ROSSSBLOG
2010-02-08 |
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Recent Publications

Mindworlds
A Decade of Consciousness
Studies
Imprint Academic
352 pages (2009)
ISBN 978 184540 185 6
Preview and order info
Avatars 'R' Us
The Ross Blog, January 27, 2010
PDF: 2 pages, 275 KB
A Strategy For Cost Efficient Distributed Data
Storage For In-Memory OLAP
Olga Mordvinova, Oleksandr Shepil, Thomas
Ludwig, and Andrew Ross
Proc. IADIS Int. Conf. Applied Computing 2009
PDF: 9 pages, 290 KB
SAP NetWeaver BI Accelerator
SAP Press Essentials 42
260 pages (2009)
Reading sample: PDF, 3 MB
ISBN 978 159229 192 2
Buy the book
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J. ANDREW ROSS
WRITER AND PHILOSOPHER
I am a freelance writer and philosopher based in Germany. I am currently
writing what I hope will be a popular book on the growing synergy of
technology and globalization.
I am British. I was born in 1949 and grew up in southern England.
I hold four degrees in philosophy, three from
Oxford and one from
London.
I wrote theses on
the logic of probability theory, truth and provability in arithmetic and set
theory, and formal semantic theory for a constructivist epistemology.
From 1976 to 1987, I worked as a tutor in logic and philosophy in Oxford,
as an administrator in London, as a teacher
of English in Japan, and as a teacher of mathematics and physics in London.
From 1987 to 1998, I worked as a physics and computer science editor at the
academic publisher
Springer in
Heidelberg, Germany. From 1999 to November 2009, I worked in the global
software company SAP
in Walldorf, Germany, first in support and then in an analytics engine
development team.
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BLOG 2010
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2010 June 24-27

Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness
14th Annual Meeting, Toronto, Canada
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 Territorial
boundaries around the North Pole: Surely a war zone when we
start drilling there
Graphene
MIT Tech Review
IBM has created graphene transistors that are
over 10 times faster than silicon transistors. The prototypes are made from
atom-thick sheets of carbon and operate at 100 GHz. The transistors were
created by growing them on a wafer in a commercially feasible process.
Graphene could replace silicon in high-speed computers.
AR Great stuff, IBM
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2010 February 8
SAP CEO Resigns
Ragnhild Kjetland, Bloomberg
SAP CEO Léo Apotheker has resigned
after the supervisory board decided not to extend his mandate. Board members
Bill McDermott and Jim Hagemann Snabe will take over as co-CEOs. Apotheker,
56, became sole CEO in May 2009 and presided over the first annual drop in
revenue at the company since 2003. SAP's software license revenue fell 28%
in 2009 and total revenue fell 8% to €10.67 billion. SAP co-founder and
chairman of the supervisory board Hasso Plattner: "The new setup of the SAP
executive board will allow SAP to better align product innovation with
customer needs."
Blair-Bush Crusade
Stephen M. Walt, Foreign Policy
Tony Blair on his discussions
with Bush in April 2002: "As I recall that discussion, it was less to do
with specifics about what we were going to do on Iraq or, indeed, the Middle
East, because the Israel issue was a big, big issue at the time. I think, in
fact, I remember, actually, there may have been conversations that we had
even with Israelis, the two of us, whilst we were there. So that was a major
part of all this."
AR Two Christians help
out the "holy" land — what's new?
2010 February 7
Google: Books Back2Life
David Drummond, The Guardian
The majority of the world's books
are out of print but in copyright. They are hard for people to find and it's
difficult for copyright holders to exploit them commercially. The Google
Book Search settlement seeks to bring those books back to life. It aims to
make access to millions of books available either for a fee or for free,
supported by advertisements. The rights holders will remain in control. They
can at any time set pricing and access rights for their works or withdraw
them from Google Books altogether. Nothing in this agreement precludes any
other organization from pursuing its own digitization efforts.
AR Go Google Go!
2010 February 6
The Galbraith Revival
Theodore Dalrymple, City Journal
John Kenneth Galbraith did not
believe that understanding economic reality required arcane mathematical
formulas. His explanations of many economic phenomena came richly laced with
commonsense psychology. His solutions emerged from the Olympian heights of
his own ratiocination. His belief in the capacity of experts to direct
everybody better than they could direct themselves made him sympathetic to
Communism.
In communist Poland, noticing the drab way people were
dressed, Galbraith remarked that it "may be the problem of socialism.
Planners can provide for everything but color, and they cannot allow for
that because so much of it is associated with idiocy great and small." In
other words, you can have any color you like, so long as it's chosen by the
philosopher-king.
AR Good man, Galbraith. I
used his book
The New Industrial State as a text in
the economics class I taught in London in 1973/4.
2010 February 5
Communicating With Brainwaves
Emily Singer, MIT Tech Review
Some people thought to be in a
vegetative state may be more aware than previously thought. Research in 2006
using functional MRI had shown that an apparently vegetative patient could
mentally respond to complex commands. A new study shows that brain imaging
can be used for two-way communication.
Patients diagnosed as either
vegetative or minimally conscious were asked to imagine either of two
different situations that activate characteristic parts of the brain. A
brain scan then showed which of the two situations the person is
visualizing. The patient had to comprehend the command, remember it during
the test, and then carry out the visualization.
Five of 54 patients
presumed to be in a vegetative state were able to control their brain
activity. All five had brain damage as a result of head trauma. In one
patient, the imagery task was used to communicate. The patient was
instructed to imagine playing tennis if the answer to a question was yes,
and to imagine his house if the answer was no. Asked six questions, he
answered five correctly. For the last question, he showed no brain activity
at all.
AR Startling to see how
easily one could be misdiagnosed as
vegetative when life goes on in the brain (me at home?)
2010 February 1
36 Arguments for the Existence of God
A work of fiction by Rebecca Goldstein
Review by Ron Charles, Washington Post
Goldstein introduces us to
the world's best-selling atheist: Professor Cass Seltzer finds himself
alarmed by the "indecent amount of attention" that has recently been
lavished on him and his new book, "The Varieties of Religious Illusion." But
it's not the body of Cass's book, it's the appendix that has earned him
millions of dollars and made him an international sensation. At the back of
the book is a list of 36 arguments for the existence of God.
Contemplating his good fortune, "America's favorite atheist" feels "moved by
powers beyond himself." In such a transcendent moment, how can he resist
"the sense that the universe is personal, that there is something personal
that grounds existence and order and value and purpose and meaning"?
Goldstein's novel sports so many spot-on episodes of cerebral pomposity that
you've got to place this novel among the very funniest ever written.
AR I liked Goldstein's
books on Gödel and Spinoza and her novel
"The Mind-Body Problem" so I guess I'll like this one too.
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 Women
say no to Sharia
England "Cesspit"
The Daily Beast
Nigerian Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, 76:
"England is a cesspit. England is the breeding ground of fundamentalist
Muslims. Its social logic is to allow all religions to preach openly. But
this is illogic, because none of the other religions preach apocalyptic
violence. And yet England allows it."
AR Thanks for this gem,
DB editor Tina Brown
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China Bugs
The Sunday Times
The British security service MI5 has accused
China of bugging and burgling UK business executives and setting up
honeytraps in a bid to blackmail them into betraying commercial secrets. The
MI5 document reports that Chinese undercover intelligence officers have also
approached UK businessmen at trade fairs with gifts — cameras and memory
sticks — that install Trojan bugs for remote access to users' computers. MI5
says China has attacked UK defence, energy, communications, and
manufacturing companies.
AR Google will feel
vindicated. Maybe China is the new Soviet Union and we have another
Cold War to chill through.

AFP/Getty Images Christopher Reid
Religion in India — a moving book
by William Dalrymple
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2010 January 31
Plasmonics
Justin Mullins, New Scientist
A spaser is a nanoscale device for
surface plasmon amplification by the stimulated emission of radiation.
Plasmons behave like light waves trapped in a metal's surface. Their
frequencies are in the THz range and they typically live for mere
attoseconds. One actual spaser is a silica ball just 44 nm across with a
gold core. The silica is doped with dye molecules that emit green light when
stimulated by a laser. Some of the light generates plasmons at the surface of
the gold. The signature of amplification is a big increase in green laser
light emitted by the ball for a small increase in energy from the
stimulating laser. The spaser is to nanoplasmonics what the transistor is to
microelectronics. But a plasmonic device would be able to process and store
information in radioactive environments. Early in 2009,
researchers at Caltech revealed a "plasmostor" that can control plasmons
like transistors control electrons. Plasmonic devices don't yet match the
performance of electronic components.
AR I blogged spasers on
August 23. Maybe in a few decades we'll
replace electronics with plasmonics rather than photonics.
2010 January 30
Tony Blair: "I'd do it again"
The Times
Blair said that many of the arguments used to
justify overthrowing Saddam's regime now applied to Iran. He said that Iran
was now a greater risk to Britain than Iraq was when he ordered the invasion
in March 2003. "I had to take this decision as Prime Minister ... I genuinely believe that if we'd left
Saddam in power, even with what we know now, we'd still have had to have
dealt with him, possibly in circumstances where the threat was worse."
AR Great man. Stick to
your guns. You saved Iraq from tyranny.
Apropos war,
Charlotte Higgins bids us recall Homer's Iliad:
A man is like a poppy who first blooms when his blood spreads
like red petals around his mortal body.

