Saturday, May 10, 2014
Sunday, May 04, 2014
Double Whammy
May First was a big day for yours truly.
The May Day mobilization went off without a hitch, me the photographer, like last year. The AFSC Portland page is even better as another photographer took over from me once the march got underway.
Then Trevor had a book signing at Mother Foucault's, also well attended, with the author reading from his Confessions of a Failed Egoist.
The May Day mobilization went off without a hitch, me the photographer, like last year. The AFSC Portland page is even better as another photographer took over from me once the march got underway.
Then Trevor had a book signing at Mother Foucault's, also well attended, with the author reading from his Confessions of a Failed Egoist.
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Tragic Loss
Our neighbor and friend.
Coast tightrope walker swept into ocean
By Associated Press: April 25, 2014, 8:22 PM
PACIFIC CITY, Ore. — Authorities say a Portland man trying to walk across a homemade tightrope between two large rock sections on the north Oregon coast is missing after a large wave hit him and swept him into the ocean.
Tillamook County Sheriff Andy Long said Friday that 25-year-old James Michael Alejandro was climbing on a rocky area of Cape Kiwanda with several others Thursday afternoon when he connected a single rope between two large rock sections above the water and tried to walk it. Witnesses say he was briefly seen in the ocean but they lost sight of him.
A Coast Guard boat and helicopters searched by water and air but didn’t find Alejandro. Long cautions that coastal ocean currents are strong and large waves are common in the area.
Monday, April 28, 2014
Cogitations
Everyone's a spy now.
I'm probably the last kid on the block to get two-step verification, the Google service where if you log in on an untrusted computer, you get a text message to your cell phone for verification purposes. You need to enter that too, or you're not you.
Since I'm on a company computer borrowed from another staffer while mine's in the shop, I took the opportunity to make it not trusted, meaning really no computer is (to me). There ya go, welcome to spyville.
And yet we're just truck stop Joe and Jill. There's future shock for ya, hello Alvin Toffler.
What's been happening? Lots of course.
Dave Koski is legitimately excited about this number 2√2ø^-2 as in Emod * 2√2ø^-2 = S mod.
These so-called "mods" are tetrahedron shapes, components defined in Synergetics 2. That's the magnum opus by Buckminster Fuller in collaboration with E.J. Applewhite since transplated to the web. Dedicated to H.S.M. Coxeter aka King of Infinite Space.
David and I have yakked about such things for years, fun shoptalk (namespace, whatever).
I've been looking at a new title:
I'm probably the last kid on the block to get two-step verification, the Google service where if you log in on an untrusted computer, you get a text message to your cell phone for verification purposes. You need to enter that too, or you're not you.
Since I'm on a company computer borrowed from another staffer while mine's in the shop, I took the opportunity to make it not trusted, meaning really no computer is (to me). There ya go, welcome to spyville.
And yet we're just truck stop Joe and Jill. There's future shock for ya, hello Alvin Toffler.
What's been happening? Lots of course.
Dave Koski is legitimately excited about this number 2√2ø^-2 as in Emod * 2√2ø^-2 = S mod.
These so-called "mods" are tetrahedron shapes, components defined in Synergetics 2. That's the magnum opus by Buckminster Fuller in collaboration with E.J. Applewhite since transplated to the web. Dedicated to H.S.M. Coxeter aka King of Infinite Space.
David and I have yakked about such things for years, fun shoptalk (namespace, whatever).
I've been looking at a new title:
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Back to the Future
David Pearce Snyder is on the ISEPP board so has behind the scenes influenced Terry in ways we'll never know about (grin). He's lectured for ISEPP before and was as lucid as ever, in bringing us his view of the future, which is very metrological, in the sense of "metrologist", one who measures (Doug Strain was one of those too).
Demographically speaking, the North American population is aging and youth will be at a premium. But beyond that rather well know fact was the good news: the gigantic onslaught of new tech that really takes time to accommodate, has been accommodated to the point where we might even thrive again. We were in a dip, if you look at the numbers.
I really appreciated this big picture perspective. My dad was a futurist and would have loved these ISEPP lectures, this one in particular I think.
Bravo Mentor Graphics and other sponsors, and Terry for picking winners way more than chance would allow. We must be doing something right, eh?
What the talk was really about was the future of higher education, a topic of keen interest to me, given I'm in the teaching business, in Cyberia (cyberspace). MOOCs started off on the wrong foot maybe, but much was learned. Universities are adapting or going under, the usual thing. I'm being vague as you had to be there. These lectures get recorded, Glenn on camera.
The Heathman dinner was excellent as usual. I let Christine have my other ticket as she's a stalwart and adds perspective to Wanderers a lot. I get two tickets per lecture as another board member, but not an advertised one i.e. I'm not the big name futurist David is, though I did get two write-ups in The Oregonian as a futurist (only Metro section I'm pretty sure). Small potatoes so far.
You don't have to go to a four year college to have a good life, but neither should you regret going if that's what you did or are doing. Many doors are open. This is not a bad time to be alive.
Monday, April 14, 2014
State of Society
During a our final review and approval of our State of Society Report during Meeting for Business recently, one Friend asked if membership issues had really been "divisive" as the report states. The clerk called on a member of Oversight to test the validity of that word. "Divisive is what fits" came the reply, in paraphrase.
