Today is Martin’s birthday. We cycled around the lakes in Reeuwijk together with his sister and brother-in-law and had lunch at ‘t Vaantje – a cafe-restaurant in the area. I see that ‘t Vaantje’s web site is now boasting that they have Wi-Fi access. The march of technology – like the march of time – is apparently an unstoppable force…
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Mad Dogs and Englishmen
Apparently, it would seem that dear Noel Coward got it wrong when he penned Mad Dogs and Englishmen back in 1932.
Scientists at The University of Manchester have unveiled new research this week claiming that going out in the midday sun, without sunscreen, is good for you.
More over at The Science Blog.
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The Young Family
This is Art as in "I think I’m having a nightmare, please can I wake up now…"
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Harlan Ellison
Harlan Ellison is one of the authors I grew up reading. His Dangerous Visions were mind-expanding. His Glass Teat deconstructed TV before anyone else could see where things were going. So he’s always been something of a hero to me. There’s a good interview with him here. Once you’ve read that, read the other two parts, and get an inkling as to what makes him tick (-tock, tick-tock – the sound of the bomb just before it goes up in your face).
2 responses to “Harlan Ellison”
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Wow…your site is brilliant. I love it!!! Sweet pictures and totally awesome blog!Keep on rockin’x Steph x
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Steph, thanks! I’ll drop by your blog as well. One of the things I find fascinating is that we are of all ages and outlooks, but yet are all of the same species <grin> Read you soon!
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The EU Constitution
If you’ve read my profile, you will know that, while I hold a British Passport, I have lived in The Netherlands since 1983. I dutifully pay my taxes, I contribute to the society, I’ve even married a Dutchman. But, in return, does the Dutch Government give me a say in the running of the country?
No way, José.
In the forthcoming vote of the EU constitution, I don’t have the right to vote. Never mind that I believe in Europe and would gladly vote yes! if given the opportunity. Never mind that prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende would like us all to vote yes!
Earth to Jan Peter: your stupid bloody system has prevented me from giving you my vote, so you can go down the toilet for all I care.
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Cognitive Dissonance
Curious Hamster takes a sly dig at Tony Blair with a Thought Experiment. It brought a grin to my face, anyway.
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11 steps to a better brain
The New Scientist this week has a good article on techniques to improve and expand your mind. I must start practising…
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Three Data Points
Data Point A – Air travel as a vector for the spread of disease.
Data Point B – Renewed warnings about the likelihood of a flu pandemic
Data Point C – number 3: Chance of a viral pandemic in the next 70 years – very high.
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The Cave
I came across this today. It looks to me like a remake of Aliens for spelunkers. However, the preview does contain one moment that reminded me strongly of the best moment in Pitch Black. Pity the moment is contained in the preview. It makes me think that perhaps the preview is going to be better than the movie…
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Store Wars
I think in some ways I like this better than I am going to like the Revenge of the Sith.
For example: a) it’s done well, using a fraction of the budget. b) the acting is probably better c) the dialogue is not as mind-numbingly awful* and d) unlike George, it doesn’t take itself seriously.
* Harrison Ford was reputed to have said to George Lucas: "George, You can write this shit, but you can’t say it"
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The Final Frontier
No, not a reference to Star Trek, but the real thing.
NASA reports that Voyager has entered the Final Frontier of our Solar System. I find this amazing.
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Move over UFOs, the Internet Has Arrived
Also on the Mind Hacks Blog is reference to a report that whould seem to indicate that the Internet is increasingly figuring in psychotic delusions.
In the Middle Ages we had demons and devils, from the 1950s on we had UFOs and alien abductions, now it’s the Internet whose tentacles reach into our minds.
Give it another decade or two, and I predict that the emphasis will shift to biotech…
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Minds Designed for Murder?
Over at the Mind Hacks Blog, Tom Stafford refers to the intriguing theory by the evolutionary pscychologist David Buss that homicide is an evolutionary adaptation that we all share.
As Bill Hill has pointed out, somewhat tongue-in-cheek, our operating system is Homo Sapiens 1.0, it’s been in place, without any upgrade, for at least 100,000 years, and the design parameters that were used in its creation apply to very few of today’s humans.
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God’s Gift to Kansas
Richard Dawkins has written another good article demonstrating the flaws in the logic followed by creationists and supporters of Intelligent Design.
What is particularly galling to him, and to many scientists, is the creationist habit of "quote-mining" – taking something completely out of context and turning the sense of the original completely back to front. I am quite convinced they don’t do it out of ignorance but out of wilful deceit. I see them do it time and time again on the BBC messageboards for Evolution and Origins.
As Dawkins writes, for supporters of Creationism and Intelligent Design: Ignorance is God’s Gift to Kansas.
