I’m going to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival over the bank holiday weekend at the end of this month. Does anybody have any recommendations for shows I should try and see?
combustion engine snuff
As oil depletion speeds up, motor racing will be made illegal. Upon it will fall the moral censure which must accompany the change in our society’s relationship to fossil fuels. Motor sports will come to play a cultural role somewhere between bare-knuckle boxing and ascot: a barbaric, contraband, relic- but also the preserve of the very rich. Video footage of races will be the new snuff movies. Policemen will capture stocks in raids, and watch them in fascination before having them destroyed. “Christ Jim, look at the speed of that” “Think of the fuel it must be burning!”
Links for 19th of August 2005
- ‘Beyond Belief’ Justin Cartwright is violently secular in the Guardian
- George Monbiot finds the belief that we are incipient compost strangely comforting (and also discusses new evidence for the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis)
- She Falls – the strangest thing (via kev)
- Political comedy makes a comeback at Edinburgh festival
- ‘Well, sir.. the day afor yestidday, I spent the whole day gatherin’ up them ballots. Them folks who had given the matter a little thought handed the ballots back all crumpled up. Them folks who had given the matter a lot of thought told me they lost theirs. Them folks what had talked it over with their wimmen-folk sicked their dogs on me.’
- ‘at that moment everybody was nobody’ (Have A Cup of Tea)
- The only black organization that exposes and opposes lesbian feminism witchcraft!! (‘teaching the black man how to claim, tame, train and dominate the black woman to make her his queen once again’)
- ‘Always wanted to live in a country people flee for fear of religious persecution? Then congratulations, we finally made it. Great news for me, of course – writers get hit just after the minorities’ (AL Kennedy in the Guardian)
- Lab grown meat product will be bland and tasteless, like real chicken nuggets
- What is the science behind advertiser’s ‘scientific’ claims?
- Sam Woolf’s chicken video is here
First Against The Wall
Dude, I just googled “First against the wall” and the top hit was this, the wikipedia entry for Karl Rove. Karl Rove is George W. Bush’s senior advisor, chief political strategist, and deputy chief of staff in charge of policy!
Memorable Quotes from Fight Club (1999)
Narrator: I want you to listen to me very carefully, Tyler.
Tyler Durden: Okay…
Narrator: My eyes are open.
[the Narrator puts the gun into his mouth and pulls trigger]
Not much posting cos i’m on holiday, ain’t i. Festival fun in devon this weekend:
email problems
If you sent me email between the 3rd of August (wednesday) and 8th of august (today, monday), then i may not have got it because my email arrived all stripped of senders and contents (great). I’ve no idea why, but please be understanding if i don’t get back to you about something you sent me…
links for 3rd of august
- ‘Was it fair of me to get laughs out of the suggestion that Jeffrey Archer was a dreadfully vulgar, lying egomaniac who wrote crappy books and deserved prison? OK, bad example.’
- Guardian review of ‘Festival’ (which is a great film)
- Intelligent discussion of surveillance technology and civil liberties at CT
- The Straight Dope on subliminal pictures in advertising
- Snopes on the subliminal popcorn sales myth
- Proof that CAAT really scare the arms industry (and that some people on message boards are idiots, but that’s incidental)
- Intelligent and well designed criticism of intelligent design (Cosma Shalizi)
- ‘Giblets you have shattered my reasoned and ordered worldview into a thousand splintering pieces with your hammer of unyielding truth!’ (more on intelligent design)
- Matt is dazzling & gnostic once more: on games
- Like a daily self-improvement plan, but designed by Chuck Palahniuk: one, two
There is a human bias to underestimate the role we play in creating our own circumstances (this is part of the ‘Fundamental Attribution Error’). I wonder also if there is an opposite bias to underestimate the effect that our circumstances have on us. If there is, what is it called?
Either way, I think both (putative) biases can be explained by perceptual selectivity and an adapted mind. It’s easier and more useful to notice how our circumstances affect things than how unchanging aspects of ourselves do. Contrawise, it’s hard to notice slow changes that our circumstances have on ourselves.
the grace that others have inside
And do you sometimes lust
For the grace that others have inside
The simple peace they make with life
Yet filled up like some summer’s night?
