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The Power Of Memes
The wonderful Dan Dennett talks about ants, terrorism and the power of memes… Recorded back in 2002 at a TED conference, it’s only just been posted on the TED web site. I can do little better than to echo the byline on the site’s page: This. Is. Unmissable. -
Horse Trials
The local horse and carriage club held its annual horse trials event last weekend. I didn’t take as many pictures as last year, but I took some. The water pool was popular with spectators for obvious reasons.The horsepower came in all shapes and sizes. I was rather taken with these little beauties:Leave a comment
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With Friends Like These…
…who needs enemies? I know I’m coming late to this story, but I’ve finally seen the video of Mika Brzezinski refusing to lead with the so-called "news" story of Scunthorpe Motel (aka Paris Hilton) being released from jail.While I knew that I would be siding with Ms. Brzezinski, until I saw the video I hadn’t quite appreciated just how sickened I would feel by the behaviour of her co-presenters. What a pair of absolute wankers.Leave a comment
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Poor Planning
With apologies to the good people of Glasgow, but this raised a wry smile.(hat tip to Justin, over at Chicken Yoghurt)Leave a comment
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Binaural Recording
If you’ve got a pair of headphones handy, then use them to listen to this sound recording. It’s been recorded binaurally, rather than stereophonically. That means that the aural illusion is very strong indeed. Just listen.(hat tip to PZ Myers)One response to “Binaural Recording”
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Amazing!
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When Tim Met Jim
A good article in the Observer about the continuing gulf between art and science. It worries me that so many of the scientific facts that I had at my fingertips when young are beginning to slip away from me now. Time for a refresher course, I think.But perhaps even more worrying is the fact that ignorance about science seems to be on the rise.Leave a comment
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Before The Bang
Phil, over at the Bad Astronomy Blog, writes about some of the very latest research theories that are coming out about what may have been going on when time started and maybe even before it started. Fascinating.Leave a comment
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It’s The Stupid Theologians
Of course, one of the issues about interpreting theology is that sometimes the interpreters give every indication that they are at least sixpence short of the full shilling. Here’s some senior Church of England bishops who appear to think that us gays are to blame for the flooding in the north of England. Sigh.Leave a comment
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It’s The Theology, Stupid
Yesterday, the Observer carried an interesting opinion piece by Hassan Butt, calling on his fellow Muslims to renounce terror. Butt was, until recently, a member of radical group Al-Muhajiroun, raising funds for extremists and calling for attacks on British citizens. He appears to have had a change of heart.What I found most interesting about his piece was that he downplays the role of Britain’s involvement in the Iraq war as a major factor in the radicalisation of young British Muslims. In effect, he says it’s the theology, stupid. That seems to be to be the crux of it. Yes, Iraq has been, and continues to be, a disaster, but until we manage to focus on the real wellsprings of power – the theology itself and the life-destroying interpretations of it that currently hold sway – little progress will be made. Rachel picks up on this theme over at her blog.Leave a comment
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Grow Old Along With Me…
It’s fifteen months now since we moved into the farmhouse that is now our home. The farmhouse has always been known locally as "De Witte Wand" – the White Wall. This struck us as a bit odd, since there is no white wall in sight anywhere on the property. It’s a brick building. We asked our neighbours about the name, and one of them said that originally, the farmhouse on this site was not built of brick, but of wattle and daub. The walls would then have been whitewashed, hence the name.
At some point in the farmhouse’s history, the wattle and daub walls have been replaced by bricks. The original timber frame was kept during the rebuilding, but the roof was enlarged. You can see the original roof frame in the attic, inside the larger frame that now supports the bigger roof.
We don’t know when that was done. We do know that the farmhouse has been on this spot since at least 1828. We know that because it is marked on a Kadaster (Land Registry map) that was made in that year.
Here’s a photo of the farmhouse taken at some point in the 20th century, when it was still a working farm. As you can see, it is a brick building by the time of this photograph.