Sukhoi T-50: The Russian F-22 Raptor?
Pavel Felgenhauer says humbug: "It doesn't have a new engine, modern
weapons, or electronics. It's impossible to make a fifth- generation plane
without having fifth-generation components. It's just a tuned-up version
of the existing Sukhoi 27 model."
2010 January 29
Virolution
Frank Ryan, New Scientist
The human genome has evolved as a
holobiontic union of vertebrate and virus. Evolution acts on the holobiont
in a process known as symbiogenesis. The AIDS pandemic shows symbiogenesis
in action. HIV-1 is a retrovirus, a class of RNA virus that converts its RNA
genome into DNA before implanting it into host chromosomes. This process of
endogenization converts the virus into an endogenous retrovirus (ERV).
Endogenization allows a virus incorporated in a chromosome in the host's
germ line to become part of the genome. Such germ-line endogenization is the
source of all the viral DNA in the human genome. Retroviruses have undergone
a long co-evolutionary relationship with their hosts. Viral genomes contain
regulatory sequences that can control not just viral genes but host ones as
well. Many viral sequences have become part of our genome.
AR The science here is
totally fascinating.
2010 January 27
Christopher Reid Wins Costa Prize
Arifa Akbar, The Independent
Christopher Reid's poetry collection
The Scattering won the £30,000 Book of the Year award. Reid, 60, is only the
fourth poet to win the Costa prize. He wrote the poems as a tribute to his
late wife, who died in 2005.
AR Chris and I studied
together at Oxford some 40 years ago.
The Jesus Tablet
CNN
Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the iPad tablet computer. He
called it "a truly magical and revolutionary product ... unbelievably great
... way better than a laptop. Way better than a smartphone."
AR Do I need it? No.
Avatars 'R' Us
Andy Ross
Avatar is now number one worldwide, but not because of its reception by the
critics. Its meticulous technical details and magical alien ecosystem explain much of
its success. Also, the avatar concept tells us something deep about
ourselves.
AR Read my review and
weep.
2010 January 21
Gravity as an Entropic Force
Martijn van Calmthout, New Scientist
Erik Verlinde of the
University of Amsterdam argues that gravitation could result from the
entropy of the distribution of mass in spacetime. Newton treated gravity as
a force between objects and Einstein showed that gravity describes how
objects warp spacetime. Yet their laws are only mathematical descriptions.
Verlinde starts from the first principles of thermodynamics and uses
the holographic principle. Earlier, Stephen Hawking and Jacob Bekenstein
introduced holography to describe the properties of black holes. They said a
spherical event horizon could store all the bits of information about the
mass in the hole. Gerard 't Hooft and Leonard Susskind later proposed that
this holographic principle might apply to the whole universe.
Verlinde uses the holographic principle to consider a small mass at a
distance from a bigger mass. Moving the small mass changes the information
content, or entropy, of a holographic surface between the masses. This
changes the energy of the system. Using statistics, Verlinde show that
movements toward the bigger mass are more probable. This shows up as an
attractive force between the masses. It is entropic because it arises from
probability and information.
From expressions for the information in
a holographic surface and its energy content, and Einstein's E = mc2,
Verlinde derives first Newton's law of gravity and then the Einstein
equations.
On the Origin of Gravity and the Laws of Newton
Erik P. Verlinde,
ArXiv
Newton's law of gravitation is derived in a theory in which
space is emergent through a holographic scenario. Gravity is explained as an
entropic force caused by changes in the information associated with the
positions of material bodies. A relativistic generalization leads directly
to the Einstein equations. The equivalence principle implies that the origin
of the law of inertia is entropic.
AR Wow — this is great!
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Gulf: US Versus Iran
The New York Times
The Obama administration is accelerating the
deployment of new defenses against possible Iranian missile attacks in the
Persian Gulf. Special ships off the Iranian coast and antimissile systems in
at least four Arab countries will counter the Iranian threat. The
administration is trying to win broad international consensus for sanctions
against the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps, said to control a covert
nuclear arms program.
AR Think what a missile
firefight in the Gulf would do (a) to world gas prices and (b) to
property prices along the Arab side of the Gulf.


CNN Steve Jobs
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Dubai
Albert Speer Jr, Der Spiegel
Dubai's Burj Khalifa is purely a
vanity project. I am convinced that the slums of the 21st century are being
built in Dubai. Not all the buildings are constructed to the same quality as
the Burj Khalifa. Many buildings were built quickly and on the cheap by
speculators and are now standing empty. One builds cities for people. The
cities have to be used. The quality of the urban space is absolutely
decisive.
AR Speer is an architect
and the son of the Nazi architect

You won't find consciousness in the brain
Ray Tallis, New Scientist
We cannot say that when we see neural
correlates of consciousness that we are seeing consciousness itself. If we
did, we would be unable to explain how intracranial nerve impulses can be
"about" extracranial objects. There are problems with a sense of past and
future, with notions of the self, with the initiation of action, and with
free will. Science begins when we escape our subjective, first-person
experiences into objective measurement, and reach towards a vantage point
the philosopher Thomas Nagel called "the view from nowhere". An account of
consciousness in terms of nerve impulses must be a contradiction in terms.
The brain no more has a world of things appearing to it than does any other
physical object.
AR This is correct given
his "science begins" assumption (from Nagel). But that can be finessed — see
my new book Mindworlds

Burj Khalifa Opens
The Wall Street Journal
The Burj Khalifa, at 828 m (half a
mile) the world's tallest skyscraper, opened January 4. Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum
hopes the building will help restore the allure of Dubai as a business
hub.
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2010 January 17
What's Our Sputnik?
Thomas L. Friedman, The New York Times
Visiting the greater China
region always leaves me envious of the leaders of Hong Kong, Taiwan and
China, who surely get to spend more of their time focusing on how to build
their nations than my president, whose agenda can be derailed at any moment
by a jihadist death cult using exploding underpants.
Taiwan is a
barren rock with 23 million people who, through hard work, have amassed the
fourth-largest foreign currency reserves in the world. They got rich
unlocking their entrepreneurs, not digging for oil. China is now our main
economic partner and competitor. I hope Americans see China's rise as the
21st-century equivalent of Russia launching the Sputnik satellite.
AR Tom is right on the
money, as always. The Islamic belt is the
rust belt of the future. Invest where people work.
Opening The Academic Mind
Gideon
Lewis-Kraus, Slate
Louis Menand's new book suggests that
contemporary higher education's biggest problem is professionalization.
Professors have become professionals in a system committed to its own
protection and perpetuation. Menand: "Interdisciplinary anxiety is a
displaced anxiety about the position of privilege that academic
professionalism confers on its initiates and about the peculiar position of
social disempowerment created by the barrier between academic workers and
the larger culture. It is anxiety about the formalism and methodological
fetishism of the disciplines and about the danger of sliding into aimless
subjectivism or eclecticism."
AR Menand needs to watch
his language: that's a bad case of
pseudoscholarly woffle he has there.
James Cameron Hates
America
Tom Shone, Slate
James Cameron's
Avatar
has been greeted on the right with the kind of immediate snarling antagonism
reserved for Oliver Stone pics. MovieGuide, "the family guide to Christian
movie reviews," awarded the movie "four Marxes and an Obama" for its
"abhorrent New Age, pagan, anti-capitalist worldview that promotes Goddess
worship and the destruction of the human race." Writing in the London Daily
Telegraph, Nile Gardner professed himself astonished by "the roars of
approval which greeted the on-screen killing of US military personnel."
Cameron was always going to be a tough nut to crack. His politics are an
intriguing salad: dove-ish bromides strapped into the titanium exoskeleton
of a hawk. He was born in Canada in 1954, which means that he spent his
formative teenage years watching the giant next door receive the beating of
its life in Vietnam. It left him with an almost forensic fascination for
"how the mighty fall," his enduring theme as a filmmaker, from Terminator
to Titanic.
AR The right should be
happy with
Avatar: any jihadists who exult at its
firefights will be infected with eco-paganism — a vast
improvement on the jihadist death cult.
2010 January 16
Google In China
The New York Times
To many of the young, well-educated Chinese
who are Google's loyal users in China, the company's threat to leave is no
laughing matter. Many view the possible loss of Google's services with real
distress. China's Communist rulers have long tried to balance their desire
for a thriving Internet with their demands for political control. Google has
stirred up the debate over their claim that constraints on free speech are
crucial to stability and prosperity.
AR The students should
press for changes in how the government works in China. Espionage and
hacking of Google data don't look good. Their authoritarian cult of covert
controls on information means they cannot prove they wish Google well — if
they do.
2010 January 15

Foreignpolicy.com Haiti —
Jesus
China: $123
Trillion by 2040
Robert Fogel, Foreign Policy
In 2040, the
Chinese economy will reach $123 trillion, or nearly three times the economic
output of the entire globe in 2000. China's per capita income will hit
$85,000, more than double the forecast for the European Union, and also much
higher than that of India and Japan. In other words, the average Chinese
megacity dweller will be living twice as well as the average Frenchman when
China goes from a poor country in 2000 to a superrich country in 2040.
Although it will not have overtaken the United States in per capita wealth,
according to my forecasts, China's share of global GDP — 40 percent — will
dwarf that of the United States (14 percent) and the European Union (5
percent) 30 years from now. This is what economic hegemony will look like.
AR People published
equally absurd extrapolations about Japan
a quarter-century ago.
2010 January 12
Brain Entanglement
David Robson, New Scientist
Groups of brain cells seem to use
quantum entanglement. The electrical activity of neurons in separate parts
of the brain can oscillate together by phase locking. The frequency seems to
be a signature of neurons working on the same task. Recent work [below]
shows that the electrical signal in groups of neurons separated by up to 1
cm can lock phase exactly. Such "coherence potentials" can start in one set
of neurons and be cloned by others some ms later. This is much more complex
than classical phase locking and matches both amplitude and frequency. This
mechanism could code memories.
Coherence Potentials ... in
the Cortex T.C. Thiagarajan, M.A. Lebedev, M.A. Nicolelis, D.
Plenz
PLoS Biol 8(1): e1000278. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000278
Transient associations among neurons are thought to underlie memory and
behavior. We recorded ongoing local field potential (LFP) activity at
multiple sites within the cortex of awake monkeys and organotypic cultures
of cortex. We show that when the composite activity of a local neuronal
group exceeds a threshold, its activity pattern occurs without distortion at
other cortex sites via fast synaptic transmission. We call these all-or-none
propagated patterns coherence potentials. They are diverse and complex
waveforms that can serve for encoding information.
AR This suggested role of
quantum entanglement in the neural
memory-building mechanism is entirely consistent with the
consciousness mechanism I describe in my new book Mindworlds.
2010 January 11
From Eternity To Here
Sean Carroll, California Institute of Technology
The fundamental
laws of physics treat the past and the future as exactly the same, whereas
the world does not. That's the arrow of time problem. The answer to why the
past is different from the future is intimately connected with the whole
universe, with what happened at the big bang. The fact that the past is set
in stone while the future can still be altered is all because of entropy.
The fact that you can remember yesterday but not tomorrow is because of
entropy. Once you assume that the universe had a low entropy for whatever
reason, everything else follows. To understand why the entropy was lower
yesterday really requires cosmology. The early universe was was smooth, it
was expanding very rapidly, it was a dense, hot state, and there was a lot
of stuff in the universe. That happens to be a very low-entropy
configuration, and that is the puzzle. We have to understand how quantum
mechanics and gravity play together long before we can ever hope to say
definitively what the right answer is to these questions.
AR The nature of time is
the topic of chapter 13 in my new book Mindworlds.
I claim that physics is time-symmetric because
it is epistemologically flat whereas time is the dimension of
epistemic depth.
2009 January 10

