Thursday, December 23, 2010

File this under: Takes One to Know One


I particularly like the line from Senator McConnell:

“Some have tried to portray this debate as a debate between those who support 9/11 workers and those who don’t,” McConnell said. “This is a gross distortion of the facts. There was never any doubt about supporting the first responders – it was about doing it right.

Now switch the sentence by replacing "9/11 workers" with "fighting terrorists" and "first responders" with "American troops."

Or switch "9/11 workers" with either "capitalism" or "socialism" and "first responders" with "America."

Other examples?

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Paradigm Shift for Religious Right

Linked is a brief Newsweek article by Lisa Miller. Read it and then let's discuss. To warm you up, the writer is suggesting that the religious Right has shifted the focus from moral issues such as sexuality, divorce, etc. to patriotism in the form of anti-socialism, anti-big government, and anti-immigration. I'm wondering if some Christians feel disenfranchised by this shift, that is, that their religion is so political to begin with, especially on issues that are ambiguous in the Bible.

http://www.newsweek.com/2010/12/09/one-nation-under-god.html

Friday, November 5, 2010

Election Disappointment

Just a brief thought on the election. I've really only been paying attention to politics for the last ten years. What seems to be increasingly clear to me is that there really is no reason to expect any improvement out of parties or legislators. Why do so if your party is swept out of office in one election, then can come back saying the exact same thing two years later and sweep back in?

To me it seems ludicrous that people should be fed up with Republicans in 2008, then think that the best option is going back to many of the same people in 2010 because they don't like what the Democrats did in those two years. If there was ever an opportunity for a third party to establish itself, it seems like this was it. Instead of a legitimate third option arising, all that we saw was what appears to be a faction of the right wing that's further away from 'center' and so doesn't really pose as a long term third option other than moving the Republican party further to the right and polarizing the process even more.

I would really like the American public to realize that politics need not be thought of as a continuum, where every issue falls on one side or the other, and the degree to which it varies from center determines how appealing it is. If you disagree with some issues but agree with others for a party, there really isn't going to be any candidate that can possibly appeal to you.

But like I said, if ever there was a time to establish this possibility, this year's election was it. As such, I suspect another method may be necessary if that system will ever change. I know we've discussed alternate voting methods before, but I suspect those will be nigh impossible to implement, as those in power are complicit in maintaining that power structure, so they have no incentive to change it.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

What is the proper course of action for past transgressions?

Wellesley professor unearths a horror: Syphilis experiments in Guatemala


I don't have a lot of time to write this up very formally, but I thought this was a noteworthy article that was forwarded to everybody in SPH by another student.

My question is what is a government to do 70 years after the fact? Obama has apologized for this to the Guatemalan government, but if I remember correctly (I read this a few days ago), there was also a question of possible reparations of some sort. Personally, I don't really see what good it would do. The impression I got was that there were unlikely to be any descendants of these people. In that case, the suffering inflicted can not be undone or assuaged. The horror some may experience now is unlikely to be any higher than you or I might experience reading about this. And with a Guatemalan government complicit in the act at the time, how are the United States any more guilty than they?

What are your thoughts?

Monday, August 30, 2010

Book Review: Polio: An American Story

Title
Polio: An American Story
(Winner of the 2006 Pulitzer Prize in History)

Author
David M. Oshinsky
George Littlefield Professor of American History, Department of History, University of Texas

Publication Date
2005

Publication Information
Oxford University Press; 288 pages

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Political Trackers: Potentially benefitting society, but more likely not.

Here's a recent article on political trackers from the Star Tribune:

http://www.startribune.com/politics/state/101038219.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUycaEacyU

I haven't really heard of these people before, but it doesn't really surprise me given the ease of recording and disseminating video now.

One of the goals of tracking as listed in the article is ensuring politicians keep the same message instead of telling different groups what they want to hear, which seems to be a good thing. However, if it's more a witch hunt for the "gotcha" moment as is also mentioned, I wouldn't view it as favorably. Since people are rarely as noble as they like to make out, I tend to think it's more of the latter than the former.

Either way, I'm a bit skeptical of this tactic. It seems regardless of the intent, if this is employed successfully, the end result will be encouraging political parties to get candidates that can maintain a strict public persona without any hiccups or flaws, which is likely to mean that they're good at being fraudulent. The less politicians are able to be human and err (in normal ways, I'm not referring to corruption or anything like that), the worse off we are.

