Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Have I mentioned...

Have I mentioned how much I have come to personally dislike Bernie Sanders? This is not a matter of his stated political positions, many of which I agree with on a general level. I just dislike him as a human being...

Originally shared by Shava Nerad

David Sirota's war against media critical thinking
Bernie, Beto, and the Streisand Effect


If there's anything I despise more than an attack on the electorate from foreign influence, from right wing media, from corporate mainstream media, it's a left media figure using everything we know about propaganda and media criticism, distortion and influence, to punch left.

David Sirota was Bernie Sanders' first office lead in the 90s, when Vermont sent Bernie to DC to mess with Speaker Newt Gingrich's head. It was David's first big break in DC from the looks of his VC, and I'm sure that the relationship means a lot.

Right up to New Hampshire, I was pretty gleeful about Sanders' run. I was really troubled when he hired Tad Devine and displaced his Vermont staff. I defended Bernie with teeth bared when his staff lifted the Clinton campaign annotated voter file (yes, in the modern way of blurring social engineering and hacking, you can call that hacking) and the DNC threatened -- quite justifiably -- to shut their asses down.

Later I ended up regretting it as the campaign grew more and more anti-community. I imagined another Dean campaign -- bottom up, participatory, integrated with the party to the point of taking over the counties, breathing a via positiva of lifeblood into the progressives -- to use an abused term? Hope.

What we got was Bernie Bros that presaged #metoo politics, and a level of hostility and lack of civic and political understanding of how political insurgencies work in a two party system that was crippling, all around.

Well, oops, it's happening again.

This time, instead of Tad, we've got David Sirota as our snake in the garden, the designated whisperer of insinuations to drip poison into ears and divide.

He's fun. Let me take this apart for you. I'm going to write this up as a reference for fellow journalists. It's going to be tl;dr, long, opinionated but well documented, and I'm going to add to it over the course of days.

===

Who the hell is Beto O'Rourke?

I'd heard the name. There's even some lunatic with Mass plates on my street here in Cambridge who has a Beto bumper sticker. Early adopter, I guess.

But as I've written here I'm not favoring anyone at this point in 2020. It's too early.

Still, the first week in December, I saw retweets of Sirota "exposing" Beto for various insinuated sins against progressive politics. The major charges have been that he has:

o - voted "with the GOP" 167 times.
o - accepted at least one maxed out donation from a CEO of an oil/gas corporation

Now, I'm going to go through and take these apart in depth with full footnotes, but this preamble is just to explain why this rang such an off note with me.

Voting "with the GOP" means you are not voting party line Democrat. There are lots of reasons for this. One of the most common in recent years is that you live in a rural state. Yo? This is part of how we got the Cheeto.

Plus, Politico has reported that Sanders votes with the Dems about 95% of the time. He has been in office a very long time. I don't have a full tally, but David has included procedural votes in his 167 that Beto's joined the evil pachyderms. How many hundreds or thousands more votes has our independent from Vermont registered since the 90s?

David illustrated Beto's receiving "oil money" from the CEO of a small business in Texas. Right SIC code, $2700 donation. Instructed people to decide what they thought of it -- after framing that we can't afford more money in politics supporting global warming that is going to kill us all. Nice.

Remember, this stuff pretty much starts with Stalin, and he was a lefty. We've all studied him. ;)

The example he uses is a guy who is a long time Democratic donor, the widower of a Human Rights Campaign activist. The two men were married in the Unitarian Universalist church. Now he's raising two kids as a single dad.

I honestly doubt he was buying Beto's vote for big oil.

Beto's a Texas politician. Over 375,000 people in Texas fall directly under the oil/gas SIC code, and more -- likely millions -- in the many industries that support and profit from the extraction and refining.

What is Bernie afraid of?

I'm not the only one -- probably not even the only one who didn't know crap about Beto -- for whom David Sirota is managing to bring a spotlight to the Texan and shade to the Vermonter with his tactics.

Streisand Effect.

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Netflix Review: "Memories of the Alhambra"

Just finished Episode 6 of the new Korean language Netflix series "Memories of the Alhambra", and now I have to wait a week for the next one. At this point there are only a few possible explanations: 1) the protagonist is actually crazy; 2) magic; 3) alien super science; 4) deal with the devil; 5) the writers are so caught up in the story that they simply don't care about reality. I favor the later at this point -- I'm so caught up in the story that I don't care, either. :-)

Sunday, December 2, 2018

Insect Apocalypse

Originally shared by Allen Knutson

This is the scariest article I've read in a really long, scary, time.

"(It’s easy to read that number as 60 percent less, but it’s sixtyfold less: Where once he caught 473 milligrams of bugs, Lister was now catching just eight milligrams.) “It was, you know, devastating,” Lister told me. But even scarier were the ways the losses were already moving through the ecosystem, with serious declines in the numbers of lizards, birds and frogs. The paper reported “a bottom-up trophic cascade and consequent collapse of the forest food web.” Lister’s inbox quickly filled with messages from other scientists, especially people who study soil invertebrates, telling him they were seeing similarly frightening declines. Even after his dire findings, Lister found the losses shocking: “I didn’t even know about the earthworm crisis!”
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/27/magazine/insect-apocalypse.html

Monday, November 5, 2018

Yep...


Originally shared by Darrin C

There’s currently an organized bot effort to discourage people from voting. Among their “arguments” is that voting machines are all “rigged”.

Hogwash.

I’m one of the computer scientists who discovered these voting system problems. And I vote, because it matters. So should you.

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

I posted this in the "google+ mass migration" community; just making ita public post...

Originally shared by Kent Crispin
How I set up a hubzilla hub on Digital Ocean.

Motivation: Hubzilla is the most interesting of the possible G+ alternatives I've looked at so far. It's most important feature, from my perspective, is that your identity isn't tied to a particular hub. Identity portability is built in. You can move your activity to any hubzilla hub -- one you run yourself, or one run by a mega-corp. You can run your own hub and participate fully in the network.

But hubzilla is new and perhaps a bit hard to grasp -- new terms, new concepts. I decided to set up a hub.

Requirements: Some proficiency in linux system administration at the command line. Financial committment of ~ $100/year. Time committment of ~ 8-24 hours to set up, and then ongoing time TBD. Some expertise in using Google...

0) You need a domain name for your hub (eg: "nymclub.net"). In my case I had registered the name long ago at godaddy.com.

1) Set up a DO account (at https://www.digitalocean.com/) and create a
droplet. A minimal droplet costs $5/month. Select ubuntu 18.04 as the OS.

The name of the droplet on creation should be the domain name above (eg: "nymclub.net"), and not the name they provide by default. Secure your droplet by following the excellent clear instructions at
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/initial-server-setup-with-ubuntu-18-04

[In general, DO has really great tutorials.]

[Note: I don't work for DO, but I am a satisfied customer.]

The droplet will have an IP address that it will keep as long as it is alive.
Note it.

2) Set up DNS using the above IP address. You can use DO servers, following the documentation at:

https://www.digitalocean.com/docs/networking/dns/

In my case I have my own dns servers, so I used them.

Be sure you can log into your droplet remotely, by name, not IP address.

3) Install the LAMP stack (Linux, Apache, Mysql, PHP):
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-linux-apache-mysql-php-lamp-stack-ubuntu-18-04
(There is also a DO "one click application" that gives you a server with a
LAMP stack. I don't know anything about it, other than it exists.)

Note: I used the MariaDB, a free plug in replacement for MySql, with

$ sudo apt install mariadb-server

if I recall correctly. It may be the default already.

Verify that you can see the apache start page from your browser.