Temple of Apollo, Schwetzingen Schloßpark, today

The Mosque, Schwetzingen Schloßpark, today
2010 January 9
Schwetzingen covered in snow — strained my back shoveling it!
Mad Mitch and al Qaeda in Yemen
2010 January 7
Quantum Darwinism
MIT Technology Review
Quantum Darwinism was unleashed last year
by the physicist by Wojciech Zurek at Los Alamos National Labs. It explains
why macroscopic physics obeys classical rules while the quantum world obeys
the laws of quantum mechanics.
Zurek thought about the role of the
environment in quantum mechanics. For other quantum physicists, the
environment is a nuisance. For a quantum object in isolation, its quantum
information can survive forever. But in the classical world this quantum
information leaks into the environment.
For Zurek, the environment is
an information channel with properties that are key to understanding Quantum
Darwinism. All macroscopic measuring machines get their information through
this channel. Only quantum states that can be transmitted through the
environment in the right way and in multiple copies can be observed at the
macroscopic scale. The classical view of the universe is determined by the
states that survive transmission through the channel.
Universal Darwinism is essentially a 3-step
algorithm: replication or copying, variations among the copies, and
selective survival of the copies determined by their variations. John
Campbell concludes that Quantum Darwinism meets this criterion.
Quantum Darwinism
John Campbell,
arXiv
The Darwinian nature of Wojciech Zurek's theory of Quantum
Darwinism is evaluated against the criteria of a Darwinian process as
understood within Universal Darwinism. Quantum theory is discussed from the
view that Zurek's derivation of the measure- ment axioms implies that the
evolution of a quantum system entangled with environmental entities is
determined solely by the nature of the entangled system. Quantum Darwinism
is found to conform to the Darwinian paradigm in unexpected detail.
Universal Darwinism may be considered a candidate Theory of Everything as
anticipated by David Deutsch.
AR UD is a sufficiently
general algorithm that it very nearly applies to any temporal process under
the "becoming" paradigm that I describe in my new book Mindworlds.
The theory QD that it does apply to quantum processes — which are then not
only instances of becoming but also of inheritable variation — is
intriguing. Zurek's use of QD to reduce the logical basis of QM from 5 to 3
axioms is a fine piece of work.

Billboard.com Taylor Swift had an amazing
2009. Last night she won a People's Choice Award for Favorite Female Artist.
2010 January 6
Can science explain religion? H.
Allen Orr reviews Robert Wright's attempt to show how it can — with skepsis.
2010 January 4
European Supergrid
Alok Jha, The Guardian
Europe's first electricity grid for
renewable power is on the political calendar this month. Germany, France,
Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden, Ireland, and the UK
plan to link their clean energy projects around the North Sea in a network
with thousands of km of undersea cables costing up to €30 billion.
The supergrid supplies electricity across the continent from wherever the
wind is blowing, the sun is shining, or the waves are crashing. Connected to
Norway's hydro-electric power stations, it could act as a giant battery. It
is a big step toward a continental supergrid linking into solar power farms
in North Africa.
2010 January 3
The Aging Brain
Barbara Strauch, The New York Times
Aging brains are easily
distracted. They can wander off and begin daydreaming. Deborah M. Burke, a
professor of psychology at Pomona College in California, has researched
tip-of-the-tongue "tots" when you know something but can't quite call it to
mind. Tots increase in part because neural connections can weaken with
disuse or age. But if you are primed with sounds that are close to those
you're trying to remember, the lost name will pop into mind.
The
aging brain gets better at recognizing the big picture, and it can continue
to build pathways that help it to recognize patterns and see significance.
The trick is finding ways to keep brain connections in good condition and to
grow more of them. For adults, one way to nudge neurons in the right
direction is to challenge their previous assumptions. Adult learners should
confront thoughts that are contrary to their own. If they look at their
insights critically, they can remain sharp.
2020 visions from The Telegraph
●
Coolpix of my study
2010 January 2
Repeal the Irish Blasphemy Law
As of yesterday, the new Irish
blasphemy law makes blasphemy a crime punishable by a €25,000 fine. The new
law defines blasphemy as publishing or uttering matter that is grossly
abusive or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion,
thereby intentionally causing outrage among a substantial number of
adherents of that religion.
We believe that blasphemy laws are unjust. In a civilized society, people have a right to to
express and to hear ideas about religion even if other people find those
ideas to be outrageous.
AR All the Irish need to
do to advertise the absurdity of the law is
to start a
new religion that requires its members to proclaim statements
which other religions condemn as blasphemous.
They would even enjoy tax exemption.
 Buy
now
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Run Barefoot!
Chris McDougall, The Telegraph
Last spring, Daniel Lieberman, the
head of the evolutionary anthropology department at Harvard, recruited
Harvard students for an experiment: to run every day either barefoot or
wearing a thin foot-glove. The results were remarkable. Once their shoes
were taken away, the students instinctively stopped clumping down on their
heels and began landing lightly on the balls of their feet, keeping their
feet beneath their hips and bending at the knees and ankles. Dr Lieberman
was so taken by his discovery that he started running barefoot for miles at
a time through Boston.
AR Good — now I know why
I like running barefoot
Migration Threatens Britain
George Carey, The Times
British democratic institutions support
the liberal democratic values of the nation. But some groups of migrants are
ambi- valent about or even hostile to such institutions. The idea that Britain
can continue to welcome with open arms immigrants who immediately establish
their own tribunals to apply Sharia, rather than make use of British civil
law, is deeply socially divisive. Our society owes more to our Christian
heritage than it realises and to overlook this inheritance of faith will
lead to the watering down of the very values of tolerance, openness,
inclusion and democracy that we claim are central to all we stand for.
AR Steady on, archbishop!
People will start thinking the Church of England has a backbone!

It's as good to use as it looks
AR
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BLOG 2009
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Robot War
P.W. Singer, CNN
The U.S. military today has more than 7,000 unmanned systems in the air and
12,000 on the ground. But the back-end networks don't always match the
front-end systems, and many of the systems are built in an ad-hoc manner.
Some of their communications feeds are not even encrypted. Insurgents can
now use cheap commercial software to tap into U.S. military video feeds and
see what the systems are monitoring. Pentagon officials say they are fixing
the problem, but thousands of systems will need to be retooled for
encryption.
Robots at war


Must see soon in 3D

Shakira gave a speech at the Oxford Union to 400 students on Monday. The
Grammy Award winner, 1.6 m tall and 32 years old with an IQ of 140, said:
'''So how do I go from Barranquilla, Colombia, to occupy the same stage as
Newton and Churchill? Lord knows I'm no Mother Teresa.''

Oxford views
|
2009 December 31
2020 visions from The Independent
●
Coolpix of my study
2009 December 26-30
Reading
Beyond the Darkness by Shirley du Boulay (a biography of Bede
Griffiths)
My Amazon review of
The Marriage of East and West: This book is an insightful classic by
a Christian mystic. Driven by an inner vision of the shared goal of all
genuine religions, Dom Bede argues passionately that Western religion, by
which he really means Christianity, can be "married" with Eastern religion,
and in particular with Hinduism. His own experience as a Catholic monk in
India makes this view persuasive and convinces this reader at least that the
vision is lucid and veridical. But the book is not perfect. Bede's disdain
for science and industry, indeed for the whole "modern" world that has
developed since the Renaissance, is unreasonable, in my humble opinion. For
me, his understanding of modern science is too superficial and his antipathy
toward the popular desire for creature comforts is too procrustean. Also,
his views on Semitic versus Asiatic thinking and male versus female
psychology are badly dated. Still, the man deserves to be a saint and his
book deserves to be read by anyone interested in deep spiritual experience.
2009 December 25
Read
The Marriage of East and West by Bede Griffiths (from beginning to
end)
2009 December 24

Image: 20th Century Fox
Avatar is
not only environmentalist and anti-imperialist but also sexist and racist —
or is it? Only if your ideas about sexism and racism are so PC that no
statements at all are allowed in movies. I say it's just a celebration of
good ole Hollywood clichés.
2009 December 22
The Large Hadron Collider
Kurt Andersen, Vanity Fair
The LHC is not merely the world's largest particle accelerator but the
largest machine ever built. At the center of one of the main experimental
stations in the caverns dotted around the big ring is a magnet that
generates a magnetic field 100,000 times as strong as Earth's. And because
the guts of the collider are cooled by liquid helium, inside the machine
it's one degree colder than outer space, so it's the coldest place in the
universe.
Proton beams in each of two pipes have now started shooting around the ring,
one beam clockwise and the other counterclock- wise, at an energy level of
3.5 trillion electron volts, several times that of the previous biggest
accelerator. The proton beams collide head on, at a combined energy of 7 TeV,
producing up to 800 million collisions per second.
The LHC is essentially a super-microscope that will use the largest energies
ever generated to examine sub-nuclear bits of matter and record fleeting
blinks of energy that last for only million-billionths of a nanosecond. It's
also a kind of time machine that will reproduce the conditions that
prevailed 14 billion years ago, giving scientists a look at the universe a
trillionth of a second after the big bang. The goal is to achieve a deeper,
better, truer under- standing of the fundamental structure and nature of
existence.
In other words, it's one of the most awesome scientific enterprises of all
time, even though it looks like a monumental folly. Or else, possibly, the
reverse.
The LHC
2009 December 21
Avatar in 3D is
awesome — a magical realization of an alien ecosystem. JC has beaten all
odds and come back a winner.
2009 December 20
Reading books by Haruki
Murakami and
Collapse by Jared Diamond
2009 December 19
Day trip to Bad Homburg: temperature —15°C
2009 December 18
God
Anthony Gottlieb, Intelligent Life
Karen Armstrong says God "is not good, divine, powerful or intelligent in
any way that we can understand. We could not even say that God 'exists',
because our concept of existence is too limited." For her, the only
authentic and defensible God is one who utterly transcends human
understanding and therefore cannot be described at all.
Terry Eagleton defines God as "what sustains all things in being by his
love, and ... is the reason why there is something instead of nothing, the
condition of possibility of any entity whatsoever." A wiser response to the
apparent inexpressibility of statements about God may be simply not to
express them.
AR Armstrong's
"apophatic" concept of God is a mysticism that collapses modulo the
dialectical unity of opposites to atheism. Eagleton's more theological
definition seems to describe what in my Godblogs
dialogs I assert to be essentially the self-alienated self failing to
recognize its own conditioning of all possible experience. This deep self
behind all our experience is perhaps the Kantian Transcendental Ego, not to be
confused with the phenomenal ego. By contrast, the father god of traditional
Christianity is an image reflecting our genocentricity (blog Dec 6).
2009 December 17
Enjoying my new Apple iMac running Snow Leopard and featuring
Magic Mouse and Time Machine
2009 December 15
Heidelberg Forum: Biosciences and Society
Print Media Academy, Heidelberg
The Evolution of Religions
Professor
Daniel C. Dennett
Excellent. Dan is unbeatable. His message is loud and clear. We must learn
to see religions as social clubs that would be better off shelving their
founding myths. Let us treat belief in gods with the same compassion we
might have for a drug addict.
2009 December 14
Pankaj Mishra has his say on
Islam, AfPak, and novels
Christopher Hitchens pours more
scorn on Sarah Palin
2009 December 12
Paranormal Flexibility
Charles M. Blow, The New York Times
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life have released a report pointing
out that many Americans are now choosing to "blend Christianity with Eastern
or New Age beliefs" and that "sizable minorities of all major U.S. religious
groups" said that they have had supernatural experiences. The number of
Americans who said that they have had a "moment of sudden religious insight
or awakening" is now greater than those who said that they had not. So it
seems many Americans cobble together Mr. Potato Head-like spiritual
identities from a hodgepodge of beliefs.
AR Looks like we need a new product to fill those potato heads.
2009 December 11