Thoughts?

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

MR OBAMA, TEAR DOWN THAT MOSQUE!


Before I say anything, I just want to make it clear that it is somewhat amazing to me that this even makes national news as it should have stayed in the confines of the Lower Manhattan Zoning Office, thank FoxNews in all likelihood for that.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Is college worth the costs?

Original Post by Papa TaggartRR (e-mail correspondence)
Posted here via TaggartRR
Feel free to join the conversation.

Interesting. I have thought this for a while. If parents took the same $80-90k that the spent on college and invested it in the child's name and the child learned some trade, would they be better off at 50 years old?

Is it worth it to go to college?
For people considering college, perhaps the greatest lesson of the Great Recession is not that you shouldn't go to college but that you should make sure the investment will pay off.

Source:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38561562/from/toolbar

Friday, July 30, 2010

Book Review: The J Curve

Title
The J Curve
A New Way to Understand Why Nations Rise and Fall


Author
Ian Bremmer
Adjunct Professor, School for International and Public Affairs, Columbia University
President, Eurasia Group

Publication Date
2006

Publication Information
Simon & Schuster Paperbacks; 291 pages

Reason for Reading
The author, Ian Bremmer was on The Daily Show on May 13th pitching his newest book, “The End of the Free Market.” In the interview, he seemed to be knowledgeable, thoughtful, and articulate so I thought his book would be worth checking out. While searching, I discovered a previous book of his in the bargain section of Amazon, so I thought I’d try that one first.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Book Review: On the Social Contract


Title
On the Social Contract (Du Contrat Social)

Author
Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Publication Date
1762

Publication Information
Dover (Dover Thrift Edition); 97 pages

Reason for Reading
In keeping with my goal of learning more of the American Revolution and the era in which it took place while simultaneously focusing on political theory to better understand the political system installed at that time, I picked this book by Rousseau discussing social contract theory. Given the time of publication, I would hazard a guess that many of the founding fathers of America (at least those involved in drawing up the new Constitution) would have read this. Whether or not it had any direct influence on either the Articles of Confederation or the Constitution I’m not certain. The little I’ve looked up online seems to indicate its effects on America’s founding were negligible, but it may have been more influential in the French Revolution. Regardless of this, the text remains noteworthy in the field.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Memories, Events, and Society: Not at the same level

Our minds: not prepared for today’s dialogue. Does it hurt our society?

Recently, Greg Miller from “Smithsonian.com” sat down and discussed how our brains make memories with Dr. Karim Nader from McGill University (neuroscientist). Nader talks about how memories can actually be changed each time we recall them, making accurate memories less likely with each recollection. Anecdotally, he says he remembers on 9/11 viewing on the television that night footage of the second plane hitting the second world trade center building. He later found out, footage of the incident did not become available until 9/12. But the traumatic event was played over-and-over on television and in his mind during discussion with friends and relatives that his brain actually re-wired to include that 9/12 footage into his 9/11 memories.

Now let’s apply this concept to something else. On June 15, 2010 President Obama addressed the nation from the Oval Office on live TV. His speech lasted a total of 17 minutes. However, the night and days following his 17 minute speech CNN, FoxNews, and MSNBC spent numerous hours discussing what the President did and didn’t not say, what he actually did say actually meant, and what he didn’t say says about his ideology in dealing with big business and how he handles national crisis.

Going back to Dr. Nader and what we now know about memories, it is quite possible that millions of people watching the aforementioned shows will remember Obama saying are not saying something he actually did not or did say. They will most likely remember what commentators think his words meant then the actual words the President used.

This is our mind: this is our media culture in the 21st century.

Source:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/How-Our-Brains-Make-Memories.html?c=y&page=1

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Immigration through the eyes of an intellectual (Chomsky per usual)


I'm linking to a talk he gave at Brown where he goes into a history lesson on how NAFTA had the effect to, while helping its creators (wealthy), make the US a more attractive place to the bludgeoned poor of Central and South America economically. Therefore, our own actions during the Carter and Reagan years has made us more prone to illegal immigration.

He goes on to discuss that while since the late 19th/early 20th century, the 14th amendment rights for corporations as people have greatly expanded (due to their intrinsic power applied as legal appeal), the rights of illegal immigrants have been greatly reduced so that they are no longer consider people (slippery slope anyone?). He ties this in with the recent Arizona law where anyone who appears Latino has to carry around documentation of citizenship, in effect purporting a pro-white agenda in that state.

