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Boy-Wives and Female Husbands
Gawd, I love the internet! It leads me down such fascinating paths. There I was, idly browsing through Improbable Research, and I come across a reference to this week’s Improbable Research column in the Guardian. It’s devoted to the topic of when someone’s speech "sounds gay", what makes it sound that way (and is the speaker in fact gay?). There have been three studies into this.I noticed that one study had been done by Rudolf P. Gaudio at Standford University in 1994 (and on an associated note, his picture set off my gaydar – although I have to say that my gaydar is notoriously unreliable). I then googled to see what other research he might have been involved in. I see that he contributed a wonderfully-titled paper entitled "Not Talking Straight In Hansa" to the book Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender and Sexuality, edited by Anna Livia and Kira Hall. I’m almost persuaded to get a copy, since many of the other papers have equally intriguing titles such as: "The Color of His Eyes; Polari and the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence", "Pots an Pans; Identification of Queer Japanese in Terms of Discrimination" and "‘Go Suck Your Husband’s Sugarcane’; Hijras and the Use of Sexual Insult".Gaudio’s work on the Hansa society and language then led me on to another intriguingly-titled book: Boy-Wives and Female Husbands, by Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe. It’s a study of homosexualities (the modes and expressions of homosexuality) in African societies. Despite what Archbishop Akinola may wish to believe, homosexualities have been around in African societies for a very long time, and have not been recently introduced by the decadent West. The book gets a good review here. Damn, another one for the pile. -
Murata Boy
Murata Boy is a bicycle-riding robot. It actually rides a bike better than most humans – I can’t come to a dead stop and still remain upright, for one thing. Still, Murata Boy cheats – I think it doesn’t actually power the bicycle with its feet – there’s what looks suspiciously like an electric motor attached to the rear wheel. Same for the handlebars – I think they are turned by a servo motor in the top of the frame. Despite this, Murata Boy is pretty impressive. It was created to showcase the technologies of the firm that built it.Leave a comment
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Be Prepared
Here’s a handy-dandy guide to propaganda and debating tricks. Train yourself to spot when they’re being deployed (by politicians, practically all the time these days, it would seem). Very useful.(hat tip to Larry Moran of Sandwalk for the link)Leave a comment
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Bootstrapping The Brain
Carl Zimmer refers to an article that appears in Nature, which describes the case of a man being roused from a minimally conscious state by electrical stimulation of his brain. Unfortunately, the article is available to subscribers only, so I haven’t been able to read it. But Zimmer does have a link to an article that he wrote on the background. And here’s a BBC news story on the current development (pun not intended).Leave a comment
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Clashing Carpets
Martin and I have a weak spot for watching Escape to the Country – a TV programme in which home-seekers are shown a selection of country properties in their budget that purport to measure up to their requirements. Part of the fascination is the chance to look at other people’s taste (and I use the word advisedly) in interior furnishings. The highpoints come when a particularly violent scheme elicits whimpers of horror from us. Such schemes usually centre around a carpet whose design burns into the retina.Now Dan, over at fulminate//Architectures of Control, draws our attention to carpets that are deliberately designed to be unsettling. Fascinating stuff.Leave a comment
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The Wilder Shores
Come with me on a trip to the wilder shores of medical research. Ben Goldacre, over at Bad Science, raised his eyebrows at some research that has been published in the journal Medical Hypotheses. The "central thrust of their argument is that people with Down’s Syndrome have a lot in common with people from oriental countries". Oo-er, missus.Vaughan, a contributor to Mind Hacks, has now referenced Goldacre’s article, and given some additional background to this esteemed journal, and its somewhat controversial founder. There’s clearly no shortage of hare-brained hypotheses in every field of human endeavour. Don’t miss the link to the hypothesis (also published in Medical Hypotheses) that asks: Is there an association between the use of heeled footwear and schizophrenia?Leave a comment
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What’s Your AQ?
