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Archive for August, 2010

Mankind’s local view of history

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

I talked about it before and some, but the concept is so interesting to me that I need to elaborate.

I believe that it is intrinsic in human nature to possess a kind of confirmation bias, extrapolating severely limited set of data points (say, the time span of one generation) to make statements about timeless truths, concepts lasting for very long time frames. In other words, we all have a kind of local view of history which is causing us to make incorrect assumptions about the past, or is preventing us from questioning things enough to make good predictions about the future.

There are numerous examples to support this idea. Until about 2006, the general populace was convinced that housing prices will always go up. We fear of terrorists taking over planes but forget that in the seventies, plane hijackings were rather common. We love good food but just fifty years ago Americans considered food to be a rather utilitarian exercise.

It is commonly thought (and by “It is thought” I mean “at some point we all thought that, even if now we may not admit it because of a certain pressure from those who tend to expose common conceptions as myths who may make us appear stupid”) that the Middle Ages were by and large a waste — several centuries of backwardness. However, I believe that we think that only because we live in a technophiliac age where one assigns value to a very specific kind of progress that was, admittedly, absent in the Middle Ages. This is most likely coupled with a phenomenon in which we conveniently forget that progress has an exponential nature — sure, the Renaissance seemed like a huge step forward, but it very likely needed to be bootstrapped by a much slower progress that was brewing in the centuries before it (plus, following the Durants in the Lessons of History, “Sometimes we feel that the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, which stressed mythology and art rather than science and power, may have been wiser than we, who repeatedly enlarge our instrumentalities without improving our purposes”). But, even more fundamentally, our belief in progress is an even more deeply rooted assumption about the human race. Can we extrapolate it into the future? Will we always aim towards progress? What if we deplete our natural resources?

And how about political systems? We think of monarchy as a less developed, more primitive form of government that suffers from a lot of problems that we have since managed to mitigate with other systems. But again, this is just confirmation bias: we were raised in a culture that relishes in the importance of democracy. We seem to think that democracy will reign forever — or at least, that monarchy will never come back. But that doesn’t have to be the case (Frank Herbert was onto something). It doesn’t have to be the case because the path between concept and execution is chaotic — small variations in the original assumptions can lead to massive differences in execution, so what seems like a massive problem with monarchy in the context of eighteenth-century world citizen’s worldview may easily be solvable with twenty-first-century’s tools and mindset. For example yes, there is potential for abuse, but what if we use technology to limit it just as technology today ensures we don’t abuse some of the privileges given to us. Once we solve these problems (which centuries of oppression have brought to the foreground), the underlying framework may provide a much more efficient way to stabilize the society (in fact, I’ve always thought that democracy is ostentatiously very inefficient — just think about the years of training, campaigning, and money spent by the candidate who loses the elections).

That’s exactly the problem with extrapolation: it assumes that some phenomenon can be approximated well with a linear model. So long as the extrapolation is minimal, most phenomena do behave pretty nicely: if today we’re burning up coal like crazy, tomorrow we are also likely to use up a lot of it. But it does not necessarily follow that in fifty years we will. Extrapolation over a long time window is unable to take into account the interactions of the thousands of variables that affect the outcomes we’re trying to predict.

History, or social sciences in general, suffer from this problem particularly much, precisely because there are so many variables at play (i.e. the systems they try to explain are so chaotic). In a way, one of my biggest realizations was that social sciences are enormously more complex than exact sciences because the latter have the liberty of operating on kiddie worlds where everything can be controlled and measured and there are relatively few degrees of freedom. It’s only when we move on to sciences that rely on inaccurate, nondeterministic and complex objects, such as economics (struggling with the complexity of human nature when applied to incentive-driven behavior), politics (struggling with the complexity of understanding the impact of policies on e.g. economics) and history (struggling with the complexity stemming from the interplay of a number of economic, political and social factors with individuals and their decision-making process), that the number of variables increases beyond our comprehension. Those models are nowhere near linear, so let’s not extrapolate.

There are some positive consequences of the abandonment of superfluous extrapolation. It is not necessarily the case that food will look less and less like food — in fact, we are slowly starting to see people go back to natural sources of food, from organic food to CSAs to growing their own vegetables. We may run out of rare earth metals in twenty years, but that doesn’t necessarily imply armageddon.

Is the Bible listed as Fiction or Non-fiction?

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

What about each of its parts, since it is a collection of works?

Powerful dreams

Monday, August 16th, 2010

I wish I could remember my dreams more; they are fascinating. I keep discovering new states of mind, new feelings through the dreams I’m having.

Recently I woke up, panting. Just a moment seconds earlier, out of nowhere, a feeling came to me in my dream. I dreamt of something indescribable. It was akin to being in the presence of pure evil, something that permeated me yet had no form of its own. It was terrifying.

Song Lyrics

Monday, August 16th, 2010

I’ve always appreciated songs for their music than their lyrics. In fact, I couldn’t even tell you what some of my favorite songs are about. I think this may have something to do with the fact that I don’t absorb lyrics — maybe it has to do with the fact that I wasn’t born and raised surrounded by the English language. It’s also probably one of the reasons I find poetry difficult to take in.

This is interesting because it means that there is this entire dimension to music that I can’t see that others see. What is it like? Is appreciating music for its lyrics like seeing color after a lifetime of color-blindness?

Socially conscious capitalism?

Friday, August 13th, 2010

I’m going to go out on a limb and suggest that capitalism isn’t fundamentally flawed, and perhaps it’s worth just fine-tuning it a little to solve some of its problems (such as inequality and lack of social awareness and identity).