I followed up later, as another member of Oversight, with more details, as there's no reason to leave Friends in the dark on this matter. I wrote (by email):
Unlike the Tallahassee Friends, who according to our documents see becoming a member as a kind of detailed vetting, an integrity test, almost an initiation or hazing, I look for a willingness, an eagerness, to publicly identify as a Friend in a way that deserves the backing of some Monthly Meeting. The meeting will not disavow so-and-so when they publicly proclaim to be a Friend. That's the social contract.
However, we do not certify, as a meeting, that so-and-so has met a lot of deeply spiritual criteria. Presumably so-and-so wrote a letter to Oversight and a clearness meeting was convened. We do not require any criminal background checks, e.g. we are not assuring the public that Y is not a child molester. We hope not, and will be surprised if so, but let us not mislead the general public into thinking a member has somehow been through some thorough quality assurance program in order to "come out" as a recorded member.
We do not hire expensive Internet services to study the public record, as we might if you want to work in the children's program as one of two supervisory adults, as required by our insurance company (another item of business during the same meeting). As a third adult in the room, you would not need a background check or social security number.
No, that's not how the process works, in the case of something routine like membership.
We're encouraging people to come forward as Friends and deal with the consequences in the aftermath (for the rest of their lives perhaps).
We're not saying all of those consequences have already been dealt with, nor that so-and-so has reached the top of some spiritual ladder, nor even a higher rung.
We do not pretend to having criteria to measure your "rung level" on any spiritual ladder, though individuals on the Clearness Committee, or anyone, during the seasoning period between meetings for business, may express their reservations about Z e.g. if Z seems too immature and / or clueless about Quakers and Quaker history and/or does not behave in a way consistent with Friends testimonies, that's something to point out.
Given it's a social contract between the meeting, and the individual, both sides get to think about it. Then to agree to this contract is not to make a lot of corollary claims about Z other than that she and/or he is now accepted as a recorded member. He and/or she is willing to publicly identify as a Friend in a way a meeting agrees to back or certify. We hope Z will not be hypocritical then, going forward.
I followed up later, as another member of Oversight, with more details, as there's no reason to leave Friends in the dark on this matter. I wrote (by email):
As another person on Oversight besides [X], I can vouch for membership being divisive in the following sense:Recorded membership is one of many practices Friends engage in to signify their loyalty to the Religious Society of Friends.
some see [sic] witnessing others becoming members should be only observed and conducted by other members, whereas others have no problem with non-members witnessing the entire membership process, even convening the clearness committee for that purpose.
I'm one of those who sees no contradiction here as we value transparency and have no secret rites in our faith and practice i.e. members-only (other than to satisfy the state that we map to their corporation laws). As a non-member, I have convened many a membership committee with no qualms about my ethics. I celebrate people's heeding the inward call to serve, which takes many outward guises.
Unlike the Tallahassee Friends, who according to our documents see becoming a member as a kind of detailed vetting, an integrity test, almost an initiation or hazing, I look for a willingness, an eagerness, to publicly identify as a Friend in a way that deserves the backing of some Monthly Meeting. The meeting will not disavow so-and-so when they publicly proclaim to be a Friend. That's the social contract.
However, we do not certify, as a meeting, that so-and-so has met a lot of deeply spiritual criteria. Presumably so-and-so wrote a letter to Oversight and a clearness meeting was convened. We do not require any criminal background checks, e.g. we are not assuring the public that Y is not a child molester. We hope not, and will be surprised if so, but let us not mislead the general public into thinking a member has somehow been through some thorough quality assurance program in order to "come out" as a recorded member.
We do not hire expensive Internet services to study the public record, as we might if you want to work in the children's program as one of two supervisory adults, as required by our insurance company (another item of business during the same meeting). As a third adult in the room, you would not need a background check or social security number.
No, that's not how the process works, in the case of something routine like membership.
We're encouraging people to come forward as Friends and deal with the consequences in the aftermath (for the rest of their lives perhaps).
We're not saying all of those consequences have already been dealt with, nor that so-and-so has reached the top of some spiritual ladder, nor even a higher rung.
We do not pretend to having criteria to measure your "rung level" on any spiritual ladder, though individuals on the Clearness Committee, or anyone, during the seasoning period between meetings for business, may express their reservations about Z e.g. if Z seems too immature and / or clueless about Quakers and Quaker history and/or does not behave in a way consistent with Friends testimonies, that's something to point out.
Given it's a social contract between the meeting, and the individual, both sides get to think about it. Then to agree to this contract is not to make a lot of corollary claims about Z other than that she and/or he is now accepted as a recorded member. He and/or she is willing to publicly identify as a Friend in a way a meeting agrees to back or certify. We hope Z will not be hypocritical then, going forward.
Wednesday, April 09, 2014
Wanderers 2014.4.8: WW1
Gordon Hoffman did a stupendous job synergizing with Wanderers, letting other old timers chime in with fascinating facts and factoids, adding texture and nuance to an already-tasteful presentation.
Gordon is qualified to call himself a truly vested individual when in comes to WW1, and right away we should point out that, at this point in history, extremely few people with USA passports, with USA citizenship, are seen to frequent the monuments to its war dead in Europe. This is rightly seen by many as anomalous. But then the USA stands out in many ways that leave Europeans somewhat perplexed, if not dismayed.