The original of this photo is in the possession of the family that originally farmed here. It shows the front of the farmhouse, where the family would have lived. The rest of the farmhouse was the stall for the cows and the stable for the farmhorse. The outbuilding was where the pigs were kept. The family sold off the farm and some of the land, I think in the early 1970s. The farmhouse was bought by a doctor, who used it as a weekend cottage until 1980. At that point it was put back on the market and sold to the people who lived here until we bought it from them last year. Here’s an aerial shot of the farmhouse as it was in 1980.
You can clearly see what was originally the large entrance to the cow stalls at the rear of the house, although by this time the doorway has been replaced by French windows. The couple who bought the farmhouse in 1980 did extensive renovation and remodelling of the interior space. They also developed the gardens that surround the house.
Since buying the house, we have done little major work on the interior, apart from putting in a new kitchen. The gardens are being reshaped by Martin to become his concept and design. We’ve had no regrets about moving here, and hopefully we can continue to enjoy this house for many years to come.
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Clap Your Hands
So, this season’s finale of Doctor Who aired over the weekend. I found it strangely unsatisfying – more pyrotechnics than plot drama. And Russell T. Davies’ outrageous plot device – what you might call the Tinkerbell strategem, with the Doctor as Tinkerbell and Martha as Peter Pan – well, I confess I rolled my eyes in derision.Still, John Simm, as The Master, acquitted himself well; playing the role as a bizarre mixture of Pol Pot and pantomime dame. And I did like the throwaway reference to Captain Jack’s probable fate (even if he didn’t get much to do in this week’s episode).But all in all, this finale was not my highlight of this season’s offerings. For me, the episodes of Blink, and Human Nature / The Family of Blood, were definitely the high points, and possibly the best that there ever have been in the entire 40+ years of the show.2 responses to “Clap Your Hands”
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I am with you on this one Geoff – Blink was the best episode of the series and one of the best episodes ever. Maybe it is a function of the age at which you see the show, but I still have a fondness for those old Jon Pertwee episodes involving UNIT, but objectively the new series is far better written than any of the old ones.
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Andy, I go back even further – I really liked Patrick Troughton’s Doctor… and I can remember the first ever episodes with William Hartnell, I was beside myself with excitement over the first appearance of the Daleks.
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The Great Wen
Craig Murray comments on recent events in London, and opens with a marvellous evocation of the Great Wen that is worthy of Michael Moorcock’s Mother London:LONDONAn Italian banker, custodian of Vatican money and secrets, is found swinging under Blackfriars Bridge. Businessmen purchase seats in the national legislature simply for payments of cash. A Bulgarian dissident is killed with a tiny ricin pellet injected from an umbrella. A Brazilian electrician is executed by police on the London underground. The dismembered torso of a small African child floats down the Thames. The country’s most flamboyant businessman, a lawmaker, steals his workers’ pensions and leaves for a yacht cruise. Muslim lads from Yorkshire kill themselves and 67 people on public transport. Etonian mercenaries plan coups in Papua New Guinea, Sierra Leone and Equatorial Guinea before finding respectability and the jackpot in Iraq. A Russian defector is poisoned with polonium and dies a slow horrible death. Politicians and civil servants concoct a dossier of lies to provoke a war. A girl is arrested for reading out the names of the dead at the Cenotaph, and a man for carrying Vanity Fair outside Downing St. A small black child bleeds to death in a tenement stairwell. Gays die as a nail bomb rips through a pub. The IRA run a long, slow war of death and attrition. Every year, scores of people simply disappear. Homeless people curl up like bundles in neon-lit doorways.Go and read the rest.One response to “The Great Wen”
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Hey, I added you to my blogroll. Could you take a look and see if my site is worthy to be on your roll? 🙂
eric@showyourgaypride.com
http://www.showyourgaypride.com
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Google Maps
Google has just added some improvements to its Google Maps application. And I have to say that I’m impressed. This web application is now very slick indeed, and far better than the Microsoft Streets and Trips application that I used to rely on for planning my trips. Don’t believe me? Then take a look at what Jeff Atwood found when he compared the two – and that was before the latest round of improvements to Google Maps.Leave a comment
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Dominoes