‘I see the light’, Cracker, as heard not as sung
links for 21st of July 2005
- The center of gravity, the decisive terrain in this war is the vast majority of people who are not directly involved but whose support, willing or coerced, is necessary to insurgent operations around the world” The War on Terror is like The War on Subs would have been in WWII
- Networked Europe (those two via, via, Interconnected)
- Who killed Richard Cullen? Jon Ronson on the man who killed himself over ?130,000 of credit card debt
- How do the police keep going in hectic times like this? Listen to Chief Commissioner of the Metropolitan police, Sir Ian Blair, speaking on radio 4 (MP3, 460 KB, funny, silly, sorry).
- Desktop Search Comparison – Google vs. Copernic
- Possibly the coolest conference in the world
- Guardian article about Russian politics and democratic deficit
- Gloomy Sunday – the notorious ‘Hungarian Suicide Song’ – was written in 1933 and banned from the playlists of major radio broadcasters around the world for being too depressing (and reading the lyrics I can see why)
- When i was a child, i was constantly terrified that my life was just a story being read by King Babar to his children
- Cosma Shalizi on some new methods for adumbrating epistemic communities
- Stunning photoblog
- The 14 identifying characteristics of fascism (any similarlity to governments near you is disturbing)
Stephen J. Cowden
General Council & Company Secretary
Reed Elsevier
1-3 Strand
London, WC2N 5JR
21 July 2005
Dear Mr Cowden
Thanks for your reply (12 July) to my letter of 29th of June. I asked three questions in my letter:
Will Elsevier stop helping to organise arms fairs, specifically DSEi (next scheduled for September 2005)? How does your involvement in the arms trade square with your playing ‘a positive role in our local and global communities’? How should the members of academic and medical communities feel about this involvement?
You answered the first, with a straight ‘no’. I’d still like to know the answer to these two:
How does your involvement in the arms trade square with your playing ‘a positive role in our local and global communities’? How should the members of academic and medical communities feel about this involvement?
And to this I’ll add another:
How can you say believe that sufficient “rigorous checks” are made on the exhibitors at DSEi and that their activities are “legitimate” when illegal activities, such as the sale of landmines (banned by international convention) have been shown, repeatedly, to be organised at DSEi? [1]. Are you able to provide details of the checks that your organisation carried out on exhibitors?
I look forward to hearing from you
Yours
Tom Stafford
Endnote:
[1] http://www.caat.org.uk/campaigns/dsei/dsei-2003-report/landmines.php
I’m not a socialist – but I agree with their point that markets will tend to seek efficiencies without respect for human dignity and well-being. I’m not a libertarian – but I agree with their point that the state will tend to aggregate power to itself, necessarily trampling on the freedoms of the individual. It seems to me like the key issue here is that of beaurocratic diffusion of responsibility – whether that diffusion happens in a multinational corporation or at the level of (inter)national government. The problem is only going to get more pressing as the connections between economies, polities and societies becomes more and more multiple, distal and diverse. The globalisation of markets requires the globalisation of responsibility, but at the same time makes personal responsibility near impossible. Time for radical new political solutions? No – time for radical old political solutions. The issues have got more tangled, but they were pretty tangled at the birth of modernity anyway. There’s enough old fashioned corruption, fascism, exploitation and war around that we can still get milage out of boring things like democracy, seperation of powers, the rule of law, human rights, welfare and free trade – despite all their problems and internal contradictions.
Oh, dammit. I wanted to say something about the diffusion of responsibility (remember Milgram! remember Asch! remember Arendt!) and i’ve ended up thinking about the Enlightenment foundations of political philosophy. Hmm. So. Anyone got any ideas of how to deal with the moral impact of the diffusion of responsibility in complex socities?
Excitingly, Andy Brown’s photography website www.envioustime.co.uk has been updated. Stop by for some excellent documentary, portrait and music photography.