I'm truly not so-qualified, i.e. my insights into WW1 are still in early Big Bang inflationary stage, where I double my understanding every thirty minutes. I've been reading a lot of history recently, lets say "of the Vienna Circle" to stay brief about it, along with that compendium, Human Smoke (on my Kindle).
Having Gordon's slide presentation plunk down in the middle of these studies really helped things crystallize for me. Following the changing map of Europe is as hard as inverting a matrix or finding its eigenvalues. Historians take in hyper-dimensional spaces for breakfast. That being said, I have a lot more learning ahead of me (duh). Thank you Gordon, for accelerating my process.
He handed around some small items from his collection. Dick Pugh was there, another master of the show and tell, sorry to miss Mastin, and Glenn. Terry, you should come to more of these. But then it's such a small venue. Anyway, it was what it was, which was fantastic and educational.
Gordon was and is a major galvanizer of the Saturday Academy subculture in which I've participated and blogged about at some length. He's blessed with a surplus of attention, one could say, whereas a deficit of same has become the norm. He shares his scholarship with the rest of us, and he enjoys the opportunities his life affords. Search elsewhere in these chronicles for more.
Thursday, April 03, 2014
Thirsters 2014.4.3 and 2014.3.27
We've been learning a lot about land use and land use planning at Thirsters recently.
Oregon is blessed with some forward-thinking zoning laws that most "states" don't have, being states more in name only.
Developers don't have as free a hand in Oregon to blemish and blight the landscape with their suburban monster malls and chintzy McMansion subdivisions of short half-life.
Our coastline is relatively unmarred with human ugliness, compared to California, the scarred state.
However, Washington County has been suffering from extremely weak leadership and went whining to the legislature when the District Court slapped down it's illegal land grab beyond the boundary, stealing class one arable land. Most of Helvatia was saved, but only just, and the rapacious are angry over their defeat.
That land grab (rezoning) would have been a no-no in Governor McCall's day, but the Thoughtless Generation doesn't believe in planning ahead, as we've seen with Mt. Tabor and Tri-Met both recently.
A dumbing down has occurred.
Boomers and younger are turning out to be semi-retarded in many ways, might be all those For Dummies books, hard to say. More likely too much milk and super-size fries. A fast food diet makes ya stupid.
Last week we learned about how Portland State University is staying remarkably respectful as a kind of go-between between Federal agencies and native populations of the North American southwest (e.g. Nevada testing area) with long term land use and sustainability on their minds.
Oregon has not yet fallen prey to the depraved, at least not as much as in other states where zombie "walkers" (corporations feigning personhood) stalk the landscape, imprisoning humans for profit and despoiling the landscape. Arizona comes to mind, with a shudder, a state likely already lost to greed and terminal myopia.
Oregon is blessed with some forward-thinking zoning laws that most "states" don't have, being states more in name only.
Developers don't have as free a hand in Oregon to blemish and blight the landscape with their suburban monster malls and chintzy McMansion subdivisions of short half-life.
Our coastline is relatively unmarred with human ugliness, compared to California, the scarred state.
However, Washington County has been suffering from extremely weak leadership and went whining to the legislature when the District Court slapped down it's illegal land grab beyond the boundary, stealing class one arable land. Most of Helvatia was saved, but only just, and the rapacious are angry over their defeat.
That land grab (rezoning) would have been a no-no in Governor McCall's day, but the Thoughtless Generation doesn't believe in planning ahead, as we've seen with Mt. Tabor and Tri-Met both recently.
A dumbing down has occurred.
Boomers and younger are turning out to be semi-retarded in many ways, might be all those For Dummies books, hard to say. More likely too much milk and super-size fries. A fast food diet makes ya stupid.
Last week we learned about how Portland State University is staying remarkably respectful as a kind of go-between between Federal agencies and native populations of the North American southwest (e.g. Nevada testing area) with long term land use and sustainability on their minds.
Oregon has not yet fallen prey to the depraved, at least not as much as in other states where zombie "walkers" (corporations feigning personhood) stalk the landscape, imprisoning humans for profit and despoiling the landscape. Arizona comes to mind, with a shudder, a state likely already lost to greed and terminal myopia.
Monday, March 31, 2014
E Module Mensuration
Quoting from Dave:
T = 1/24 = .0416666
E = (√2/8)(ø^-3) = .0417313
So, the T & E modules are close in volume, and the difference was what Fuller expounded on in Synergetics 2.
If the Rhombic Triacontahedron is 120T modules, it has a volume of 5 tetra volumes. Alas, the "radius" was not exactly 1, but .999483.
So, the Rhombic Triacontahedron's volume was really 5.007758 or 120 E modules, when the radius is exactly 1. Kirby
figured that out, how to get the radius for the exact volume 5 Rhombic
Triacontahedron, which is .999483 or (2/3)^(1/3)((ø^1)/√2)).
The radius in question for the Rhombic Triacontahedron is from the origin to the center of the rhombus. The radius to the long leg to the short leg is ø^1:ø^0:ø^-1 or 1.618034:1.000000:.618034.
This
was an epiphany for me since the E module derived from the Rhombic
Triacontahedron had a radius of 1, so the legs were .618034 and
.381966.
