Axis 1 – Intensity

A few hours ago, I took the trash out, and had to dump collected weeds out of one of the cans. It has been raining slightly the past few days, so a sort of tea was created in the bottom of the can. The smell was a concentrate of the natural smells I expect from the area, disarming me with an overpowering version of what are usually pleasant smells.

This is the component of a sensory experience that one might mistakenly see as not changing the nature of it – intensity. Louder music isn’t the same music, but louder. It’s different music. A “pleasant” smell is so often nothing but a subtle smell and the opposite with bad and pungent smells. A woman who, noticing her perfume smells good, decides to bathe in it, and your typical modern sound mastering engineer who obsesses with making music loud neglects this fact.

Oh yeah, and how good coffee tastes is well correlated with how hot it is, but that actually has nothing to do with what I’m talking about here.

"Ecology’s Big, Hot Idea"

Increasingly, scientists are applying more math and physics-like tools to biology (nice for me since I think I’m good at math and I shall study biology). The idea of “metabolic ecology” is on the drawing board right now. It’s an attempt to derive equations and constants that can reliably predict things such as body size, temperature, metabolic rate and how they relate to eachother. On one hand, it is a waste of brain power and discovery to constantly be looking at different parts of a whole and not utilizing underlying patterns, but like the critics say, if the ideas require too much patching up to be workable, then they aren’t of much use. We understand biology in good detail and “metabolic ecology” might put too much emphasis on rules. Take your pick: fallacy of everything-is-the-same-whole or fallacy of every-thing-is-a-different-kind.

The Deepest Night: A Yuletide Tale

(reprinted with permission, thanks to Dan Ralph Miller)

On the deepest night a frigid breeze
blows beneath the stars,
As whirling wisps weave winter-elves
across the ice-bound lake,
Half a moon spills brightness on
the snow clad forest floor,
Heaven's helmet wheels wide on
Tiwar's mighty axle-tree.

Grey owl ogles from her skyward seat
in a naked oak,
the hoary hare stops high on his haunches
to whiff the wind,
And the lynx which lays in wait for it
soon forgets its longing,
as rim of heaven rumbles with
the roar a reindeer riot.

Bursting quickly from the brush
quickened quails fly,
Raucous cries arise as creatures
before their time arouse,
And when the thunder threatens
open the heavens to crack,
the din declines and the winter woods
wend back to a peerless quiet.

Swiftly storming swart-clouds
overwhelm the moon,
and the wary wolves wail warnings
from hill to snowy hill,
The forest wights lay low
as even the owl squints to see,
As a frightful flurry whips snow aloft
an icy death of a fog.

Weird and woeful wailings wax into a
harrowing host of howls,
Roar the hooves of a hundred reindeer
rounding the river ice,
At once every snow-flake sent aloft
falls quietly back to earth,
And moonlight stills the air again as if
even the moment is frozen.

A wight now stands in man-like shape with a cloak of grey
and a wide brim hat ,
White-bear fur boots lashed to the knee, with a coat of gold
and a vest of green.
Wind-driven wild are his white hair and beard, with one eye
the summer sky as blue,
and the other as dark as midnight's well, and wise old
hands that a tale would tell.

And when he whistles a simple tune,
from the woods a gaggle of elves emerge,
thirteen in all, both swarthy and bright,
some are quite short and others his height,
"There beyond the beaver dam,
lies a farm where a humble kindred stays,
This year their harvest was hit with blight,
and they've not an apple this Yuletide night"

"You are elves of wide renown,
known for your crafts the nine worlds over,
Surely we can, between us, dream,
of gifts for this family so deserving,
Let them feast like lords the yuletide through,
and send elk for their hunters after this moon.
Let the gifts be at their doorstep,
before the man in the moon tallies up midnight!"

At midnight the man of the house hears a knocking,
and goes to the door-sill to see who comes calling,
He heaves high the door on its iron hinges and is greeted
with a snow-blast that sends him back reeling,
Now he can see on the step there are footprints,
and a big velvet sack had there been forgotten.

He calls for his wife, as if guests she's expecting, she says
"No, but close the damn door if you're pleasing,"
So he hoists up the package and slams shut the door,
and lays it all out on the floor by the fire.
A gold table cloth. A large old drinking horn.
A needle and thread. And a loaf of old pan bread.
"This is all fine and dandy, but where is the cheese?
I was kind of expecting at least something to eat."