4) Hubzilla requires a mail server that can send mail to confirm accounts. I just installed postfix as an "internet server":

$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install postfix

[I think this will take further work on my part -- I got it to the point where it could send the confirmation emails, and didn't do any more email
configuration. Email is, in general, a pain.]

I also installed an email client so I could send test messages:

$ sudo apt install mutt

5) Hubzilla also highly recommends using SSL/TLS for your web server. I used the "Let's Encrypt" certificate authority, and "certbot". See
https://certbot.eff.org/lets-encrypt/ubuntubionic-apache for information.

https://nymclub.net worked first try.

6) Install hubzilla. The instructions at
https://project.hubzilla.org/help/en/admin/administrator_guide are perhaps too concise, but they are complete. I followed them slavishly. Google will reveal several other tutorials:

https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-hubzilla-on-ubuntu/ --
doesn't include TLS, and uses an apache virtual host.

https://hubzilla.rocks/page/tobias/tutorial_install_hubzilla_in_7_easy_steps

https://websiteforstudents.com/install-hubzilla-platform-on-ubuntu-16-04-18-04-with-apache2-mariadb-and-php-7-2/

Might not be a bad idea to read through them.

Once you have unpacked the software you can access the site and use the software itself to guide you through the installation. Specifically, I used the recommended "git clone" to get hubzilla in the default root directory of the web site, /var/www/html, then browsed to https://nymclub.net. The web site at this point shows the status of the installation -- what is missing and what needs to be configured. At the command line, then, I manually installed the needed requirements -- php-zip, mbstring, php-xml, and several others were needed. Sometimes it took a bit of head-scratching to figure out the correct package name to install. You can use "dpkg S" to find that out - eg:

$ sudo dpkg -S php-zip

You may also need to edit the /etc/php/7.2/apache2/php.ini file to be sure that all the indicated packages have been enabled, change upload limits, and so on.

Important: in order to get changes in the php configuration to be reflected in the web page you must first RESTART THE WEB SERVER:

$ sudo service apache2 restart

Took me a while to remember that...

Be sure you have changed "AllowOverride None" to "AllowOverride All" in the necessary places in the /etc/apache2/apache2.conf file:


Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride All
Require all granted


Set up the database and the database user as described in the documentation.

After all this you should have an installation.

Finally, you need to create the first user, using the same email address
that you provided during installation. This user is the administrator.

7) Now it is "administration" of hubzilla, not "installation." I'm learning
this at the moment, so just a couple of quick notes.

Initially, the navigation bar at the top of the page is pretty empty. In the
upper right of the "Channel Home" page is "New Member Links". A "Missing Features?" group is at the bottom of the list, with "Install more apps" and "Pin apps...".

"Install more apps": click on this link to get a list of apps to install.

"Pin apps to navigation bar": Click on that link, and you will see a bunch
of apps, along with a pushpin icon. Click the icon, and the app will appear in the nav bar. (Requires a reload).

I think you need apps to do much of anything, so the above two steps are pretty important.

Anyway, for ~$100/year you can have an awesome social network with complete control over your own data. Not a bad deal.

Monday, October 22, 2018

Well, I have a hubzilla instance running on a Digital Ocean droplet...

Well, I have a hubzilla instance running on a Digital Ocean droplet -- https://nymclub.net. It's a minimal virtual server with limited storage, but so far it is working quite well -- a couple of small glitches, but so far I am impressed.

Installation is a bit complex -- hubzilla itself is really pretty straightforward to install, but the infrastructure: a virtual host, a domain name with function dns, a web server with a LAMP stack, a let's encrypt certificate, email -- a bunch of fiddly details that need to be set up. I haven't done this stuff for a while, and there were small snags that I wouldn't have hit in my younger days...

Sunday, October 21, 2018

No reason for only one account...

I must admit that I am having a great time exploring the lesser-known social media platforms. I think maybe I've signed up for more than I can possibly keep up with, but maybe that's an illusory problem -- I already keep dozens of tabs open and I've survived that. To paraphrase Dylan: "Tabs will arrive, tabs will disappear.."

Of course, people who live on their phones may not have that luxury, but I surf mainly from my desktop.

Murderer in the garden....


Murder in the garden....

Originally shared by Sawanya Prittipongpunt

Big-eyed bugs - Hemiptera (Geocoris) : มวนตาโต

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

I am mosqueeto:

I am mosqueeto most places:

ello.co: mosqueeto
pluspora.com: mosqueeto
diasp.org: mosqueeto
cake.co: mosqueeto
mastodon.social: mosqueeto
photog.social: mosqueeto
reddit.com: mosqueeto
tumblr.com: mosqueeto
social.isurf.ca: mosqueeto
C32767.blogger.com


Friday, October 12, 2018

Patience.

I don't understand people immediately leaping to other social media platforms -- g+ isn't slated to close for 10 months, and a lot can happen during that time. Indeed I will be trying as many different platforms as I can in the next few months, but I am certainly not going to commit to anything. Not only will things change, but I will undoubtedly change as well, as I think about what I really want.

Adding instant translation to other social media platforms

Pursuant to adding instant translation to hubzilla/diaspora/etc: the google api charges by the code point character, $20/1000000 characters. Convenient translation, therefore, could be an enhanced service that is charged for at a pretty reasonable rate.

Thursday, October 11, 2018

Very useful summary:

https://medium.com/we-distribute/a-quick-guide-to-the-free-network-c069309f334
https://medium.com/we-distribute/a-quick-guide-to-the-free-network-c069309f334

Organizational infrastructure of a social media platform

It's hard for me to keep up, so this may have been discussed extensively elsewhere, but...:

What kind of an organizational infrastructure is appropriate to support a long term replacement for gplus? For example, I could personally support a diaspora instance with perhaps a few dozen active users, using my personal funds and time. But that doesn't scale. Many of the efforts so far seem to be on an "if we build it they will come and the organizational infrastructure will evolve later" model.

Some kind of legal entity (corporation/foundation/trust) with an unlimited potential lifetime and a funding mechanism seems required. A governance mechanism to deal with bad actors, hopefully something other than autocracy, would be nice.

In a federated case this consideration applies to each instance individually, and to the overall software base. How do the various alternatives compare in this matter?

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Instant translation?

One of the most important features for g+, for me, is the convenient access to instant machine translation. It allows me to follow people from all over the world, and at least have a semblance of understanding what they are saying. This won't be easy to replace.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018

https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/fozwbgzjggirfatkdwztdq

https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/fozwbgzjggirfatkdwztdq
https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/fozwbgzjggirfatkdwztdq

The first image is of Sagittarius, slightly cropped to put the center of the Milky Way galaxy dead center. If you work at it, you can make out the teapot of Sagittarius. This was a thirty second exposure; note the airplane entering from the left.

The first image is of Sagittarius, slightly cropped to put the center of the Milky Way galaxy dead center. If you work at it, you can make out the teapot of Sagittarius. This was a thirty second exposure; note the airplane entering from the left.

The second image is a tightly cropped portion showing the airplane track, with the two wingtip lights, with bright flashes every couple of seconds.

A thirty second exposure is long enough for star trails to just begin to show, which is why all the stars look like parallel peanuts.

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Saturday, September 22, 2018

View from the outside...


View from the outside...

Originally shared by All Things Chinese

Potato in Hot Toffee - this newly invented Chinese dish has gained a sudden popularity among gourmet lovers in China, all because it looks so much like the head of a VIP currently purchasing on top the food chain on our planet 😋

Friday, September 14, 2018

Dr Strange confronting eldrich horrors...


Dr Strange confronting eldrich horrors...

According to the embedded EXIF data, these photos were taken with a Samsung Galaxy S7 -- an example of fantastic photography done with a smart phone.

According to the embedded EXIF data, these photos were taken with a Samsung Galaxy S7 -- an example of fantastic photography done with a smart phone.

