Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Proximate vs. Ultimate Causation


Anti-Semitic Incidents See Largest Single-Year Increase On Record, Audit Finds

Proximate:

"These incidents came at a time when we saw a rising climate of incivility, the emboldening of hate groups and widening divisions in society."
Ultimate:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine%27s_Sword

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0902270/



Be A Dick



This is bigger than you think.

A lot bigger.

Make no mistake, profits will go down.

Someone has decided to put an ideal ahead of a profit.

Ideals are contagious.


Tuesday, February 27, 2018

No Where To Go But Down

Slid into an excerpt (a word way too hard to pronounce) from I Wrote This Book Because I Love You by Tim Kreider.

And this little ole tidbit at the end is quite delicious:

A friend of mine once had a dream about a strange and terrible device: a staircase you could descend deep underground, in which you heard recordings of all the things anyone had ever said about you, both good and bad. The catch was, you had to pass through all the worst things people had said first before you could get to the best things said about you, at the very bottom. This wasn’t even my dream, and my friend told me about it over a quarter century ago, but I’ve never forgotten it.

So how many steps do you see yourself descending?

This fragile-ego fuck would't get too far.

Kreider says:

There is no way I would make it more than two and a half steps down such a staircase,... 

but that

the dream-metaphor is clear enough: if you want to enjoy the rewards of being loved, you also have to submit to the mortifying ordeal of being known. 

I am known to few. Too few.

But getting back to hard to pronounce words, why would anyone include the word "clasped" in a song.

Hard to say let alone sing.

Know me.

Monday, February 26, 2018

School Shootings And Hume

After listening to this
  I couldn't help but think that we don't have time to "look at everything" and per David Hume, can never account for all of the variables.

We must discriminate...what is likely to be effective?

Most mentally ill people don't commit violent acts.

Most depressed people don't commit violent acts.

People with no access to firearms never fire them.