Increasing the edges by ø^1 we have a long diagonal
on the Rhombic Triacontahedron that is the same as the icosahedron's
edge of 2, which fully inscribes within the Super Rhombic
Triacontahedron.
By increasing the radius by ø^1 for the 5.007758 E module Rhombic Triacontahedron, we get the Super Rhombic Triacontahedron.
Thusly, an E module is 120th of the 5+ volume Rhombic Triacontahedron or (√2/8)(ø^-3), and the next larger sized E module derived from the Super Rhombic Triacontahedron is ø^3 larger or √2/8 expressed as E3.
Quoting from me:
The blue icosa is the standard 18.51 of Synergetics, as is the yellow cubocta ("VE") of volume 20. The other shapes are all non-standard in having that 1.851 edge, 1/10th of the volume number, but here an edge. The green cubocta, has those smaller edges, which is in turn the interval for the whole 4F tetrahedron.
Which is why the yellow cubocta sticks out. What defines the "non-standards" is the tetrahedron to which our standard icosahedron is flush. The small green cubocta has a volume between 15 and 16 whereas the yellow one has volume 20 as you know.
The icosahedron + its dual = rhombic triacontahedron of whatever size. In the jargon Koski and I have been using, the "super RT" would be the standard (18.51) icosahedron + its dual, combining to form this rather large combo.
It's when you scale down that super-RT by 1/phi that you get the RT mother-of-Emods i.e. 120th of such is what is named an "E module" in Synergetics. David measures in those, and phi-up, phi-down versions of those, in terms of place value (base). The video expresses volumes in "super-RT sized Es" plus standard Es, one could say.
Then in Synergetics we have the "T module", a fine distinction, in that the T's volume is exactly that of the A's and B's, whereas the E's is only really close (the exact ratio being a focus in Synergetics 2 another number with phi in it, though Fuller avoided greek letter stuff).Sunday, March 30, 2014
The Thoughtless Generation
The horrific mutilation and scarring of Mt. Tabor, an historic site, is due to begin this October.
The Southeast Examiner ('The Fast Track Reservoir Disconnect' by Midge Pierce, April 2014) pleads with neighbors to fight this elective mastectomy / self-disfigurement, but for $7 million, the contractor-mercenaries are lined up behind one of the most loathed politicians in Portland's history, Nick Fish.
This ignorant and suicidal attack on our own infrastructure and water system is psychopathic to the core, yet citizens already know that governments will run amuck and commit to policies more damaging than any army of vandals could ever hope to imitate.
OMSI, a once great science museum, has not heeded proposals to model the civic water system to its citizens. I think by now it's too late.
This sell-out, once great museum is complicit in the denigration of Portland's living standards, in its refusal to go with place-based education.
We all learn to overlook what's happening locally in exchange for the fiction of "caring" globally. Sappy liberals are as much to blame as butt-ignorant ditto heads.
Our "environmentalist state" is in the process of being betrayed at the deepest level, by the odious Nick Fish in Portland, and by a weak / spineless governor, all set to let the coal economy exploit our infrastructure for the purely private gain of greedy idiocrats.
Politicians: the scum of the Earth.
Speaking of betrayal by mercenaries, the fast tracking of the Transpacific Partnership trade "agreement" has attracted nothing but scorn from Cascadians. This is the process by which governments delegitimize themselves and commend themselves to the ash heap of history.
We aren't surprised to see Washington DC first in line to self-disembowel. That city has been a gutless wonder for longer than I can remember, a ceaseless source of bad / depraved decisions. Why do people listen to DC anymore? I know I don't.
May the family names and company brands of those who participate in the war on Mt. Tabor live on in infamy as traitors to our city. Historians, do your homework. These were among the truly depraved of our planet, as bad as Blackwater.
Remember not to be like them. Have some self pride. Be a generation the world celebrates, not an execrable monster of which history is ashamed.
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Episode Two
:: sleepless in Portland ::
Bravo on Episode Two, an effective video.
I think we might get some jail terms for certain cops pretty soon. Worth prosecuting.
The miss-assumption of the propertied that they own the public lands and infrastructure, and that the police work for them, against others also entitled to public access, is here acted out in a kind of high stakes street theater. Private wealth versus democracy.
As soon as the police side with private wealth against an entitled public, they become goons and thugs, regardless of outward uniform.
The City of Portland is not getting the police protection it deserves, so long as the mayor behaves like a hostage to the Business Plot er Alliance.
Here's a link to Episode One.
Sunday, March 16, 2014
Cramming on Unicode
I floated the idea of having Unicode a theme for OST during OSCON this year, with OST a subdivision of ORM. That got me cramming on Safari, plus I've been looking over Holden's shoulder as he blasts a set of I-Python Notebooks out to Amazon for review, some of which focus on Python 3.x's byte, bytearray, and str type objects. That's my focus here.
To recap: I have a somewhat roller coaster like curriculum that gives both an encouraging and a grim look at humans and their history.
The story of Unicode, its development, is more or less a story of collaboration against the odds, laying a kind of Tower of Babel foundation, but without the intent to build toward a pinnacle, with one language winning out. On the contrary, there's still room for entirely new languages. This was forsightful planning and so an encouraging story.
