I've been bagging Adam Creighton as an unreliable commentator on matters economic for years now - and in a column at The Australian today (which I presume will be making Jason Soon grind his teeth) Adam has gone into bat for the "this has all been an over-reaction" crowd.
In fact, Jason: you seem to be having an all out crisis of confidence as to who on the conservative-ish side of commentary you can possibly trust now. You hate "glibertarians" (fair enough) now but conservatives keep coming up short.
I think you should just give up and just accept my lines: the soft (and harder) Left may be annoying on identity politics, but they don't jeopardise entire planetary populations' safety by denying/downplaying climate change or pandemics because of culture wars and conspiracy ideation. They may (if you can count Democrats as "soft Left" at all) try to play at Middle East interventions in a way that does not always work out, but the entire Muslim world there is a a geo-political nightmare and you can't expect great outcomes. International co-operation on trade and all matters is way, way better than populist nationalism: the fact that a cynical dictator thug like Putin is encouraging the West to break up into nationalist enclaves shows it is obviously the wrong path. And Trump is an absolute idiot of a damaged man and any commentator who defends him in any respect at all deserves to be completely ignored.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Well, that was a bit dull...
A long weekend with nice, warm sunny weather, and no where to go for a drink, or a meal. Even the dog parks are chained up. We did a bit of yard work, and washed a ceiling to get rid of some yellow spotiness that doesn't look like mould, exactly. It's a good question as to what it is - it hasn't appeared in any bathroom, and is worst in the dining room where we sometimes do cooking at the table, but has started to spread into the adjacent living room. Yet I don't think it is happening in the kitchen, which should have the biggest effect from cooking steam or fumes. The spots can be washed off the cornices very well, but not so well off the flat ceiling, although they can be made much fainter. Actually, I see from the internet that you can get yellow mould. It's an annoying problem.
Some other observations:
* Brisbane is feeling as if it has gone into winter dryness already. After a relatively dry summer, this is not a good thing;
* this COVID virus seems to work in really complicated ways, doesn't it? Lots of different effects on the body, and lots of collaboration and note comparing needed still to understand how it usually works. I was reading an ICU doctor's comments about this on twitter yesterday, but didn't save it.
* I continue to think that doctors and nurses who work in hospitals in the US must be the most ropeable people on the planet when they hear conservative scepticism of the seriousness of the issue from the likes of Fox News. If the New York ones could organise a posse to firebomb the Fox News studios, they would only be doing the world a favour.
* I think low rates of new cases in at least Brisbane is starting to make people feel very careless about social distancing at the supermarket. I wore a mask at one on the weekend or the first time, though, but as I was a Vietnamese heavy suburb, lots of other people were too. I didn't find it much of an issue, although not scratching an itchy nose through the outside surface was a challenge.
Some other observations:
* Brisbane is feeling as if it has gone into winter dryness already. After a relatively dry summer, this is not a good thing;
* this COVID virus seems to work in really complicated ways, doesn't it? Lots of different effects on the body, and lots of collaboration and note comparing needed still to understand how it usually works. I was reading an ICU doctor's comments about this on twitter yesterday, but didn't save it.
* I continue to think that doctors and nurses who work in hospitals in the US must be the most ropeable people on the planet when they hear conservative scepticism of the seriousness of the issue from the likes of Fox News. If the New York ones could organise a posse to firebomb the Fox News studios, they would only be doing the world a favour.
* I think low rates of new cases in at least Brisbane is starting to make people feel very careless about social distancing at the supermarket. I wore a mask at one on the weekend or the first time, though, but as I was a Vietnamese heavy suburb, lots of other people were too. I didn't find it much of an issue, although not scratching an itchy nose through the outside surface was a challenge.
Sunday, April 12, 2020
Short movie review: BlacKkKlansman
I don't normally pay any attention to Spike Lee films, but his recent comedy/drama BlacKkKlansman, now on Netflix, is really good.
Based on a true story, I see that it adds one key plot element for drama. (Look it up after you have watched it: there are several articles on the net discussing what's true and what is invented.) But I forgive that: it's just really well made, and I liked the mix of tension as well as humour; and the serious message at the end too.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
It's Easter, so let's talk about...Buddhist emptiness, physics etc
Back in January, you may recall, a robot in a Buddhist temple in Kyoto got me into considering the Heart Sutra, which was the subject of a separate post (which had some interesting comments from my handful of regular readers.)
