abailart

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Climate blah blah in a cornflake
abailart
by abailart  Yesterday 4:26 AM   
 There are, of course, rigorous and ongoing scientific enterprises which interrogate any stable models and theories of climate change, just how science should be. And if the likes of Bush and Blair lied so viciously you'd be right to query anything that governments say.
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Personality Types in Cyberspace
abailart
by abailart  12-14-2009    2
 With a strong predilection towards disagreeing with people, their messages in email and discussion board groups often begin and are peppered throughout with words like "but" and "however." A more subtle oppositional message may start off with "well" or the namesake "yes but." Psychodynamic theory proposes that these people struggle with underlying feelings of hostility that can only be expressed passively or indirectly, via the act of disagreeing. They also may need to oppose others as a way to firm up their somewhat fragile identity or to boost self-esteem by proving themselves right and others mistaken. People with oppositional tendencies may be drawn to the intellectually contentious atmosphere of online discussion groups. That atmosphere, combined with the difficulties in establishing one's presence in a somewhat chaotic environment that lacks the identity-grounding cues of face-to-face contact, may also amplify oppositional tendencies.
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100 Incredible Lectures from the World’s Top Scientists
Socratoad
by Socratoad  12-14-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Hugh Laurie, Schopenhauer, and the art of life
abailart
by abailart  12-14-2009   
 No Remarks
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The Psychology of Cyberspace
abailart
by abailart  12-12-2009    1
 John Suler, Ph.D. Department of Psychology, Science and Technology Center Rider University. There is a rapidly growing field of 'cyberpsychology': the contents here suggest some of the areas of focus. Clearly, business and marketing research are well represented in studies; another interesting area of study is the social site as a virtual laboratory for studying human personality, motivation,etc; related to the latter the pressing question of how internet relationships (e.g. friendship, group, lover) interact with individuals' lives beyond the internet.
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Deleuze on Difference and Art
syncopath
by syncopath  12-10-2009    1
 pics from Earth as Art. views come through the eyes of Landsat -7 satellite. 1. Pinacate Volcano Field, Mexico. 2. Richat Structure in African desert of auritania. 3. Icefall, Lambert Glacier, Antarctica. 4. Ganges River Delta, India. 5. Volga River Delta flows into the Caspian sea. (you may also refer to it as deterritorialized reflections coming out of our atmosphere ..-))
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Deleuze on Difference and Art
syncopath
by syncopath  12-10-2009    1
 pics taken from Earth as Art. views come through the eyes of Landsat -7 satellite. (you may also refer to it as a deterritorialized reflections coming out of our atmosphere ..-)) 1. Pinacate Volcano Field, Mexico. 2. Richat Structure in African desert of auritania. 3. Icefall, Lambert Glacier, Antarctica. 4. Ganges River Delta, India. 5. Volga River Delta flows into the Caspian sea.
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Some More Routine Deaths
abailart
by abailart  12-8-2009    1
 Draw your own conclusions about the efficacy of western occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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modern poetry
doodleicious
by doodleicious  12-7-2009   
 am clipping this for a writer friend of mine..............
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Us and Them
abailart
by abailart  12-7-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Tolstoy on War and Light
abailart
by abailart  12-5-2009    2
 You say if enemies, such as Germans, Turks, or savages, come to attack you, and if you do not make war, they will kill you all. This is an error. If there were a society of Christians who did no evil to anybody, and who gave the surplus of their labor to others, no enemies, either Germans, Turks, or savages, would torture or kill them. They would take what these Christians (for whom there would exist no difference between Germans, Turks, or savages) would give up to them. If a Christian is called upon to take part in war, that is the moment for him to testify the truth to those who do not know it.
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Abel
abailart
by abailart  12-5-2009   
 Demetrios Capetanakis, poet, philosopher and literary critic, died of an incurable disease in London in 1944, at the age of 32. During that time he completed seventeen poems which John Lehmann calls ‘one of the most astonishing literary achievements I have ever come across.
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Intelligent Discussion Forums
abailart
by abailart  12-3-2009   
 Although they are broadly 'philosophical', the sites I have looked at have categories across a wide range of subjects and ideas. There are several more on the site clipped. The ones I have looked at appear to be stimulating and courteous.
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Walking the Talk
abailart
by abailart  12-1-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Health Care Kills Two Million in a Decade
abailart
by abailart  11-29-2009   
 No Remarks
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US Hospital Errors Kill 200,000 Each Year
abailart
by abailart  11-29-2009   
 Interesting bit of history. I'm sure these days everything is just perfect.
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One in Eight Americans Use Welfare for Food
abailart
by abailart  11-29-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Understanding the psychology of Authoritarianism
Lexica
by Lexica  11-25-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Open Learn Units on Climate Change
abailart
by abailart  11-24-2009   
 Free learning units on climate change.
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Free Open University Courses
abailart
by abailart  11-23-2009    3
 Much more at site.