The negative dip into grim times is the rounding up of peoples in extermination camps, working them to death in poor conditions, with "keeping tabs" using "Hollerith machines" by IBM, the beginnings of our vast databases, both SQL and noSQL. Using computers to hunt down and destroy entire ethnicities, to commit genocide, is one of those dark patterns, as it keeps happening in history and engineering has served to amplify and intensify the pattern's efficiency and viciousness.
Back to the Unicode story, UTF-8 is what saved its bacon, as ASCII-users were not about to bloat their files with little payback. But then we should remember about patient names and the ability of Unicode to represent a patient's name in a native language on the monitors, perhaps with a romanized phonetic reading ("romanji") for the nurses and doctors. Unicode lets you display fluency by quoting multiple languages in the same document.
In UTF-8, the boundary between ASCII proper and the encompassing Latin-1 is at code point 128. With the first bit now occupied, two will be needed (at minimum) from now on, and the leading byte will show 110, 1110, 11110, 111110, 1111110 indicating up to "six cars total" (including the "engine" or leading byte).
Like a train of three bytes would go: 1110 0001 + 1010 0000 + 1011 0000 where I'm using + to separate the bit patterns. Payload bits would be the xs in 1110 xxxx + 10xx xxxx + 10xx xxxx i.e. there's room for 16 payload bits for a total of 2**16 or 65536 code points, all within in reach of this three byte encoding, with more bytes waiting in the wings.
What is 0001 10 0000 11 0000 as a decimal number? Unicode is just a consecutive numbering of a huge inventory of font-provided glyphs. Turns out its 6192, which happens to be the Mongolian letter sa.
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Hominins (ISEPP lecture)
I shirked my responsibilities as a member of Oversight Committee to attend this alternate church venue for a science lecture on 4.4 million year old fossil records of hominins.
Dr. Tom White is an expert, and he correctly praised Terry of ISEPP for the Linus Pauling Memorial Lecture series, which has brought the best minds to Portland, to edify our populace.
Best if Cascadia has a literate capital, don't ya think? -- unless our capital is Seattle, which I'm all for, in the brochures for public consumption.
Anyway, we learned a lot. Africa seems to be the matrix for early homonin development. A "homonin" is a human lineage specialist species whereas "hominid" includes the apes, which are seen as branching off just a million or so years before this latest species, Ardi's.
Ardi's species predates Lucy's and so is probably Lucy's ancestor type.
Chimps spring from a branch that forked earlier, in that great Github in the Sky we call "evolution" (or "goalless morphing in response to feedback" if you want to remove the "march of progress" spin that adheres to much of the evolutionist talk).
I will piggy-back my thanks atop Dr. White's, to Terry, for helping make Portland a capital, an intellectual gemstone.
Too bad about the impending earthquake. Maybe with less of an ice age thanks to global warming it'll be deferred? Hope springs eternal. Plate tectonics don't care that much about ice or no ice.
Tom did a lot to promote evidence and reason as the two prongs of science. People are welcome to generate and publish texts on a different basis, just don't call it science, was his warning / advice / plea.
Speculations sometimes go off the deep end into pure storytelling and myth, as we find in Fuller's Critical Path and later Tetrascroll (subtitled "a cosmic fairy tale").
Fuller is capable of doing science (applying reason to evidence) and contributing to it, however he's more of a literary figure, like Mark Twain. "Bucky" aka "Dr. R.B. Fuller" made forays into science but in some dimension only camped there. His literary base was more a latter day Neoplatonism, a philosophy, not in the sense of "Christian" so much as "Geometric" i.e. concerned with Platonic Forms.
Some of Dr. Fuller's wild speculations, about human prehistory for example, explore in a surreal space of mytho-graphic imagery, exciting to the intuition perhaps, but at best proto-scientific.
Someday we may have tools to "transmit life-forming information" to other planets, other than I Love Lucy, and thereby beam ourselves (and favorite "pets" e.g. dolphins) to a post Earthian location, not talking about Mars. But such is the stuff of science fiction, not science per se.
Friday, March 07, 2014
Corporation Meeting (2014)
This is my final year as a Corporation Member of the AFSC. I've served at least one earlier three year term.
On the theory that Yearly Meetings appoint whom they choose, and AFSC receives these appointees without approving them, I was able to "sneak in" as an attender (and former member), promoting my theory that attenders may be as actively Quaker as members and should not be treated as second class in principle.
So in that sense NPYM is flaunting the AFSC's by-laws, which insist, implicitly, that "a Quaker" be defined as a "a member of a Yearly Meeting". I've recorded my non-member status in the surveys sent around to us and no one has raised a fuss.
The board, which is more central and more powerful in terms of AFSC's governance, does allow non-Quakers to serve (up to 20%), which I suppose might cover people such as myself, who claim to be Quaker, but choose not to signify this attribute through the institution of recorded membership. I'm not on the board however.
Attenders, sometimes more active than members, and on occasion more "cutting edge" in their practice, should not be overlooked when it comes to serving on the AFSC corporation. One reason some have not sought membership -- as when a same-sex couple finds the local meetings still refuse to take their marriage under its care -- is their practice is ahead of the curve.
I shared these concerns and perspectives at one of the breakout sessions. Lucy Duncan agreed these were relevant and important concerns. I also reiterated my view that FCNL and AFSC need to maintain distinct identities. Succinctly: FNCL is about changing the law, whereas AFSC is about "breaking" the law (think civil rights movement).