I had some respect for Wim Kok. But when I read this sort of thing, then I think I was mistaken.RNW: So the mistakes he made in relation to Iraq resulted from a strong belief that he was choosing the right way?"Absolutely. If you still remember his speech, his brilliant speech, in the British parliament on the eve before the British took action in Iraq, then you’ll remember that this was really a man who believed in every word he spoke with so much passion and conviction. I was very impressed by that. Although I had a somewhat different view, I was still impressed by what he did."Oh bloody hell. Why don’t people realise that passion and conviction does not make things true? Evidence makes things true. Kok, you’ve gone down in my estimation.Leave a comment
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Fun With Statistics
Hans Rosling is very good at showing statistics about societies. And he’s got a rather stunning party trick. Watch this video – right to the end.(hat tip to TED Blog)Leave a comment
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A Contest For Parents
Martin and I aren’t qualified to enter, but Flea is holding a contest, over at One Good Thing, to find the most humiliating moment in parenting. Mind you, I think that the example she uses to set up the contest will be hard to beat.Leave a comment
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Open The Can…
… and what you might find inside are worms.There’s recently been a story in the UK press about a 16 year-old who has gone to the High Court to accuse her school of discriminating against Christians by banning the wearing of "purity rings". Now it starts to appear as though the backstory to this is even more interesting. See here and here. Whether this gets picked up in the mainstream media, of course, is another matter.Oh, and be sure to check out the greatest animated cartoon ever made. See the second link.Leave a comment
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What Enigma?
I see Paul Davies has an article in today’s Guardian about his theories of the Universe. I’ve mentioned him before, in less than flattering terms, and I see little in this article that makes me want to revise that opinion.He opens with a paragraph that states, in effect, the Anthropic Principle:Scientists are slowly waking up to an inconvenient truth – the universe looks suspiciously like a fix. The issue concerns the very laws of nature themselves. For 40 years, physicists and cosmologists have been quietly collecting examples of all too convenient "coincidences" and special features in the underlying laws of the universe that seem to be necessary in order for life, and hence conscious beings, to exist. Change any one of them and the consequences would be lethal.Why is this an "inconvenient truth"? It simply is. So what? Davies seems to be wanting to have his cake and eat it in a number of ways in this article.- He clearly doesn’t like the Multiverse theory (the idea that there exists possibly an infinite number of universes, each with the knobs twiddled differently to produce a different set of the laws of physics in each). And yet he comes up with the idea of a great "cosmic computer"(!) which is running the software programs that result in our physical laws. What seems to have totally escaped him, which leads me suspect that he knows little about computing theory, is that the whole point about computers is that they are, in effect, a universal Turing machine. In other words, the "great cosmic computer" can be running an infinite number of virtual operating systems, each of which is running its own programs that dictate their own laws. Hallo, we seem to be back with the idea of Multiverses again…
- Davies states: "The root cause of all the difficulty can be traced to the fact that both religion and science appeal to some agency outside the universe to explain its lawlike order". Erm, while I accept that religion appeals to the supernatural by default, I beg to differ that science does. Davies seems to be rewriting the whole definition of the scientific method here in the cause of his pet theories.
- And then there’s this odd coda at the end of his article: "If there is an ultimate meaning to existence, as I believe is the case, the answer is to be found within nature, not beyond it". Meaning? As I said the last time, I don’t need no steenking meaning, and I doubt whether the universe does either…
I honestly wonder what on earth he is playing at. Is it simply further fund-raising for Beyond?Leave a comment
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Excuse Me?
We’re currently well into the Gay Parade season, with reports, and photos up on Flickr, coming in thick and fast. I was rather taken by the Angry Professor’s tale of what happened when she took her four year-old along to the local gay parade. But then she mentioned a product of which I had not heard (I lead a sheltered life): Boy Butter. The web site is a revelation. Young people these days don’t know how lucky they are. We had to make do with vaseline when we were growing up.I was particularly struck by the comment of Eyal Feldman, owner of the company: "I am not only the president, I am also head of the research department". Oo-er, missus, as Frankie would have said.Leave a comment








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