SB 1070

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBfHD2n13OA (50 mins duration)

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Book Review: His Excellency


Title
His Excellency: George Washington

Author
Joseph J. Ellis
Professor of HistoryMount Holyoke College

Publication Date
2004

Reason for Reading
With all the talk recently about what the Founding Fathers intended for the country, I’ve had an increased curiosity about the American Revolution and the people involved in starting it. I figured Washington to be a good place to start and wasn’t disappointed in my selection. Both Washington as a topic and Ellis as an author were good. Ellis has written a number of books on the period, and his reputation seems to be quite good. He won the Pulitzer for his book Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Book Review: Better

Title

Author

Publication Date
2007

Reason For Reading
I've heard good things about the author from a number of sources. Most recently, the professor of my Health Management and Policy class mentioned in class that he was reading the book (or possibly one of the other two books by this author) for the second time, and strongly recommended it. One other thing he mentioned was that an article Gawande wrote for the New Yorker on health care costs was one that made a strong impression on President Obama and recommended members of Congress to read it (cited below). As such, it was also a reading we did for the class.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Supreme Court Case of the Month: Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals

Case
William Daubert, et ux., etc., et al., Petitioners v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc (1993)

Chief Justice
William Rehnquist

Background
A couple children were born with birth defects, which their parents claimed was due to use of the drug Bendectin (used to treat nausea & morning sickness). Merrell Dow's expert witness showed that there were no studies linking Bendectin to birth defects. The plaintiffs' witness showed that there was evidence of birth defects in in vitro and in vivo animal studies, pharmacological studies, and reanalysis of other published studies. However, these apparently were not generally accepted within the scientific community at that time.

Two previous standards come into play. The older precedent is the Frye law, a common law standard from 1923. The second is the 1975 Federal Rules of Evidence. The Frye law held that in order to be admissible as evidence, the techniques must be "generally accepted by a meaningful segment of the associated scientific community." The Federal Rules of Evidence are a broad set of rules that apply to pretty much every aspect of evidence, not just scientific. This is where it gets a little tricky. I'm not sure how exactly these differed from the Frye law. I think they just didn't clearly articulate how expert opinion would be allowed in court and what would qualify as expert opinion.

Synopsis
Both the district court and the Circuit court found for Merrell Dow, so it wasn't a surprise that the Supreme Court found for the defendant as well, but the case established a new precedent for how scientific evidence is allowed. Frye appears to be quite similar to the Daubert Standard, and I think the significance of Daubert is just that it essentially overruled the Federal Rules of Evidence and established a Supreme Court precedent. More specifically, I think the FRE didn't clearly articulate what was permissible for expert opinions, and this case essentially clarified what would be, and it's similar to the original Frye Standard.

Two things were mentioned about the plaintiffs' evidence that bears mentioning. First, the evidence they submitted appeared to have been prepared specifically for litigation, which apparently made the Circuit Court skeptical. Also, the plaintiff's expert witness was later found to have falsifed research on the teratogenic effects of Bendectin, but that appears to have been after the case was heard by the Supreme Court.


Vote & Dissenting Opinions
Majority: 7 Concur/Dissent: 2

Notable on this is that Chief Justice Rehnquist is one of the two dissenters.

Further Discussion
I stumbled onto this case when it was mentioned in my Epidemiology text book. One of the first quotes I read was that this is the most important Supreme Court case you've never heard of.
It reminded me a bit of the Thimerosal vaccine discussion we had recently. How might this apply to potential cases involving Thimerosal? I would guess at this juncture, any cases with that would get thrown out pretty quickly or be an easy ruling for the defendants if the only evidence is one questionable research study that was later retracted by the journal that published it, so it's not exactly a valid comparison.


References and Further Reading


http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~jus/0302/orofino.pdf

Federal Rules of Evidence as of 12/1/09:

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Obama Goes Nuclear!


Here's the rundown on old arguments (WSJ - provided):

Nuclear isn't safe. The 1979 Three Mile Island accident—in which a faulty cooling valve led to a meltdown without injuring anyone—occurred when computer technology had barely penetrated the U.S. industry. In the 1970s, each reactor was an island unto itself. Industry officials barely communicated. The valve that failed at Three Mile Island had failed nine times previously, yet nobody said a thing about it.