In another meeting we played a board game about the horrifyingly silly-fascist nation-state game, wherein humans are penned in at birth and disallowed much freedom of movement unless especially economically privileged. I played an undocumented Polish guy with no possibility of US citizenship. I worked in a restaurant in Philadelphia or somewhere, with no other family here. Most of us weren't going to reach the citizenship goal. The game is rigged that way, with an outer loop that just goes in a circle.
I'm thinking of the philosopher Rene Descartes wandering around Europe with has valet, a cross between a tourist and military journalist. With an EU passport, he might get away with that today. Jesus Christ would have no hope of getting an employment-based visa to the US in our day, having only low level carpentry skills -- "Rabbi" wouldn't qualify as a skill unless he had a baccalaureate degree -- and coming as he did from an ethnic minority background.
So why doesn't the AFSC make more use of the nation-free Dymaxion Projection? Chris gave a slide show on that at a math-GIS meetup, which I missed because of our program (malesh -- too bad). But shouldn't Fuller's anti-nationalism (along with Einstein's) get some notoriety from Friends? He, like Bayard Rustin, was also a Medal of Freedom winner.
We have this myth that the US does not export a large number of migrant workers to the rest of the world i.e. that it's a one way street. That's because migrants in Okinawa, Afghanistan, Germany, and Korea, Marshall Islands, and so on, are accounted as "US military personnel" vs. "migrant workers".
Saturday, March 01, 2014
Catching Up
Lots going on. I watched eXistenZ yet again, with SH and CP, LW drifting in and out, but then forgot to return it to Movie Madness. I did that today, walking back by the Hawthorne Liquor Store, picking up vodka for me, gin for SH.
Movie Madness had some oldster stars behind tables, selling souvenirs / memorabilia around the 38th anniversary of Carrie, with an exclusive engagement at The Hollywood Theater on Sandy tonight. I was sorely tempted to go, believe you me, but it's one of the few DVDs I own and I'm on a budget, time/energy-wise.
Speaking of vodka, I listened in on some "over the fence" chatter (figuratively) regarding the situation in Ukraine, a major Python state. UA.pycon has been one of the biggest [ cancelled in 2014! ]. US.pycon is not even technically within the 50 states this year or next, but the way I think of it, it's a suggestion to that population center (US) where to go (in Canada) for the Pycon in their area (but wouldn't Canadians go there too?). I'd say CA.pycon is in Montreal this year, but that's not how it's seen: a different management team plans each convergence.
It's more the Flying Circus model: US.pycon is on tour in Canada, a new opportunity for Canadians, to have it close by.
Is there a RU.pycon? Yes indeed, most certainly. Russia is a Python state too.
Which topic brings me to NATO (one of my nicknames is "nato professor"). The Quaker meetinghouse was turned over last night to Veterans for Peace and fellow travelers, an inter-generational shindig twixt Vietnam vets and Gulf War vets, among others. The public was welcome, and for them, the (Netflix-available?) Sir! No Sir! was recommended.
What's Roz Savage up to these days? Talk about catching up... I should visit her web site. We had dinner together once, she won't remember. I was somewhat smitten, but then I'm prone to being smit (smited).
Segue from Smite: that's what David Koski called "half-a-Mite" -- a pun. The half-Mite or Smite is a shape at the root of a language game called space-filling with Archimedean honeycomb duals.
Lastly, Lindsey had on loan from her girlfriend Melody, an interesting compilation of Edgar Allen Poe stories on DVD, with young / original talent, including Jane Fonda. Walker'd seen the first episode with Melody, the last three with me, leaving one left for me to catch up on before returning it to Multnomah County Library.
Jane's right up there with Sissy Spacek as one alluring / interesting babe, many vets would agree (of any gender); not that I'm a vet, though I've spent time on bases. Ex-marine Gill Gilleland was my scuba trainer. Another ex-Marine taught me rollerblade skating when I was younger, Tom Connally my spirit guide. Dave Fabik, a VietVet, member of Bridge City, read the welcome letter from our Portland Quaker meetings.
Princeton Club of Oregon. I got to visit Julian Voss Andreae in his current studio, to converse about the octet-truss. Way cool. I'm grateful for these privileges and that's why I blog: to share my front row seat. Check it out!
Happy Birthday Alexia!
Movie Madness had some oldster stars behind tables, selling souvenirs / memorabilia around the 38th anniversary of Carrie, with an exclusive engagement at The Hollywood Theater on Sandy tonight. I was sorely tempted to go, believe you me, but it's one of the few DVDs I own and I'm on a budget, time/energy-wise.
Speaking of vodka, I listened in on some "over the fence" chatter (figuratively) regarding the situation in Ukraine, a major Python state. UA.pycon has been one of the biggest [ cancelled in 2014! ]. US.pycon is not even technically within the 50 states this year or next, but the way I think of it, it's a suggestion to that population center (US) where to go (in Canada) for the Pycon in their area (but wouldn't Canadians go there too?). I'd say CA.pycon is in Montreal this year, but that's not how it's seen: a different management team plans each convergence.
It's more the Flying Circus model: US.pycon is on tour in Canada, a new opportunity for Canadians, to have it close by.
Is there a RU.pycon? Yes indeed, most certainly. Russia is a Python state too.