His wife is abacked by his words,
"Hush now and don't be quite so uncouth!
Give thanks that somebody left us a gift,
though it may not be what you wanted...
Go and ready yourself for the bed now,
tomorrow you have a long day of hunting,
Don't sully your luck for the hunt by complaining,
we shouldn't go hungry on yuletide."

But when they turn and look back, the cloth
is bedecked with the finest feast an eye can see.
And honey mead pours from the horn
and try as you might it cannot be emptied,
And needle and thread has sewn for them
each a new tunic and slack,
And the old pan-bread has doubled and tripled
enough for a many day hunt.

"By the gods!" he exclaims, "we have been
blessed indeed on this cold Yuletide Eve!
Get the children from bed and fetch cat and dog,
this calls on the spot for a yuletide blot!"
"A gift for a gift" she agrees with a smile,
and gathers the kindred around,
when tucked away between the plates
she sees a wise old wooden whistle.

To her lips once touched comes a mindful tune,
whistled as if by magic,
which catches the ear of Old Man Yule
and his throng of thirteen elves,
He smiles and laughs before turning his cloak,
whipping up a storm of snow,
And soon is gone like a sudden storm,
leaving the owl again to ogle the mouse.

~ ~ ~
By Dan Ralph Miller, Yule, 2004ce

Declining Rate of Technological Innovation?

Okay, so this guy that’s a psychiatrist for the pentagon says that if you plot important technological innovation against population, it peaks in 1873 and goes downhill from there. This isn’t too surprising if it’s true (though I question what he counts as “important technological innovation”) since man has already plucked all the low-hanging fruit and all we have left is weird discoveries that won’t help as much feed anyone or kill anyone. hehe. It does piss me off how the people disagreeing with this guy say “nonsense! Bandwidth and processor speed increase exponentially!” Yeah, they are kinda missing the point. Making a bigger car isn’t an invention. We already have cars!

This also supports the assertion I always make that from this point forward, value will only come from difficult toil. A programmer who only knows VB.net isn’t going to make anything of value and that’s why I encourage you all to learn hard sciences – Physics, Biology and Chemistry. If you must learn computer science, learn the lower-level stuff; learn asm and processor design. Code your own OS. But for Dog’s sake, don’t whip up a script in Perl that hurls random insults or jokes and act as though you accomplished something! Everyone should know Perl. Everyone. Smart people should get busy and get good at science. Or, as Einstein put it:

Try not to become a man of success but rather to become a man of value.

- Albert Einstein

Samuelson

A major influence of mine is an immigrant Swede, John Samuelson that moved into the middle of the desert. To this day, the man’s incorrectly spelled musings can be found carved in rock (I shall not tell you where). Do you not see in the quotes below that he is cut from the same cloth as John Muir?

The rock of Faiht and Truht
Nature is God
The Key to Life is Contact
Evolution is the Mother and Father of Mankind
Without them We Be Nothing

-John Samuelson

Mother Time
Neither wealth laws nor armv’s can stop the human mind
from creating new or improve upon the present day religion and government
Water is soft only hard in the chemicals
But with time the ocean can grind the hardest granite to a powdered sand
So with time will the human race grind
out its own destinys
regardless of the opposition or party in power.

-John Samuelson

Untamed Wilds

Untamed Wilds

I lay
immobilized
another day

I have heard the eerie, joyous yelps of coyotes one last night

I’m weak
I have only to stop breathing for a second
To see the wood’s dark heart,
where the tiny beasts shall feast on my soul
and return it to the soil
and I shall live again among the oaks

I live off centipedes and elderberries
and the nights are fast becoming wicked cold

I can’t let the woods claim me back
As long,
as those fuckers are still alive

Copyright (C) 2005 Thomas Webb and The Happy Buttons.

My Idea

obvious.. Okay, when psychologists try to get a grasp on more generic psychological principles, not merely describing man, they study other animals. But won’t this, too lead to bad assumptions? Most intelligence on this planet is very, very similar. It is mostly:

  • mammalian, or at least vertebrate
  • life
  • native to earth

So… Psychologists can start getting out of their rut by studying cephalopods (octopusen, squids, et cetera).. They at least don’t fit the first thing in the list above. That alone means they violate many assumptions we have about intelligence. They are short-lived & non-social. Just because the genesis of our intelligence was primate social structure doesn’t mean a slimy sea monster that doesn’t even take care of it’s young can’t be wily also. Robot Psychology, on the other hand, I’ll just leave to Dr. Susan Calvin.

この全部言い方が分かりません。タコやイカなど本当に頭が良いですよ。でも、頭がちょっとちがいと思います。