You might also recall that I had stumbled onto a translation of a book by DT Suzuki about the Swedish 18th century oddball Swedenborg.
So, the connection: the Heart Sutra in English translation has a lot of emphasis on "emptiness", with this key part -
Form is emptiness
and emptiness is form.
Form is not other than emptiness
and emptiness is not other than form.
So is the same for feeling,
perception, mental formation,
and consciousness.
In the afterword to the Suzuki book, by David Loy (who I see is a pretty widely know author on Buddhism), I thought this commentary on "emptiness" was interesting:
OK That clears up everything.*
I see that Wikipedia has a lengthy entry on Nagarjuna (the philosopher, not the Bollywood star), and it talks about how a lot of his philosophising was on "emptiness". This, apparently, is a key saying:
In another interesting bit from Wikipedia, Nagarjuna is considered by some to be neo-Kantian:
The other thing that the Swedenborg book has got me thinking about is Buddhism and non-locality in modern quantum physics. I keep getting the feeling that these might be pretty compatible.
First, a reminder about nonlocality can be found in this pretty good 12 minute explanation of quantum physics, which Youtube conveniently suggested I should watch:
So, how's this tie in with Buddhism? I don't know yet, but there is a very lengthy discussion of it on this page (The Physics of Peace: Quantum Nonlocality and Emptiness) from what looks like a very lengthy website called the Chinese Encyclopaedia of Buddhism. That website seems to be a project started by an Estonian Buddhist who has connections with Australia. How odd.
Anyhow, I'll read it and report back.
Maybe I can factor the emptiness of the tomb and Easter eggs into the story, too. I seem to be turning all EM Foster - "Only connect!"
* Narrator voice: no, it didn't.
You might also recall that I had stumbled onto a translation of a book by DT Suzuki about the Swedish 18th century oddball Swedenborg.
So, the connection: the Heart Sutra in English translation has a lot of emphasis on "emptiness", with this key part -
Form is emptiness
and emptiness is form.
Form is not other than emptiness
and emptiness is not other than form.
So is the same for feeling,
perception, mental formation,
and consciousness.
In the afterword to the Suzuki book, by David Loy (who I see is a pretty widely know author on Buddhism), I thought this commentary on "emptiness" was interesting:
OK That clears up everything.*
I see that Wikipedia has a lengthy entry on Nagarjuna (the philosopher, not the Bollywood star), and it talks about how a lot of his philosophising was on "emptiness". This, apparently, is a key saying:
All is possible when emptiness is possible.Which does, a Loy indicates, sound like it is putting a more positive spin on "emptiness" than one's initial reaction.
Nothing is possible when emptiness is impossible.
In another interesting bit from Wikipedia, Nagarjuna is considered by some to be neo-Kantian:
Nāgārjuna was also instrumental in the development of the two truths doctrine, which claims that there are two levels of truth in Buddhist teaching, the ultimate truth (paramārtha satya) and the conventional or superficial truth (saṃvṛtisatya). The ultimate truth to Nāgārjuna is the truth that everything is empty of essence,[43] this includes emptiness itself ('the emptiness of emptiness'). While some (Murti, 1955) have interpreted this by positing Nāgārjuna as a neo-Kantian and thus making ultimate truth a metaphysical noumenon or an "ineffable ultimate that transcends the capacities of discursive reason",[44] others such as Mark Siderits and Jay L. Garfield have argued that Nāgārjuna's view is that "the ultimate truth is that there is no ultimate truth" (Siderits) and that Nāgārjuna is a "semantic anti-dualist" who posits that there are only conventional truths.[44]As I am fond of Kant, I think it's pretty cool to find debate about whether a Buddhist philosopher from 150CE got to his ideas before Immanuel did. (That's Kant, not Swedenborg).
The other thing that the Swedenborg book has got me thinking about is Buddhism and non-locality in modern quantum physics. I keep getting the feeling that these might be pretty compatible.
