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May 05, 2008Assorted Link Roundup, May 2008
Without style or grace. Wolfgang Beirl explains why financial engineers (like the ones I've been teaching this semester) are also known as "rocket scientists". There are connections here to Wolfgang's thoughts on telephones and the foundations of statistics. Man's role in changing the face of the Earth dep't.: Ben Fry's map of the 48 contiguous states, showing only streets and roads. Everything else, astonishingly, emerges from that. (Via Unfogged.) The radical right revives the theory of magical kingship propounded by Sir J. G. Frazer in The Golden Bough, in which the health of the land is sympathetically tied to the character of the ruler, as an account of the American presidency, and correspondingly prophecies doom, doom, DOOM! should Hillary be elected. Illustrated with kittens. Note: WorldNetDaily, unlike the Landover Baptist Church, is not a parody. (I've mentioned them before.) Speaking of signs of the apocalypse, Thomas "The Baffler" Frank is now writing op-eds for the Wall Street Journal. (Via Aaron Swartz.) Mind Hacks offers two neurologically-themed tattoos, observing of the second that it produces "a markedly different effect, despite the fact it resides in the same location". Steve Laniel and Tom Slee review Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody. You have probably already seen or read Shirky's talk "Gin, Television and Social Surplus". His social history is over-simplified, and I get a bit leery of my own response to things which push my buttons so thoroughly, but nonetheless — preach it, brother Clay, preach it! Brooks Simpson, in an interview with the Southern Poverty Law Center, briskly shreds various lies about the US Civil War and the Confederacy propagated by modern apologists for "treason in defense of slavery". Via Abiola Lapite, who has a good post on the genetics of height. Sierpinski cookies (via Dave Feldman). Because I am a mean and vicious person, I take great pleasure at reading Kathy G. toy with someone who pretends to know something about economics (1, 2, 3, 4). G. is a public-spirited person, so when she says "I write about economic theory because I believe it is Really. Fucking. Important. Bad economic models make for bad economic policies.", I believe her. But I enjoy reading her for the sheer pleasure in the evisceration. Similarly, I think that in a juster world, Camille Paglia would now be remembered only as the occasion for this 1991 Molly Ivins essay. Kit Whitfield explains the concept of a "Macho Sue": A disagreeable variant of Mary Sue, often found in action films, cop shows and the more battly kind of science fiction. While Mary Sue is a fictional character who bends the universe around herself with her amazing specialness, Macho Sue bends the universe around his manhood. He has a particular ability to get away with behaviour that would be considered bad in a woman — to the point of behaviour that would be considered typically female by a misogynist if displayed by a woman.She instances (the characters played by) John Wayne, but, oddly enough, neglects to mention Achilles. Further on the literary-critical vein, a remarkably funny, yet thoroughly horrifying, review of a set of novels I will not be reading. It ends thus The PALADIN OF SHADOWS series is arguably the most horrifying series of books I have ever read. It has a hero I can't stand, politics so strong they're comical, and sex scenes that are downright horrifying. And I cannot stop reading it. I am going to buy every single one, and if Ringo ever comes out with a spin-off featuring Katya as Cottontail the Bionic Whore, I will buy that too. Because dammit, there's bad, and then there's so bad you have to memorialize it for future generations.but you really need to read what comes before it to get the full effect. The reaction by the author of the books in question is — startling. (Via Kate Nepveu.) Thematically not-unrelated, an experiment with a famous comic book author. (For the record, I liked Ronin well enough when I read it as a teenager, but generally haven't seen what there was to get excited about in Miller's work; at most a "lower and distorted form" of a general theme.) Second in our series of great moments in Afghan Buddhism: the earliest known oil paintings may be from Bamiyan (via Matthew Berryman). You should read Existence Is Wonderful. She changes my mind about things. I become more and more convinced that one of the keys to understanding our intellectual life is the Skolnick Effect. It is hard to understand the success of neuromarketing otherwise, for example. It's not that functional brain imaging can't be scientifically useful (I'm involved in some projects myself), but the level of the usual study which gets popular attention is to tell us, on the basis of tiny