My friend Cat now has her photos at www.cathrynbardsley.co.uk, and I’ve put my photos back on-line, here (what, you didn’t notice they were down?), including the burning man photos. Hugh & Matt’s photos from Nepal/Thailand are also back up after space-shortage made me take them down as well.
I wrote to Elsevier to ask them about their involvement with the arms trade. Their response is below (and as PDF here, 600 KB). They only answered the first of my three questions (with a ‘no’).
Frankly, just because something is legal doesn’t make it legitimate and anyway I find hard to believe that adequate checks are carried out at DSEi, especially given that we know it has, just for a first example, repeatedly haboured the brokering of illegal sales of landmines. I’ll be writing back to Elsevier, and in a few days I’ll post it that here too.
Making words needed
Part of any good advice on writing is to cut everything that isn’t doing some work. As the classic says ‘Omit needless words’, ‘Vigourous writing is concise’.
It occurs to me that sometimes, especially with scientific writing, that rather than have a choice of what to include and what to omit, you have a fixed number of ideas to include and your task, as a writer, is the mirror of the maxim above. Rather than ‘omit needless words’ you must find a way to make needed the words/ideas you are compelled to include. Any advice on how to do this would be appreciated.
Links for 16th of July 2005
- ‘This is not a love song’: I can stop thinking about you. /
You don’t drive me crazy. / I guess we had fun / but the details are hazy. - Why the Bombings Mean That We Must Support My Politics
- ‘Very few people here believe they hate us for our freedoms. We think they hate us because our armies are in their countries.’ (Andrew Brown on salon.com)
- Bruce Mau: An Incomplete Manifesto for Growth
- An addictive waste of time
- the best card trick in the world (involves information theory)
- Fox News: ‘the BBC almost operates as a foreign registered agent of Hezbollah and some of the other jihadist groups’ Roger Mosey, head of BBC Television News: ‘If I may leave our customary impartiality aside for a moment, the comments made on Fox News are beneath contempt.’
- an alternative to national service – the Crap Year
- What Bin Laden wants and why he wants it (he says)
- Was it the “very diversity, that melting pot aspect of London” that Islamist extremists found so offensive that they wanted to kill innocent civilians in Britain’s capital, Marr wondered. “No, it’s not that,” replied Gardner briskly, who is better acquainted with al-Qaida thinking than most. “What they find offensive are the policies of western governments and specifically the presence of western troops in Muslim lands, notably Iraq and Afghanistan.
A human network syndrome?
Dan wrote me a comment on my post on modelling local economies and the effect of shops which generate more income but send profits outside the local economy. It’s quite long so I’ve put most of it below the fold. Some context may be found from this post i’ve linked to before, by Dan at Indymedia.org.uk, about the
redevelopment plans current for Burngreave, Sheffield. Even if you’re not interested in redevelopment policy, there’s stuff about the utility and use of simulations that has general interest
Some abbreviations i’m not sure he defines: LM3 = Local Multiplier 3, a measure developed by the NEF which gauges how much of money spent in the local economy stays in the local economy. NEF = The New Economics Foundation. ABM = Agent Based Modelling. ODPM = Office of Deputy Prime Minister.
Anyway, Dan says:
This is all a bit like wading through underbrush at the moment. One day in the future, the concepts we’re trying to get at may emerge from the murk, but for now….
1. The value of modeling
2. A human network syndrome?
3. Capitalism, network breakdown
Links for 7th of July 2005
- The Very Model of a Modern Labour Minister
- If not the King, then at least the Prince of Lies
- Classic paper in psychiatry:
Rosenhan, D. (1975) On being sane in insane places. Science, 179, 250-8. - US Military: Guantanamo quite nice after all, ping-pong and ice-cream (for one in five)
- Pedagogy, Lobachevsky & Mathematics
- George Bush’s Inbox circa September 2003
- Our kev in The Times on ‘real poverty’
- Best practice for analysing large data sets
- Filezilla open source FTP package
- Priest who crucified a nun to death: ‘i don’t understand why journalists are making such a fuss’
The McNamara Fallacy
The first step is to measure whatever can be easily measured. This is OK as far as it goes.
The second step is to disregard that which can?t be easily measured or to give it an arbitrary quantitative value. This is artificial and misleading.