First, a reminder about nonlocality can be found in this pretty good 12 minute explanation of quantum physics, which Youtube conveniently suggested I should watch:
So, how's this tie in with Buddhism? I don't know yet, but there is a very lengthy discussion of it on this page (The Physics of Peace: Quantum Nonlocality and Emptiness) from what looks like a very lengthy website called the Chinese Encyclopaedia of Buddhism. That website seems to be a project started by an Estonian Buddhist who has connections with Australia. How odd.
Anyhow, I'll read it and report back.
Maybe I can factor the emptiness of the tomb and Easter eggs into the story, too. I seem to be turning all EM Foster - "Only connect!"
* Narrator voice: no, it didn't.
Thursday, April 09, 2020
Unusual protection from COVID-19
From Atlas Obscura, a tale from Japan newly relevant to current circumstances:
Here's an old school version of the critter, indicating that Japanese art is not always that impressive (Wikipedia says this is a woodblock print from the Edo era. Really?)
Here's another version, which I think is modern but looking more "old-school vibe":
And here's a recent government poster using that old woodblock image, it seems:
I feel safer already...
In the first half of 1846, a kawaraban, or cheaply printed broadside, recorded a strange account in Japan’s old Higo Province on Kyūshū island. A local government official had spotted a curious creature in the water one evening: a scaly, three-legged figure with long hair and a beak. Even more curious, it had warned him of a forthcoming illness and instructed him to draw and distribute its image for protection. A sketch was printed next to this account, and as the kawaraban spread, so did tales of this mysterious half-merperson, half-bird, from Kyūshū all the way to Edo.
Known as Amabie, this yōkai, or spirit, has become associated with refuge from epidemics. It makes sense, then, that it has resurfaced during the global COVID-19 pandemic, only this time on social media. Illustrations of Amabie are circulating on Twitter and Instagram under the hashtags #amabie and #アマビエ; artists around the world are drawing and sharing Amabie in hopes of repelling disease, or at the very least honing their talents and finding community while social distancing....
Scholars believe that Amabie is a local variation of Amabiko, a similar Japanese creature that appears from the sea and prophesies good harvests and outbreaks of disease. “In accounts of Amabiko, it is sometimes said that the image itself can ward off the epidemic,” says Jack Stoneman, a professor of Asian and Near Eastern Languages at Brigham Young University. “This is not unusual in Japanese cultural history—images as talismans.”
Here's an old school version of the critter, indicating that Japanese art is not always that impressive (Wikipedia says this is a woodblock print from the Edo era. Really?)
Here's another version, which I think is modern but looking more "old-school vibe":
And here's a recent government poster using that old woodblock image, it seems:
I feel safer already...
Victorian Police and the Church
Jack the Insider has a very interesting take on the matter of the George Pell prosecution, which seems not to be behind the paywall, for now. He points out a long standing history of the police force in that State turning a blind eye, or actively protecting, sex offending priests. Jack wonders if the prosecution of Pell was undertaken with view towards diverting attention from the history of their previous protection.
Sinclair Davidson likes to believe that Pell was targeted purely for being a conservative figure hated by the Left. I have never felt it likely that the Police were especially sympathetic to carrying out the wishes of political Left in such matters. Jack's view adds some greater nuance to the matter.
[I should add - I am not in a position to argue the details of what various figures within the Victorian police have done in the Pell matter. I have not followed it in that close a detail. So sue me. I do know, however, that the conservatives and culture war warriors at Catallaxy do not do nuance. Their take that it is the greatest scandal in Victorian prosecution history is therefore virtually guaranteed to be wrong.]
Sinclair Davidson likes to believe that Pell was targeted purely for being a conservative figure hated by the Left. I have never felt it likely that the Police were especially sympathetic to carrying out the wishes of political Left in such matters. Jack's view adds some greater nuance to the matter.
[I should add - I am not in a position to argue the details of what various figures within the Victorian police have done in the Pell matter. I have not followed it in that close a detail. So sue me. I do know, however, that the conservatives and culture war warriors at Catallaxy do not do nuance. Their take that it is the greatest scandal in Victorian prosecution history is therefore virtually guaranteed to be wrong.]
Einstein in England
The TLS does a quick survey of some recent books on Einstein, some of which deal with his visits to England. He quite liked the place, apparently.