Originally shared by Sawanya Prittipongpunt

สดใส🕷น่ารัก😁ศุกร์แล้วสุขสบายใจ..Happy Friday&Weekend🤗

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Here's the full size image from the Kodachrome slide -- hiking in the Sierras maybe 40 years ago.


Here's the full size image from the Kodachrome slide -- hiking in the Sierras maybe 40 years ago.

Very close crop of a scanned old Kodachrome slide vs a similar size crop of a recent digital photo. I can afford better lenses now, so the digital photo is intrinsically much sharper. But independent of that, I like the effect of the grain in the slide.

Very close crop of a scanned old Kodachrome slide vs a similar size crop of a recent digital photo. I can afford better lenses now, so the digital photo is intrinsically much sharper. But independent of that, I like the effect of the grain in the slide.

Sunday, September 9, 2018

My daughter has been singing praises of non-digital photography, so I've been going through boxes of old slides and negatives and scanning them. This is a slide taken long ago from atop Mt Diablo.


My daughter has been singing praises of non-digital photography, so I've been going through boxes of old slides and negatives and scanning them. This is a slide taken long ago from atop Mt Diablo.

Thursday, September 6, 2018

https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/uykbrkp7ng1pyqfofwfl6a

https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/uykbrkp7ng1pyqfofwfl6a
https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/uykbrkp7ng1pyqfofwfl6a

A useful dichotomy, "conservative" vs "republican"...

A useful dichotomy, "conservative" vs "republican"...

Originally shared by Stephen M. Dupree

I actually disagree with this meme. The idiots burning their bought and paid for Nike gear are republicans. They are not conservative. To be a conservative they would have actually had to have had a thought.

I disagree with conservatives most of the time but generally I respect that have given an issue some consideration and come to a different conclusion than have I. I have no respect for republicans. If I call someone a republican, it is because I consider the term an insult and I wish to insult them.

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=755965874742319&set=a.178561082482804&type=3
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=755965874742319&set=a.178561082482804&type=3

Monday, September 3, 2018

"...cheap nativist populism that sells well to a certain cadre of white person who's convinced that he's been left out of a pie eating contest..."

"...cheap nativist populism that sells well to a certain cadre of white person who's convinced that he's been left out of a pie eating contest..."

Originally shared by Helen Ikua

Is Trump a commoner who rallied the peasants for the greater good, or is he as much a son of privilege and a cynical agent of the status quo as the Washington royalty that he professes to detest?


Washington's elite as well as vast swathes of a nation were recently united in their grief, even as they took a moment to say goodbye to one of America's most recognizable sons. But notable by his absence at such a sombre event where America bid farewell to an eminent senator, was the man whose boorishness and ornery dispostion has turned him into persona non grata at the funerals of America's great and good.
And the fact that Trump's presence does not seem to be particularly required or welcome at the funerals of former First Ladies and senators, has only convinced Trump's MAGA audience that Washington's crowd have got it in for the underdog in the White House, which is why the nation's political elite have latterly taken to hijacking the funerals of Washington's erstwhile denizens, so that they can coalesce around their deep seated loathing of Donald Trump.
However, pictures of a jovial Trump hobnobbing with the Clintons on his wedding day to Melania, show that far from being spurned for being a barefoot country boy who fell off the turnip truck, and far from being a quixotic outlier who doesn't care for the machinations of power, and far from being a man who doesn't secretly crave the approval of Washington's parading courtiers, Trump has not always been on unfriendly terms with the infulence merchants that he purports to despise for the titillation of his MAGA base.
And while contrarians are known for their ideals for which they'd be willing to suffer and be shunned for, Trump is hardly a contrarian who espouses a disgreeable if lucid philosophy on many things. In fact, the cognitive dissonance that comes through in Trump's daily tweet attacks, shows him to be a man who's driven less by ideology, policy, or principle, and more by evolving grievances that can escalate quite suddenly into ferocious displays of petulance.
In a man of studied thoughtfulness and considerable intellect, Trump's blunt refusal to adhere to Washington's code of conduct, might even pass muster as a revolutionary's gallant efforts to shake things up for the benefit of ordinary Americans. But there's a fine difference between irreverence for established systems that have failed to deliver, and the kind of rhetoric that can easily be misconstrued as just plain bad manners. Going out of one's way not to say anything laudatory about an American senator whom many Americans revered, or claiming that men who get captured in combat are not made of the stern stuff of legend, does not exactly detract from the fact that one pretended to have a bad case of the bone spurs in order to avoid military service.
For all his bombast and cheap nativist populism that sells well to a certain cadre of white person who's convinced that he's been left out of a pie eating contest, Trump was never going to be the new broom that swept Washington clean. Far from draining the swamp of all its slimy inhabitants, or reining Wall Street in like the runaway bronco that it is, and all the yatta yatta promises which he made on the campaign trail, the New York real estate guy who rose to power simply by posing as an America first nationalist, has only enabled the kind of chaos and administrative dysfunction in which influence peddlers, special interests, and lobbyists tend to thrive.
And by choosing to conduct the business of state at Mar-a-Lago, instead of appointing ambassadors and key government officials who are vital to the smooth running of bureaucracy, Trump is not only showing that he has little interest in representing America properly to the world, but he has not even begun to do away with red tape. Indeed, Trump's unorthdox style of leadership far from being a breath of fresh air, has only encouraged a disorderly feeding frenzy in which factionalism has become the default setting for his administration.

Saturday, August 25, 2018

"America's vacuous masses..."

"America's vacuous masses..."
Ouch.

Originally shared by Helen Ikua

More than just political gamesmanship? July 27 2016, Trump's public plea to Russia: Russia if you're listening, I hope you're able to find the 30000 emails that are missing. I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press.


Those who've convinced themselves that Robert Mueller is conducting a witch hunt by unfairly targeting Donald Trump instead of going after Hillary for crimes that have never been proved against her, should try and remember that rain does not come out of nowhere. For, when candidate Trump very publicy and with much aplomb invited an unfriendly foreign power to hack into Hillary's emails and likely release sensitive information contained in those emails, candidate Trump must have had an inkling that he was not speaking into the thin air, but to Russian friends who'd only be too happy to acquiesce this most public of flirtation with conspiracy to commit a crime against the United States.
Now, some might argue that Trump's friendship with the Kremlin is for all intents and purposes an imaginary friendship, and those who'd propound such a proposition would probably be right. In fact, judging by the ease with which Russia has sown discord in America, sometimes by hacking the DNC, sometimes by responding to Trump's direct urging and hacking into Hillary's emails, or sometimes by planting disinformation about vaccines for the express consumption of America's vacuous masses, it's clear that Russian intelligence does not think much of the general IQ of Americans and does not mind toying with Americans every which way.
Still, one cannot erase the fact that Russians, though only imaginary friends of Trump who see him as a useful chump that they can troll, nonetheless came through for Trump during critical moments in his campaign. Releasing hacked emails for instance, just for purposes of detracting from scandalous material that was contained in the Access Hollywood tape which featured Trump trumpeting his sexual prowess for the benefit of novices who don't know a thing about grabbing pussy, easily counts as one of those moments when Trump's pals in the Kremlin dove into the milieu of America's politics in order to make good their pseudo-friendship with Trump.
And while it's not entirely unexpected that Trump would try and deflect attention away from the Russia probe by lashing out at Mueller, at Hillary, at Obama, at the Democrats, or even by throwing his own employees under the bus, and while it's no longer surprising to hear that Flynn met with Russians, Carter Page met with Russians, Manafort met with Russians, Don Jr met with Russians, Jared Kushner met with Russians, what must never be lost on Americans is that Trump's inner circle were peddling something to Russian intelligence, they were peddling influence in exchange for promises to dole out certain favours to Russia should candidate Trump win the 2016 election.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

Memories of my (misspent?) youth...

