Posted on October 2, 2006 in Routine
I’ve only been slowly going back to read other blogs.
Posted on October 1, 2006 in Humor?
I’ve been seeing a lot of Squid blogging around. They throw in the occasional octopus and Cthulhu, but there’s too much a trend here for my comfort. So I am thinking of a Friday blogging which will open new fields of inquiry. The question is, which of these creatures should be my focus?
So what is your choice?
Posted on October 1, 2006 in Reflections
Can no one know Reality? Must we define it before we can know it? In Buddhism, we know Reality by silencing all talk about it and just observing it from a still place. So that leaves very few people (not including myself) who can see Reality for what it is. There is a large number of people who get pieces — the body parts salon of the Blind Men and the Elephant. This is the largest group. And in the final group are those who, for reasons of disease or sheer stubbornness, do not see more than a twig of Reality. The New Age can lead you here if you are not careful. Combine that with mental illness and you are lost, lost indeed.
Posted on October 1, 2006 in Fact-Dropping Psycho-bunk Reading
This little vignette very nicely describes the nature of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. From Robert L. Park’s Voodoo Science, a fine compedium of “sane” delusions:
Suppose, for example, that you want to clock the speed of an automobile. You could set up two pylons on the side of the road a known distance apart. An observer at the first pylon will press a button that starts a clock running when the car passes; when the car passes pylon number two, a second observer will press a button stopping the clock. The accuracy of the measurement depends on such things as how precisely the pylons are positioned and how quickly observers respond. The effect of these uncertainties can be minimized by simply using a larger separation between the pylons.
But now suppose you also ask where the car was when its speed was measured. The answer is “between the pylons”. The more accurately you determine the automobile’s speed by moving the pylons apart, the less precise you can be about its position. If you want to be more precise about the position of the car, you must move the pylons closer together, making the speed measurement more uncertain.
This trade-off is the classic dilemna of the measurement. Position and motion are said to be “complementary” variables….
What Heisenberg postulated was that there is a fundamental limit on how accurately you can simultaneously know both the position and motion of a particle. That limit, called the Planck constant, is a measure of the graininess of nature.
So it has nothing to do with funny faces on ice crystals appearing when you sing happy songs to them. Tell that to your resident New Age Bipolar-Depression Denier.
Posted on September 29, 2006 in Humor? Journalists & Pundits
Nice little farce based on the media’s unwillingness to see that Diebold could rig our elections for us.
Posted on September 29, 2006 in Psychosis Reflections Schizophrenia
Some people might mean “truths” or “viewpoints” when they say “Reality”.
Posted on September 26, 2006 in Conservation
Some people would rather sacrifice beauty than give in to conservation.
Posted on September 26, 2006 in Memory Poems Uncertainty
Unhappy memories
sidle up on these tepid September afternoons
Posted on September 25, 2006 in Reading
D.H. Lawrence writes on the American soul as epitomized in the works of James Fenimore Cooper
Posted on September 25, 2006 in College
I wouldn’t have called them friends. They were the people I hung out with when I was in college.
Posted on September 23, 2006 in Routine
In the shallow pampliest of a puddle, I saw my paralysis.
Posted on September 21, 2006 in Consuming Sugar and Fat
When we talk about weight health, we need to present the idea that what is ideal is a mean, not either extreme.