AFP
The Airbus Military A400M airlifter completes its maiden flight
Springer Sold
The Times
Candover Investments and Cinven, the private equity groups, have sold
Springer, the leading academic business publisher, in a deal worth a total
of €2.3 billion. Candover and Cinven will share about €100 million in
proceeds from the sale to a Swedish private equity fund and a
state-backed Singaporean fund. The deal included about €2.2 billion of debt.
In 2003, Candover paid €1.65 billion for the assets used to create Springer.
2009 December 9
Are we better off without religion?
Sue Blackmore, The Guardian
Gregory Paul argues that popular religious belief is caused by dysfunctional
social conditions. In his latest research, Paul measures "popular
religiosity" for developed nations, and then compares it against the
"successful societies scale" (SSS), which includes such things such as
homicides, the proportion of people incarcerated, infant mortality, sexually
transmitted diseases, teenage births and abortions, corruption, income
inequality, and many others.
The rich nations with the highest levels of belief in God and the greatest
religious observance are also the ones with all the signs of societal
dysfunction. These correlations are truly stunning. Many, such as those
between popular religiosity and teenage abortions and STDs, have correlation
coefficients over 0.9, and the overall correlation with the SSS is 0.7 with
the United States included and 0.5 without.
Paul concludes that "religious prosociality and charity are less effective
at improving societal conditions than are secular government programs." He
argues that religion is a crutch for people under extreme stress: Americans
suffer a lack of universal health care, a competitive economic environment,
and huge income inequalities, so religious belief and observance provide
relief. The majorities in other rich countries are secure enough not to seek
help from a supernatural creator.
The Chronic Dependence of Popular Religiosity upon Dysfunctional
Psychosociological Conditions
Gregory Paul, Evolutionary Psychology
Better understanding the nature, origin and popularity of varying levels of
popular religion versus secularism, and their impact upon socioeconomic
conditions and vice versa, requires a cross national comparison of the
competing factors in populations where opinions are freely chosen. ... High
levels of income disparity, popular religiosity as measured by differing
levels of belief and activity, and rejection of evolutionary science
correlate strongly negatively with improving conditions. ... Religious
prosociality and charity are less effective at improving societal conditions
than are secular government programs. ... The nonuniversality of strong
religious devotion, and the ease with large populations abandon serious
theism when conditions are sufficiently benign, refute hypotheses that
religious belief and practice are the norm ... Instead popular religion is
usually a superficial and flexible psychological mechanism for coping with
the high levels of stress and anxiety produced by sufficiently dysfunctional
social and economic environments.
Time and Spacetime: The Crystallizing Block Universe
George F. R. Ellis,
Tony Rothman
The nature of the future is completely different from the nature of the
past. When quantum effects are significant, the future shows all the signs
of quantum weirdness, including duality, uncertainty, and entanglement. With
the passage of time, after the time- irreversible process of state-vector
reduction has taken place, the past emerges, with the previous quantum
uncertainty replaced by the classical certainty of definite particle
identities and states. The present time is where this transition largely
takes place, but the process does not take place uniformly: Evidence from
delayed choice and related experiments shows that isolated patches of
quantum indeterminacy remain, and that their transition from probability to
certainty only takes place later. Thus, when quantum effects are
significant, the picture of a classical Evolving Block Universe (EBU) cedes
place to one of a Crystallizing Block Universe (CBU), which reflects this
quantum transition from indeterminacy to certainty, while nevertheless
resembling the EBU on large enough scales.
AR This is exactly the
conception of quantum spacetime I propose
in my book
Mindworlds
2009 December 6
Tiger Woods
Desmond Morris, The Telegraph
To understand what has happened to Tiger Woods, we have to turn the clock
back hundreds of millennia. The extension of sexual activity in our ancient
ancestors went hand in hand with the development of a pair bond. Our species
acquired the best brain in the animal world and this amazing organ needed a
great deal of programming. We added a whole decade to the process of growing
up and this created a heavy maternal burden. The emotional attachment of a
loving father eased this burden considerably.
Evolution didn't perfect the basic human family unit because some
flexibility was necessary. So now each human adult has two reproductive
strategies, different for male and female. The adult male is driven, first,
to devote a huge amount of time and energy into rearing the offspring
produced within his pair bond, and second, given a casual opportunity to
father extra children, to do so providing it does not disrupt his first
drive. The reproductive strategies of the human female are, first, to find a
mate who will offer her the security she needs to rear her children, and
second, to mate with a male who will provide good genes for her offspring.
Even in a happy marriage, both partners may stray under the influence of
primeval reproductive urges.
AR The loving father
ideal is symbolized by the Abrahamic god.
As a species, we are still adapting to monogamy. Some humans experience the
cognitive dissonance as compulsive A-god imagery. In this way, our genes
push us to overcome our self-constructed personalities in obedience to our
selfish genes. Darwin-Dawkins biology predicts that a species like ours will
evolve A-god auto- phenomenology to reflect our genocentricity.
2009 December 5
The Local:
The German Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe has issued a ruling in favor of
the Christian church and against the heathen city of Berlin: Advent Sundays
in the run-up to Christmas are holy and shops must remain closed.
AR Is there no end to
such religious nonsense? I protest!
2009 December 2
Martin Heidegger was a Nazi, but
his Nazism is the least troubling part of his legacy.
2009 December 1
America Versus The Narrative
Thomas L. Friedman, The New York Times
The Narrative is the cocktail of half-truths, propaganda and out- right lies
about America that have taken hold in the Arab-Muslim world since 9/11.
Propagated by jihadist Web sites, mosque preachers, Arab intellectuals,
satellite news stations and books — and tacitly endorsed by some Arab
regimes — this narrative posits that America has declared war on Islam, as
part of a grand "American-Crusader-Zionist conspiracy" to keep Muslims down.
We punched a fist into the Arab/Muslim world after 9/11, partly to send a
message of deterrence, but primarily to destroy two tyrannical regimes — the
Taliban and the Baathists — and to work with Afghans and Iraqis to build a
different kind of politics. [We] aimed at giving Arabs and Muslims a better
chance to succeed with modernity and to elect their own leaders. The
Narrative was concocted by jihadists to obscure that.
|
Greens
Bryan Appleyard
Literary Review
Whole Earth Discipline:
An Ecopragmatist Manifesto
By Stewart Brand
Atlantic Books, 316 pages
Brand says we need to deploy science to clean up the mess made by science.
Climate change really means Mother Nature is preparing to rid herself of
humans. If we are to survive, we have to embrace nuclear power and
foodstuffs synthesized in laboratories. Farming is a planetary catastrophe,
stripping out biodiversity and filling the atmosphere with the methane from
cow farts. Greens resist nuclear power and persist in deluding people into
thinking all we have to do is build wind farms and cycle to work. They also
go on about the loss of the rainforest. They insist that any new technology
has to be shown to do no harm, which is impossible. The Greens are going to
have to grow up.
My (un)Holy Trinity
Boss — the being (or becoming) of spatiotemporal structure(s)
—
is the physical analog of an apophatic god
Susie — the self underlying subjective inner experience —
is the psychological analog of the loving sustainer of all things in our
personal worlds
Goof — the god of our fathers —
is the biological analog of the monotheistic patriarch revealed as an urge
toward genocentric behavior

Virgin Galactic unveils SpaceShipTwo (SS2) at
Spaceport America, NM. Governator Arnold Schwarzenegger christened SS2 the
"Virgin Space Ship (VSS) Enterprise".
Virgin hopes SS2 will rocket tourists into zero gravity beginning in two or
three years. The carrier aircraft Eve will release SS2 at an altitude of 18
km and SS2 will then rocket up to about 100 km above Earth. In a trip of
about 150 minutes, passengers will experience about 5 minutes of
weightlessness. Some 300 punters have put down deposits for the $200,000
ride.

Oxford's "Home of Egalitarian,
Enlightened and Erudite Islam"
|
|

Swiss say "Ja" to stopping construction of minarets
AR I say
good for them
Impact of gasoline inhalation
on some neurobehavioural characteristics of male rats
Amal A Kinawy
BMC Physiology 2009, 9:21
From the conclusion:
Chronic exposure to gasoline vapours impaired the levels of monoamine
neurotransmitters and other biochemical parameters in different brain areas and
modulated several behavioural aspects related to aggression in rats.
AR Petrol heads beware!