Which topic brings me to NATO (one of my nicknames is "nato professor"). The Quaker meetinghouse was turned over last night to Veterans for Peace and fellow travelers, an inter-generational shindig twixt Vietnam vets and Gulf War vets, among others. The public was welcome, and for them, the (Netflix-available?) Sir! No Sir! was recommended.
What's Roz Savage up to these days? Talk about catching up... I should visit her web site. We had dinner together once, she won't remember. I was somewhat smitten, but then I'm prone to being smit (smited).
Segue from Smite: that's what David Koski called "half-a-Mite" -- a pun. The half-Mite or Smite is a shape at the root of a language game called space-filling with Archimedean honeycomb duals.
Lastly, Lindsey had on loan from her girlfriend Melody, an interesting compilation of Edgar Allen Poe stories on DVD, with young / original talent, including Jane Fonda. Walker'd seen the first episode with Melody, the last three with me, leaving one left for me to catch up on before returning it to Multnomah County Library.
Jane's right up there with Sissy Spacek as one alluring / interesting babe, many vets would agree (of any gender); not that I'm a vet, though I've spent time on bases. Ex-marine Gill Gilleland was my scuba trainer. Another ex-Marine taught me rollerblade skating when I was younger, Tom Connally my spirit guide. Dave Fabik, a VietVet, member of Bridge City, read the welcome letter from our Portland Quaker meetings.
Princeton Club of Oregon. I got to visit Julian Voss Andreae in his current studio, to converse about the octet-truss. Way cool. I'm grateful for these privileges and that's why I blog: to share my front row seat. Check it out!
Happy Birthday Alexia!
Friday, February 28, 2014
Life's Beginnings
An ISEPP lecture, meaning STEM-oriented, science, engineering... in a church though. The Schnitzer is a great venue but when the economy took a hit so did we and this church is right next door. Our speakers get a kick out of speaking in a House of God I think, more theatrical than just a theater.
Dr. Michael Russell is out of the box brilliant, and although from Britain, he loves LA, and JPL of Cal Tech is lucky to have him (my view). He knows his molecules really well, in the context of microbiology, and he's willing to risk a big picture theory, regarding life's origins.
In my youth, Genesis had long been superseded by lightning in primordial soup producing amino acids. In this new narrative, the gigantic convection currents that lead to a parting of the plates on the one hand, and their subduction on the other, with continental drift on the surface, means lots of opportunities for heat to escape, and not just heat, but minerals, catalyzing agents, an environment rich in possibilities once these jetting hot metals reach the deep sea, which covered the whole planet back then (we're going back billions of years here).
His insights into how our cells power the ATP cycle was the best I've ever heard. Hydrogen ions get pushed out to the exterior creating a disequilibrium, and in coming back in, they're forced to do work.
It's all about hydrolyzing CO2. That's the essence of life's energy pathway, though he takes it further, he hopes through the "vinegar" stage at least in his experiments. I'm skipping over a lot of fine points, really the main points of his theory, so just use this to get the flavor then dig into it yourself.
In our epoch, and in many before ours, photosynthesis has been the prime mover, when it comes to producing the organic compounds of life. But in early Earth, the womb of life would be the ocean floor, and interface between heated basic minerals and acidic solvents -- an life-friendly energy gradient.
We adjourned to the Heathman for another stellar serving, this time of bovine (steak or a vegetarian lasagna). We appreciate the service this venerable hotel has rendered over the years, to our many venerable guests, to our sponsors. My sense of privilege is appropriately sky high and I am grateful for our little after-dinner Q&As with these MVPs in their fields.
Dr. Russell is a geologist by training and examining formations in Ireland is was led to a thermodynamic hypothesis that anticipated the discovery of undersea "smokers" and later the million-year-old vents, cool enough to encourage life, places where inner-Earth heat escapes to the ocean in molten form.
At this interface, of mineral and symbiotic sea, the chances of life become high over time, in back of the napkin calculations. So it's not lightning in the primordial sea anymore. There's another contender. I was happy to take that in.
Sunday, February 16, 2014
The Lego Movie (movie review)
This movie resembles Robots in developing a consistent look and feel, up to a point. The theme is the tension between conformity / uniformity versus the celebration of "specialness" as one of the cookie cutter instances. AI explores this same tension, a concern among children, under pressure to develop a character.
Our hero is a "construction worker" in some happy camper robotic "utopia" of the most uber-controlled kind. We might as well be in the fevered imagination of some kid with an overbearing business man type father, trying to work it out through play-as-therapy.
I should preface the whole business by confessing:
The one-on-one interviews coming from the prisoners are stellar (we watched some preview clips). I'd say this documentary looks very promising, worthy of a high profile Coffee Shops Network (CSN) listing for sure. I've been a Stallings fan for a long time, as these blogs attest. Nick Consoletti was the catalyst for enriching and expanding my network in Portland in important ways.
I was hobbled by a bad heel, a "victim body part" given my hauling like a quarter ton up the mountain every day (talking about my morning meditation exercise / walk up Mt. Tabor). And I have a bazillion more OSCON proposals to read, but had spent all morning on the day job and felt in a "no battery charge" condition regarding doing more technical reading.
So rather than get back to work after Johnny's performance at First Unitarian downtown, I rushed to The Bagdad for The Lego Movie, even though it wasn't in 3D, which must be spectacular, maybe again someday. Awesome.