Today, thanks to the Price-Anderson Act, first adopted in 1957 and amended several times since, each of America's 104 reactors is now on the hook for $100 million in damages for an accident at another reactor ($10 billion coverage in all). You can bet they talk to each other. Accidental "scrams" and safety outages have been reduced to nearly zero. Our entire fleet is up and running 90% of the time. That's why, even though nuclear constitutes only 11% of generating capacity, it provides 20% of electricity.

Nuclear is too expensive. Building a 1,500-megawatt reactor will cost around $5 billion, which seems expensive until you compare it to everything else. The equivalent capacity in wind power would easily cost $4 billion because you have to build 4,000 windmills at $1 million apiece plus hundreds of miles of transmission lines and an almost equal capacity of natural gas generators to back them up when the wind doesn't blow.

Building zero-emissions coal plants that capture the carbon dioxide and bury it underground will probably cost more, but nobody really knows because it's never been done. Only natural gas is cheaper to build, but that's because 95% of the cost is in the fuel. (With nuclear it's only 26%.) Natural gas prices fluctuate. Would anyone care to predict what the price of natural gas will be in 25 years?

A hijacked jet liner crashing into a reactor would cause a nuclear holocaust. Go to YouTube and search "plane crashing into wall." You'll see a video of an F-4 fighter jet hitting a concrete containment wall at 500 miles per hour. The plane simply disappears. The wall barely budges. Nuclear opponents argue that a jumbo jet would have a greater impact, but the laws of physics say it would be about the same. A jet is a hollow metal tube. Even at the speed of a bullet (700 mph) it could not penetrate a concrete containment wall.

We haven't figured out what to do with the waste. Basically, there is no such thing as nuclear waste. The reason we have the controversy over the Yucca Mountain storage facility is because we gave up fuel reprocessing in the 1970s. Reprocessing reduces the volume of spent fuel—already remarkably small—by 97%. The French reprocess and store all their high-level waste from 30 years of producing 70% of their electricity beneath the floor of one room in their La Hague plant.

We can't reprocess because that will lead to nuclear proliferation. The conceit of the 1970s was that if we isolated plutonium in an American reprocessing plant, some foreign terrorist would steal it to make a bomb. Half a dozen countries have since built nuclear bombs, none of them with stolen American plutonium. North Korea built its own reactor. Iran has been enriching uranium. France, Japan and Russia all reprocess and no one has stolen their plutonium. Reprocessing American fuel has nothing to do with nuclear proliferation.

The nuclear revival is being forced on America by the powerful nuclear industry. There is no American "nuclear industry." Westinghouse is now owned by Toshiba. Areva is French. GE partners with Hitachi but is running in last place. Only three of the 33 proposed American reactors are GE designs. The biggest new international competitor is South Korea, which just won a $20 billion contract to build four reactors in the United Arab Emirates. China is building four Westinghouse AP1000 reactors, even though its design has not yet been approved by our Nuclear Regulatory Commission. When the first new reactors are built here, 70% of the parts will come from abroad.


So, is nuclear a viable option in America's (hopefully) green future or will the same country that had to change NMR to MRI have to find another alternative fuel?

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Supreme Court Case of the Week: Gibbons v. Ogden

Case

Thomas Gibbons, Appellant v. Aaron Ogden, Respondent (1824)

Chief Justice

John Marshall

Background

Aaron Ogden had a license to operate a monopolistic steamboat service granted by the State of New York. Thomas Gibbons operated a competing steamboat service on interstate waterways adjacent to the state of New York. Ogden took him to court in the state of New York to prevent him from operating his business, and two levels of New York court agreed with him.

Synopsis

The Supreme Court agreed with Gibbons' lawyers argument that that the Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution (the Commerce Clause) gave Congress the right to regulate commerce extended to "all aspects of it, overriding state laws to the contrary." (from wikipedia)

Vote & Dissenting Opinions

6-0 (with 1 abstaining)

Further Discussion

This case seems pretty straightforward and simple, really. It is an important case, but at least on first glance, appears to be an easy decision. Here's Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1 & 3 of the Constitution:

Clause 1: The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

Clause 3: To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes

References & Further Reading

http://www.house.gov/house/Constitution/Constitution.html

http://www.oyez.org/cases/1792-1850/1824/1824_0

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibbons_v._Ogden

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Bad Journalism Example

This past Sunday now-VP, Joe Biden, squared off on juxtaposing political talk shows against former-VP, Dick Cheney. Both sides vehemently argued why the Obama administration was/wasn’t handling terrorism correctly.
That is the background.
Here is the topic

Monday morning two journalist from Bloomberg News published an article on the war of words (1). Throughout the article the two journalist report on the fighting and list a half dozen quotes from each person. Then it ends.