This episode, of which we have a photo, sounds like a event you could perhaps write a fanciful movie around:
This episode, of which we have a photo, sounds like a event you could perhaps write a fanciful movie around:
On September 9, 1933, something spooked Einstein, who was by then living in exile in Belgium. Apparently fearing for his life, he travelled alone to England at short notice. Einstein turned to Oliver Locker-Lampson, whom he had met on an earlier visit, for protection. A Conservative Member of Parliament and decorated former soldier, Locker-Lampson was “an impulsive romantic” and, according to Robinson, Einstein clearly liked the “commander’s can-do, gung-ho personality”.And here's a staged photo from that time. Not sure if that is part of the actual accommodation - it looks a bit like a hut, but a very rough one!:
Locker-Lampson took Einstein to his thatched holiday hut in Norfolk. In what sounds like an episode of Dad’s Army, he armed locals with shotguns to protect Einstein from Nazi assassins. Einstein used the “admirable solitude” of the countryside to continue working on his unified field theory, a project which would occupy him for the rest of his life. The sculptor Jacob Epstein came to model him and recalled his “wild hair floating in the wind”, like “the ageing Rembrandt”. His wonderful bronze bust of the scientist is in the Tate Gallery.
Before Einstein departed for America on October 7, he said “no matter how long I live I shall never forget the kindness which I have received from the people of England”. Once ensconced in the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton, Einstein never returned to Britain.
A coupla interesting sites
A month or two ago, I stumbled across a blogspot blog by some older guy who just put up quotes from old books. It seemed a rather esoteric exercise, with little readership (a familiar feeling), but some of the quotes were interesting. Do you think I can find the blog again? I think Google used to make it easy to search their own hosted blogs, but it seems harder now, even though there are probably fewer blogspot blogs around than ever before. I think it might have had a latin name? Anyway, I will keep looking.
Amongst other interesting sites recently found, try this one: Res Obsura (a catalogue of obscure things). It's run by an assistant professor of history at UC Santa Cruz, and although he posts infrequently, they are high quality and interesting posts on a range of unusual topics that seems to align closely with my interests.
One other new site, Notches - (re)marks on the history of sexuality.
Come on, who doesn't like considering the history of sexuality? I think it's particularly interesting because of the remarkable changes anyone aged, say, 40 or over, has witnessed in their own lifetime.
Here's from the "About" section:
I haven't read a single post yet, but there is a lot that sounds interesting.
I suspect it will be providing grist for the mill for several future posts here.
Amongst other interesting sites recently found, try this one: Res Obsura (a catalogue of obscure things). It's run by an assistant professor of history at UC Santa Cruz, and although he posts infrequently, they are high quality and interesting posts on a range of unusual topics that seems to align closely with my interests.
One other new site, Notches - (re)marks on the history of sexuality.
Come on, who doesn't like considering the history of sexuality? I think it's particularly interesting because of the remarkable changes anyone aged, say, 40 or over, has witnessed in their own lifetime.
Here's from the "About" section:
NOTCHES is a peer-reviewed, collaborative and international history of sexuality blog that aims to get people inside and outside the academy thinking about sexuality in the past and in the present. Since its launch in January 2014, NOTCHES has attracted over 200,000 views, been profiled on About.com’s Sexuality site, the History News Network, and Freshly Pressed three times by WordPress. NOTCHES is sponsored by the Raphael Samuel History Centre, and we are committed to the centre’s mission of “encouraging the widest possible participation in historical research and debate.” Our goal is to create a collaborative and open-access blog that is intellectually rigorous and accessible, historical and timely, political and playful.I see from the posts linked on the main page that there is a bias towards towards gay and queer topics, which is probably what you would expect, but a lot of it is to do with heterosexual behaviour, and particularly across different cultures. Also abortion.
I haven't read a single post yet, but there is a lot that sounds interesting.
I suspect it will be providing grist for the mill for several future posts here.
Wednesday, April 08, 2020
More on India and COVID19
There's an interview of interest about this at the New Yorker. I thought that this painted a grim picture of the country health wise, even without COVID19:
And it’s also got a population that has tuberculosis and respiratory issues and pneumonia and high rates of smoking and air pollution. So, the trajectory of the disease in this population is going to be unclear. The other thing is that India also has a lot of hypertensives. About a third of the country’s adults are hypertensive, and about one-tenth of them are diabetic. And, so, all of this is likely to compound the problem. Of course, we don’t know anything for sure until the numbers actually start going up. But these are all the reasons why people of India are worried.But then I Googled the figures for diabetes and hypertension in America, and the figures are pretty much the same!
