Archive for 2004

04w53:2 Susan Sontag is Dead

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 53 number 2 (Susan Sontag is dead)

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Susan Sontag, Leading Intellectual, Dies at 71 | Associated Press
http://tinyurl.com/3pw9s
“Susan Sontag, the author, activist and self-defined ‘zealot of seriousness’ whose voracious mind and provocative prose made her a leading intellectual of the past half century, died Tuesday. She was 71.” Links to New York Times

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emailed by Timothy on Tuesday 28 December 2004 @ 3:27 PM

04w53:1 Presentations on Human Nature

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 53 number 1 (Presentations on Human Nature)
This issue of Good Reads provides links to three audio presentations, recorded at the Pop!Tech 2004 convention held in Camden, Maine, October 21-23, 2004. They are all provided by IT Conversations and are available to stream or download on the site. – Timothy
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Human Nature | Malcolm Gladwell
http://www.itconversations.com/shows/detail230.html
“Malcolm explores why we can’t trust people’s opinions — because we don’t have the language to express our feelings. His examples include the story of New Coke and how Coke’s market research misled them, and the development of Herman-Miller’s Aeron chair, the best-selling chair in the history of office chairs, which succeeded in spite of research that suggested it would fail. […]This presentation is one of many from the IT Conversations archives of Pop!Tech 2004 held in Camden, Maine, October 21-23, 2004.[runtime: 00:30:18, 13.9 mb, recorded 2004-10-21]” Related: http://www.businessinteriors.ca/products/seating/herman_miller_aeron.htm

Frans de Waal | Human Nature
http://www.itconversations.com/shows/detail231.html
“Frans de Waal tries to convince us that we’re all apes and that there’s little difference between us except that we walk on two legs. At first you think he’s joking. Perhaps not. A global ethologist and zoologist, de Waal is best known for his work on the social intelligence of primates. He thinks that if we ignore the importance of power struggles in the study of human nature, we’re making a big mistake. In his talk, he draws constant parallels between primate and human behavior and uses politicians as examples, including visuals of where aggression can also be used for reconciliation and how it plays a positive role, not just in politics, but in business and our social lives. [runtime: 00:30:36, 14 mb, recorded 2004-10-21]”

Joel Garreau | Human Nature
http://www.itconversations.com/shows/detail265.html
“‘Are we fundamentally changing human nature in our lifetime?’ Joel Garreau thinks that yes we will be…over the next twenty years. What’s driving this? He goes into great depth on Moore’s Law and later on, Metcalfe’s Law, which he received brownie points from Bob at the end of his session. He talks about technologies, how they are now aimed inward and gives a number of s curve examples.
[runtime: 00:49:23, 22.6 mb, recorded 2004-10-21] “

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emailed by Timothy on Monday 27 December 2004 @ 10:57 AM

04w52:2 The Elegant Universe

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 52 number 2 (The Elegant Universe)
< Thanks to Matt Crookshank for letting me know about this – Timothy
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The Elegant Universe | PBS
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/program.html
“To view any part of this three-hour mini-series, choose an episode from one of the three columns below and select either QuickTime (full-screen option available) or RealVideo to begin watching. Each hour-long episode is divided into eight chapters.”

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emailed by Timothy on Wednesday 22 December 2004 @ 11:43 AM

04w52:1 Zeke's Gallery Interview with Marc Mayer

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 52 number 1 (Zeke’s Gallery interview with Marc Mayer)

The goodreads.ca homepage uses Blogger to archive the posts. I did this way back in May so that I could provide RSS feeds, and because it has a feature where you can email your posts, so by putting that e-address in the mailing list, I could automatically archive the emails. As many of you know, Blogger offers the ability to leave comments, which I have had off until now. Since the weekend, you can leave comments on the goodreads.ca homepage regarding any links or issues you may have.
And now for self-promotion:

Remember the time you spent almost ten dollars on that issue of Harpers or the Walrus and were disappointed? Remember the time I got in trouble because I didn’t tip enough to the lousy waiter for bad service, especially when they’re already making a wage, but then there was the time I tipped the cab driver out of sympathy even though he took the longest route and effectively ripped me off? Now, remember that great article you read about some time ago on Goodreads?