2 responses to “God’s Gift to Kansas”
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Intelligent Design: That’s the theory where God couldn’t have set up something as complicated as evolution because pastors in Pennsylvania don’t understand it:AFP reports: “In January the school board ordered teachers to tell students that Darwinism is not proved, and to teach as well an alternate theory, "intelligent design," which posits that a grand creator, God, is responsible for the development of living organisms.”’We’ve been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture” complains Pastor Mummert who is determined to hold on against such shocking and dangerous notions of reason and knowledge.Unfortunately the article has expired on AFP, but it’s been quoted on many sites so google the above quotes if you want to find it.
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Kaan, thanks for that pointer – I see the good pastor also trots out that old canard: "evolution is just a theory". But the "we’ve been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture" quote is absolutely priceless.
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The Wollemi Pine
Here at chez nous, Martin is the gardener – I just mow the lawn, or occasionally share some of the heavier garden work. Because of this secondary position, I don’t have very much influence over what goes into the garden.
I know this because I can’t have a Monkey Puzzle tree in the garden.
My better half has stamped his foot, and, being the head gardener, pulled rank on me. It is useless for me to say (quite truthfully) that ever since I was a small child, I have loved the look of the Monkey Puzzle tree, and always wanted to have one. In fact, I think it was probably a formative experience as a very small child that imprinted this desire on me. I must have only been about seven or so…
My parents had a hotel. To my seven year old eyes, in the winter, the out-of-season time, it was rather like having the run of the Overlook from Kubrick’s The Shining. The attic seemed to me to be huge, filled with mysterious things that either belonged to us, or were fixtures and fittings of the hotel that had passed their in-fashion date. One day I was poking about in the attic and found: an artificial monkey puzzle tree. I had never seen anything like this before – and when I learned the name from my mother I was even more intrigued. Ever since then, I’ve wanted to have one in a garden that I can call my own.
Flash forward to present time and "No, you can’t have a tree like that in the garden".
So – time to get sneaky, and this is where the Wollemi Pine enters our story. The Wollemi Pine is one of the world’s oldest and rarest plants dating back to the time of the dinosaurs. Until 1994, when it was discovered at a secret location in Australia, it was known only in 200 million-year-old fossil records. With less than 100 adult trees known to exist in the wild, the Wollemi Pine is now the focus of extensive research to safeguard its survival. Its very dark green leaves and bubbly bark help mark it out as a close relative of the Monkey Puzzle tree (beginning to get the picture?).
So here’s the schtick – how can my gardening husband possibly refuse the chance to help propagate an exceedingly rare species of tree?
We can register online at www.wollemipine.com and get involved in what is a worldwide conservation project. So I get something that is closely related to the mysterious tree of my childhood and he gets the feelgood factor of helping to preserve something extremely rare. A win-win situation, I feel. I’ll let you know how it goes when I drop this on him.
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Education Begins At Home
But apparently not in this household. And the mother even has the audacity to blame the schools: "I don’t care what people say about me. I blame the schools – sex education for young girls should be better".
I despair. It’s the sort of thing that gives eugenics a good name. And one of the babies is called T-Jay? That’s a name? I feel a depressing attack of the Victor Meldrews coming on…
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Autistic Savants
One of the threads that Peter Watts wove into his picture of Vampire Domestication was the connection with the human brain’s facility of pattern matching and the apparent ability of savants to "calculate" difficult mathematical problems instantly. I put quotes around the word calculate, because a savant isn’t really "calculating" at all – the answer is just apparent to them.
By coincidence, I was reading today in the Guardian about the documentary that has been made about Daniel Tammet, an autistic savant. That triggered a memory, and sure enough, I had read an article on Tammet in the Guardian a few months back. Tammet is unusual in that he can describe how he does these feats of mathematical wizardry to ordinary mortals like us. The article is well worth reading and gives a brief glimpse into another way of experiencing the world.
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Devolution
Devolution – subtitled: Why Intelligent Design Isn’t – is the title of an article written by H. Allen Orr for The New Yorker. It is one of the best-written pieces of journalism I’ve yet read on why Intelligent Design isn’t science.
The noise made by the supporters of ID is growing in volume in the US (and even, heaven help us, in the usually pragmatic Netherlands*). So it is good to see some clear voices prepared to state that the emperor has no clothes and that ID is simply junk science. The sooner this boil of ID is lanced, the better it will be.
* Last Saturday’s Volkskrant carried an interview with Maria van der Hoeven, Minister for Education, Culture and Science. She wants a "broad debate over evolutionary theory" and has written in her weblog of her interest in ID. Personally, I would think holding such a view would disqualify anyone from holding a ministerial post with the words "education" and "science" in the title, but then, oxymorons seem to abound in this world.
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Vampire Domestication
Via Boing Boing, comes this magnificently ironical parody of a presentation at a Pharmaceutical Conference. Brilliantly performed by its author, Peter Watts, it gives a chillingly low-key pitch as to why vampires can benefit society. "Sociopaths are already highly productive members of corporate society".
As counterpoint to the exposition are the wonderful company slogans of FizerPharm shown on the slides; example: FizerPharm – Trust, Profit, Deniability.
The penultimate sentence of the presentation is, of course, the kicker.
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