Recently, Brent and I have been asking ourselves whether some information needs to be limited to the public. This is a prime example of information I would argue should be limited. What these two journalist did was report that two people got in an argument and that they have authority, so we the public should listen. However, they did not fact check either person or give any information regarding the subject on which the two people were arguing. Is this real journalism? Did it really take both of them to read through the quotes from a 15 minute segment and write them down? Wouldn’t real journalist dug up information one what the two members were saying. For instance, Cheney argued that “Christmas day bomber” should not have been read his Miranda rights Well, journalist, tell me what the Bush administration did under a similar circumstance with the “shoe bomber” back in 2003? Was that suspect read his Miranda rights?

It is my conclusion, then that these two journalist have done nothing but complicate the matter for public. This article could have been replaced telling me that Brad Pitt and Angelina were in an argument, because as far as disseminating information that will help me, a voting citizen, make a decision, this article did nothing.

Source:
1) http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a6phLM6zkt8k

Monday, February 8, 2010

Science News: Autism & Vaccines, Soda & Cancer

Two big science stories to address:

1) Last week The Lancet (impact factor 28.4; that’s big) retracted a controversial 1998 article linking MMR vaccinations to the onset of autism after almost 80% of the original authors wrote letters to the journal requesting a retraction.

2) Today in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention there was a study involving 60,500 Chinese and they discovered a link between drinking as little as two (2) cans of soda a week and 80% increase in pancreatic cancer.

Let’s address both of these.

1) http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/56008/title/Journal_retracts_flawed_study_linking_MMR_vaccine_and_autism


2) http://cebp.aacrjournals.org/content/current pg#447

Friday, January 29, 2010

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Hands Up Heads Down!

Or hands up, heads up, and most importantly butts up!

"...a handful of epidemiological research groups around the world, and big names such as Ulf Ekelund of the epidemiology unit of the UK's Medical Research Council and James A. Levine of the US's Mayo Clinic, are trying to shift the debate about obesity. As well as talking about exercise, they want to discuss sitting." (1)

These large studies tell us something intuitively obvious: a job which requires you to constantly be moving (or at least standing) is better for your health presupposing your baseline is permitting, i.e. no arthritis, no orthostatic hypotension, no joint disorders, etc.

How many hours do you stand during the day?
According to the same article where the quotation was found, Donald Rumsfeld is quoted to say he stands for 8-10 hours a day but enemy combatants are only required to stand for 4 hours at a time as a measure of their incarceration in our prisons.

Perhaps the fitness of a nation should be assessed by the "flabbiness" of its citizens asses?





1) Stand up to the insidious dangers of sitting down

By Simon Kuper, in the Financial Times. Accessed at ft.com

Published: January 23 2010 02:00 | Last updated: January 23 2010 02:00

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Supreme Court Case of the Week: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission

Case
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010)

Chief Justice
John Roberts

Background
Citizens United made a documentary titled "Hillary: The Movie" to be released before the Democratic primaries of 2008. Initially it was ruled that the company couldn't advertise the film before the primaries due to the restrictions set in place by the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA) of 2002, more commonly known as the McCain-Feingold reform bill for its two sponsors. This was to restrict corporations from using their treasury funds to openly campaign for or against candidates in elections.

Synopsis
On the basis of the 1st Amendment, the court overruled two previous rulings (Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce (1990) and partially overruled McConnell v. Federal Election Commission (2003)) and overturned the BCRA. The fact that they overruled other decisions was part of what made the decision a shock to many people. It seems laws on this topic go back nearly 100 years, starting when Theodore Roosevelt was president.

Vote & Dissenting Opinions
5-4

The conclusion of Justice Stevens, representing the dissenters (taken from the wikipedia page listed at the bottom of this post):

"At bottom, the Court's opinion is thus a rejection of the common sense of the American people, who have recognized a need to prevent corporations from undermining self government since the founding, and who have fought against the distinctive corrupting potential of corporate electioneering since the days of Theodore Roosevelt. It is a strange time to repudiate that common sense. While American democracy is imperfect, few outside the majority of this Court would have thought its flaws included a dearth of corporate money in politics."