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Some Precepts of Engaged Buddhism
abailart
by abailart  11-6-2009    3
 No Remarks
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Mediocrity
abailart
by abailart  11-3-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Is Intelligence Sexy?
abailart
by abailart  11-2-2009    6
 <<<Many traits in many species have evolved through sexual selection specifically to function as fitness indicators that reveal good genes and good health. Sexually selected fitness indicators typically show (1) higher coefficients of phenotypic and genetic variation than survival traits, (2) at least moderate genetic heritabilities and (3) positive correlations with many aspects of an animal's general condition, including body size, body symmetry, parasite resistance, longevity and freedom from deleterious mutations. These diagnostic criteria also appear to describe human intelligence (the g factor).>>> (from abstract). So then, is there some sort of mirror neuron circuitry in the brain that excites a cortical g spot?
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The Reassurance of Magic
abailart
by abailart  10-27-2009   
 A very straightforward polemic to chew over between the cornflakes and the coffee. (Certainly, almost anything is better than pop science).
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Defenders of Christianity
abailart
by abailart  10-21-2009    4
 Thank goodness it was all so long ago.
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Introduction to Ancient Greek History
Socratoad
by Socratoad  10-1-2009    3
 No Remarks
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Ratzinger on his way to UK
abailart
by abailart  9-29-2009    1
 No Remarks
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Hard Times: facts
abailart
by abailart  9-29-2009   
 Hrad Times, Charles Dickens (an English novelist. Bah!)
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Ralph Waldo Emerson quote & image
syncopath
by syncopath  9-28-2009    9
 No Remarks
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A Mind All Logic is Like a Knife All Blade.....
abailart
by abailart  9-28-2009    6
 No Remarks
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Metaphors We Live By
abailart
by abailart  9-28-2009    1
 A short step whence to seeing all language as metaphor and metaphor as the meeting of the body and consciousness. Hard to stomach for right-angled rationalists, those who carry tablets of stone truths, number crunchers and those who live in a bricked-up mind. Spot the metaphors.
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Artforms of Nature
einbar
by einbar  9-28-2009   
 The nineteen century German biologist Ernst Haeckel is famous for his fantastically illustrated book Artforms of Nature. The copyright for this book from 1904 has now expired and thanks to Wikimedia Commons it is available for everyone to appreciate. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Is the Internet melting our brains?
abailart
by abailart  9-25-2009    14
 I start with Plato's critique of writing where he says that if we depend on writing, we will lose the ability to remember things. Our memory will become weak. And he also criticizes writing because the written text is not interactive in the way spoken communication is. He also says that written words are essentially shadows of the things they represent. They're not the thing itself. Of course we remember all this because Plato wrote it down -- the ultimate irony. We hear a thousand objections of this sort throughout history: Thoreau objecting to the telegraph, because even though it speeds things up, people won't have anything to say to one another. Then we have Samuel Morse, who invents the telegraph, objecting to the telephone because nothing important is ever going to be done over the telephone because there's no way to preserve or record a phone conversation.
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Anti-Science and Global Warming
abailart
by abailart  9-25-2009    2
 Interesting. Seems to imply that some people without any knowledge of science or any science training 'know' that smoking isn't bad for you etc. If a thousand cardiologists say you need a heart operation and ten scientists paid by a pharma company say you don't who'd you go for?
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Erwin James
miad20
by miad20  9-24-2009    4
 No Remarks
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FDR: electric Power and Health Reform
abailart
by abailart  9-24-2009    1
 <<<The political anger was fierce and unrelenting at this and other Roosevelt initiatives. According to New Deal historian William Edward Leuchtenberg, one US Senator compared the President to the beast of the Apocalypse, "who sets his slimy mark on everything." One enraged citizen wrote to FDR, "If you were a good and honest man, Jesus Christ would not have crippled you." The REA public option survived the frenzy. By the time the juice reached our neighborhood, more than 90 percent of American farms were electrified, nearly all of them by rural electric coops. At the worst of the storm against Roosevelt's initiatives, it seemed there were no limits to incivility. >>>
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A Precious Gift for Lovers of Literature
Socratoad
by Socratoad  9-22-2009   
  The Paris Review Interview Archive "Since 1953, when the first issue of the magazine appeared with an interview of E. M. Forster, our Q&A encounters with the great writers of our times have come to be recognized as a sort of literary genre unto themselves: the Paris Review interview. More than fifty years—and more than three hundred interviews—later, the archive continues to grow with each new issue of the magazine. In November 2006, the first volume of a four-book set of The Paris Review Interviews was celebrated by reviewers across the English-speaking world. In tandem with this publishing project, we offer here online a complete index of every interview ever published, searchable by author and by date—as well as a substantial sampling of the archive’s finest interviews, posted in their entirety. Taken together, these conversations with novelists, poets, playwrights, essayists, biographers, journalists, and critics constitute what Salman Rushdie calls “the finest available inqui
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Free Lectures and Courses...
abailart
by abailart  9-22-2009    3
 This was clipped some time ago by someone to whom I add thanks. Newer clippers may find it interesting. I've detailed the astronomy items as that is what I was searching for.
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Madness and Civilisation
abailart
by abailart  9-22-2009    2
 No Remarks
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Dark Mountain
abailart
by abailart  9-22-2009    1
 No Remarks
— end of the list —

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