Memories of my (misspent?) youth...

Originally shared by Chris Kim A

Who Do You Love - Cobra - Mona – Cipollina-Graventies Band – television performance, Germany, 1980

Not the most awesome audio quality, but it's always great to watch Cipollina do his thing
https://www.youtube.com/attribution_link?a=ADixPHl_n7Q&u=/watch?v%3Dsiv9Nh0W1xc%26feature%3Dshare

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Here's a picture from Yosemite two months ago: https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/ttzafc058yb135wsnfelaq

Here's a picture from Yosemite two months ago: https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/ttzafc058yb135wsnfelaq
https://ello.co/mosqueeto/post/ttzafc058yb135wsnfelaq

The sky was a ruddy haze this morning. The picture is the hood of my car. The dust and white specks are ash from the fires north of here.


The sky was a ruddy haze this morning. The picture is the hood of my car. The dust and white specks are ash from the fires north of here.

The "Mendocino Complex" fire is "the largest wildfire in California history", according to a headline.

Meanwhile, the Ferguson fire in Yosemite is still burning. All park entrances except the east side Tioga entrance are closed.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Friday, July 20, 2018

It's clear at this point that Putin is just playing with Trump -- Putin is leading him around by the nose and saying "heel" when the whim strikes.

It's clear at this point that Putin is just playing with Trump -- Putin is leading him around by the nose and saying "heel" when the whim strikes.

It's also clear that Putin is perfectly willing to let Trump burn. Either Trump is blind to this possibility (hard to believe at this point, but after all, Trump is a narcissist), or Trump is terrified past the point of being able to think. In any case, whatever Putin has on Trump, it must be far more serious than peegate.

Of course, one thing that Putin does have on Trump is that Trump is a traitor. But by now this is public knowledge, so there must be something else -- something that would send Trump and his family to jail for the rest of their lives.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

"Quisling" -- love that word. And "quisling president" just rolls off the tongue.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

It's like we are in a slow motion zombie apocalypse.

It's like we are in a slow motion zombie apocalypse.

People are being infected with a strange disease that leaves their bodies more or less intact, but affects their minds in strange ways. People with the disease become paranoid. They develop a tendency towards violence, both verbal and physical. They recognize each other, and are suspicious of everyone who doesn't have the disease.

There is no cure. Rare cases of spontaneous remission are known, but in general the prognosis is grim. In most cases an infected person will remain mentally damaged until they die.

At this point perhaps 35% of the population is affected. The rate of infection has slowed significantly, and most of the remaining population seems naturally immune. But unfortunately, the collective deranged behaviour of the large population of sick people is causing serious problems.

The good news is that it is a slow moving epidemic, and we may be able to contain it. The bad news is that we will be caring for a large number of sick people for many years.

Depressing list.

Depressing list.

Originally shared by ᏖᏗ ᏦᏓᏂ

So in light of some of the recent reports of black people having the police called on them by white people for literally nothing, I thought it’s hard to really take in the magnitude of the issue
5/5/18: Woman calls police on a man inspecting real estate. He had already explained to the woman that he was removing the boards off of the door because he was an investor with a contract in inspect the property, even giving her a business card to verify he wasn’t lying. She told him he didn’t belong there and called the police. Luckily, these police responded appropriately and notified the woman if she interfered with the man further, they would arrest her. https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/16/us/investor-memphis-police-trnd/index.html
5/11/18: Of course you have the white woman calling the police on a black family BBQing in the park in Oakland. https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/woman-calls-police-oakland-barbecue_us_5af50125e4b00d7e4c18f741
6/12/18
: Food truck owner in Portland, Islam Elmasry, threw Gatorade and Srirachia in a woman’s face because she tried to pay for her meal in quarters. https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2018/06/portland_food_cart_owner_caugh.html
6/12/18: White woman calls police on black contractor working in a parking lot, just trying to do his job. Accuses him of being a danger because of his job there, but no charges for unsafe work conditions ever made. Basically, won’t let him work. He’s also being very polite. https://youtu.be/nezADvguDeI
6/22/18
: White man (who owns a townhome but does not actually live in the community) uses his SUV to block a black woman doctor from entering her own gated community where she lives. In Buckhead, a black woman doctor was returning home to find a vehicle queued ahead of her. After waiting she realizes the vehicle was just sitting blocking the gate. She went to ask the person to make way so she could enter. The man tells her she “doesn’t belong here” and uses his car to prevent her from entering. Tells her he doesn’t believe she really lives there, then claims he’s protecting the community because there’s been an HVAC thief (like he thinks this dressed up in nice business clothes and heels driving a high end car is going to be going in there to load a central HVAC unit into her car that costs more than I could probably get a mortgage for). This complex uses key fobs for residents to open the gate, which she possessed. https://www.theroot.com/racial-profiling-at-its-finest-white-man-uses-suv-to-1827057448
6/24/18: White woman, Stephanie Sebby-Strempel, sees two black boys (age 15) at the local pool. They were the guests of a resident (i.e. were allowed to be at the pool and weren’t breaking rules). The woman violently treated the boys. She screamed “Get Out!” while threatening to call the police on them. She struck and pushed the boy in the chest and twice in the face, while he walked toward the exit, used racial slurs against them. The boys left politely, even saying “Yes, ma’am” to the woman. Luckily, due to the violence caught on camera, the woman was charged with third degree assault. Apparently, she bit a police officer. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2018/07/02/police-say-woman-screamed-racial-slurs-and-smacked-a-black-teen-at-a-pool-she-lost-her-job/?utm_term=.3bf7b1d322c4
6/25/18
: Woman calls the police on an 8-year-old black girl selling bottled water on the sidewalk to pay for a trip to Disneyland. Her claim was that the girl was being too loud and she was working with her window opened. Too loud, on the sidewalk in the middle of the day in San Francisco…where it’s loud in general cause it’s a city. Then tries to play victim because of the backlash. https://people.com/human-interest/woman-called-police-8-year-old-selling-water/
6/26/18
: White woman gets in door of man’s car and refuses to let him close it to say he was in her way while he is in his car in a Cold Stone Creamery parking lot enjoying ice cream he’d just purchased there, instead of maybe just asking him to move or being nice. The man is nothing but polite acting. https://youtu.be/iP1CaqMsBNU
6/27/18
: White cop in Ohio uses his daughter’s laptop to track her location and find her out with her black boyfriend (she’s 18 and not a minor, not that it excuses this but at this point who she dates is none of his business). Pulls over the boy and puts him in the back of the car blatantly saying he’ll “make shit up” to arrest him if he doesn’t get his daughter. The boy’s mother (I believe) comes out worried and is also threatened. When his daughter gets out of the car, he releases the boy and forces his daughter into the back of his car (ignoring an actual emergency call) – which at her age is abduction. All because her boyfriend is black. https://rollingout.com/2018/06/24/white-ohio-cop-well-make-s-up-after-stopping-black-boy-dating-daughter/
6/27/18
: Chicago police cuff boy and accuse him of escaping juvenile and having a gun. He’s 10, he hadn’t been in juvi nor did he have a gun. Boy is terrified, ya know, cause he’s 10. He’s obviously terrified seeing as how he was so scared he urinated himself. http://www.newsweek.com/chicago-handcuffed-michael-thomas-gun-juvenile-eddie-johnson-chicago-police-962873