samples, that some part of the brain is differentially activated by thoughts of attaining money, chocolate, justice and sex and/or dirty pictures. (That last link in particular offers a glimpse into a remarkable clusterfuck of bad science journalism amplifying sloppy thinking.) At this point what you are really learning is that there isn't a straightforward mapping from our psychological concepts to paticular brain regions, which is something the neuropsychologists have been trying to tell you for quite a while now. You can even say it with math, but that doesn't seem to make people any more inclined to listen. Worse, the journalists — and even many of the scientists — seem incapable of separating "implemented in the brain" from "innate". (A recent offender, via Abiola. [It wouldn't surprise me in the least if some sense of social hierarchy is innate in human beings — with all the disclaimers about what such statements mean hereby incorporated by reference — but the point is that the results reported are completely irrelevant to the question of innateness.]) I realize we have thousands of years of ingrained ideas about mind-body dualism and human nature to work through here, but honestly, people, could we at least get into the eighteenth century? All our thoughts and actions involve our brains somehow; detecting them in the brain with current technology says nothing about their being innate, unless you want to seriously say that the rules of chess are hard-wired into our genomes. But if I pursue this further I will get into the bog of free will, and the idiotic conclusions about it people draw from weird experiments... (Meanwhile, the fact that people can get papers in Science out of the astonishing prediction that territorial ethnic conflict requires the geographic proximity of (self-perceived) ethnic groups, and is rare in locales where one group is an overwhelming majority, suggests that there is a version of the Skolnick Effect involving toy-model simulations.) The newly-risen Fafblog shows that prophetic parody is the only way to keep up with the real news. Carlos Yu has, sadly, stopped blogging. I feel a bit bad because I always liked his stuff and rarely told him so. I will miss very much the only blogger capable of writing about ancient Sanskrit plays featuring "creepy horny drunk carnivorous beggars covered in human ash, accompanied by hott chick acolytes, carrying around someone's skull, asking you for money" (parenthetically adding "I think they used to squat in Tompkins Square Park"); the grand unified theory of wingnuts; Garry Wills; paleobiochemistry; football and other pure products of America; and God knows what else. I hope that, like Fafblog, he will one day return. A while back, Brad DeLong linked to a parody of Thomas Aquinas's proofs of the existence of God, Five Ways of Proving the Existence of Santa Claus. This is ridiculous, of course, but really not much more so than such serious topics treated by the Angelic Doctor as the relation of the saints to the damned (the saints in Heaven will see the suffering of the damned perfectly; will have no pity towards them; and will in fact rejoice in their suffering); whether the weeping of the damned will be corporeal (yes, but there will be no tears); and whether the damned will be in material darkness: The disposition of hell will be such as to be adapted to the utmost unhappiness of the damned. Wherefore accordingly both light and darkness are there, in so far as they are most conducive to the unhappiness of the damned. Now seeing is in itself pleasant for, as stated in Metaph. i, "the sense of sight is most esteemed, because thereby many things are known." On which note, I have a final exam to give. Linkage; The Commonwealth of Letters; Minds, Brains, and Neurons; The Natural Science of the Human Species; The Beloved Republic; Afghanistan and Central Asia; The Dismal Science; Math; Learned Folly; The Running-Dogs of Reaction; The Continuing Crises; Philosophy; Psychoceramics Posted by crshalizi at May 05, 2008 16:59 | permanent link
April 30, 2008Books to Read While the Algae Grow in Your Fur, April 2008
Posted by crshalizi at April 30, 2008 23:59 | permanent link
May Day 2008: Strike Against the War