I don’t have a wage and have all the debts associated with being chronically underemployed, so I think tapping on the tip jar at Christmas time is something I should feel no shame or embarrassment in. Please consider a small amount to help me help you into the new year. There is a PayPal link on the goodreads.ca homepage, or email me for my address if you’d like to send a cheque. If we are comrades in poverty, or you’re a newbie subscriber, than don’t worry about it.

Happy Holidays,

– Timothy
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My interview with Marc Mayer | Chris Hand
http://zekesgallery.blogspot.com/2004/12/my-interview-with-marc-mayer.html
“Artists are important contributors to our intellectual life. Forget all that stuff about how art contributes to spiritual life, or quality of life, or even pleasure, artists bring new information into the world from the unique perspective of the visual arts heritage and the growing set of tools at their disposal. We learn things that we can’t learn anywhere else, that we can’t learn from philosophy, from science, from nowhere. […] Canadians need to buy Canadian art, it’s the best investment they can make. […] The art world functions in very different ways in different countries, when it works well, there’s a strong market that supports many artists and there’s a strong cultural infrastructure that permits a certain independence for institutions to identify and explain the really great stuff as a service to the public and to posterity. […] [Other country’s] artists have a big collector, connoisseur and commentary machine behind them and so smart people from those countries who want to be artists have a shot at a bright future, though it’s only possible for a small few, even there. In any case, I view the current art economy in Canada as an interim situation. We can’t go on forever like this. We need to encourage a national market, like, now.”

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emailed by Timothy on Tuesday 21 December 2004 @ 1:42 AM

04w51:4 Beautiful Maths

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 51 number 4 (beautiful maths)

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Cones, Curves, Shells, Towers | Margaret Wertheim
http://tinyurl.com/ypc6r
“At first glance it does not seem possible that such a complex, curving form could have been folded from a single sheet of paper, and yet it was. The construction is one of an astonishing collection of paper objects folded by Dr. David Huffman, a former professor of computer science at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and a pioneer in computational origami, an emerging field with an improbable name but surprisingly practical applications. ” New York Times article, may require registration

Mathematicians crochet chaos | BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/4099615.stm
“Dr Hinke Osinga and Professor Bernd Krauskopf, of Bristol University’s engineering mathematics department, used 25,511 crochet stitches to represent the Lorenz equations.”

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 17 December 2004 @ 6:32 PM

04w51:3 Patriotic Propaganda

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 51 number 3 (patriotic propaganda)

Thank you Hollywood for teaching the world how to make patriotic propaganda videos. The war is more fun with internet. I found out about this via Metafilter where these comments to this link were posted:

Not to sound like I hate freedom(tm), but I love how much more well-reasoned this sounds than American propaganda.
posted by borkingchikapa at 10:16 AM PST on December 15

A new era of Adobe Premiere Propaganda?

This is pretty fascinating. Instead of having leaflets dropped on my head and watching state TV, I am choosing to watch propaganda to satisfy my curiosity, and it’s so easy to do. I imagine there’s probably around four Kevin-Bacon links between the author, the journalist and me. Yay internet. That being said, the video’s pretty standard stuff. It makes a good contrast with the scared-rat untranslated blurry badly lit masked man type videos the individual groups have been putting out so far.

About time they hired a ‘marketing board’.
posted by anthill at 10:29 AM PST on December 15

I agree, with you both. It’s reasoned, rational and contrasts strongly to some of the recent comments I have heard from US army commanders: Fallujah being a “Nest of Vipers” etc. It is a bit surreal hearing a Midlands accent in those circumstances… and it would be very easy to string together using stock footage without every having been near Iraq… …must watch what I say before Homeland Security starts following people home from the Mosque in Wolverhampton.
posted by fingerbang at 10:30 AM PST on December 15

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A Message From The Iraq Resistance | The Iraqi Resistance
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article7468.htm
“And to George W. Bush, we say, ‘You have asked us to ‘Bring it on’’, and so have we. Like never expected. Have you another challenge?'”
Windows Media File

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 17 December 2004 @ 12:45 PM