Further Discussion

Does this give more weight to corporations than to individual citizens (who are limited to ~$2300, if memory serves correctly)? Even if corporations are restricted from donating directly to candidates, it's not as if a candidate will be unaware of who's putting multiple campaign ads out for them, and remember that during their term. However, do corporations not also deserve freedom of speech? If laws are made in regards to how they can act, shouldn't they also have the ability to speak out about it? I know many would argue they'll fill the airwaves with misinformation and lies for their own benefit, but don't normal people do that also? We don't argue to take away freedom of speech from them.

What will be the role of foreign companies in this? President Obama mentioned in his State of the Union address that this may open the door to foreign companies to play a roll in our campaigns. I'm guessing the entire law was overturned, but could it still be applied to foreign companies? It's not as if they're covered in the Constitution.

Support for this seems to be based entirely on party lines (which obviously isn't surprising) with conservatives arguing it's a blow for free speech, and liberals saying it gives corporations too much power. While corporate power in many instances does give me pause, I think according to the letter of the law, this ruling is probably accurate and in the better long-term interests of American citizens. I don't think this can just be viewed as corporations buying TV commercials around election time, as the implications of it could be far more reaching.


References & Further Reading

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillary:_The_Movie


Thursday, January 14, 2010

The Problem of Evil: An Argument Against the Existence of God

The Problem of Evil

Consider the following three claims:

a) God is omnipotent (i.e., all powerful), omniscient (i.e., all knowing), and omni-benevolent (i.e., wholly and perfectly good).
b) God exists.
c) There is unnecessary evil in the world.

Most theists who believe in the Judeo-Christian God accept these three statements, but they are logically contradictory (i.e., that can’t all be true) so one of them must be rejected. Statement c) looks pretty difficult to deny—just consider the recent earthquake in Haiti. The rejection of b) would be the atheistic (or perhaps some species of agnostic) response. Theists have tried to respond to this problem in several ways which I’ll discuss below.

The Apologists Response: The most straightforward tack is to claim that God allows evil in the world and we can't possibly know the reasons for which he allows such evil to exist. For instance, some claim that maybe the Holocaust was a necessary evil for some future reasons or future good that we're not aware of. This strategy claims that the three statements are only apparently contradictory but can be rendered consistent. But this doesn't work because God would be, nonetheless, allowing such evil and harm to persist when he doesn't have to. And this doesn't seem to be characteristic of an omni-benevolent God. In order to emphasize this point, it’s worth noting that we all seem to be able to conceive of a world with less evil in it; we all seem to be able to think of a possible world in which things go better than this one. And if this is the case, then it seems God has failed in some way (since he has perfect knowledge, is all powerful, and is wholly good) by allowing evil in this world when he need not.

The Theodicy Response: Some theorists have tried to give some sort of reason for why God would allow evil in the world in order to explain away the apparent contradiction in the above statements. There are many different reasons one could give but a popular response is that God values giving man free will over creating a world with less evil. (Alvin Plantiga—a contemporary philosopher at Notre Dame gives this response.) Therefore, the theodicy continues, it's the existence of free will that has led to such evil in the world. But again, it seems as though God is nonetheless allowing evil to persist in this world when he wouldn't have to. In addition, this doesn’t seem to explain the existence of evil and suffering brought on by natural disasters.

Rejection of a) Response: One might try to reject a) claiming that their idea of God isn't exactly the Christian God. But if this is the case, it doesn’t look like a God who lacks one of the three main features (omnipotence, omniscience, or omni-benevolence) is worthy of our praise. One would need to explain what the difference is between this God and the conception of God in statement a), then further argue that he is a God that is worthy of our praise.

I’m interested in hearing other responses to this argument against the existence (and the possibility!) of God.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Google to potentially pull out of China

In case you haven't read yet, apparently Google had some Gmail accounts hacked into (or at least it was attempted) of Chinese human rights activists. As a result, Google may stop filtering their searches for Chinese citizens.

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/01/new-approach-to-china.html

So a few questions:

What is the potential profit loss for Google in this scenario?

Should they have filtered the internet for China originally?

What kind of company steps into their void (American, Chinese, another country; established, new, something in between)?

How does this affect Chinese citizens in the short and long run?

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Tuesday Morning Quarterback - Who is this guy, and why does he write for ESPN?