Steve, I borrowed the crutches from your closet after the movie, as the heel was so bad last night I could barely make it down the sidewalk. Yes, this means I'm driving to meeting, more peak oil down the drain. I'll hope to compensate in some way. I suppose we could say all of Lego-verse (a multi-verse) is a byproduct of peak oil, right? Plastic and all. I wonder which hole in the desert or ocean bottom each Lego piece comes from.
Of course the movie doesn't actually use that much real Lego as it's an animation / simulation of a multi-verse, the combination of puppetry and physics engine we've come to call home in the entertainment business. I'd like to watch "the making of".
Our hero is a "construction worker" in some happy camper robotic "utopia" of the most uber-controlled kind. We might as well be in the fevered imagination of some kid with an overbearing business man type father, trying to work it out through play-as-therapy.
I should preface the whole business by confessing:
(a) I'm writing this under some time pressure, self imposed, as there's a business meeting I need to get to, yes on a Sunday these "Christians" do business (you'd think the money changing in the temple story might give pause, but nooo) andJohnny had jiggered it a bit (he's a pro) and delivered a brilliant recital, as a benefit performance for a documentary under way, a movie about taking Shakespeare into prisons, and having prisoners stage plays for one another under Johnny's and his theater crew's direction.
(b) I just prior went to see Johnny Stallings doing a brilliant rendering of Dostoyevsky's The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, like the last thing he wrote, a short story about someone very ordinary (connect to Lego Movie context) having their own special truth to share with the world (a missing puzzle piece perhaps).
The one-on-one interviews coming from the prisoners are stellar (we watched some preview clips). I'd say this documentary looks very promising, worthy of a high profile Coffee Shops Network (CSN) listing for sure. I've been a Stallings fan for a long time, as these blogs attest. Nick Consoletti was the catalyst for enriching and expanding my network in Portland in important ways.
I was hobbled by a bad heel, a "victim body part" given my hauling like a quarter ton up the mountain every day (talking about my morning meditation exercise / walk up Mt. Tabor). And I have a bazillion more OSCON proposals to read, but had spent all morning on the day job and felt in a "no battery charge" condition regarding doing more technical reading.
So rather than get back to work after Johnny's performance at First Unitarian downtown, I rushed to The Bagdad for The Lego Movie, even though it wasn't in 3D, which must be spectacular, maybe again someday. Awesome.
Steve, I borrowed the crutches from your closet after the movie, as the heel was so bad last night I could barely make it down the sidewalk. Yes, this means I'm driving to meeting, more peak oil down the drain. I'll hope to compensate in some way. I suppose we could say all of Lego-verse (a multi-verse) is a byproduct of peak oil, right? Plastic and all. I wonder which hole in the desert or ocean bottom each Lego piece comes from.
Of course the movie doesn't actually use that much real Lego as it's an animation / simulation of a multi-verse, the combination of puppetry and physics engine we've come to call home in the entertainment business. I'd like to watch "the making of".
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Valentine's Day
Regarding the many St. Valentines of Rome we are meant to consider commemorated on this day, or tomorrow, February 14, the great Gnostic writer Valentinus (or Valentinius) is not among them, though he too lived in Rome and almost made bishop if not saint. But his lineage was later much disrespected by the mainline church and his memory is not supposed to "shine forth" on this day of pink hearts and celebration of intimate relationships.
Lets not be too narrow-minded i.e. uncatholic in our thinking, but rather let's remember that Gnosticism does not "blame Eve" for anything, and is therefore less misogynistic than most preachers of Genesis. For Gnostics, the local Maker deserved human resistance as Gnosticism celebrates a subversive stance against "local / minor deities" which it associates with whatever institutions abuse their power. As a breeding ground of subversives, over-throwers, the Gnostic faiths have always attracted the ire of more mainstream authoritarians, especially the more militant patriarchs.
In consideration of the Quaker Equality Testimony, I think adding this earlier first century Valentine to the equations would be consistent with the "romantic love" theme, as there's a special romance where neither player has overbearing responsibility or power, especially not simply by virtue of one's gender. As Dora Marsden might have put it, a woman with power equal to that of a man will not be forced to participate in institutions that put her beneath the power of men, any more than vice versa. That's often a premise for romantic relationships, even healthy ones -- if that's not an oxymoron (joke).
Lets not be too narrow-minded i.e. uncatholic in our thinking, but rather let's remember that Gnosticism does not "blame Eve" for anything, and is therefore less misogynistic than most preachers of Genesis. For Gnostics, the local Maker deserved human resistance as Gnosticism celebrates a subversive stance against "local / minor deities" which it associates with whatever institutions abuse their power. As a breeding ground of subversives, over-throwers, the Gnostic faiths have always attracted the ire of more mainstream authoritarians, especially the more militant patriarchs.
In consideration of the Quaker Equality Testimony, I think adding this earlier first century Valentine to the equations would be consistent with the "romantic love" theme, as there's a special romance where neither player has overbearing responsibility or power, especially not simply by virtue of one's gender. As Dora Marsden might have put it, a woman with power equal to that of a man will not be forced to participate in institutions that put her beneath the power of men, any more than vice versa. That's often a premise for romantic relationships, even healthy ones -- if that's not an oxymoron (joke).
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