6/30/2018: A white woman and her husband (who posts a bunch of racist stuff on FB as it seems) called the police on a 12-year-old black boy for cutting grass. The boy had started his own lawn care service and had a customer paying him to do her lawn. He accidentally went over the invisible property line between the two homes in a suburban neighborhood by about 12 – 18 inches, and the white woman called the police on him. She referred to her neighbor as “human garbage.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2018/06/30/a-white-woman-called-police-on-a-black-12-year-old-for-mowing-grass/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.7677c6c9d701
7/2/18
: A doctor at the Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin asks a black employee “if she wanted to get lynched” in a meeting. http://atlantablackstar.com/2018/06/29/milwaukee-doctor-who-asked-co-worker-if-she-wanted-to-get-lynched-claims-it-was-an-ignorant-mistake/
7/4/18
White man, Adam Bloom, calls the police on a black woman because she was swimming in the community pool where she lives with her own daughter on the 4th of July. He had followed the woman around harassing her and telling her she needed to show him ID. No person should ever feel compelled to just give anyone their ID, especially a woman since this would tell some strange man where she lived and everything. Outside of that, this pool required a key card to enter, which this woman had and used to enter the pool. Obviously she was a resident since she possessed a resident’s key pass. With the pool secured like there, there’s no reason for anyone to be asking anyone for an ID: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/man-who-called-police-black-woman-north-carolina-pool-no-n889371
7/5/18
: A black family is at a funeral at a local catholic church. Hundreds of people were in the church for the viewing, and during the viewing an individual accidentally knocked over the chalice while trying to hug the deceased (which makes sense people would be clumsy while in grief). The white priest stopped the funeral and told the mourners they had to “get the hell out of my church.” The family was forced to unceremoniously carry their own mother out of the church without completing the funeral because the priest called the police on them to force them to leave. They were escorted to a funeral home out of the county for an on-the-fly alternative funeral. https://youtu.be/ukXCsiV73XM
7/6/18
: White woman calls police on black woman for smoking outside in the parking garage (at the edge of the deck not enclosed) of her own apartment complex. Police show up and tell white woman that the black lady isn’t breaking any rules. White woman also threatens to try to have the black woman evicted: https://www.ebony.com/news-views/newportnancy-white-woman-calls-cops-on-black-woman
7/6/18
: Black family enjoying their pool in their own apartment community has a white man call the police on them accusing them of breaking the pool rules for a small party of 6 people politely enjoying the pool. Calls the police on them to report breaking pool rules (seriously think the police should come out and enforce fricken pool rules). https://youtu.be/n7FsZZ6f9Aw
Plus the well-known:
Yale student has police called on her for falling asleep in her dorm lobby while studying.
Two black men have the police called on them for sitting in a Starbucks while waiting for the person they’re meeting to show up.
Golf club owner calls the police on black women (who are members) for playing too slowly.
Three black boys shopping for prom in a Nordstrom Rack had the police called for shoplifting (they weren’t)
A black trio staying in an AirBNB had the police called because they “didn’t wave back to the neighbor.”
https://www.vox.com/identities/2018/5/11/17340908/racial-profiling-starbucks-yale-police-violence-911-bias
A black boy was violently choked and slammed by police at a Waffle House after his prom (http://www.newsweek.com/video-black-man-choke-slammed-outside-waffle-house-after-prom-white-cop-919948)
All of these are just the incident that managed to make the news between May and now….

https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/16/us/investor-memphis-police-trnd/index.html

Note that "Walkaway" is the title of a middling Science Fiction novel by Cory Doctorow, and a play on the word "walkabout". I spent 45 minutes this morning tracking down and blocking puppet accounts associated with the hashtag #WalkAway

Note that "Walkaway" is the title of a middling Science Fiction novel by Cory Doctorow, and a play on the word "walkabout". I spent 45 minutes this morning tracking down and blocking puppet accounts associated with the hashtag #WalkAway
https://www.salon.com/2018/07/09/russian-bots-are-back-walkaway-attack-on-democrats-is-a-likely-kremlin-operation/

Monday, July 9, 2018

Originally shared by Astronomy Picture of the Day (APoD)


Originally shared by Astronomy Picture of the Day (APoD)

The Snows of Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Image Credit: European Space Agency, ESA, Rosetta, MPS, OSIRIS; UPD/LAM/IAA/SSO/INTA/UPM/DASP/IDA
GIF Animation: Jacint Roger Perez
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap180426.html

You couldn't really be caught in this blizzard while standing by a cliff on Churyumov-Gerasimenko, also known as comet 67P. Orbiting the comet in June of 2016 the Rosetta spacecraft's narrow angle camera did record streaks of dust and ice particles though, as they drifted across the field of view near the camera and above the comet's surface. Still, some of the bright specks in the scene are likely due to a rain of energetic charged particles or cosmic rays hitting the camera, and the dense background of stars in the direction of the constellation Canis Major. Click on this single frame to play and the background stars are easy to spot as they trail from top to bottom in an animated gif (7.7MB). The 33 frames of the time compressed animation span about 25 minutes of real time. The stunning gif was constructed from consecutive images taken while Rosetta cruised some 13 kilometers from the comet's nucleus.

https://xkcd.com/2013/

https://xkcd.com/2013/
https://xkcd.com/2013/

Saturday, May 12, 2018

Originally shared by Bryn Art


Originally shared by Bryn Art

The Idea Lost and Found 😺👵🏻
Artist: Unknown.

Monday, April 30, 2018

Sometimes The Economist gets it right.

Sometimes The Economist gets it right.

Originally shared by The Economist

The Wolf at the White House Correspondents Dinner https://econ.st/2FvaGPR
https://econ.st/2FvaGPR

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Speaking of filter bubbles, echo chambers, and epistemic closure: Is it my imagination, or does Netflix stock an inordinate number of fluffy Korean television series?

Something other than madness


Something other than madness

Monday, April 16, 2018

Long, but clarifies a useful distinction between an "echo chamber" and an "epistemic bubble" (or "filter bubble"). Unfortunately, the prospects for escape from an echo chamber are slim...

Long, but clarifies a useful distinction between an "echo chamber" and an "epistemic bubble" (or "filter bubble"). Unfortunately, the prospects for escape from an echo chamber are slim...

Originally shared by Gregory B. Sadler

Here's an interesting piece that has been making the rounds. I do like the distinction made in it between "echo chambers" and "epistemic bubbles". For my own part, I do block - or disconnect from - some people who out themselves as bad conversation partners on social media. More on YouTube than anywhere else. . .

https://aeon.co/essays/why-its-as-hard-to-escape-an-echo-chamber-as-it-is-to-flee-a-cult
https://aeon.co/essays/why-its-as-hard-to-escape-an-echo-chamber-as-it-is-to-flee-a-cult

Monday, April 9, 2018

A small milestone, perhaps...

A small milestone, perhaps...

Originally shared by rare avis



It's A Girl!


Congratulations!


Tammy Duckworth became the first senator to give birth while in office when she welcomed a baby girl Monday.

The new baby’s name is Maile Pearl Bowlsbey (pronounced MY-lee, according to a statement from Duckworth’s office). “We’re also so grateful for the love and support of our friends and family, as well as our wonderful medical teams for everything they’ve done to help us in our decades-long journey to complete our family,” Duckworth, 50, said in a statement. She and her husband Bryan Bowlsbey also have a three-year-old daughter.

Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois, is just the tenth woman to give birth while serving in Congress, and the first to give birth as a sitting U.S. Senate.

Her office said she is “recovering well” from the birth.

“Parenthood isn’t just a women’s issue, it’s an economic issue and one that affects all parents—men and women alike,” Duckworth said in her statement Monday. “As tough as juggling the demands of motherhood and being a Senator can be, I’m hardly alone or unique as a working parent, and my children only make me more committed to doing my job and standing up for hardworking families everywhere.”

