets
cups of coffee
typescripts
micro circuits oh so neatly assembled
and childrenand it’s hard to see Moloch because he is both far away
and everywhere
and no one asks to whom they are all obedientand they say, “Who’s Moloch? Never heard of him”
as out in the dark Moloch belches
and grows redder and redder
and fatter and fatter
as he eats the children
Mary McCann (1992). First published by Pomegranate Women’s Writing Group
found in Alastair McIntosh’s Soil and Soul: People versus Corporate Power
a scientific maxim
Hemmingway : Always do sober what you said you’d do drunk.
A scientific version of this maxim: Always work out a test of whatever wild speculations you make
make it go away
The famous mathematical sociologist Paul Lazarfeld once said, “You never understand a phenomenon unless you can make it go away.” We might add, “or unless you can reverse its direction.”
Psychologist William McGuire (1983, 1989) suggested as one of many ways to develop new hypotheses that you can take some seemingly obvious relationship and imagine conditions where its opposite would hold.
Robert P. Abelson (1995). Statistics as Principled Argument
Quote #165
There has been a myriad of sporadic cease-fires in the MidEast over the last sixty years. Indeed, over the last three millenia and each has proved but a tiny foyer opening onto yet another grand dark ballroom, whose weary dancers waltz endlessly to the dismal music of war. Still, I think this one’s going to last. Call it a hunch.
— Rob Corddry
Links for 13th of September
- Contended demographics: CT post on death rates in Iraq
- ‘The suicide bomber, cloistered in his bedroom and dreaming at the keyboard of a martyrdom on video is an entirely modern or post-modern figure. ‘
- ‘In this existential Choose Your Own Adventure you wander about, fruitlessly attempting to confront the Nothingness that is Being, and spend a lot of time gently musing about the essential meaningless of existence a position brought on by your status as the main character of a book with the illusion of getting to choose between endings already written for you, something the original books certainly never explored too deeply.’
- ‘Non-Cartesian Cognitive Science…Traditional Cognitive Science is Cartesian in the sense that it takes as fundamental the distinction between the mental and the physical, the mind and the world, the subject and the object.’
- Saint Chartier folk festival
- Because of foetal homicide laws women in the US are being advised to consider themselves ‘pre-pregnant’ at all times, by giving up smoking, drinking and drugs. (The guardian)
- rorymcleod.com
- ‘The rest of this document will briefly discuss some popular techniques for bypassing DVD region coding on different platform’. What I did was search for my hardware spec at the firmware page, noted possible problems and then just used LtnRPC to disable to region-switch counter. Magic!
- ‘This is a collaborative project devoted to analysis of Russell Hoban’s very good 1980 novel Riddley Walker’
- Microsimulation traffic model (java)
- Festival at the edge storytelling festival
the stroop-test and car-crashes
Title Stroop color
cognitive penetrability criterion
Pylyshyn’s cognitive penetrability criterion: if performance is affected by beliefs (e.g. any cognitions, additional extra task information, etc) then performance is not due to primitives of functional architecture.
Heuristics for decentralised thinking
Heursitics for decentralised thinking
(Michael Resnick, ‘Turtles, Termites and Traffic Jams: Explorations in Massively Parallel Microworlds’ MIT Press, 1994, p134ff)
1. Positive feedback can be good
Take-off effects 2. Randomness can help create order
comined with positive feedback -> self-causation shakes off local minima (annealing) prevents worst excesses of exploitation in exploitation-exploration dilemma 3. & 4. Emergence
Need to distinguish between levels Not all properties of a system have to be explicitly built in Emergent objects may have different properties than their subunits 5. The Environment is Active
Intelligent behaviour doesn’t just rely on agents. The environment is dynamic and a source of complexity
Shalizi review of TT&TJ
The noble Vacilando
In Spanish there is a word for which I can’t find a counterword in English. It is the verb vacilar, present participle vacilando. It does not mean vacillating at all. If one is vacilando, he is going somewhere, but does not greatly care whether or not he gets there, although he has direction. Everything in the world must have a design or the human mind rejects it. But in addition, it must have purpose or the human conscience shies away from it.
John Steinbeck (in Travels With Charley: In Search of America, 1962)
But only nearly as strong
It comes as the Revealer. Showing that no society can protect, never could—they are as foolish as shields of paper. They have lied to us. They can’t keep us from dying, so They lie to us about death. A cooperative structure of lies. What have They ever given us in return for the trust, the love—They actually say ‘love’—we’re supposed to owe Them. Can They even keep us from catching cold? from lice, from being alone? from anything? Before the Rocket can penetrate, from the sky, at any given point. Nowhere is safe. We can’t believe Them any more. Not if we are still sane, and love the truth.
Thomas Pynchon, Gravity’s Rainbow
Quote #162
I’ve always been slightly suspicious about the Freudian tendency to read meaning into everything. You see hidden meanings and get paid for it and you’re an analyst, you do it for free and you’re psychotic.I suspect this is why there’s so little psychoanalytic work on psychosis, the infinite regress of hidden meanings would probably cause a dimensional rift and the universe would collapse.
Vaughan Bell on Mindhacks.com
Links for 24th of August 2005
quote #161
I am very interested in words, and what we have words for and what we haven’t got words for. For instance, the word “paranoia.” It always seems very strange to me that we have this word which means, in effect, that someone feels that he is being persecuted when the people who are persecuting him don’t think that he is. But we haven’t got a word for the condition in which you are persecuting someone without realizing it, which I would have thought is as serious a condition as the other, and certainly no less common.
RD Laing