Very Japanese
Robots replace Japanese students at graduation amid coronavirus
The photo:
Reminds me of one of the funnier episodes of Big Bang Theory in which Sheldon attended work in a very similar manner.
The photo:
Reminds me of one of the funnier episodes of Big Bang Theory in which Sheldon attended work in a very similar manner.
Then they shook hands, and parted ways
With the release of a statement by the complainant "J" in the Pell case, we now have statements by both of the key players.
I would love to know how many of the words in the complainant's statements are genuinely his, because it does read very well. I would expect there was at least some lawyerly help in drafting it.
But assuming it is a genuine reflection of his attitude, the funny thing is that both he and Pell are being pretty damn gentlemanly about the outcome. Pell, who doesn't exactly give the impression of being a "life of the party" type anyway, seems to indicate no great bitterness over a period in which he got to be like a religious hermit; J got to say that he accepts the court decision and respects the need for the criminal burden of proof being set high, and (in a key point that makes me think he is actually a good example to people who have encountered sexual abuse) says that "this case does not define me." That attitude should actually please conservatives, who dislike the intense victimhood claims common in identity politics.
So, it is a very peculiar situation, where both of them are being pretty stoic and (seemingly) leaving it up to other people to hyperventilate about what happened.
If they can do that, so should those on the extremes of commentary about the case.
Update: perhaps it is not clear where I am getting my sense of Pell's reaction. Here it is, from Pell talking to a Catholic media outlet:
I would love to know how many of the words in the complainant's statements are genuinely his, because it does read very well. I would expect there was at least some lawyerly help in drafting it.
But assuming it is a genuine reflection of his attitude, the funny thing is that both he and Pell are being pretty damn gentlemanly about the outcome. Pell, who doesn't exactly give the impression of being a "life of the party" type anyway, seems to indicate no great bitterness over a period in which he got to be like a religious hermit; J got to say that he accepts the court decision and respects the need for the criminal burden of proof being set high, and (in a key point that makes me think he is actually a good example to people who have encountered sexual abuse) says that "this case does not define me." That attitude should actually please conservatives, who dislike the intense victimhood claims common in identity politics.
So, it is a very peculiar situation, where both of them are being pretty stoic and (seemingly) leaving it up to other people to hyperventilate about what happened.
If they can do that, so should those on the extremes of commentary about the case.
Update: perhaps it is not clear where I am getting my sense of Pell's reaction. Here it is, from Pell talking to a Catholic media outlet:
The cardinal told CNA that he had lived his time in prison as a “long retreat,” and a time for reflection, writing, and, above all, prayer.
“Prayer has been the great source of strength to me throughout these times, including the prayers of others, and I am incredibly grateful to all those people who have prayed for me and helped me during this really challenging time.”
The cardinal said the number of letters and cards he had received from people both in Australia and from overseas was “quite overwhelming.”
“I really do want to thank them most sincerely.”
In a public statement at the time of his release, Pell offered his solidarity with victims of sexual abuse.
“I hold no ill will to my accuser,” Pell said in that statement. “I do not want my acquittal to add to the hurt and bitterness so many feel; there is certainly hurt and bitterness enough.”
Tuesday, April 07, 2020
Dear Leader doesn't like oversight
Yeah, what a stupid "if anyone has ever criticised me or my administration, it's because they are being politically biased" performance by Dear Leader Trump today.
Culture war warriors bouncing off the walls after Pell convictions overturned
I see that, reviewing my previous comments on Pell, I initially did not think it likely the High Court would readily overturn the conviction after a jury and three judges thought it could stand. (I'm including the trial judge, who could in theory have directed the jury that the evidence was so weak that they must acquit.)
I've always been ambivalent about the likelihood of the allegation, and thought it wise that no one, on the either side of the culture wars, should be expressing certainty about the case. I specifically said that David Marr should not have spoken as if he had complete vindication after the initial conviction - it was a bit of grandstanding.