Duckworth is an Iraq War veteran who lost both her legs and injured her arm in 2004 when a helicopter she was co-piloting was hit by a grenade. She received a Purple Heart for her service. She went on to serve in the House of Representatives (where she gave birth to her first child), and was elected to the Senate in 2016.


http://time.com/5233484/senator-tammy-duckworth-gives-birth-girl/

A small milestone, perhaps...

A small milestone, perhaps...

Originally shared by rare avis



It's A Girl!


Congratulations!


Tammy Duckworth became the first senator to give birth while in office when she welcomed a baby girl Monday.

The new baby’s name is Maile Pearl Bowlsbey (pronounced MY-lee, according to a statement from Duckworth’s office). “We’re also so grateful for the love and support of our friends and family, as well as our wonderful medical teams for everything they’ve done to help us in our decades-long journey to complete our family,” Duckworth, 50, said in a statement. She and her husband Bryan Bowlsbey also have a three-year-old daughter.

Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois, is just the tenth woman to give birth while serving in Congress, and the first to give birth as a sitting U.S. Senate.

Her office said she is “recovering well” from the birth.

“Parenthood isn’t just a women’s issue, it’s an economic issue and one that affects all parents—men and women alike,” Duckworth said in her statement Monday. “As tough as juggling the demands of motherhood and being a Senator can be, I’m hardly alone or unique as a working parent, and my children only make me more committed to doing my job and standing up for hardworking families everywhere.”

Duckworth is an Iraq War veteran who lost both her legs and injured her arm in 2004 when a helicopter she was co-piloting was hit by a grenade. She received a Purple Heart for her service. She went on to serve in the House of Representatives (where she gave birth to her first child), and was elected to the Senate in 2016.


http://time.com/5233484/senator-tammy-duckworth-gives-birth-girl/

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Monday, March 26, 2018

"And what’s noticeable in all this is the irrelevance of the Senate. They refuse to reclaim their treaty-making powers with respect to trade (they could end Trump’s China shenanigans overnight); they have abdicated any influence on foreign policy and war just as they have done nothing to protect the special counsel. They are just like the Roman Senate as the republic collapsed. The forms survive; there is nothing of substance behind them."

"And what’s noticeable in all this is the irrelevance of the Senate. They refuse to reclaim their treaty-making powers with respect to trade (they could end Trump’s China shenanigans overnight); they have abdicated any influence on foreign policy and war just as they have done nothing to protect the special counsel. They are just like the Roman Senate as the republic collapsed. The forms survive; there is nothing of substance behind them."

Originally shared by Gregory B. Sadler

Provocative essay here, using Plato's analysis of the slide of democracy into demagoguery (which both left and right have indulged for far too long) and then into tyranny. I have to say that, unfortunately, I agree with Sullivan.

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/03/america-takes-the-next-step-toward-tyranny.html
http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2018/03/america-takes-the-next-step-toward-tyranny.html

Friday, March 16, 2018

Putin sending Trump a message?

Putin sending Trump a message?

Originally shared by Lynn Keller

The anti-Putin Russian exile who was found dead at his London home this week was murdered. He was a close associate of Russian oligarch and prominent Putin critic Boris Berezovsky, who was found dead in his ex-wife's house in England in 2013.

https://www.aol.com/article/news/2018/03/16/putin-critic-nikolai-glushkovs-death-has-been-confirmed-as-murder/23387806/?a_dgi=aolshare_twitter

Originally shared by rare avis

Originally shared by rare avis




On Consciousness: The New York Review Of Books



What is the silliest claim ever made?


The competition is fierce, but I think the answer is easy. Some people have denied the existence of consciousness: conscious experience, the subjective character of experience, the “what-it-is-like” of experience. Next to this denial—I’ll call it “the Denial”—every known religious belief is only a little less sensible than the belief that grass is green.

The Denial began in the twentieth century and continues today in a few pockets of philosophy and psychology and, now, information technology. It had two main causes: the rise of the behaviorist approach in psychology, and the naturalistic approach in philosophy. These were good things in their way, but they spiraled out of control and gave birth to the Great Silliness. I want to consider these main causes first, and then say something rather gloomy about a third, deeper, darker cause. But before that, I need to comment on what is being denied—consciousness, conscious experience, experience for short.

What is it? Anyone who has ever seen or heard or smelled anything knows what it is; anyone who has ever been in pain, or felt hungry or hot or cold or remorseful, dismayed, uncertain, or sleepy, or has suddenly remembered a missed appointment. All these things involve what are sometimes called “qualia”—that is to say, different types or qualities of conscious experience. What I am calling the Denial is the denial that anyone has ever really had any of these experiences.

Perhaps it’s not surprising that most Deniers deny that they’re Deniers. “Of course, we agree that consciousness or experience exists,” they say—but when they say this they mean something that specifically excludes qualia.

Who are the Deniers? I have in mind—at least—those who fully subscribe to something called “philosophical behaviorism” as well as those who fully subscribe to something called “functionalism” in the philosophy of mind. Few have been fully explicit in their denial, but among those who have been, we find Brian Farrell, Paul Feyerabend, Richard Rorty, and the generally admirable Daniel Dennett. Ned Block once remarked that Dennett’s attempt to fit consciousness or “qualia” into his theory of reality “has the relation to qualia that the US Air Force had to so many Vietnamese villages: he destroys qualia in order to save them.”

One of the strangest things the Deniers say is that although it seems that there is conscious experience, there isn’t really any conscious experience: the seeming is, in fact, an illusion. The trouble with this is that any such illusion is already and necessarily an actual instance of the thing said to be an illusion. Suppose you’re hypnotized to feel intense pain. Someone may say that you’re not really in pain, that the pain is illusory, because you haven’t really suffered any bodily damage. But to seem to feel pain is to be in pain. It’s not possible here to open up a gap between appearance and reality, between what is and what seems.

Some people not only deny the existence of consciousness; they also claim not to know what is being presumed to exist. Block responds to these deniers by quoting the reply Louis Armstrong is said to have given to those who asked him what jazz was (some people credit Fats Waller): “If you got to ask, you ain’t never gonna get to know.” Another response is almost as good, although it’s condemned by some who follow Wittgenstein. If someone asks what conscious experience is, you say, “You know what is from your own case.” (You can add, “Here’s an example,” and give them a sharp kick.) When it comes to conscious experience, there’s a rock-bottom sense in which we’re fully acquainted with it just in having it. The having is the knowing. So when people say that consciousness is a mystery, they’re wrong—because we know what it is. It’s the most familiar thing there is—however hard it is to put into words.

What people often mean when they say that consciousness is a mystery is that it’s mysterious how consciousness can be simply a matter of physical goings-on in the brain. But here, they make a Very Large Mistake, in Winnie-the-Pooh’s terminology—the mistake of thinking that we know enough about the physical components of the brain to have good reason to think that these components can’t, on their own, account for the existence of consciousness. We don’t.

*

The first cause of the Denial, behaviorism, took off about a hundred years ago as a methodological research program in experimental psychology. Psychologists had found that they couldn’t properly study consciousness because the data provided by introspection were irremediably vague. In order to be a proper science, psychology had to stick to publicly observable behavioral phenomena that are precisely measurable. The foundational text is generally agreed to be John Watson’s 1913 paper “Psychology as the Behaviorist Views It.”

Methodological behaviorism was a good and fruitful idea. For a few years, all went well. Then philosophers came on the scene, and morphed a methodology into a metaphysics. They took moderate methodological behaviorism, which puts consciousness aside and limits the scientific study of mind to behavior, and blew it up into mad metaphysical behaviorism that claims consciousness is nothing more than behavior and dispositions to behavior. As the philosopher C.D. Broad put it in 1925, this is a form of “reductive materialism.”