Mandelbulb: An artfully
rendered image of a version
of a 3D analog of the
Mandelbrot set

Headline Shirts / Creative Commons
Da Vinci tee rocks
Batteries: MAIL Beats Lithium
MIT
Tech Review
Fluidic Energy, a spinoff from Arizona State University, says it can develop
a metal-air battery that dramatically outperforms lithium-ion cells. The
Metal-Air Ionic Liquid (MAIL) battery uses an ionic liquid as its
electrolyte. Cody Friesen, a professor at Arizona State University and
founder of Fluidic Energy, aims to build a battery with up to 11 times the
energy density of lithium-ion cells for less than
one-third the cost.

Angela Merkel

Noddy is 60
Happy anniversary!
|
2009 St Andrew's Day
Tariq Ramadan is an Islamic
proselytizer
2009 November 29
Deutsch-Amerikanisches Institut:
Das individuelle Gedächtnis
Hannah Monyer im Gespräch mit Manfred Osten
Das individuelle Gedächtnis und die damit verbundenen neuro- logischen
Herausforderungen, mit denen der moderne Mensch konfrontiert ist, wird das
Thema.
Neurobiologin Hannah Monyer beschäftigt sichmit der Frage, aus welchen
Bestandteilen sich das individuelle Gedächtnis zusammensetzt und inwiefern
es sich unter Einflüssen ändert.
Professorin Hannah Monyer studierte Medizin an der Universität Heidelberg. Nach
der Habilitation in Biochemie ist sie seit 1999 Ärztliche Direktorin der
Abteilung für Klinische Neurobiologie am Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg. Im
gleichen Jahr wurde ihr das Bundesverdienstkreuz verliehen. 2004 erhielt sie
den Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz-Preis der DFG.
Dr. Manfred Osten war nach über 30 Jahren im diplomatischen Dienst von 1995
bis 2003 Generalsekretär der Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung. Zudem ist er
als Autor und Journalist tätig.
AR Nichts neues aber
trotzdem sehr gut.
2009 November 28
The New York Review updates two big themes:
Another, more critical, review of
Caldwell on Islam in Europe
New developments in
Google versus book authors worldwide
2009 November 24
DARPA Cat Brain "Scam"
Noah Shachtman, Wired
Last year, DARPA gave IBM nearly $5 million to make electronics that mimic
the "function, size, and power consumption" of a cat brain. Last week, IBM
lead researcher Dharmendra Modha told a supercomputing conference that his
cortical simulator had simulated a cat brain with a billion neurons and 10
trillion synapses. IBM Blue
Brain lead scientist Henry Markram responded with an angry open letter
to IBM CTO Bernard Myerson:
"What IBM reported is a scam — no where near a cat-scale brain simulation.
... I am absolutely shocked at this announcement. Not because it is any kind
of technical feat, but because of the mass deception of the public. ... All
these kinds of simulations are trivial and have been around for decades —
simply called artificial neural network (ANN) simulations. ... For a
grown-up "researcher" to get excited because one can simulate billions of
points interacting is ludicrous. ... This is light years away from a cat
brain, not even close to an ant's brain in complexity. It is highly
unethical of Mohda to mislead the public ... That IBM and DARPA would
support such deceptive announcements is even more shocking."
AR My November 19
response was premature. Of course Mohda's
"simulation" is just an ANN, which proves nothing
about cats.
I defer to Markram's condemnation of the
announcement.
2009 November 23
Learning To Read
Owen Flanagan, New Scientist
Reading in the Brain
By Stanislas Dehaene
Viking, 400 pages
Reading is only about 5000 years old but the modern brain is about 200,000
years old. Brain imaging shows reading takes place in all brains in what
Stanislas Dehaene calls a "letterbox" on the bottom of the left hemisphere.
Cognitive neuroscientists assume that a brain area dedicated to a particular
function is an adaptation that evolved to serve a function related to
reproductive success. But the letterbox cannot be an adaptation because
reading is so recent. It must be an exaptation that evolved to do one thing
but has been co-opted to do another.
The area that reading co-opted originally evolved for the visual acuity
needed to track animals. Evidence for this comes from studying line, edge,
and curve detection in the letterbox area, which also explains universal
visual features of all alphabets.
AR Perhaps we can augment
the letterbox with a neurochip to
enable us to speed-read with robotic efficiency.
2009 November 21
A Strategy For Cost Efficient Distributed Data Storage For
In-Memory OLAP
Olga Mordvinova, Oleksandr Shepil, Thomas Ludwig,
and Andrew Ross
Proceedings IADIS International Conference
Applied Computing 2009, Rome, Italy, November 19-21, 2009
PDF: 9 pages, 290 KB
Abstract. With the availability of inexpensive blade servers featuring 32 GB
or more of main memory, memory-based engines such as the SAP NetWeaver
Business Warehouse Accelerator are coming into widespread use for online
analytic processing (OLAP) of terabyte data volumes. Data storage for such
engines is often implemented in standard storage technologies like storage
area network (SAN) or network attached storage (NAS) with high hardware
costs. Given the access pattern, storage costs can be reduced by using a
distributed persistence layer based on commodity architecture. We discuss an
example of an in-memory OLAP engine with a focus on storage architecture. We
then present an implementation of a distributed persistence layer that is
optimized for the access pattern of such engines. Finally, we show the
cost-saving potential and discuss the performance impact compared to SAN
systems.
AR Olga presents the
paper today in Rome.
2009 November 20

The new Royal Caribbean International cruise liner Oasis Of The Seas weighs
225,000 tons, is 362 m long, and can carry over 6,000 passengers. The ship
was built in Turku, Finland.
AR If global warming
causes sea levels to rise enough, millions
of us may be living in such ships a century
from now.
2009 November 19
IBM Simulates Cat Brain
Mercury News
Researchers from IBM and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory say they
have created a computer simulation that matches the scale and complexity of
a cat's brain, and project members from IBM and Stanford have developed an
algorithm for mapping the human brain at new levels of detail. Researchers
used an IBM supercomputer to model the movement of data through a structure
with 1 billion neurons and 10 trillion synapses to see how information flows
in a system comparable to a feline neocortex.
The work is part of a federally funded effort to study what's known as
cognitive computing, starting with reverse-engineering the human brain.
Current computers are designed on a model that differentiates between
processing and storing data, which can lead to a lag in updating
information. Our brain software runs on a more complex physical
infrastructure that can integrate and react to a constant stream of sights,
sounds, and other sensory information. The research is funded by DARPA.
AR This is a big step
forward. An exaflops supercomputer with a
few petabytes of memory could
simulate a human brain.
2009 November 18
Supersymmetry is a great idea
looking for evidence
Was Nietzsche pious? Is
atheism a kind of religion?
2009 November 16
God, genes, and money: new work
suggests a link
2009 November 15
Enjoyed an evening
at the Mannheim Palazzo thanks to SAP
2009 November 11
Going Muslim
Tunku Varadarajan, Forbes
The phrase "Going Muslim" would describe the turn of events where a
seemingly integrated Muslim-American discards his apparent integration in
society and elects to vindicate his religion in an act of messianic violence
against his fellow citizens. This would appear to be what happened in the
case of Major Nidal Malik Hasan. There would not necessarily be a
psychological "snap" in the case of the imminently violent Muslim. Instead,
there could be a calculated discarding of camouflage in an act of revelatory
catharsis.
A short time after the shootings at Fort Hood, President Obama asked us not
to jump to conclusions. This is part of a larger problem, the privileging of
religion, and its frequent exemption from rules of normal discourse. Muslims
may be more extreme because their religion is founded on bellicose conquest,
a contempt for infidels, and an obligation for piety that is more extensive
than in other schemes. The Army had an Islamic fundamentalist in its midst,
blogging about suicide bombings and telling everyone he hated the Army's
mission. Yet they did nothing about it.
Erdogan's Blind Faith
Seth Freedman, The Guardian
Despite glaring evidence to the contrary, the Turkish prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, believes "it is not possible for those who belong to the
Muslim faith to carry out genocide". Accordingly, he refuses to accept that
Sudanese paramilitaries committed genocidal acts against the population of
Darfur, or that Sudan's president, Omar al-Bashir, is guilty of any crime.
Furthermore, says Erdogan, Israeli "war crimes" in Gaza are worse than
anything that has taken place in Sudan. Whatever one's take on Israel's
actions during Operation Cast Lead and the general siege on the Gaza Strip,
to make such absurd comparisons is both futile and false. His collective
exculpation of every last Muslim from the charge of genocide flies in the
face of bloody wars the world over.
Corrective Studies
Nic Robertson and Paul Cruickshank, CNN
Leaders of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) have written a new
"code" for jihad. The LIFG now views the armed struggle it waged against
Colonel Gadhafi's regime as illegal under Islamic law. Entitled Corrective
Studies, the 417-page code is the result of more than two years of work.
From the code: "Jihad has ethics and morals because it is for God. That
means it is forbidden to kill women, children, elderly people, priests,
messengers, traders and the like. Betrayal is prohibited and it is vital to
keep promises and treat prisoners of war in a good way. Standing by those
ethics is what distinguishes Muslims' jihad from the wars of other nations."
AR Muslim philosophers
still have a dauntingly big moral problem.
2009 November 9
20 Jahre Mauerfall