That’s Asperger Quotient. Here’s a test, originally devised by psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen, that purports to give an indication of whether you exhibit the common signs of Asperger’s syndrome. I turn out to be boringly average with a score of 18.Leave a comment
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Out of the Tunnel
That’s the title of the book by Rachel North that describes her experiences in the terrifying places of her life. First when she was raped and secondly when she was very nearly blown up in the bombings in London on the 7th July 2005.I mentioned here that I thought that the book would be worth reading. Now that I have done that, I can confirm that my feeling was right. It is a wonderful book. Her voice is human, true, solid, and deserves to be heard.The end of the book – when the light returns – reminds me somewhat of the glorious closure of Tony Kushner’s Angels In America:This disease will be the end of many of us, but not nearly all, and the dead will be commemorated and will struggle on with the living, and we are not going away. We won’t die secret deaths anymore. The world only spins forward. We will be citizens. The time has come.Bye now.You are fabulous creatures, each and every one.And I bless you: More Life.The Great Work Begins.Thank you, Rachel for the book.Leave a comment
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A Horse Named Courage
Liz (of Granny Gets A Vibrator fame) tells us that we should live each day to the full. Quite right, too.Leave a comment
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The Joys of Parenting
Jon Ronson on bringing up his boy. I hail from a time when one didn’t have conversations like that with one’s parents, but I still ended up knowing the words somehow.2 responses to “The Joys of Parenting”
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I loved that. You can’t put one over on a kid for long. Apparently, when my niece was barely three, sis took her on holiday with our parents to Lanzarote. In the apartment was a painting, which looked like someone had asked the handyman to throw the ends of all the paint cans on a piece of hardboard and shove it up there. Well, my niece walked up to it, put her hand on her hips and said disgustedly "What’s THAT!" "It’s a painting’ my sis said, "Nahhh….." said the niece – "That’s BO**OCKS!"
A shocked silence fell. How did she know that word? How did she know how to use it? My dad, sanguine as ever, strolled away and muttered. "Of course, she’s quite right you know.." and that was good enough for him. -
Hee – nice one. Clearly she has a great future as an art critic.
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The Drowned World
Geoff Manaugh, over at BLDGBLOG, adds his thoughts on an article in the New Scientist about the effects of rising sea levels. I note that the article also has a map showing the possible outline of the Benelux countries 100 years from now. There’s not much of The Netherlands left in this scenario, although our corner of the country still has its head above water…2 responses to “The Drowned World”
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Just read the book – and been wondering about how true the scenario is in there. Did England still exist btw? or do I need to start building my ark now?
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Well, the scenario is worst case – a 5 metre rise in sea level in 100 years. That will still leave lots of England above water, but London and most of East Anglia will go, of course.
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Atom
The BBC seems to have hit its stride again with some excellent science documentaries. After the appalling decline of Horizon, once the flagship of BBC science documentaries into dumbed-down crap produced by meeja-studies graduates, it comes as something of a relief to be able to say that the Science You Can’t See season on BBC Four is shaping up very well. After two reasonable programmes on the quest for Absolute Zero, I’ve just seen the first of three programmes on the science of the atom.I’m impressed. Presented by Professor Jim Al-Khalili, this is science that is not dumbed-down in the slightest. And we didn’t have any of those appalling "reconstructions", with actors hamming it up. Instead we got documentary footage of the real people involved – most memorably of the amazing conference at Solvay, with Einstein and Bohr representing the opposing sides, and duking it out with their theories.The fifth Solvay conference formed the climax of the first of Al-Khalili’s programmes, and he literally walked us through the famous photograph of the attendees at the conference, to great effect. Then we suddenly cut from the conference building in Brussels to the good professor standing in an Alpine meadow. For one dizzy moment, I felt sure that he was about to do a Julie Andrews and burst into song, but no; he simply set up the next episode, which I can’t wait to see. Very good stuff indeed. It clearly helps to have someone who knows his stuff, and who is a great communicator, to front up a science programme like this.I’m also greatly looking forward to another programme in the season: Dangerous Knowledge, which will include the life and work of Alan Turing.Leave a comment
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Talking of Birds…
Here’s a snippet from Dawn Chorus by Marcus Coates…2 responses to “Talking of Birds…”
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Couldn’t get that video to load. Shame. Probably my puter.