Proponents of this view insist that their position does not eliminate consciousness, but instead reduces it to something else. They’re right, formally speaking: to reduce X to Y isn’t to say that X doesn’t exist. It’s simply to say that X is “really just” Y, that X is “nothing more than” Y, that X is “nothing over and above” Y. And since Y is assumed to exist, X is also held to exist. For although X is nothing more than Y, it’s also nothing less than Y. When you reduce chemical processes to physical processes, you don’t deny that chemical processes exist.

All true. And yet, to reduce consciousness to behavior and dispositions to behavior is to eliminate it. To say that consciousness is really nothing more than (dispositions to) behavior is to say that it doesn’t exist. Reductionists may continue to deny this, or claim that it begs the question—that it assumes the truth of the conclusion for which it’s arguing. Formally speaking, it does beg the question, and begging the question is a well-known theoretical sin. Sometimes, however, it is the correct response.

To see this, it helps to compare the behaviorists’ reductionist theory of consciousness with the Pizza-ists’ reductionist theory of consciousness: that consciousness is really just pizza. Formally speaking, the Pizza Theory fully allows that consciousness exists, for pizza certainly exists. So, too, philosophical behaviorism fully allows that consciousness exists, because behavior certainly exists. But to say that experience is just pizza is to deny that consciousness exists, for we know that conscious experience exists, we know what it is like, and we know that it isn’t just pizza. So, too, for the claim that consciousness is just behavior.

This, then, is philosophical behaviorism, the first main version of the Denial. It was already stirring when Russell published The Analysis of Mind (1921), and was clearly on the table when Broad excoriated it in The Mind and its Place in Nature (1925), worrying that he might “be accused of breaking a butterfly on a wheel.” It may be that relatively few psychologists fell into outright philosophical behaviorism, but there was cross-infection. In 1923, the psychologist Karl Lashley aimed “to show that the statement, ‘I am conscious’ does not mean anything more than the statement that ‘such and such physiological processes are going on within me.’” Still, even an austere experimentalist like E.G. Boring, one of the leading “operationist” psychologists in the mid-twentieth century, held firmly in 1948 to the view that experience or “consciousness is what you experience immediately.”

Two years later, however, Brian Farrell judged Boring’s claim to be a “comical and pathogenic remark.” Farrell thought better times were coming. If Western societies were truly to assimilate the work of the relevant sciences, “then it is quite possible that the notion of ‘experience’ will be generally discarded as delusive.” As things are, it’s only by “restricting the use of the word ‘experience’ to ‘raw feels’ [that we can] go on defending the view that ‘experience’ and ‘behavior’ are not identical; and this line of defence is hopeless.” In the present state of our language, “the notion of ‘experience’ can be shown to resemble an occult notion like ‘witchcraft’ in a primitive community that is in the process of being acculturated to the West.” Fortunately, science “is getting to the brink of rejecting [experience]… as ‘unreal’ or ‘non-existent.’”

At this point, the philosophers had left the psychologists in the dust in the race to folly. Farrell’s thoughts were echoed by, among others, the radical philosopher of science Paul Feyerabend (1962) and Richard Rorty (1965); and they were influential in the vast upsurge of discussion of consciousness that followed the publication of the psychologist Ullin Place’s paper “Is Consciousness a Brain Process?” (1956), and the Australian philosopher Jack Smart’s paper “Sensations and Brain Processes” (1959). But, by now, something else was in play. For philosophers were not—or not primarily—motivated by behaviorist considerations in their denial of the existence of consciousness. Their line of thought was, in one striking respect, far worse. For it does at least follow from philosophical behaviorism that consciousness doesn’t really exist, whereas these philosophers were motivated by something—a commitment to naturalism—from which it doesn’t even begin to follow that consciousness doesn’t exist.

*

Naturalism states that everything that concretely exists is entirely natural; nothing supernatural or otherwise non-natural exists. Given that we know that conscious experience exists, we must as naturalists suppose that it’s wholly natural. And given that we’re specifically materialist or physicalist naturalists (as almost all naturalists are), we must take it that conscious experience is wholly material or physical. And so we should, because it’s beyond reasonable doubt that experience—what W.V. Quine called “experience in all its richness… the heady luxuriance of experience” of color and sound and smell—is wholly a matter of neural goings-on: wholly natural and wholly physical.

It’s true that we can’t understand how experience can be wholly a matter of neural goings-on, when we start out from the way the brain appears to physics or neurophysiology. Crucially, though, there’s no reason to give the way the brain appears to physics or neurophysiology priority over the way it appears to the person having the experience. Rather the reverse, as Russell pointed out as early as 1927: he annoyed many, and incurred some ridicule, when he proposed that it was only the having of conscious experience that gives us any insight into the intrinsic nature of the stuff of the brain. His point was simple: first, we know something fundamental about the essential nature of conscious experience just in having it; and second, conscious experience is literally part of the physical stuff of the brain, if materialism is true.

Genuine naturalists, then, are outright realists about consciousness, who accept that they are, in many ways, profoundly ignorant of the fundamental nature of the physical. They understand the respect in which the great naturalistic project, spearheaded by physics, hasn’t decreased our ignorance, but increased it—precisely because of its advances and successes. We don’t understand quantum mechanics, or “dark energy,” or “dark matter,” or a host of other things. So be it.

But then—in the middle of the twentieth century—something extraordinary happens. Members of a small but influential group of analytic philosophers come to think that true naturalistic materialism rules out realism about consciousness. They duly conclude that consciousness doesn’t exist. They reach this conclusion in spite of the fact that conscious experience is a wholly natural phenomenon, whose existence is more certain than any other natural phenomenon, and with which we’re directly acquainted, at least in certain fundamental respects. These philosophers thus endorse the Denial.

The problem is not that they take naturalism to entail materialism—they’re right to do so. The problem is that they endorse the claim that conscious experience can’t possibly be wholly physical. They think they know this, although genuine naturalism doesn’t warrant it in any way. So they, like the behaviorists, claim that consciousness doesn’t exist, although many of them conceal this by using the word “consciousness” in a way that omits the central feature of consciousness—the qualia, the “heady luxuriance.”

The situation grows stranger when one reflects that almost all their materialist forebears, stretching back over 2,000 years to Leucippus and Democritus, completely reject the view that experience can’t be physical, and hold instead (as all serious materialists must) that experience is wholly physical. Russell made the key observation in 1927: “We do not know enough of the intrinsic character of events outside us to say whether it does or does not differ from that of ‘mental’ events”—whose nature we do know. He never wavered from this point. In 1948, he noted that physics simply can’t tell us “whether the physical world is, or is not, different in intrinsic character from the world of mind.” In 1956, he remarked that “we know nothing about the intrinsic quality of physical events except when these are mental events that we directly experience.” But the Deniers weren’t listening, and they still aren’t.

Why do the Deniers ignore a long line of distinguished materialist predecessors and ally themselves with Descartes, their sworn enemy, in holding that experience can’t possibly be physical—thereby obliging themselves to endorse the Denial? The answer appears to be that they share with Descartes one very large assumption: that we know enough about the physical to be certain that experience can’t be physical.

It’s easy to see how, in Descartes’s day, these two assumptions might have seemed plainly right. Matter, according to the “corpuscularian” mechanics of the day, consisted of little particles of various shapes bumping into and hooking up with each other in various ways. There was nothing more to it, and it seemed evident that it couldn’t possibly be, or account for, conscious experience. The intuition seems more excusable then than today, when quantum field theory has done away with the gritty particles of the past.