What follows is a letter my friend John Burke has been circulating to friends. John used to blog as "reprieved" a.k.a. "rootlesscosmo", but gave that up. I wish he'd start again; but in the meanwhile I have his permission to reprint this. I well remember how indignant a lot of antiwar people were at US organized labor's late, feeble, and sometimes dead wrong positions during the Vietnam War. Much of the then AFL-CIO leadership supported the war (though this support grew less vocal as the war dragged on under a Republican administration); so did a lot of union members, notably the building trades "hard hats" who waded into an antiwar rally in Manhattan in 1969. There were exceptions, including the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) on the West Coast and, eventually, the United Auto Workers and a number of public employee unions; there was a labor coalition against the war, which formed a contingent at rallies, bought ads in the print media, and lent support to antiwar candidates. The only thing I have to add is that when John says "my United Transportation Union button", he means "the button of the union I belonged to during the more than a quarter century I worked on the railroads". Manual trackback: Chaotic Soliloquy; Stripes with Plaid Posted by crshalizi at April 30, 2008 16:55 | permanent link
April 24, 2008Putting the CART before the Horse-Race
Finally, from Amanda Cox at the Times, a decision tree students can believe in (click for full size): ![]() Now, if I wanted to be a hobby-horse-riding pedant, I would compare this to a regression of vote-share on these covariates, and ask you rhetorically which one was easier to understand, and which gave more of a misleading impression of being more than a summary description; but I'll save that for the poor souls who take data mining in the fall. (This is from the 16th; it would be interesting to see how it changed after last Tuesday. Not that I'm bitter.) Local interest note: Ms. Cox will be judging the final-project posters produced by the students in Prof. Nugent's graphics and visualization class (36-315), next Friday, 2 May, 12:30 to 1:20 pm in Porter Hall 125C. Friendly, non-psychotic visitors are welcome. Via Flowing Data, via K. (Owing to the silly limits of the Times archives, I can't find the direct link to the story!) Manual trackback: A Well, With Two Buckets Posted by crshalizi at April 24, 2008 09:20 | permanent link
April 23, 2008Posted by crshalizi at April 23, 2008 10:31 | permanent link
April 22, 2008Voting will continue until morale improves (Public Service Announcement)
If you (1) live in Pennsylviana, (2) are registered to vote and (3) are not sure about where to vote, what to bring, etc., votesPA.com has the information you are looking for. Manual trackback: Cranial Darwinism. Posted by crshalizi at April 22, 2008 16:07 | permanent link
Chaos, Complexity, and Inference (36-462): Lecture Notes
This page will be updated as the semester goes on, if you want to use this RSS feed to track them. Alternately, lecture notes will be linked to on the course syllabus, which includes the readings.
Corrupting the Young; Complexity; Enigmas of Chance; Networks Posted by crshalizi at April 22, 2008 16:03 | permanent link
April 19, 2008"Thou Shalt Not Follow a Multitude to Do Evil"From William R. Cross, The Burned-Over District: The Social and Intellectual History of Enthusiastic Religion in Western New York, 1800--1850 (reprint; New York: Harper, 1965, pp. 81--82): The whole tribe of Yorkers exhibited a trait which bears on the nature of Burned-Over District credulity. It ranks in importance with the canniness and moral intensity customarily attributed to Yankees and relates to both, but has been less noticed because it is difficult to define and isolate. Against the "holy enterprise of minding other people's business," which produced a marked community-mindedness, these folk balanced a stubborn intrspection in the fashioning of personal beliefs, which recognized no authority this side of Heaven. Frank curiosity, pride in independent thinking, a feeling that action should be motivated by sound logic and never by whimsy, a profound skepitcism of any rationalization looking to less than the supposed ultimate good of society, and, once arrived at, an overweening confidence in one's own judgment — all these attitudes differently demonstrate the same trait. The mores of the community must definitely be observed when established and agreed upon, but in practice they remained forever open to challenge and subject to revision. No apology was required for unorthodoxy dictated by conscience in conference with Scripture; rather, any difference from custom created a compelling obligation for the individual to press toward conformity with his own new light.Cross goes on in a footnote to add that "Certain angles of [this trait] survive the generations of Yankee descendants, and my discussion of it is based in part upon observation of acquaintances, my family, and myself". Posted by crshalizi at April 19, 2008 18:11 | permanent link
April 14, 2008The End of the Age
![]() Vanquished, the hero sails into the west, but legend says that he will return when his people's peril is most dire. (The legend does not say whether that was a promise or a threat.) (Photo via Warren Ellis, who got it from English Russia) Posted by crshalizi at April 14, 2008 11:16 | permanent link
April 11, 2008Solvitur ambulando
A: Hey, you over there, the one walking! You're doing it
wrong.