Berlinermauer am Bethaniendamm, Berlin-Kreuzberg, 1986. Thierry Noir,
GFDL
1989 Was A Very Good Year
Timothy Garton Ash, Los Angeles Times
1989 was the biggest year in world history since 1945. It led to the end of
communism in Europe, of the Soviet Union, the Cold War, and the short
twentieth century. It opened the door to German reunification, a European
Union stretching from Lisbon to Tallinn, the enlargement of NATO, two
decades of American supremacy, and globalization. It also brought us
Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwa on
Salman Rushdie.
"Berlin was always the centerpiece of the Cold War and ... very nearly the
front line of real combat."
Fred Kaplan, Slate
AR I spent the summer of
1974 in Berlin-Kreuzberg, overlooking the wall from the rooftop of a radical
student commune. I learned to imagine Berlin as the pin in the world
grenade. Now I guess we are 20 years into a global war against Islamic
militants.
Galen Strawson on selves and how my
mindworlds create them
2009 November 8
Goldman Sachs
John Arlidge, The Sunday Times
Number 85 Broad Street, New York, NY 10004, is where the money is. It's the
site of the best cash machine that global capitalism has ever produced. The
people who work here make more money than some countries do. Their assets
total $1 trillion, their annual revenues run into the tens of billions, and
their profits are in the billions. Average pay this year for the 30,000
staff is expected to be a record $700,000. Top earners will get tens of
millions. When they have finished getting "filthy rich by 40", these alpha
dogs parachute into some of the most senior political posts in the U.S. and
beyond, prompting accusations that they "rule the world". Number 85 Broad
Street is the home of Goldman Sachs.
2009 November 5
France: Autistic Tories Castrated UK
The Guardian
Venting European Union frustration, France's Europe minister, Pierre
Lellouche, accused William Hague, the UK's shadow foreign secretary, of a
"bizarre autism" in their talks. Lellouche is one of the most Anglophile
members of Sarkozy's government.
David Cameron outlined a fresh Tory approach to the EU in the wake of the
full ratification of the Lisbon treaty. He would seek to strengthen British
sovereignty and repatriate a series of powers over social and employment
legislation.
Lellouche responded: "It's pathetic. It's just very sad to see Britain, so
important in Europe, just cutting itself out from the rest." He recalled the
Tories' decision to abandon the main centre-right EPP grouping in the
European parliament: "They have essentially castrated your UK influence in
the European parliament."
2009 November 4

Lisbon Treaty Signed: New Dawn In Europe
David Charter and Philip Webster, The Times
Europe's elite celebrated the imminent arrival of its first president last
night. Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other leaders hailed a new era of
expanded powers for the European Union to act on the world stage. There was
relief across European capitals as the long journey toward an accord that
gives Europe a president and a new chief of foreign affairs came to an end.
Islamist Says Merkel Is Great
Foreign
Policy
Mohammed al-Fizazi is sitting in a Moroccan jail for his role in a 2003
Casablanca terrorist attack. In a letter in Der Spiegel, he praises the
religious freedom and employment opportunities available to Muslims in
Germany. "The German chancellor is great," he writes. He argues that Muslims
are forbidden from jihad in Germany because they have signed visa
application forms, which amount to a contract between them and the German
state to abide by Germany's laws. "Germany is not a battle zone," he states,
and engaging in terrorism "will only reinforce the backwardness of Muslims
and their image as a group of backward-looking idiots whose place is in the
caves and not in the streets of Hamburg."
2009 November 3
Merkel On Globorg
CNN
German Chancellor Angela Merkel addressed a joint meeting of the U.S.
Congress: "We need an agreement on one objective: Global warming must not
exceed 2 degrees Celsius ... A globalized economy needs a global order ...
Without global rules and transparency and supervision, we will not gain more
freedom, but rather risk the abuse of freedom and thus risk instability."
Unprecedented Concessions
Stephen M. Walt, Foreign Policy
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is completing the Obama administration's
humiliating retreat from the principles set forth in the president's Cairo
speech of less than five months ago. In a joint press conference with
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Clinton praised Netanyahu for
making "unprecedented concessions" on settlement expansion. What will the
United States do when "two states for two peoples" isn't an option and
everybody finally admits it, and the Palestinians begin to demand equal
rights in "greater Israel?"
2009 November 1, All Saints Day
This month I turn 60 and retire from SAP.
Working title for my next book: GLOBORG
Note to Iran: The Bahai
faith is better.
|

Hannah Monyer

Photo: Rolf Kickuth
Me, caught off-guard in a paparazzi shot, at age 60


NASA/JPL/U. Arizona/Barcroft Media
Surface of the Red Planet:
Images from the NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
Russian Nukes In Space
Wired
The Russian space agency may build a nuclear-powered spacecraft. It would cost
$600 million and Russian scientists claim it could be ready as early as 2012. If
they actually build a spaceship, it would complete a half-century quest to bring
nuclear power to space propulsion, beginning with a 1947 report by North
American Aviation to the Air Force. Nuclear rockets can be twice as efficient as
chemical rockets.

I want one!
AR
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How Many Universes Are There?
New Scientist
Cosmologists Andrei Linde and Vitaly Vanchurin at Stanford University calculate
that there are more universes than the 10e500 postulated in string
theory. They say the total number of universes is about 10e10e7.
But it may not matter how many universes exist, just how many we can
distinguish. Quantum theory splits the world into a system under study and the
rest of the world, including the observer. The system hovers in superposition
until the observer measures a single reality. In quantum cosmology, we can only
talk about the states an observer inside it can measure. This vastly cuts down
the number of universes worth mentioning.
Nick
Bostrom wins the
Inaugural Gannon Award
The Gannon Group presents
The Eugene R. Gannon Jr. Award for the Continued Pursuit of Human
Advancement.
The committee named Dr. Nick Bostrom, professor of philosophy at Oxford, the
2009 Gannon Award winner.
The Promise and Challenge
of Humanity's Future
Suppose we get many little things right and make some progress. What use, if we
are marching in the wrong direction?
There are big potential gains from getting better at thinking about the right
kinds of macro- questions ... These high-leverage questions deserve to be
studied with at least the same level of seriousness, scholarship, and creativity
that is routinely applied to all sorts of insignificant
micro-questions.
I see philosophy and science as overlapping parts of a continuum. Many of the
questions that I am interested in lie in the intersection. I tend to think in
terms of probability distributions rather than dichotomous epistemic categories.
I guess
that in the far future the human condition will have changed profoundly (for
better or worse).
I think there is a non-trivial chance that this "far" future will be reached in
this century ...
Nick Bostrom, Director
Future of Humanity Institute
Oxford University
AR This is the territory
explored in my next book.

Credit: Andrew Frew/Brainlab
Emily Singer's brain
Intelligence Explained
MIT Technology Review
Scientists are in search of the source of intelligence. By volume, gray matter
makes up roughly half the human brain. The other half is white matter,
consisting
of thin neural projections wrapped in myelin. Myelinated nerve fibers
can send more signals faster than unmyelinated ones, allowing neurons to process
thousands of times more data.
In diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), a scanner
magnet tracks the movement of water molecules in the brain. Water moves randomly
within most brain tissue but flows along the insulated neural fibers like
current through a wire. With DTI, scientists can map neural wiring in detail.
Research links IQ to the quality of the white matter, which is at least partly
genetically determined.
AR No big surprise here.
Melding Man and Machine
Emily Singer
MIT Tech Review
An implant seeded with muscle cells can integrate prosthetic limbs with
the body, allowing amputees greater control over robotic parts. The implant,
developed at the University of Michigan, consists of tiny cups about 100 µm in
diameter that are positioned over cut nerve endings. The cups are made
from an electrically conductive polymer that can relay both
motor and sensory signals between the nerves and a prosthesis. Each cups contain
a scaffold of tissue seeded with muscle cells. The nerve grows into the cup and
connects to the cells. The connection then transmits signals.
AR This is a useful enabling
technology for some of the developments featured in
my next book.
Shame on the Conservatives
David Miliband, The Guardian
Europe is a vital test of credibility for the Conservative party. In the
European parliament, David Cameron's Conservatives have rejected the
conservatism of Angela Merkel for that of people who commemorate the Latvian
Unit of the Waffen SS. Rejected Nicolas Sarkozy's Conservatives for a party of
climate change deniers from the Czech Republic. Rejected Fredrik Reinfeldt's
Swedish Moderate Party for the Polish far-right party of Michal Kaminski.
Shamefully, the Conservatives have refused to disown people they would not be
seen dead with in Britain.
Cameron should have confronted his party last week with a simple truth: the
modern world is defined by international challenges that require European
cooperation. Cameron completely ignored the challenges and complexities of a
modern globalized world.
AR Well said. The
Conservatives are not taking the European parliament seriously at all.
Perhaps this is because it's a bunch of overpaid time-servers who don't have a
clue.

Credit: L.A. Mirny, M. Imakaev
The Human Genome in 3D
MIT
Technology Review
Unfurled, the human genome contains about 2 m of DNA. Packed, it fills a cell
nucleus about 3 µm in diameter. New technology has
revealed how these molecules are packed into such a tiny space, apparently in a
fractal globule: adjacent regions in the linear chain of DNA are shown in one
color above.
"Our technology
is kind of like MRI for genomes," says Erez Lieberman-Aiden, a researcher in the
Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology and one of the authors of
a new paper detailing the work.