The Cartesians, then, “established it as a principle that we are perfectly acquainted with the essence of matter,” as Hume put it in 1738. This was a great mistake, and 250 years later, the leading materialist philosopher David Lewis made the same mistake, claiming “that the physical nature of ordinary matter under mild conditions is very well understood.” True, this isn’t a claim of perfect acquaintance, but it is a version of the Cartesian view, and it is assumed to justify the claim that we know enough about the physical to know that experience can’t be physical. For naturalistic materialists the conclusion follows immediately and inexorably: consciousness doesn’t really exist.

One of the strangest things about the spread of the naturalism-based Denial in the second half of the twentieth century is that it involved overlooking a point about physics that was once a commonplace, and which I call “the silence of physics.” Physics is magnificent: many of its claims are either straightforwardly true or very good approximations to truth. But all of its claims about the physical are expressed by statements of number or equations. They’re truths about quantities and relational structures instantiated in concrete reality; and these truths tell us nothing at all about the ultimate nature of the stuff of reality, the stuff that has the structure that physics analyzes. Here is Russell again (in 1948): “the physical world is only known as regards certain abstract features of its space-time structure… we know nothing about the events that make matter, except their space-time structure.” Stephen Hawking agrees in 1988: physics is “just a set of rules and equations,” which leaves open the question “what… breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe.” Physics has nothing to say about things that can’t be expressed in general rules and equations.

This is the silence of physics—a simple point that destroys the position of many of those today who, covertly or overtly, endorse the Denial. When we grasp the silence of physics, and ask, with Eddington, “what knowledge have we of the nature of atoms that renders it at all incongruous that they should constitute a thinking [i.e., conscious] object?” The answer is simple: none. The false naturalists appear to ignore this point. They rely instead on an imaginative picture of the physical, a picture that goes radically beyond anything that physics tells or could tell us. They are in Russell’s words “guilty, unconsciously and in spite of explicit disavowals, of a confusion in their imaginative picture” of reality. This picture is provably incorrect if materialism is indeed true because, in that case, experience is wholly physical yet excluded from the picture.

*

The facts of the Denial are before us, and we have an account of how they arose: first, from a mistaken interpretation of behaviorism; then, from a mistake about what a naturalistic outlook requires. But I believe we still lack a satisfactory explanation of the Denial as long as we lack a satisfactory explanation of how these mistakes could have been made. How could anybody have been led to something so silly as to deny the existence of conscious experience, the only general thing we know for certain exists?

The explanation is as ancient as it is simple. As Cicero says, there is “no statement so absurd that no philosopher will make it.” Descartes agrees, in 1637: “Nothing can be imagined which is too strange or incredible to have been said by some philosopher.” Thomas Reid concurs in 1785: “There is nothing so absurd which some philosophers have not maintained.” Louise Antony puts it like this in 2007: “There is… no banality so banal that no philosopher will deny it.”

Descartes adds that when it comes to speculative matters, “the scholar… will take… the more pride [in his views] the further they are from common sense… since he will have had to use so much more skill and ingenuity in trying to render them plausible.” Or as C.D. Broad says, some 300 years later: some ideas are “so preposterously silly that only very learned men could have thought of them… by a ‘silly’ theory I mean one which may be held at the time when one is talking or writing professionally, but which only an inmate of a lunatic asylum would think of carrying into daily life.”

We know that silliness happens, but we may still wonder how it is possible. Perhaps we should turn to individual psychology: it can seem exciting to hold views that seem preposterously contrary to common sense—there’s something Oedipally thrilling about it when the father is an old gentleman called Ordinary Opinion. Herbert Feigl adds another psychoanalytic note: “Scholars cathect [or invest] certain ideas so strongly and their outlook becomes so ego involved that they erect elaborate barricades of defenses, merely to protect their pet ideas from the blows (or the slower corrosive effects) of criticism.”

These observations may account for why, as Hobbes notes in 1645, “arguments seldom work on men of wit and learning when they have once engaged themselves in a contrary opinion.” Descartes is right again when he says:

It frequently happens that even when we know that something is false, we get used to hearing it, and thus gradually get into the habit of regarding it as true. Confident assertion and frequent repetition are the two ploys that are often more effective than the most weighty arguments when dealing with ordinary people or those [including philosophers] who do not examine things carefully.

This is what psychologists now call “the familiarity effect” or “mere-exposure effect.” And here, Sir Francis Bacon steps in, writing in 1620:

Once the human mind has favoured certain views, it pulls everything else into agreement with and support for them. Should they be outweighed by more powerful countervailing considerations, it either fails to notice these, or scorns them, or makes fine distinctions in order to neutralize and so reject them.

Very well, but how is it possible to deny the existence of consciousness? Russell thinks it’s the fault of philosophy. There are things that “only philosophers with a long training in absurdity could succeed in believing.” But it isn’t just philosophers, as Mark Twain notes: “There isn’t anything so grotesque or so incredible that the average human being can’t believe it.”

This is how philosophers in the twentieth century came to endorse the Denial, the silliest view ever held in the history of human thought. “When I squint just right,” Dennett writes in 2013, “it does sort of seem that consciousness must be something in addition to all the things it does for us and to us, some special private glow or here-I-am-ness that would be absent in any robot… But I’ve learned not to credit the hunch. I think it is a flat-out mistake, a failure of imagination.” His position was summarized in an interview in The New York Times: “The elusive subjective conscious experience—the redness of red, the painfulness of pain—that philosophers call qualia? Sheer illusion.” If he’s right, no one has ever really suffered, in spite of agonizing diseases, mental illness, murder, rape, famine, slavery, bereavement, torture, and genocide. And no one has ever caused anyone else pain.

This is the Great Silliness. We must hope that it doesn’t spread outside the academy, or convince some future information technologist or roboticist who has great power over our lives.



This essay is adapted from Things That Bother Me: Death, Freedom, the Self, Etc., published this week by New York Review Books.
http://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/03/13/the-consciousness-deniers/

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Saw "Black Panther" last night -- it's a great movie, and tremendous fun.

Saw "Black Panther" last night -- it's a great movie, and tremendous fun.

Funny thing: while an authoritarian system like a hereditary monarchy is anathema to my world view, it works in a superhero movie...

Some of my friends have this issue as well.


Some of my friends have this issue as well.

Originally shared by Craig Froehle

S. Chris T. Hey, did you know that you currently have a feature turned on that tells other people what you +1? Yep. Here's what it looks like when other people (like me) see what you've plussed. Is that info you want to be sharing? If not, you might want to turn it off. Thanks.

p.s., And a warning to everyone else: You can disable sharing your +1s in your G+ settings: Click "Settings" in the left-hand menu and then set "Who can see your "+1s on posts" activity?" to "Only You"

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Not photoshop

Not photoshop

Originally shared by Brian Slesinsky

A photo of the Earth and the dark side of the moon, as seen from a million miles away by Deep Space Climate Observatory (2015).

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

I wish that G+ gave me a means to block all members of particular communities. Would eliminate many spammers at once.

“Banks creates a kind of flawed paradise, a society truly worth fighting for – rather than a warning from the future, his books are a beckoning.”

“Banks creates a kind of flawed paradise, a society truly worth fighting for – rather than a warning from the future, his books are a beckoning.”

Originally shared by Michael Interbartolo

Iain M. Banks’ Culture Series is headed to Amazon Prime Video, with the studio snapping up the rights to “Consider Phlebas.”
Categorized as “Space Opera,” the books document a utopian society that finds itself post-scarcity, with money and space transportation no longer an issue. Humanity has encounter multiple species, some more friendly than others, and grown from living purely on natural worlds to create huge space habitats like rings. Lifespans have been extended by hundreds of years.
https://www.slashgear.com/amazon-is-bringing-iain-m-banks-culture-to-prime-video-21520266/