***
The Transcript:

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Weeks before the Florida high school shooting, a teenager opened fire at a school in Kentucky. Police say the teenage gunman there killed two and wounded more than 12 others. Now Kentucky is one of many states debating school security and gun control. And Kentucky's Republican governor, Matt Bevin, is on the line. He's in Washington, D.C., for a meeting of the National Governors Association.
Governor, welcome to the program.
MATT BEVIN: Thank you, Steve. Great to be with you.
INSKEEP: We're at a moment when some Republicans are signaling some openness to gun measures. President Trump has said he would be willing to raise the age limit for buying a rifle. Senator Marco Rubio of Florida said the other day he's willing to consider, at least, restricting the size of magazines, the number of bullets you can stick in a gun at one time.
Would you support measures like that, Governor?
BEVIN: I think it's fair to say that at a time like this or, frankly, at times when it's less emotionally raw, we would be wise to look at any and all possibilities of securing our schools and our society as a whole, our children most specifically. But as to any specific recommendation, I think it's premature, certainly for me and I think for us societally, to assume that any one thing is the solution. I have submitted that it's broader than any one thing and any single piece of legislation.
INSKEEP: Governor, a couple of things to follow up on there. First, when you're saying you want to wait until a time that's less emotionally raw - there's been a series of very high-profile mass shootings at schools and other places for years and years and years. When would be the time to act?
BEVIN: Correct. No, this is my point - is that clearly something needs to be done. But what I have said from the beginning - and it's true enough. And nobody can refute the fact that certain elements in our society have not changed. And over the course of the last decade in particular as we have seen these mass shootings, the number of guns that exist has not really changed. The access to them has not changed and, in fact, has gotten more restrictive. So if those are facts - and they are facts - what has changed? Something has changed. Something is triggering this.
INSKEEP: If I can...
BEVIN: And I think that culture is changing underneath our feet.
INSKEEP: If I can - we can talk about the culture. But let's just check one thing having to do with the number of guns, Governor. The Congressional Research Service found that since about 1968, the per capita firearms ownership in the United States has roughly doubled. We're now up to 89 guns for every 100 people. That is a lot of guns.
BEVIN: There are fewer guns in homes, though. There were far more guns per home and more homes that had a gun 50 and a hundred and 200 years ago. There may be more absolute number of guns. But the access to them by children is not necessarily higher. And - in fact, that's a statistic that goes back now 50 years. I'm talking about what's been happening in the last 10 years. And there has not been that shift or change significantly in the past decade where we've started to see these school shootings.
INSKEEP: You're talking about the fact that family sizes have changed, and so that may lead to different statistics. But 89 guns for every hundred people is still an awful lot of guns.
BEVIN: It is. But I'll tell you this. There have always been a lot of guns per person. And the access to them by children - with no restrictions, no rules, no laws - has long existed. And yet children did not go to school and kill other children. And so we've got to ask ourselves, if we want to be truly honest about how to address this - and we should be - as the father of nine children, all of whom are at home, this is something that matters to someone like me. I don't think I'm alone. This is an issue that we have to be very, very serious about and open-minded about. What is the root cause of this evil?
INSKEEP: OK. So what do you propose to do?
BEVIN: Again, there is no immediate solution. It isn't - when you are dealing with evil, it's important to understand, how can you stop it? That's the real question everybody has. Are we going to frisk every kid coming into a school? Are we going to surround them in barbed wire? Are we going to put metal detectors at the entrance of every school? It'll be just a matter of time before somebody will breach whatever security measure is put in place because if somebody truly wants to perpetrate evil, it has always been able to be done. And it's a tragic and sad reality. So that...
INSKEEP: Well, that's an interesting - if I can, that's an interesting point, Governor, because there were security measures at the school that was shot up in Florida the other day. There was a security officer - a resource officer, as he's called - who ended up doing nothing and ended up resigning as a result. You make a good point that school security measures can be breached. Would there be any room to make it harder to obtain a weapon that can kill large numbers of people on those occasions when security is breached?
BEVIN: Let me give you a - in response to your question, there was a shooting, as you noted, in Kentucky.
INSKEEP: Right.
BEVIN: Sixteen students were shot. Two children were killed. This was an instance where a student brought a gun to school, killed other students with it. This student was 15. He was too young, by law, to even own a gun. He was not allowed by law to bring a gun to school. He was not allowed by law to kill people. And yet he violated every one of those laws. The question I ask - and I mean it sincerely - what other law would a child who's willing to break those three laws have obeyed that would have precluded something like this from happening?
INSKEEP: What if a gun dealer had made it harder for someone to get a weapon? Might that help in some situations?
BEVIN: That's been happening in many respects, as though - some would disagree. But it is much more difficult now than it was 50 and a hundred years ago or even 20 years ago and, in some cities, incredibly harder to obtain a gun. And that's not inappropriate necessarily. It just isn't. I'm not disagreeing that we should have certain checks and balances. I'm not. What I'm saying is to assume that that is the solution, which people seem singularly to want to focus on, I think, is a very naive and premature assumption.
INSKEEP: One other thing, Governor - I think it's fair to say, you're indicating it's difficult to find a solution here. It's fair to say that we're all guessing at solutions. We don't really know what is going to work for sure because there's so little research on gun violence, how it happens, how to prevent it. And one reason for that, as you probably know, is that there's been a ban on federal money - an effective ban on federal money - being used for gun research since the 1990s. Even the congressman who sponsored that, Jay Dickey, now says it was a mistake. Would you support removing that ban so that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention can research gun violence and how to stop it?
BEVIN: I'm a big supporter of statistics that are valid, that are able to be backed up. And so research is imperative. On that front, on any number of other fronts, we would be foolish not to be aware of the impact of guns specifically in this instance. But at the same time, we also need to look at the realities of student depression, the impact - and we've seen study after study on their psyche as it relates to social media and the use of personal devices. There's a very compelling and interesting article recently in The Atlantic - studies...
INSKEEP: Governor, I'm sorry. I've just got about 20 seconds. And I'm hoping to get a yes or no here. Would you be willing then to call up Mitch McConnell, who's from your state, the Senate majority leader, and say, please get that ban removed? Let's have some gun research.
BEVIN: I think it's important to look at everything. And by everything, I mean not those things that those seem imperatively, in their minds, to focus on but to look at what we are doing to our young people - the use of drugs, the depression, the lack of engagement by parents, the lack of morality in our society. We need to look at everything.
INSKEEP: Governor, thanks very much.
BEVIN: Thank you.
INSKEEP: Matt Bevin is the Republican governor of Kentucky.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Order Up! Modus Ponens. Over Easy.


I’m reading a book entitled The Self-Driven Child.
I got interested through this article and by being a parent.
The beginning of the book is about the brain and having taught Psych 101 much of this was review.
But then, suddenly, one little idea…
When someone is depressed, logic is impaired.
Logic? Impaired?
The logician in me will order the modus ponens this way:
If one is depressed, then one’s logic is impaired.
Not too surprising, right?
The brain is an organ and requires the right mixture of chemicals and elements to think logically or to do logic. Even logic like which way is right and which way is left, let alone something like advanced quantification calculus. Depression affects the balance of chemicals.
But…
Could we order the modus ponens the other way?
If logic is impaired, then one is depressed.
No.
There could be other factors (antecedents), conditions that necessitate depression and logic impairment isn’t one of them.
Now consider this question and logic:
How logical is it to believe in an afterlife?
That you will continue to be when the organ that organizes/synthesizes your thoughts and your personality (consider that I recently came to learn about a man who was struck by lightning, but lived to tell about it, and how his doctor’s warned him that he will see personality changes) will decompose like other material entities.
Can we say that any person x that believes in an afterlife has impaired logic?
Which goes first?
If one believes in an afterlife, then logic is impaired.
If logic is impaired, then one believes in an afterlife.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Worth The Price of Admission


On the treadmill this morning I saw the millionth commercial for the Black Panther movie. Maybe it was the over-advertising but it just got me thinking about how I will probably never see this movie and moreover, if I do end up seeing the movie, I probably won't like it. If I don't fall asleep.

