Thursday, April 30, 2009

Items of note

I've been busy starting up a new research project that I intend to present results from at the end of May, so I haven't had time to blog much, but here are a variety of small things that attracted my attention.

I was pleasantly surprised to find that the awesome doxygen source code documentation tool is now even more awesome: starting from version 1.5.5 it can now be used with Fortran! WRITE(6,'(A)') 'Praise the Parser!'

Speaking of programming: Intelligent Design Sort - it never gets old - praise the Sorter!

Pascal Boyer admits he has a problem: he is really interested in crackpots. Admittedly crackpots are a fascinating, if understudied, from a sociological point, but Boyer attempts to remedy this with his analysis of the group. He reproduces the well-known finding that a large fraction of crackpots have engineering backgrounds, but he does make some valid points (that appear obvious in hindsight, as all good analyses should), in particular: "the crackpot alternative is, almost universally, less mathematically challenging than the standard account" and "The crackpot theory is based on textbooks" with no exposure or understanding of actual research literature.

While we're on the subject of cranks, I must admit that I view most flavors of libertarianism with scorn, so I have a soft spot for those uncivil bloggers who ridicule it: Gavin M. over at Sadly, No! dissects Glenn Reynolds's libertarian conservatism and finds feudalism.

Still on the subject of cranks, PFAW dissect Orson Scott Card's absurdist bigotry using the scalpel of sarcasm.
http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/does-national-organization-marriage-want-overthrow-government
I still do not understand why people think "Ender's Game" was great.

Finally dispensing with the crank theme, and moving onto more serious stuff (although with a Speculative Fiction flavor), I could not agree more with the following argument (hat tip io9):
"But the one—the most absolutely key, the rock star green technology—that I champion over all others is birth control: vasectomies, IUDs, the pill, condoms. I don't care which kind you or your family prefers or finds most appropriate, I love them all. Any technology that reduces the absolute number of consumers (and particularly Americans and Europeans who consume the most) now that's a TECHNOLOGY!" — Pump Six And Other Stories author Paolo Bacigalupi, interviewed at EcoGeek.org.
If you, like me, had not previously heard of this Stanley Fish guy the NYT has added to their Opinion section, this (rather old) Slate article "The Indefensible Stanley Fish" by Judith Shulevitz will provide you with some useful background information. (Note clever segue from Speculative Fiction to tedious postmodernist analysis of Fiction.)

Finally some science! Evidence of forethought in Chimpanzees: Ed Yong at Not Exactly Rocket Science nicely summarizes the story of Santino the Chimp's premeditated ammunition collection for later attacks on Zoo visitors.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

NPR

This article at Daily Kos sums up many of the reasons why I haven't bothered listening to NPR since 2004 - their excessive reliance on talking heads from (mainly right wing) Think Tanks, and their credulous acceptance of whatever the pundits say.