The third step is to presume that what can?t be measured easily really isn?t important. This is blindness.
The fourth step is to say that what can?t be easily measured really doesn?t exist. This is suicide.
Charles Handy, ‘The Empty Raincoat’, page 219.
Tom Stafford
Department of Psychology,
University of Sheffield,
Western Bank,
Sheffield S10 2TP
Jan Hommen,
Chairman, Reed Elsevier,
Reed Elsevier PLC,
1-3 Strand,
London WC2N 5JR
Dear Mr Hommen
I was disappointed to discover that your company, through the subsidiary Spearhead Exhibitions, organises arms fairs. As an academic my familiarity with Elsevier comes from the scientific and medical journals you publish. It seems an entirely inappropriate sideline for you to assist in the selling of weapons. Will you stop?
As well as arms fairs in Brazil, Taiwan, the Netherlands, Singapore and France, Spearhead also organises the DSEi arms fair which is held binannually in London Docklands and boasts of being the largest arms fair in the world. This is a key event for those on the arms trade circuit, a trade which results in death, mutilation and suffering (most casualties of war are civilians, of course). Previous invitees to the fair have included nations such as Syria, which has refused to sign the Biological or Chemical Weapons Conventions and is accused of being a danger to world peace, and Indonesia, which used UK built Hawk jets in its lethal repression in East Timor. Other nations with long records of human rights abuses – Columbia, Saudia Arabia, Israel and China for example – attend, as well as a host of private companies with a history of selling indiscriminately to irresponsible governments in trouble spots around the world. Selling things like clusterbombs, which, like landmines, kill civilians years after the conflict that caused them to be dropped is over, but which aren’t illegal like landmines. Selling the small arms which are responsible for the majority of civilian deaths in war (and killed 500,000 people last year). Selling missile technology, selling depleted uranium shells. By organising events at which these companies can market and promote this equipment, your company is playing a direct role in facilitating this trade. And all this subsidised directly, and indirectly, by UK tax payers.
This arms fair is important to the defence industry, but it’s not a major part of your business – and I urge you to cease your involvement with it. Organising international arms fairs seems totally at odds with your company’s expressed aim to play ‘a positive role in our local and global communities’ (2003’s ‘Reed Elsevier Cares’ programme). I also wonder how the academic and medical communities would feel about your complicity in the arms trade. My feeling is that you would- rightly- lose a lot goodwill from academics, goodwill that you rely on for them to publish in, review, edit and purchase your journals. You’ll be aware that Elsevier publishes the prestigious medical journal The Lancet – this seems especially incongruous with involvement in the arms trade. Can you really justify using profits from publicly funded medical research budgets to support the sale of arms around the world?
I’d be very keen to hear back from you about these things. Specifically the three questions I’ve asked in this letter:
Will you stop helping to organise arms fairs, specifically DSEi (next scheduled for September 2005)? How does your involvement in the arms trade square with playing ‘a positive role in our local and global communities’? How should the members of academic and medical communities feel about this involvement?
I look forward to hearing from you.
Yours,
Tom Stafford
Stay Free!
My new favourite blog is blog.stayfreemagazine.org the blog of Stay Free Magazine and a must for ‘Media criticism, consumer culture, and Brooklyn curiosities’. Top recent posts include this piece about a public art project which involved covering all the adverts and advertisers slogans in Vienna for two weeks. This on an archive of propoganda music (‘The Happy Listeners Guide to Mind Control’), and this well put and much needed bit of commentary on the thesis of Malcolm Gladwell’s new book Blink. That last post led me to this article from Stay Free magazine proper (yes! they have an online archive) about those who study ‘consumer behaviour’, which contains this choice quote:
Funny how such a studied observer of consumer behavior could overlook a pretty basic truth–any company spending that much money, time, and energy on my psyche must not have a product worth buying. That is, my so-called needs only bear such intense scrutiny when the differences between deodorants don’t matter.