Detail from the movie: I, Robot

The Death of Socrates
Jacques-Louis David (1787)
Und Zarathustra sprach also zum Volke: "Seht, ich lehre euch den
Übermenschen! Der Übermensch ist der Sinn der Erde. Euer Wille sage: der
Übermensch sei der Sinn der Erde!"
Friedrich Nietzsche
Also sprach Zarathustra
The People's Republic
of China celebrates
its 60th anniversary
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2009 October 30
Brain Scans Read Thoughts
New Scientist
Neuroscience 2009,
Chicago, October 17-21:
Jack Gallant, a leading "neural decoder" at the University of California,
Berkeley, presented one of the field's most impressive results yet. He and
colleague Shinji Nishimoto showed that they could create a crude
reproduction of a movie clip that someone was watching just by viewing their
brain activity. Others at the same meeting claimed that such neural decoding
could be used to read memories and future plans.
Presidential Lecture
Neuroscience 2009
Harvard professor Elizabeth Spelke makes a good argument for conducting
studies of mathematical reasoning by investigating mechanisms found across
cultures and species. For example, studies show that human infants and
nonhuman animals can discriminate the cardinality of small sets of objects.
If we can locate where this nonsymbolic numerical evaluation resides in the
brain, we have a start for studying our more abstract abilities.
It's a big jump from nonsymbolic numerical abilities to abstract
mathematical reasoning, but once we understand these basic processes, maybe
we can find the other structures involved.
Genes and Autism
Simons
Foundation
Data revealed at Neuroscience 2009 suggests that a pathway involved in
language development may be important in autism. The gene FOXP2 codes for a
protein that regulates the expression of other genes. Variants of one of its
targets, CNTNAP2, occur in people with specific language impairment (SLI).
Common variants of CNTNAP2 raise the risk of developing autism.
2009 October 28
Quantum to Cosmos
New Scientist
Quantum to Cosmos
Festival
Perimeter Institute,
Waterloo, Canada, October 15-25, 2009
Why this universe?
Physicists have been trying to show why the universe must be as we see it.
But perhaps other laws hold in universes that exist elsewhere. Sean Carroll
of Caltech finds it easy to imagine that nature allows for different kinds
of universes with different laws.
What is everything made of?
Katherine Freese at the University of Michigan is excited that the problem
of dark matter may be nearing resolution. But the discovery of dark energy,
which seems to be speeding up the expansion of the universe, has created new
puzzles for which there are no answers in sight.
How does complexity happen?
Leo Kadananoff at the University of Chicago is most engaged by questions
about complex systems. He says we shall only understand life when we know
how simple constituents with simple interactions can lead to complex
phenomena.
Will string theory ever be proved correct?
Cambridge physicist David Tong admires the mathematical beauty of string
theory. He fears he might never know whether it describes reality, but he
can apply its methods to problems such as the behavior of quarks and exotic
metals.
What is the singularity?
For Perimeter Institute director Neil Turok, the biggest mystery is the big
bang. Conventional theory points back to a singularity where the known laws
of physics break down. Turok has high hopes for string theory and the
holographic principle.
What is reality really?
Anton Zeilinger at the University of Vienna specializes in quantum
experiments that seem to show the influence of observers in shaping reality
and wonders how the universe can know when it is being watched.
How far can physics take us?
Lawrence Krauss of Arizona State University wonders if we would require
knowledge of other universes to understand why our universe is the way it
is.
AR I would like to
have been there.
2009 October 26
Blair For EU President!
Philip Webster and David Charter, The Times
Tony Blair should become President of the European Union, says Foreign
Secretary David Miliband. He said the new role needed someone who "stopped
the traffic" in Washington and Beijing.
Europe Needs Us
David Miliband, The Times
When I took China's State Councillor Dai Bingguo to the Cabinet War Rooms
and Churchill Museum last weekend, I told him this:
1 We embrace the
internationalism of the modern world, with its
new powers and new threats. Britain is a leading contributor of
people and money in tackling the great challenges of the world.
2 British ideas give us
influence. During the economic crisis,
Britain has been at the forefront of new thinking. On climate
change and in the Middle East, our ideas make us activists.
3 Our values set a high
standard. Transparency as well as ambition
are important factors in how others see us. The universal values
of equal worth, social justice and mutual responsibility need us
to stand up for them.
4 Britain is at the heart of a
unique web of international networks.
We are leaders in the Commonwealth, home to 53 states and a
quarter of the world's population. Our relationship with the
United States is special.
British commitment to and strength in Europe is good for Britain and good
for Europe. Europe needs Britain.
AR I don't wish to
be boring, but I think I agree with David.
Karen Armstrong maintains
that God is back
2009 October 22
Consciousness: The Movie
Douglas Fox, New Scientist
If a movie camera films a wagon wheel rotating at a certain speed, the
spokes can appear to move slowly backward instead of forward. We can
experience the effect without a camera, suggesting that the brain naturally
chops what we see into frames.
Rufin VanRullen, at the University of Toulouse, recreated the effect in his
lab. Using EEG to measure his subjects' brainwaves, he found a rhythm in the
right inferior parietal lobe (RPL) that rose and fell at about 13 Hz.
Perhaps this wave reflects the RPL's changing receptivity to new
information, leading to discrete visual frames. To test this idea, VanRullen
used transcranial magnetic stimulation to disrupt the RPL brainwave. This
also disrupted the illusion.
But subjects shown a pair of overlapping patterns moving at the same rate
may see one pattern reverse independently of the other. So perhaps the brain
processes different objects within the visual field independently of one
another. It seems
there are several film reels, each recording a different object.
To investigate, VanRullen exposed his subjects to flashes of light barely
bright enough to see, and found that the probability of them noticing the
light depended on the phase of another brainwave with a frequency of about 7
Hz. The subjects were more likely to detect the flash when the wave was near
its trough, and miss it when the wave was near its peak.
Ernst Pöppel, at the Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich, suggests that the
snapshots from the senses may feed into blocks of information in a higher
processing stream. He calls these the building blocks of consciousness and
reckons they underlie our perception of time. He thinks the neural system
needs 30
to 50 ms to bring together the distributed activity into one building block.
To test this idea, Pöppel measured volunteers' reaction times following a
dot jumping across a computer screen. He found their reactions followed a 30
ms cycle. Whenever the dot moved, the volunteers reacted only at the end of
a cycle. A similar cycle has been observed when volunteers are asked to
discern whether an auditory and a visual stimulus are simultaneous or
consecutive.
Edward Large, at Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, has found that
rhythmic sounds can entrain gamma brainwaves, causing the beginning of each
sound to be accompanied by a burst of strong wave peaks. A rhythmic beat may
entrain other brainwaves too, including those behind the movie of
consciousness.
AR This picture confirms
the ideas I present in Mindworlds.
2009 October 20
Are We Descended From Hot Rocks?
Nick
Lane, New Scientist
Peter Mitchell, who won a Nobel prize in 1978, argued that life is powered
by a kind of electricity. Energy from food is used to pump protons through a
membrane and build up an electrochemical gradient across it. As the protons
flow back across the membrane, they release energy that can be used to make
ATP molecules.
Mitchell dubbed his theory chemiosmosis. Proton power drives not only cell
respiration, but photosynthesis too. Proton gradients are often harnessed
directly, rather than being used to make ATP. The root organism in the tree
of life first branched into bacteria and archaea. Both of these groups have
proton pumps and generate ATP from proton currents.
If Bill Martin of the University of Düsseldorf is right, the last common
ancestor of life on Earth was powered by proton currents, yet its bounding
membranes were unlike anything found today. Around 2002, Martin came across
the work of Mike Russell of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
California. Russell had been exploring hydrothermal vents ...
Video: Life's origins
2009 October 18
Jerry Fodor has good things to say
on Michael Tye on externalism
2009 October 17

NASA
Andromeda Galaxy
NASA
This mosaic of M31, the Andromeda Galaxy, merges images taken by the
Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope on NASA's Swift spacecraft. It is the
highest-resolution image of the galaxy ever recorded in the ultraviolet. The
image shows a region 200,000 light-years wide and 100,000 light-years high.
M31 is more than 220,000 light-years across and lies 2.5 million light-years
away. Between May and July 2008, Swift's Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope
acquired 330 images of M31 at wavelengths of 192.8, 224.6, and 260 nm in a
total exposure time of 24 hours to generate 85 GB of image data.
2009 October 15
Can shale gas sate America's hunger for energy?
Are there more billionaires in China
than in the United States?
Is the U.S. National Security Agency a
national disaster?
2009 October 13
The Lost Prestige of Nuclear Physics
N. J. Slabbert, The New Atlantis
Albert Einstein became the iconic face of the early atomic age. Later in the
twentieth century, the public perception of the atom's promise to serve
humanity collapsed. Nuclear science's loss of prestige is connected to a
broader wave of skepticism about science and technology.
Herman Kahn thought about military strategy and nuclear weapons policy
at the RAND Corporation. His book
On Thermonuclear War
(1960) discussed the
prospect of a nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union. He
described such a war as survivable and systematically projected various
steps for survival.
Kahn's willingness to discuss the most unsettling aspects of nuclear power
was sensational. But Kahn held that the nation's advanced technologies,
industrial capabilities, and social and economic traditions and institutions
were forces for good.
For the United States, the second half of the twentieth century has seen a
loss of prestige of nuclear physics. This has its roots in a failure to
develop a philosophy of science and technology that can interpret innovation
as a moral enterprise.
Nuclear physics is so central to science that a failure to restore its
stature must bode ill for the future. America must choose between a morally
sustainable mission in pursuit of an achievable dream of a better world or
a tragic association of science and technology with fear and nightmare.
AR Kahn coined the term
megadeath.
His thoughts impressed me
as a
teenager. To think the unthinkable! Perhaps it was good
training for my
philosophy.
Robert Wright on the evolution of the Abrahamic God versus
Karen Armstrong on the apophatic tradition
China and its technocrats — 60 years of The People's Republic
2009 October 11
Evolution
The
New York Times
THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH
The Evidence for Evolution
By Richard Dawkins
Free Press, 480 pages
The theory of evolution really does explain everything in biology. The
phenomena that Darwin understood in broad brush strokes can now be accounted
for in the precise language of DNA. No serious biologist doubts that
evolutionary explanations exist or will be found for every jot and tittle in
the grand script. To biologists and others, it is a source of amazement and
embarrassment that many Americans repudiate Darwin's theory.
"A magnificent book of wonderstanding" — Matt Ridley
"This may be his best book yet" — V. S. Ramachandran
"A must-read for Darwin Year" — Jerry Coyne
"Clear, absorbing, and vivid" — Lord Harries of Pentregarth
"A stunning exhibition of the evidence" — Dr. Alice Roberts
AR A book I must read,
evidently.
Bill Wuz Robbed
Maureen Dowd, The New York Times
Clinton: Hey, man, this thing is plumb crazy. Can you believe it?
W.: No way, Jose!
Clinton: You never expected to win this prize. You were the quote- unquote
war president and proud of it. I had to put up with a gazillion hours of
Arafat's insanity, but that wasn't enough for those Oslo ice queens. Ending
ethnic cleansing in Bosnia wasn't enough, or bringing peace to Northern
Ireland. And I guess my work with the Clinton Global Initiative saving lives
in Africa and hanging with Bono and Barbra wasn't enough either.
W.: Calm down, bro. You gotta take care of that ticker.
Clinton: It was a case of premature adulation.
W.: Heh-heh-heh. Yeah, very pre-emptive.
2009 October 10
How can the United States exert power
in the 21st century?
2009 October 9
Obama Wins Nobel Peace Prize?
John Dickerson,
Slate
Last Friday, the International Olympic Committee stiffed him. Today, Obama
wins gold. The committee credited Obama not for concrete accomplishments but
for atmospheric ones: "Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as
Obama captured the world's attention and given its people hope for a better
future. His diplomacy is founded in the concept that those who are to lead
the world must do so on the basis of values and attitudes that are shared by
the majority of the world's population."
The committee can pick whomever it wants. But in his 1895 will, Alfred Nobel
stipulated that the peace prize should go "to the person who shall have done
the most or the best work for fraternity between the nations and the
abolition or reduction of standing armies and the formation and spreading of
peace congresses."
AR All Obama has done to deserve this
so far is to mouth all the
platitudes one expects from a presidential
innocent.
This
excessive showering of honors on the top banana
reminds me
of the personality cult that Ceausescu
cultivated.
2009 October 8