Disclaimer: A is the one with the weird Batavophobia, not me. Manual trackback: Vukutu Posted by crshalizi at April 11, 2008 20:11 | permanent link
April 10, 2008Behold the Masses (Next Week at the CMU Statistics Seminar)
Attention conservation notice: Publicity for a talk at CMU next week. Of limited interest if you're not free and in Pittsburgh at 4 pm on Monday the 14th. We are very happy to have Nathan Eagle, of the Media Lab and SFI, as our seminar speaker next week, talking about the extremely cool work he's been doing on some extremely large social networks.
The talk is of course free and open to the public; come if it sounds interesting (unless you're like some people who attend talks in Santa Fe [not that Nathan's work is remotely comparable to Sheldrake's]). Posted by crshalizi at April 10, 2008 08:40 | permanent link
April 01, 2008He Is Risen
Fafblog has returned to us. Long live the new era of Fafno-Gibletsian rule over the cosmos! Posted by crshalizi at April 01, 2008 17:03 | permanent link
March 31, 2008Books to Read While the Algae Grow in Your Fur, March 2008I slacked off on posting this until mid-April, if anyone cares about why it's out of sequence.
Posted by crshalizi at March 31, 2008 23:59 | permanent link
March 17, 2008Career Advising Day
Attention Conservation Notice: Another thousand-odd-word rant about reactionary idiots pretending to be scientists. Contemplating the writings of the now-deservedly-forgotten Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, the late, great Peter Medawar was driven to observe that "Just as compulsory primary education created a market catered for by cheap dailies and weeklies, so the spread of secondary and latterly tertiary education has created a large population of people, often with well-developed literary and scholarly tastes, who have been educated far beyond their capacity to undertake analytical thought." (Whether that is a trained incapacity is itself a nice question.) Some of those people, owing to those tastes, pursue careers in academic research; the problem for them is that they are not actually very good at what they are supposed to do, which is come up with novel, insightful, important, precise, and accurate findings. Suppose that you are such a person, and that you do not want to switch to some other line of work to which you might be better suited. What to do? Perhaps the best thing which could happen to you would be to run across a new and controversial theory which speaks to you at a deep level, both intellectually and temperamentally. If you are what William James called "tender-minded", like Teilhard de Chardin, then Medawar has already mapped out your trajectory, though nowadays the Templeton Foundation would likely be involved. If instead you are what James called "tough-minded" — "materialistic, pessimistic, irreligious, fatalistic, sceptical" — then edification-through-obfuscation is not an option, but it wouldn't even occur to you. Instead, you take your theory and you write papers about it, where you make claims about lots of hot-button topics, especially sex and current political controversies. The papers seem to carry the signs of rigor, but are actually deeply fallacious — maybe you see this, but are so convinced the conclusions are right you don't care, or maybe you're so convinced of the conclusions you can't see the errors. (There is some peer-reviewed venue where you can publish almost arbitrarily sloppy papers, so getting into print won't be a problem.) Then — and this is the key — you start promoting your papers, and find that more salacious and provocative your spin on them, the bigger the response. Your possibly-unconscious shamelessness about publishing rubbish will not only give you an advantage in sheer publications over other mediocre scholars who happen to have an intellectual conscience, but will also get you media attention. The reason it will get you media attention, and credibility with the media, is that they will see your institutional affiliation and your peer-reviewed papers, and so you become not just another crank but a Serious Scholar Contributing to the Debate. The whole package — carelessness, provocation and publicity — is wonderfully self-reinforcing, so you write even more careless papers, with yet more provocative conclusions, which you push even harder. (As a wise woman once said, "No one ever forgets how to do something that's worked for them in the past.") With a bit of luck, book contracts, magazine columns, etc., will follow in their train. Your career becomes like two drunks supporting each other as they stagger down the street: neither crappy academic research nor media presence could stand up on their own, but together they can lurch and shamble in glorious, glorious inebriated freedom, bellowing about the fierce joys to be found in facing what's revealed by the harsh light of your pseudo-scientific prejudices. Ladies, gentlemen, and distinguished others, I give you Dr. Satoshi Kanazawa of the London School of Economics, the Fenimore Cooper of sociobiology, a man who has leveraged an inability to do data analysis or understand psychometrics into an official blog at Psychology Today, where he gets to advocate genocidal nuclear war as revenge for 9/11. He seems to mean it, rather than be fukayaming. His argument — to the extent that it is an argument and not just a
