Friday, November 20, 2009

If you start forgetting faces…

There is a psychological condition known as Cotard’s syndrome where people are possessed by the idea that they are dead and no longer exist.  To them, they are no longer here or, at the very least, missing important organs. 

The French (who discovered it) called it the “negation delirium”.

This is another thing that makes me uncomfortable--even more than the Wikipedia photo of a White Man.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Your Colorful Past















To those of us who didn't live through it, the Great Depression is a period that evokes little more than a handful of iconic, black and white images. Often haunting, sometimes beautiful, those images are twice removed from us - once by the passage of time, and again by the absence of color.

That's one reason I'm so taken with this collection of images captured on behalf of the Farm Security Administration and the Office of War Information. Taken during the the late 1930s and early 1940s, these photographs document Depression-Era life as people really experienced it: in color. Check it out.

Ray Manzarek speaks Egyptian

"The Golden Scarab is the story of a young man's journey into the consciousness."

Indeed.image  This rolled around in my music library.  And like the picture of the iconic white person, this too made me uncomfortable.

“In Egypt on the Nile in Memphis-Heliopolis
Scarab roll your dung ball
Roll away the night
Push away the sun ball
Golden scarab light”

What white people look like


According to wikipedia's article on the topic. This makes me uncomfortable, but I can't put my finger on why.

Corruption Quantified

Every year, Transparency International puts out its Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), which aggregates polls and data relating to government corruption, and assigns each country a numerical ranking from one to ten, one being the lowest score and ten the highest.  According to the CPI, the least corrupt country is New Zealand, clocking in at 9.4; the most corrupt is Somalia, with a paltry 1.1.  The U.S. comes in with a respectable 7.5, which is much, much better than I'd have thought.  Now, this is obviously very imprecise work.  Countries go up and down in ranking every year, and there's no way to tell if they're more or less corrupt, or if the data is simply more or less accurate.  But TI does their homework, and I think this is potentially useful as a rough guide.  It's also interesting to me that it roughly corresponds with the Quality of Life Index, and DOES NOT correspond to GDP rankings.  Again, this isn't science or anything, but it's interesting to think about, and interactive maps are always a fun waste of time.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

"What" indeed


I was entering a search query on Google, but didn't get farther than the word "what" when autofill kicked in:


You can try the experiment yourself if you like.  Anyway, I draw your attention to the sixth query from the top.  Selecting it brought up this results page:



 But the real fun is in the Amazon.com page.  From the Suggested Reading list to the Comments Page, it's pure gold, and well worth checking out.  Only then may you go to the Wikipedia entry.

Jesus: Outlier?

Hilarious Malcolm Gladwell send-up in Vanity Fair.

Why baby Jesus? Research confirms there were upwards of 157 hotel-cum-stables in Bethlehem that night, with estimated 97 percent occupancy levels. So why did that star shine so brightly over his?

Imagine that I were to ask you to dress up as a baby and lie in a manger...

Et cetera, et cetera.

The re-definition of the re-definition of marriage

Dan Savage makes a good point:

Wednesday, November 11, 2009