University College London
Oxford University Slips
Polly Curtis, The Guardian
Oxford University has slipped down an international league table of the
world's top universities. Oxford fell one place to joint #5 with Imperial
College London in the rankings. University
College London (UCL) came #4, after Yale at #3, Cambridge at #2, and Harvard
at #1. The UK has 4 of
the top 10 slots and 18 in the top 100. The United States had 42
universities in the top 100 in 2008 but has only 36 in 2009. The number of
Asian universities in the top 100 has increased from 14 to 16. The
University of Tokyo, at #22, is the highest ranked Asian university.
AR Looks like I was lucky
with the timing: two UCL professors
wrote back cover puffs for my new book
Mindworlds.
Singularity Summit 2009 — my cheat
sheet
2009 October 5
Religion and the Brain
Brandon Keim, Wired
In a newly published study, Jordan Grafman and his team used an MRI to
measure the brains areas in 40 people of varying degrees of religious
belief. The results fit with
their earlier work on how religious sentiment triggers other neural
networks involved in social cognition. Grafman suspects that religious
belief originated in mechanisms that helped primates to understand each
other.
2009 October 4
Report: Iran Can Make Nuclear
Bomb
W.J. Broad and D.E. Sanger, The New York Times
A report by experts in the International Atomic Energy Agency describes a
program run by Iran's Ministry of Defense to develop a nuclear payload to be
delivered using the Shahab 3 missile system. The Institute for Science and
International Security has published
excerpts from the report.
2009 October 3-4
Singularity Summit 2009
92 Street Y, New York, New York
AR Sorry, Ray, I really
wanted to be there and say hi, also to meet
Steve and talk with Dave again. But the €2K tab
was too much.
2009 October 3
Completed a pleasant reading
of
The Consolations of Philosophy by Alain de Botton (published 2000), in
which he discusses in a light and charming way the lives and practical
philosophies of Socrates, Epicurus, Seneca, Montaigne, Schopenhauer, and
Nietzsche, each in a chapter. I especially enjoyed the last two chapters.
Britain Must Grow Up
Rafael Behr, The Guardian
The second Irish referendum has approved the Lisbon treaty, removing one of
the last obstacles to its taking effect. Sceptics say this document is a
European constitution in disguise that will whisk away Albion's ancient
powers.
The European Union is an alliance of sovereign nations in which British
prime ministers have collaborated because it serves the country's interests.
The Lisbon Treaty is just one in a parade of flawed but worthwhile
compromises required to make a multinational alliance work.
Scepticism is a healthy position to take towards grand political projects,
especially when, like the EU, they are infused with the vanity of statesmen.
But the kind of parochial phobia that is normal in Britain's discussion of
the EU is paranoid nonsense.
2009 October 1
Nuclear Iran Alarms Arabs
Michael Slackman, The New York Times
Among Iran's Persian Gulf neighbors there is growing resignation that Iran
cannot be stopped from developing nuclear arms. Some analysts have predicted
that a regional arms race will begin and that vulnerable states, like
Bahrain, may be encouraged to invite nuclear powers to place weapons on
their territories as a deterrent. The head of a research center in Dubai
said that it might even be better to stage a military strike on Iran, rather
than letting it emerge as a nuclear power.
His Dark Materials Banned
Ed Pilkington, The Guardian
Novelist and children's writer Philip Pullman has been showered with awards,
including a CBE, a Carnegie Medal, and several honorary professorships. This
week his fantasy trilogy,
His Dark Materials, is ranked second in the top 10
banned books in the new rankings issued this week by the American Library
Association.
Pullman quipped he was "very glad to be back in the top 10 banned books" and
added: "Of course it's a worry when anybody takes it upon themselves to
dictate what people should or should not read. The power of organized
religion is very strong in the U.S."
AR Pullman is an alumnus
of Exeter College, Oxford.
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No Light Speed Bumps?
New Scientist
A hint that quantum fluctuations in spacetime slow gamma rays is not
confirmed by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. The new results
contradict a 2005 result from the MAGIC gamma- ray telescope suggesting that
spacetime is not smooth. It seems quantum gravity is not responsible for the
time delay observed by MAGIC. The Fermi telescope detected light from a 7-
billion year old gamma-ray burst with no evidence of a lag between photons
over a range of energies. The result does not refute quantum gravity. Only a
subset of models predict the effect.
What Missile Defense?
Yousaf Butt, Foreign Policy
Tactical missile defenses make sense. Strategic systems to guard against
nuclear-tipped missiles
do not. A 70 percent effective tactical missile defense makes sense. But even
one nuclear warhead will visit unacceptable devastation upon the United States.
Fielding a missile shield may even encourage adversarial countries to build up
missile stockpiles to ensure that some make it through. A national missile
defense system may also embolden future U.S. political leaders to take excessive
risks. Washington would need a perfect missile defense. Anything less is
downright dangerous.
Rechargeable Zinc-Air Batteries
MIT
Technology Review
A Swiss company, ReVolt, says it has developed rechargeable zinc- air batteries
that can store three times the energy of lithium ion batteries at half the price. Zinc- air batteries rely on atmospheric oxygen to
generate current. A porous "air" electrode draws in oxygen and reduces it to
form hydroxyl ions. These travel through an electrolyte to the zinc electrode,
where the zinc is oxidized to generate a current.
In the ReVolt batteries, one electrode is a zinc slurry and the air electrode is
in the form of tubes. To generate electricity, the zinc slurry is pumped through
the tubes and oxidized, releasing electrons. During recharging, the zinc oxide
flows back through the air electrode, where it releases the oxygen, forming zinc
again. The new
design is still years away from production.
Islam and Evolution
Drake Bennett, Boston Globe
Islamic creationists share some concerns with their Christian counterparts.
Turkey, with its long and deep engagement with the West, has had the most
vehement debates. In Turkey, Adnan Oktar writes under the name Harun Yahya. His
800-page opus, The Atlas of Creation, can be found in bookstores all over the
Muslim world. Like many Muslim scholars, he argues that evolution cannot explain
human development, and sees a threat in the replacement of a divine creator with
the mechanistic forces of randomness and competition for resources and mates.
But the rise of Islamic creationism shows that more Muslims are at least
wrestling with the idea of evolution.

Image: Joe Bergeron/Sky & Telescope
Warped Spacetime
Sean Carroll
Cosmic Variance
Rachel Bean of Cornell University used cosmological data to
test how well general relativity (GR) describes spacetime on a large scale. To test GR
in cosmology, you need to understand what is creating the gravitational field.
We don't know much about dark matter and dark energy, but we think they don't
pull different sides of things in different directions. Then GR predicts that
the space curvature and the time curvature will be equal. To test the
prediction, you can try to measure both forms of curvature and divide one by the
other. If GR is right, the ratio of the space curvature to the time curvature
should be 1. But the data used shows a peak between 3 and 4.
At the 98%
confidence level, this is inconsistent with GR.
AR This is intriguing, but no
excuse yet to abandon GR.
Guardian Gagged
David Leigh
The Guardian
The Guardian has been prevented from reporting parliamentary proceedings on
legal grounds which appear to call into question privileges guaranteeing free
speech established under the
1688 Bill of Rights. Today's published Commons
order papers contain a question to be
answered by a minister later this week.
The Guardian is prevented from identifying the MP who has asked the question,
what the question is, which minister might answer it, or where the question is
to be found. The Guardian is also forbidden from telling its readers why the
paper is prevented from reporting parliament. Legal obstacles, which cannot be
identified, involve proceedings, which
cannot be mentioned, on behalf
of a
client who must remain secret.
AR Well, so much for that old
bill of rights. Who needs such
nonsense anyway?
God Is Not The Creator
Richard Alleyn, The Telegraph
Professor Ellen van Wolde, a respected Old Testament scholar and author, claims
the first sentence of Genesis "in the beginning God created the Heaven and the
Earth" is not a true translation of the Hebrew. She said the Hebrew verb "bara"
does not mean "to create" but to "spatially separate". The first sentence should
now read "in the beginning God separated the Heaven and the Earth."
She said her new analysis showed that the beginning of the Bible was not the
beginning of time, but the beginning of a narration: "It meant to say that God
did create humans and animals, but not the Earth itself." She concluded that God
separated the Earth from the Heaven, the land from the sea, and the sea monsters
from the birds. "The traditional view of God the Creator is untenable now."
AR Well, whaddya know? The
biblical assertion now admits reasonable interpretation within the
"autophenomenology of genocentricity" (evolutionary) account of the Abrahamic God
expounded in my
Godblogs.

Herta Müller / DPA
Nobel Prize for Literature
Der Spiegel
Die Berlinerin Herta Müller bekommt den Literaturnobelpreis 2009. Kaum einer in
der Szene hatte die Ehrung für sie erwartet — doch die Jury überzeugte der
prägnante Stil, mit dem die 56- Jährige Diktatur, Gewalt und Gräuel seziert.
Born in Romania in 1953, Herta Müller refused to cooperate with Ceausescu's Securitate,
lost her job as a teacher, and endured threats until she emigrated in 1987. She
now lives in Berlin.
AR I say file the prize
under
Totalitarianismusbewältigung.

Graphic: Ad Astra Rocket Company
Big Ion Engine
New Scientist
The Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR) may be used to
maintain the orbit of the International Space Station (ISS) and could lead to rockets that
fly to Mars in about a month. The engine
uses radio waves to heat argon gas, turning it into a hot plasma. Magnetic
fields then squirt the plasma out the back to produce thrust. A 200 kW engine could
boost the ISS orbit.

Zoroaster
Zoroastrianism, The Real Story
"In these days of fear and indecision forced upon us by the AIOG (Arabo-Islamic
Occupational Government), let us safeguard our great icons such as Zarathustra
and our great classical Persian philosophies
such as Zoroastrianism."
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Blog 2009 Q3
Blog 2009 Q2
Blog 2009 Q1
Blog 2008
Blog 2007
Blog 2006
Blog 2005
Blog 2004
Blog 2003
Blog 2002
Blog 2001
Blog 2000
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me(at)andyross.net |
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2010-02-08 |