Posts tagged "more"

“ Globalization creates interlocking fragility, while reducing volatility and giving the appearance of stability. In other words it creates devastating Black Swans. We have never lived before under the threat of a global collapse. Financial Institutions have been merging into a smaller number of very large banks. Almost all banks are interrelated. So the financial ecology is swelling into gigantic, incestuous, bureaucratic banks - when one fails, they all fall. The increased concentration among banks seems to have the effect of making financial crisis less likely, but when they happen they are more global in scale and hit us very hard. We have moved from a diversified ecology of small banks, with varied lending policies, to a more homogeneous framework of firms that all resemble one another. True, we now have fewer failures, but when they occur ….I shiver at the thought.
Nassim Taleb, The Black Swan (2006)

posted : Friday, December 12th, 2008

“ Treating certain systems (computers, brains) as mechanisms working towards potentially meaningful results by purely formal procedures has proved to be a fruitful research program. Think of a jigsaw puzzle. The shape of its pieces contains no information about the content of the representation that has to be retrieved. Finding out how the pieces fit together is a syntactic activity that can be performed according to formal principles. All those pieces just fit together in the end; but, remarkably enough, a picture of something has been assembled by this process. Evidently it is possible, by appropriate construction, to integrate formal procedures and the more complex relationships between signs and their interpretation. A puzzle illustrates semantic machines insofar as it leads to representation of reality in the absence of any prior semantic information.
— Herbert Hrachovec, Irreconcilable Similarities. Man and Semantic Machines (1986).

posted : Monday, December 1st, 2008

“ If biologists have ignored self-organization, it is not because self-ordering is not pervasive and profound. It is because we biologists have yet to understand how to think about systems governed simultaneously by two sources of order. Yet who seeing the snowflake, who seeing simple lipid molecules cast adrift in water forming themselves into cell-like hollow lipid vesicles, who seeing the potential for the crystallization of life in swarms of reacting molecules, who seeing the stunning order for free in networks linking tens upon tens of thousands of variables, can fail to entertain a central thought: if ever we are to attain a final theory in biology, we will surely, surely have to understand the commingling of self-organization and selection. We will have to see that we are the natural expressions of a deeper order. Ultimately, we will discover in our creation myth that we are expected after all.
Stuart Kauffman At Home in the Universe, Oxford University Press, 1995, p 112.

posted : Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Rabbit in your headlights

I’m a rabbit in your headlights
Scared of the spotlight
You don’t come to visit
I’m stuck on this bed

Thin rubber gloves
She laughs when she’s crying
She cries when she’s laughing

Fat bloody fingers are sucking your soul away

I’m a rabbit in your headlights
Christian suburbanite
Washed down the toilet
Money to burn

Fat bloody fingers are sucking your soul away

If you’re frightened of dying and then you hold on
You’ll see devils tearing your life away
But, if you’ve made your peace
Then the devils are really angels
Freeing you from the Earth… from the Earth

White worms on the underground
Caught between stations
Butter fingers
I’m losing my patience

I’m a rabbit in your headlights
Christian suburbanite
You got money to burn

Fat bloody fingers are sucking your soul away… away… away…

Radiohead, UNKLE & DJ Shadow on YouTube.

posted : Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Massive Attack - Teardrop (Mad Professor Mazaruni Vocal mix)

posted : Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

The man without qualities

“His appearance gives no clue to what his profession might be, and yet he doesn’t look like a man without a profession either. Consider what he’s like: He always knows what to do. He knows how to gaze into a woman’s eyes. He can put his mind to any question at any time. He can box. He is gifted, strong-willed, open-minded, fearless, tenacious, dashing, circumspect—why quibble, suppose we grant him all those qualities—yet he has none of them! They have made him what he is, they have set his course for him, and yet they don’t belong to him. When he is angry, something in him laughs. When he is sad, he is up to something. When something moves him, he turns against it. He’ll always see a good side to every bad action. What he thinks of anything will always depend on some possible context—nothing is, to him, what it is: everything is subject to change, in flux, part of a whole, of an infinite number of wholes presumably adding up to a super-whole that, however, he knows nothing about. So every answer he gives is only a partial answer, every feeling an opinion, and he never cares what something is, only ‘how’ it is—someextraneous seasoning that somehow goes along with it, that’s what interests him.”

posted : Saturday, November 22nd, 2008