(Compare with gladwell, here)
links for the 21st of June 2005
- The Starbucks delocator
- ‘Why is what you are doing better than just giving your spare money to the poor?’ (crooked timber)
- US scientists launch evolution fight-back
- All you base are belong to us (best of)
- Another data point for the idea that experience is more important than argument for changing people’s attitudes
- All you ever wanted to know about sleep (but were afraid to ask)
- Buddhist monks can control perceptual rivalry suggesting they have exceptional control over certain mind and brain processes. (via )
- What is a geek? (from Gazebo, ‘The Journal of Geek Culture’)
- CAAT petition against the DSEi arms fair in London, September
- Numenware A blog about neurotheology: Religion. Brain. Dogen. Language. Japan.
narrative compulsion
Narrative Compulsion – that characteristic of an interpersonal situation, where the outcome of that situation is dictated by the logic of its description, rather than by the wishes or attempted actions of the players. See also life immitates art
Quote #105
The important thing is not to be in the know, but to be in the now
links for 16th of June 2005
- Measuring Shared Information and Coordinated Activity in Neuronal Networks
- I wish i’d been to college here
- the story of how a novel got conceived (in a pub), written (at work), finished (to impress a girl) and published (blind luck?)
- ‘Our relationship was the greatest achievement of my life’ But did Simone de Beauvoir’s scandalous open ‘marriage’ to Sartre make her happy, asks Lisa Appignanesi (the Guardian)
Polly Toynbee on the dangers of confusing religion and race (remember sloan wilson, remember tetlock)- what would a child’s drawing look like if it was re-drawn by an artist?
- Dan’t letter in the Guardian about Clone Town Britain
- …a queer pink light…’
- What happens when the police go on strike
- ‘It could be the ultimate accessory for the 4×4-driving city dweller: spray-on mud’
S(t)imulating the local economy
Following on from the happiness maths and the associated notes about the value of toy models, here is a toy economic model and some notes about what it might mean for regeneration of local economies (also known as ‘are you sure you want to knock down those shops and build a supermarket?’). Comments on both the economics and the epistomology very welcome…
Links for 13th of June 05
- run away from the circus
join the forces of the Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army - Mike on one of those days when riding a bike makes you king of the world
- Support the movement against urban 4x4s
- Hilarious mock-parking tickets for SUVs
- Michel Houellebecq writes about HP Lovecraft in the Guardian
- The Best Che Guevara t-shirt I’ve seen
- How to get things done (Guy Browning in the Guardian)
- More debate about Evolutionary Psychology at Crooked Timber
- Dan’s letter in the Guardian about clone town britain (contains editing-introduced inaccuracies!)
- ‘everything in my life that I?d thought was unfixable was totally fixable?except for having just jumped’
not old and quiet
[local news warning]
Not my normal cup of tea, but this sounds like it will be amazing:
Sheffield Institute for Studies on Ageing
LECTURE SERIES 2005Dr Azrini Wahidin
Lecturer in Criminology, University of Kent at CanterburyNot Old and Quiet: Older Women in Prison
The central focus of this paper is to demonstrate how female elders who are in prison negotiate and resist the omnipresent power of the disciplinary gaze. It is through a discussion of the body and the role of time-discipline that we can come to understand how the ‘old body’ is performed in prison. The work of Foucault is crucial in understanding the nature of power in prisons and how it affects the identities of elders in prison. The spaces occupied by older women in prison demonstrate how time, space and techniques of punishment in the ordering of prison life are disrupted, de-stabilised and transformed. The elders in the study demonstrate how the use of power and how the capillaries of punishment in prison are directed in a specific way at the female body. It is by inserting the words of older women in prison into debates on time and agency that we learn how older women in prison choreograph their own bodies by transgressing or reinforcing typifications of age and femininity. It is the ability to resist and reclaim aspects of their outside self which enables elders to survive prison life.
June 29th, 5.30pm Start, Lecture Theatre 5, Arts Tower, University of Sheffield
I’ve reopened the comments on The Happiness Maths, because i’m convinced the world has more to say about it.
More generally, i’ve jigged about with the system so that commenting on entries stays open for longer. If anyone can bring me the heart of a comment-spammer on a plate i’ll extend it even longer…