04w51:2 John Ralston Saul on Citizenship, Education, and Bilingualism

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 51 number 2 (John Ralston Saul on citizenship, education, and bilingualism)
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Upon Receiving an Honorary Degree from U of Ottawa | John Ralston Saul
http://www.gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=4322
“This privilege of freedom – which you haven’t been able to fully enjoy – comes with obligations. [They] have to do with your becoming full citizens, not simply with your becoming specialists, and they certainly do not have to do with you becoming someone who may earn a bit more money than others because of university training. This creation of the citizen is at the centre of the idea of public education in Canada. We are an egalitarian society, not a class-based society. […] I hope, in spite of the cost of education, that you have managed to use a good part of your time in order to read well beyond the books which were necessary for your courses, that you’ve been thinking about things that go well beyond what you’ve been specifically educating yourselves for and that you’ve been wasting the maximum amount of time pushing each other in debates and disagreements. […] On the other hand, if you haven’t been doing this for the last four years, I can reassure you of one thing: you’ve got about another 70 years […] on average, ahead of you to continue your reading and your debating and your thinking that you hopefully started in university. You’ve been preparing yourselves for the reality of truly living for the next 70 odd years. […] You’re not in a platoon going out to the frontline. And yet, they’ll talk a great deal to you about loyalty. In fact, a certain kind of disloyalty is essential to the success of a democracy, because disloyalty in normal peace time activity is a citizen’s strength. It’s all about talking and disagreeing and being disagreeable in public because you don’t want to conform, because you are not loyal to what others say you’re supposed to think. […] If you get into that habit now of being a tough-minded, disagreeable citizen, known as somebody who is not afraid to speak out in private meetings or in public or anything in between, then you will see that life is not about simply being there for the working hours, it isn’t simply about fulfilling the tasks which have been given you, or about getting the form right. Life is about something much more interesting and that. If you’re willing to take the risks, you’ll be in a position to change the way in which things are normally done. ”

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emailed by Timothy on Wednesday 15 December 2004 @ 3:14 PM

04w51:1 All in the Family

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 51 number 1 (all in the family)


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Eminem Is Right | Mary Eberstadt
http://www.policyreview.org/dec04/eberstadt.html
“If yesterday’s rock was the music of abandon, today’s is that of abandonment. The odd truth about contemporary teenage music – the characteristic that most separates it from what has gone before – is its compulsive insistence on the damage wrought by broken homes, family dysfunction, checked-out parents, and (especially) absent fathers. Papa Roach, Everclear, Blink-182, Good Charlotte, Eddie Vedder and Pearl Jam, Kurt Cobain and Nirvana, Tupac Shakur, Snoop Doggy Dogg, Eminem – these and other singers and bands, all of them award-winning top-40 performers who either are or were among the most popular icons in America, have their own generational answer to what ails the modern teenager. Surprising though it may be to some, that answer is: dysfunctional childhood.”

How Hip-Hop Music is slowly transcending its circular culture | Stefan Braidwood
http://www.popmatters.com/music/features/040728-hiphop.shtml
“Hip-hop started out as a counter-culture expression of pain-laced, defiant joy by New York’s penniless and angry. You make studio time and instrumental tuition too expensive for me, place me in ghettos I lack any means to escape or improve, cut off the power to my housing block, keep me locked down in a miserable job for pathetic pay and generally treat me as a politically powerless and racially inferior minority? I will mix records together with no respect for their discrete heritage or creators; set your anthems as backing vocals for the rhymes I’ve spent my fruitless hours of drudgery whetting with pent-up bitterness; paint your greyly hideous constructions wildly, vibrantly beautiful; and funnel the electricity from your streetlights into my decks and speakers, to dance with my peers in new and explosive ways that pay homage to our frantic, cooped-up energy. And I will tell my people that they are beautiful, and that you cannot hold us forever, for this raucous, rhythmic, illegitimate music will bring us together, and in its crude but irresistible power we will find and share our impoverished strength and soul once more.”

All to Blame | Sum 41
http://www.lyricstop.com/w/werealltoblame-sum41.html
“And now we’re all to blame/ We’ve gone too far/ From pride to shame/ We’re hopelessly blissful and blind/ When all we need/ Is something true/ To believe/ Don’t we all?”