I occasionally read this column when the headline catches my attention, and numerous times the author has brought up good points, only to have them be quite short and easy for people to skip over.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=easterbrook/100105&sportCat=nfl

Today he discusses two issues that I think are worthy of discussion, under the following headings:

Do Coaches Need To Be Coached?

Newspapers -- To Survive, Ignite Corporate Controversies That Require Image Advertising

I think the former applies to the discussion we had previously on the violence of sport in America, specifically in regards to Jarrod's comment that football in its current form is likely due to change in the near future, and this may be a big part of it. Considering the discussion on concussions, I'm surprised this hasn't gotten more attention than it has. I think his section on this should've been enlarged to an entire column and put on the front page.

The latter is an issue I hadn't fully considered. He's mostly just saying that newspapers have benefitted from controversial issues over the last year (mostly health care reform). But how much of a role do they play in the formation of these controversies?

Finally, to get back to the title of the post, I just looked the author up on Wikipedia, and he's actually the editor of the New Republic, and writes frequently on space and environmental topics.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg_Easterbrook

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Book Review: Problems of Knowledge and Freedom

Title
Problems of knowledge and freedom
Author
Noam Chomsky
Date
Two Lectures originally presented at Trinity College (Cambridge) in 1971

Reason
I previously read Chomsky’s “Profit over People” and greatly enjoyed his writing style as well as his insights and conclusions precisely pointed at not just interpreting our society, but also how we may improve it. While searching for additional Chomsky books to read I came across “Problems of knowledge and freedom” which offered a glimpse of Chomsky at the precipice of public admiration (or disagreement; 1971). The book couples Chomsky’s life (linguistics and politics) succinctly into two chapters (lectures) and reveals someone whom Chomsky revered (Bertrand Russell).


Synopsis
The book is two chapters; On interpreting the world and On changing the world. The first chapter summarizes Chomsky’s thesis on the acquisition and transfer of knowledge among humans (Linguistics, naturally). Briefly, a system of knowledge results from the interplay of innate mechanisms, genetically determined maturational processes, and the interaction with the social and physical environment (Chomsky’s Thesis). Herein lay the precepts from which the rest of the chapter evolves from; including our mental faculties being limited by our linguistic fecundity, neuroplasticity (use it or lose it), original thought being preempted by prior knowledge bases, and the necessity of a fully developed limbic system to give “scope and limits” to knowledge acquisition.

In the second chapter a relatively young Chomsky (41) recognizes the late work of his predecessor (Russell) and treks a similar path critically analyzing Western cultural and specifically the United States. This chapter builds nicely describing Chomsky’s phrase “consent without consent” highlighting the use of propaganda to galvanize a people into backing the concentration of power to ensure the status quo (a firm belief in the “benevolent” autocracies will be accompanied by one’s ability to accomplish the American Dream) and the chapter ends with many examples demonstrating the use and power of state propaganda (contextual; 1970s therefore Vietnam particularly). On of the more enjoyable sections in a chapter revealing subversion at the highest levels is a mental exercise Chomsky asks his readers to try reciting current United States handlings of war and inserting USSR for U.S. For an unfamiliar reader this could be a paradigm shifter.

Review
Why you should read this book. This is a Wikipedia page on Chomsky’s work. By this I mean it is brief but succinct with many references and best of all the author is Chomsky himself. I would recommend this book as a starter for those interested in Chomsky as his other readings will likely reiterate his statements here. The only criticism I might offer is Chomsky appears to be unaware of his critics or those holding opposing views with merit. This is a criticism of this particular book and not of Chomsky in general.


Quotes
“The major point that I want to show, by this brief and informal discussion, is that there apparently are deep-seated and rather abstract principles of a very general nature that determine the form and interpretation of sentences and such principles are language universals; it is plausible to attribute the proposed language invariants to the innate language faculty which is, in turn, one component of the structure of mind.”

“The systems of knowledge that underlie normal human behavior simply cannot be described in terms of networks of association, fabrics of dispositions to respond, habit structures, and the like.”

From Russell:
“There can be no real freedom or democracy until the men who do the work in a business also control its management…and the real obstacles lie in the heart of man, and the cure for these is a firm hope, informed and fortified in thought.”

Friday, January 1, 2010

Book Review: Asleep

Title
Asleep: The Forgotten Epidemic That Remains One of Medicine's Greatest Mysteries


Date of Publication
March, 2010

Reason for reading
Micki got an advance copy from the book store she works part-time at because she thought I'd be interested in it, and it did look interesting.