But today I award my "nonsense Culture War reaction of the day" to - guess who - Sinclair Davidson, reverting to his "physically unimpressive man who compensates by talking like Conan the Barbarian when it comes to politics" mode with this silly claim:
CRUSHING DEFEAT FOR THE LEFT, THE ABC, THE VICTORIAN POLICE, THE VICTORIAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.
Yeah - because every single person on the Left had exactly the same view of the matter, and this "defeat" will change the mind of every person who believes Pell was undoubtedly guilty.
As it happens, I have talked to people who would never vote Labor (and are not, I think, especially big viewers of the ABC) who thought Pell was guilty after his initial conviction. I have also spoken to people of Leftist persuasion who didn't know what to think. There is also the possibility of ongoing civil action involving Pell - although how much there may be to gain from that, I don't know.
In a way, the process has given something that could be seen to "please" both sides: those who were unduly certain of his guilt see that he still served a fair bit of time in jail; those who were convinced that this is the greatest injustice ever* get to jump around with the warpaint on a few days, although they'll soon enough be fuming again if civil actions proceed.
But what is 100% clear is that the final outcome will do nothing to remove the incredible loss of reputation of the Church over child abuse, or resolve its slow moving, painful internal conflict over its loss of credibility on all matters sexual, which really started with its disastrous 1960's decision on contraception.
Good luck with the bigger picture, culture war warriors of the Right...
* It pales into insignificance compared to the Chamberlain case
I've always been ambivalent about the likelihood of the allegation, and thought it wise that no one, on the either side of the culture wars, should be expressing certainty about the case. I specifically said that David Marr should not have spoken as if he had complete vindication after the initial conviction - it was a bit of grandstanding.
But today I award my "nonsense Culture War reaction of the day" to - guess who - Sinclair Davidson, reverting to his "physically unimpressive man who compensates by talking like Conan the Barbarian when it comes to politics" mode with this silly claim:
CRUSHING DEFEAT FOR THE LEFT, THE ABC, THE VICTORIAN POLICE, THE VICTORIAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.
Yeah - because every single person on the Left had exactly the same view of the matter, and this "defeat" will change the mind of every person who believes Pell was undoubtedly guilty.
As it happens, I have talked to people who would never vote Labor (and are not, I think, especially big viewers of the ABC) who thought Pell was guilty after his initial conviction. I have also spoken to people of Leftist persuasion who didn't know what to think. There is also the possibility of ongoing civil action involving Pell - although how much there may be to gain from that, I don't know.
In a way, the process has given something that could be seen to "please" both sides: those who were unduly certain of his guilt see that he still served a fair bit of time in jail; those who were convinced that this is the greatest injustice ever* get to jump around with the warpaint on a few days, although they'll soon enough be fuming again if civil actions proceed.
But what is 100% clear is that the final outcome will do nothing to remove the incredible loss of reputation of the Church over child abuse, or resolve its slow moving, painful internal conflict over its loss of credibility on all matters sexual, which really started with its disastrous 1960's decision on contraception.
Good luck with the bigger picture, culture war warriors of the Right...
* It pales into insignificance compared to the Chamberlain case
The problem for other, poorer, countries
The BBC has a story about COVID 19 infections starting in a slum area in Mumbai.
Just so hard to believe that efforts to contain it will be successful in that environment.
And in another "how can they possibly cope" story, I see that Jakarta Post is still reporting low total numbers in Indonesia, but a lot of doctors dying:
Just so hard to believe that efforts to contain it will be successful in that environment.
And in another "how can they possibly cope" story, I see that Jakarta Post is still reporting low total numbers in Indonesia, but a lot of doctors dying:
At least 18 doctors across Indonesia have died in the fight against COVID-19, the Indonesian Doctors Association (IDI) said on Sunday.Also, looks like the Philippines is claiming similar numbers as Indonesia (3,660 cases, less than Australia!), but again it's hard to believe.
One of the 18 doctors died from exhaustion while fighting the pandemic while the others had tested positive or were under surveillance for COVID-19.
Wahyu Hidayat and Heru Sutantyo were the latest doctors confirmed to have died of COVID-19, the association announced on Sunday.
Wahyu, an otolaryngologist, died at Pelni General Hospital in Bekasi, while Heru, a doctor from Diponegoro State University, died at Pertamina Central Hospital.
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