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emailed by Timothy on Monday 13 December 2004 @ 2:50 PM

04w50:2 Erasing de Kooning

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 50 number 2 (erasing de Kooning)


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Antonio Negri: The Nostalgic Revolutionary | Adrian Hamilton
http://www.globalpolicy.org/empire/analysis/2004/0817negri.htm
“I try to think of a polite way to remind him of the fact that every communist revolution of the 20th century lead to tyranny and mass murder. And a nice way to say that communism was a betrayal of the democratic values of the left. […] Negri recently described the Soviet Union as ‘a society criss-crossed with extremely strong instances of creativity and freedom’, which is more than he has ever said for any democracy. He even says that the Soviet Union fell because it was too successful. I point this out, and he replies: ‘Now you are talking about memory. Who controls memory? Faced with the weight of memory, one must be unreasonable! Reason amounts to eternal Cartesianism. The most beautiful thing is to think ‘against’, to think ‘new’. Memory prevents revolt, rejection, invention, revolution.’ He leans back as though he has brilliantly rebutted any critique of communism. So, is he seriously saying that we should never look at history, that the left should carry on as though communism was a great success, that we should not reconsider our values at all? […] None of the world’s real problems – from poverty to tyranny to climate change – are discussed in Negri’s work, except to claim that the poor are ‘more alive’, and the citizens of liberal democracies are living under the ‘real tyranny’, and… oh, I give up. It’s not just that this preacher of Empire has no clothes; he is living in an intellectual nudist colony. There are some important anti-globalisation writers, such as Monbiot and Joseph Stiglitz. But Negri is trying to keep alive a patient – Marxism – whose heart stopped beating long ago. So, this is where revolutionary Marxism comes to die. It has been reduced to an obscure parlour game for ageing bourgeois nostalgics, played out a few feet from Buckingham Palace by an old terrorist who needs us to forget.”

The philosopher as dangerous liar | Patrick West
http://tinyurl.com/3jsvt
“In his 1977 pamphlet Forget Foucault, the eminent French social historian Jean Baudrillard argued that Foucault’s writings are themselves discourses in power that impose their own narrative, projecting their own will to truth. Those who lionise this ‘author’ today, devoted as they are to this source of power-knowledge, continue to contradict themselves. Perhaps it is time to take heed of Baudrillard’s exhortation. Perhaps it is time to forget Foucault.”

Feeling sorry for Rosalind Krauss | Roger Kimball
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/11/may93/krauss.htm
“It is easy to be exasperated with Rosalind Krauss. She is pretentious, obscurantist, and mean-spirited. Enjoying a position of great academic respect, she has, through her writings, teaching, and editorship of October, exercised a large and baneful influence on contemporary writing and thinking about culture. In the end, however, one’s exasperation is likely to be mixed with pity. Here is a woman who has devoted her professional life to art and ideas but who clearly has no feeling for art and for whom ideas are ghostly playthings utterly cut off from reality.” Article date May 1993

The Derrida Industry | Brian Leiter
http://leiterreports.typepad.com/blog/2004/10/the_derrida_ind.html
“Of course, even Wittgenstein and Heidegger are controversial choices, though in terms of sheer impact, they are plainly in a wholly different league from Derrida, so much so that anyone knowledgeable about 20th-century European and Anglophone philosophy and intellectual culture must laugh out loud at Professor Taylor’s dishonest hyperbole. (Why do those in literary studies think the intellectual world revolves around their once proud discipline, now enfeebled by three decades of bad philosophy, bad history, and bad social science?) […]If he had become a football player as he had apparently hoped, or taken up honest work of some other kind, then we might simply remember him as a ‘good man.’ But he devoted his professional life to obfuscation and increasing the amount of ignorance in the world: by ‘teaching’ legions of earnest individuals how to read badly and think carelessly. He may have been a morally decent man, but he led a bad life, and his legacy is one of shame for the humanities.” NOTE: a blog posting taking Mark Taylor’s opinion piece (orignally in the New York Times and readable here) to task for his ‘dishonest hyperbole’ with a breakdown and argument with his points.

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 10 December 2004 @ 6:30 PM

04w50:1 Frank Zappa on Crossfire

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 50 number 1 (Frank Zappa on Crossfire)

A trip back to 1986 revisiting the censorship debates of the time. I have a feeling this video has recently been posted on iFilm because Zappa at one point says that the country is heading toward a fascistic theocracy. This debate on limiting freedom of speech itself validates freedom of speech, because Zappa is so reasonable and the other guest(John Lofton) makes an ass of himself, which is more devasting in my mind to just having him shut up. And who is John Lofton? Info on him is here, http://www.hisglory.us/articles/lofton_bio.htm where you’ll find this, which pretty much explains everything: “And he never went to college which is why he is so smart.” – Timothy

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Frank Zappa on Crossfire | iFilm
http://www.ifilm.com/viralvideo?ifilmid=2658805
Real Media stream, 21.18 min

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 10 December 2004 @ 6:12 PM