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The video needs Flash 8 to run. If you have an earlier version of Flash, it might not work. There’s a link to the Flash site where you can upgrade on the page of that article.
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You Couldn’t Make It Up…
Sorry, I feel a Victor Meldrew coming on over this tale-of-political-correctness-gone-horribly-wrong from Chris Applegate over at qwghlm.co.uk. Durham City Council clearly has more wankers in it than you can shake a stick at. Tracy Ingle, the council official in question, is by all the evidence, in need of a clue or three. And she’s the head of "Cultural Services". What in gawd’s name is that?Leave a comment
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It’s All Our Fault
Following on from Professor Somerville’s concern over same-sex marriage, I think her rationale has about the same intellectual respectability as this piece from Oded Gross: It’s All Because. The difference is that Oded’s tongue is firmly in his cheek, and he knows it.One response to “It’s All Our Fault”
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excellent.
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Other Ways Of Knowing
Sean Prophet, over at the Black Sun Journal, blows apart an opinion piece by Margaret Somerville on "other ways of knowing" Worth reading.I notice, from Somerville’s Wikipedia entry, that she’s also an opponent of same-sex marriage. It doesn’t surprise me; neither does the "quality" of her evidence for her stance. She appears to believe that marriage is simply a "societal institution that represents, symbolizes and protects the inherently reproductive human relationship". This seems to be an extraordinarily limited view of the multi-faceted, and constantly evolving, institution that is marriage. As the Wikipedia article on marriage states: The reasons people marry vary widely, but usually include one or more of the following: legal, social and economic stability; the formation of a family unit; procreation and the education and nurturing of children; legitimizing sexual relations; public declaration of love. Procreation is just one of the reasons, professor Somerville, not the be-all and end-all, as you seem to want it to be.Leave a comment
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Hammering the Radio
Mo, over at Neurophilosophy, tells the history of the rise and fall of prefrontal lobotomy. Scary, scary stuff.Leave a comment
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It Wasn’t The Rib
PZ Myers, over at Pharyngula, draws attention to a startling thought: it wasn’t a rib that God took from Adam to make Eve, but a bone from lower down in the body – the baculum. It’s perfectly true that, unlike most mammalian species, the Homo sapiens male does not possess a baculum, which is a bone inside the penis. Perhaps the original writers of Genesis were a bit too embarrassed to write the truth.2 responses to “It Wasn’t The Rib”
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Haha Geoff – you made me laugh, you made me think, your photographs are beautiful. Why this blog does not have more readers I just don’t know.
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Ah, but I’m perfectly happy just pottering about in my little corner. While I must admit it’s nice to receive the occasional comment, particularly positive ones such as yours, I’d probably feel a wee bit more apprehensive if I thought I had to constantly keep the visitor numbers up…
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Badges of Honour
I see that the Girl Guide organisation is thinking about introducing courses for some new badges. Apparently, it’s going to introduce sessions on how to practise safe sex, manage debt, and reduce the size of one’s carbon footprint. They’re probably more relevant to today’s world than the badges for learning how to iron and how to milk cows (1910), or the Homemaker and Commonwealth badges of 1957.The organisation has polled 1,000 of its members to come up with the subjects for the new courses. The need for knowing how to practise safe sex or manage debt I think is perfectly understandable, and laudable. I am much more perturbed by the fact that apparently large numbers of those polled felt the need for a badge for learning how to assemble flat-pack furniture. The engineer in me finds it difficult to appreciate that people do not have this capability as an innate skill. I shudder to think how I would cope without it.Leave a comment




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