Then I imagined the retorts of the people who are waiting with baited breath to see it and how they might intimate I am a snob when it comes to movies and how I think I am too good for superhero movies. 

I am not too good for any movie, the balance in my checking account proves this. My love for Airplane, Murder By Death, and Police Academy 1 and 2! prove I am not too good for any movie.

I would just say in this fictitious argument that I don’t appreciate, for the most part, superhero movies. I am more interested in willpower than I am super powers. I might also remind folks that the vast majority of movies are made for 15 year old boys.

I am not 15.

I also imagined the naysayers asking me “well if you don’t like superhero movies, what do you like?”

I don’t get to see a ton of movies because in addition to the treadmill at 5am I am on the treadmill of life with two tots and  a two hour commute every day…

BUT!

I can say that recently I really liked Wind River and Get Out.

Both movies had actors that were superb in scenes in which they had to be on the edge of emotions. Not fully immersed buy oh so close, could fall in, but avoids. This has to be hard for an actor and in both movies I appreciated these scenes immensely.

Which got me to thinking…about picking a scene from a movie that is worth the price of admission.

What is one scene in a movie you think is worth your $18 bucks?

This scene is one minute and seventeen seconds long but Renner makes it priceless.


And here, in a mere 2:27, Betty Gabriel just gets so deliciously close to falling in, dangling over the cliff but, with all of her might, doesn't fall in.

Worth the price of admission.


Tuesday, February 13, 2018

The Bluest Eye

Behold this incredible passage in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye where Soaphead Church, a child molester living as a fortune teller, has written a letter to God after a little black girl came to him to request blue eyes:

...I, I have caused a miracle. I gave her the eyes. I gave her the blue, blue, two blue eyes. Cobalt blue. A streak of it right out of your own blue heaven. No one else will see her blue eyes. But she will. And she will live happily ever after. I, I have found it meet and right to do so.
Now you are jealous. You are jealous of me.
You see? I, too have created. Not aboriginally, like you, but creation is a heady wine, more for the taster than the brewer.

What would you say to god?

I think when you can write and think like this, the imagination to create like this, you'll say anything you want.


Monday, February 12, 2018

Remote Means Far Away

Our TV remote control broke recently (recently in busy parent time = over a month ago).

Low and behold the misses finds out we can just get one on amazon.

Somehow I successfully programmed it. 4 instructional steps total.

We don't watch tv but for an hour or so in the evenings typically so we just got by without the remote, by walking up to the tv and pressing buttons - Old School baby!

But we were not able to access our on-demand and henceforth missed a month of SNL.

So getting back around to SNL, this atheist was utterly delighted with this gem:




Friday, February 9, 2018

Time

This article from NPR about the movie Groundhog Day reminded me of my Existentialism Class where we read Heidegger's Being And Time.

I can clearly remember the prof talking about time in this sense and how it changes when your ownmost possibility (death - the possibility of you that ends the other possibilities) and you can read it in this line from the article:

But it definitely changed my relationship with time. 

We love to think of time as outside of us and unchangeable.

It isn't.

Isn't that wonderful? To know that you can change time.

There's an old Leo Buscaglia bit where he asks: what would you do if you knew you had a week to live?

Would you tick away the moments that make up a dull day? Fritter away the hours in and off-hand way?


Thursday, February 8, 2018

The Coldness of My Winter

I felt the coldness of my winter
I never thought...it would ever go
...I cursed the gloom that set upon us
but I know
that I love you so...


Tuesday, February 6, 2018

42



How is The Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy funnier than A Confederacy of Dunces? Or Bill Bryson's The Life and Times of The Thunderbolt Kid?

I ask to know. To learn. Something. Anything.

Friday, February 2, 2018

Be Careful When You Change The Channel

per the usual, me and the boys were listening to the radio on our lovely morning commute (heavy sarcasm, correction, heaviest sarcasm - the commute into providence is worse than having your gums scraped with a rusty phillips head screwdriver that's been soaked in kerosene) and whilst (a word that should be used more IMHO)(could I use more parentheses?) we were listening to my favorite indy station in the isle of rhode, (Rhode Island for the neophytes reading) WRIU where the silky Nat King Cole was crooning.

I can dig the Colster. May I call him the Colster? Prolly not.

Anyhoo, WRIU decides to do a twofer of the Kinger (doesn't work either) so I thought before I get too much into the second song I'll check WHJY as I like their skits from Paul & Al.

So in less than a second I go from the uber-smooth timbre of Nat King Cole to the bleeding sandpaper scratch of David Lee Roth during Runnin' With The Devil.

Talk about a study in contrast.

No, that is an imperative. Right now! Get talking about a study in contrast.

Listen for yourselves.




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