wish-fulfillment fantasy — has to do with
his earlier
attempt to explain "why most suicide bombers are Muslims". Leave to one
side whether his attempted explanation is coherent, two things strike one on
reading that. The first is his near-total disconnection from the literature
on, precisely, the causes and motivations of suicide bombing — no
Sageman,
no Pape,
the only mention
of Scott
Atran
(an actual
evolutionary psychologist,
and very
aware of the problems with the kind of crude ad hominid argument
Kanazawa pushes) basically misses Atran's point, etc. The second is that the
fact he is trying to explain something which isn't true: the tactic I don't know of any systematic data on whether James's distinction between tender-minded and tough-minded thinkers really holds up, but at the level of casual empiricism it's pretty persuasive, and I fall very much on the tough-minded end of the spectrum. I find that sort of position persuasive, but at the same time it takes only a minimal amount of self-knowledge (certainly that's all I've got) to realize that it exposes one to certain characteristic errors or temptations. One of them is self-congratulation at being, precisely, so tough-minded. And one prominent expression of that is a delight in one's superior ability to perceive things as, supposedly, they really are, stripped of sentimental ornament; more than that, a delight in imagining how the tender-minded will be shocked by having to confront these realities. It is especially a delight in reductionism, not as a productive if not inevitable explanatory strategy, but as a series of "nothing-but" claims. This is one of our characteristic forms of wishful thinking, just as much devising imaginary consolations for real sufferings is a characteristic of the tender-minded. With these thoughts in mind, I invite you to read the conclusion of Kanazawa's article on suicide bombers: Maybe the Muslim suicide bombings are not "terrorist" acts, as the term is usually used. Maybe it has nothing to do with Israel or the American and British troops. Maybe it's all about sex, as everything else in life is. Men do everything they do in order to get laid (Kanazawa, 2003). Maybe young Muslim men are no exceptions.Satoshi, mon semblable, mon frère: whoever she is, I really hope the sex is worth it. Obligatory disclaimers:
Credits: Kanazawa's blog found via the appropriately dumbfounded reaction of Michael Meadon. I owe the insights, and much of the phrasing, of my second paragraph to a correspondent who prefers to keep their name out of this. Manual trackback: Entertaining Research; Ionian Enchantment; Pharyngula; 3 Quarks Daily; Soob; Flagrancy to Reason; O Hermenauta Learned Folly; The Continuing Crisis; The Natural Science of the Human Species; The Running-Dogs of Reaction Posted by crshalizi at March 17, 2008 15:05 | permanent link
Follow the Oil Money!
Via Skye Bender-deMoll, an old acquaintance from Santa Fe days, a lovely little example of network mapping and the visual display of quantitative information in the service of the public good: Follow the Oil Money. This website lets you track the network of campaign donations from the oil industry, in its various tentacles, to U.S. politicians, with nifty pictures and charts.
As Skye explains, while all this information is a matter of public record, available from the FEC, working with that data is surprisingly hard. (I didn't appreciate just how hard when I wrote this.) Skye and his collaborator Greg Michalec have done a really impressive job of making this accessible. The result is good for hours and hours of entertainment and enlightenment, even if you think that it's all about constitutionally-protected and democratically legitimate freedom of speech, in the form of dollars, on the part of the companies. (Incidentally, if you do think that, please contact me about exciting business opportunities in Lagos.) It would be fascinating, if perhaps scary, to see a parallel website for military contractors. Manual trackback: Three Quarks Daily; Media Theory for the 21st Century; The Monkey Cage; Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference, and Social Science Posted by crshalizi at March 17, 2008 14:04 | permanent link
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