A large portion of our disposable capital and time (especially when we’re young) goes to entertainment and our pastimes. We spend a large number of money after work, looking for something to keep us engaged. What if it was social norm to give back to the society instead of spending the time and money on oneself? Not a requirement, but something seen as a way to fit in (just like trendy clothing) or a way to pass time (like watching TV)?

The Dramatic… Depressing of the Button

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

The pop culture taught us the drama of a button press. Be it a doorbell that the stranger rings on a rainy night, or a nuclear weapon being launched by the Army commander, the culminating moment happens when the button is pressed.

Which is why it was somewhat shocking for me to realize that with buttons on a computer screen, what triggers an action is not the moment the button is pressed, but the moment it is released. Once you press the button, you can still change your mind — simply move the cursor away. This creates a very different kind of drama — in a way a slightly diminished one, as we have one more chance to rethink what we’re doing, but also a more suspenseful one, as the thing that now separates us from the action is a natural state — a release of a button, the removal of a hand from the mouse key.

Fake News: Mixing sodas

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

There are reports of middle school kids all over the U.S. getting high in a new, legal kind of way. Apparently some of more than fifty Coca Cola and Pepsi flavors, when mixed together and heated up, synthesize a powerful chemical similar in its structure to THC, the main ingredient in marijuana. Which precise soda flavors need to be mixed, in which proportions and the details of the heating process are unclear; the “recipe,” as the youths impudently call it, has managed to be kept secret among the fourteen-year-olds, just like the contents of their diaries, despite the likely popularity such a revelation would cause the potential whistle-blowers (or — experts argue — precisely because of the embarrassment such a revelation would cause the potential whistle-blowers).

Our reporters scoured the Web looking for further explanation; however, seeing as there are about thirty-five hundred Facebook groups, each of which claims to be named after the recipe, it is unclear whether the information will see the light of day.

The spokespersons at Coca Cola Co., and Pepsi Co. refused to comment on this speculation.

In Fairfield County, Connecticut, local government officials, prompted by pressure from the wives of several affluent residents, said that, pending the verification of the reports, they would begin drafting legislature aimed at limiting sales of certain combinations of flavors. More drastic measures include the introduction of regulations that prevent young people below the age of 21 from purchasing sodas, or a ban of certain flavors altogether.

Watching TV

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

I don’t really watch TV, but a few nights ago I spent a couple of hours watching some late-night programming. That TV has a unique power to draw the viewer in and not let go had been clear to me, but it was only then that I understood an important reason for that, at least for me.

When we watch TV, we can judge.

We judge everything, from kitchen shows to commercials. We make instant decisions about what we like and what we don’t like. We judge without being judged, and, even better (thanks to TV’s feedback-less nature), without ever figuring out (or needing to know) whether our judgments are right. For example, I saw all but the very ending of a show titled “24 Hour Restaurant Battle” (not a particularly imaginative name) where two teams compete to create a restaurant in 24 hours. The show makers gave me ample opportunity to make my judgments: this chef had a moment of panic here, that waiter tripped and fell, and so on. I ended up turning the TV off just before the verdict was given, and I realized that I couldn’t care less about the actual result. In fact, I remembered, the show just before it, “Iron Chef”, took nearly one hour to show me the competition and, subsequently, rushed through the conclusion in the last 7 seconds of the show. I barely had time to review the scores given to both contestants.

We want an opportunity to judge without the responsibility to judge well; and so as such, TV creates this little bubble, my own instance of the world where I’m right and nobody can tell me otherwise.

Britain’s Monarchy

Friday, August 6th, 2010

The Brits faced the impossible challenge. They couldn’t have kept their old political system in a new democratized world. But an empire so renowned for (and deriving so much of its strength from) its monarchy could not simply have abolished it. They’ve done a brilliant thing and invented a new kind of balance, one that combines the best of two worlds: the short-term stability of a democracy (giving people the impression that they are empowered to control their own destiny) and the long-term stability (having a uniting figure, a symbol to be proud of and worship–as the desire to worship is in my opinion one of the most fundamental traits of mankind).

The Actual Boston Subway Map

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Being a son of a seafarer, I developed a kind of fascination with being on the sea, and with maps. It is because of the latter (and because I happened to live in Boston, and because I didn’t quite like how MBTA imitated Harry Beck, and because I always wanted to know how far it actually between the different subway stops) that in 2005 I decided to make an actual Boston subway map, that is, a geographically-accurate map of all subway stops.

It was several years ago — I believe MBTA may have added a few subway stops since then, and you can also see all these stops on Google Maps, but there’s something elegant in the simplicity of my diagram. It’s also a good case study of Google Maps, scripting and LaTeX.

The idea was to find all the subway stops on a map downloaded from Google Maps using the locations of the stops as reported by MBTA (as you can imagine, it was a humongous pain to click on every single station map to figure out where to actually plot each station), and put the coordinates of each station in a LaTeX file that would generate the pdf image of the subway map. I used pstricks, which is a great LaTeX package for drawing graphics.

The following tcsh script downloads the relevant quadrants from Google Maps and creates an HTML file that displays all the quadrants on one large page. The URL format for the quadrants has changed since 2005 but you get the idea:

get.tcsh

Then I opened the large map in Photoshop and figured out the coordinates of each subway station and turned them into a LaTeX file:

mbta.txt and mbta.tex

Finally, I ran LaTeX to generate the following pdf file (click on the file to download the pdf):

The actual Boston T Map