floating in space… Ladies and Gentlemen, we are

3Dec/070

Lila: An Inquiry into Morals

Just finished the book Lila: An Inquiry into Morals. A definite must read. If you've read Pirsig's first book, you will know what to expect, but I liked this one even more. It's somehow more practical and provides a fresh view on the big questions in life.

But it is difficult to read. Well, I suppose it's not a simple subject, and his meticulous exploration of every detail is necessary. And that is partly what I like about his books as well. It's not just some easy to read feel good book, that provides you with feel good catch phrases on a plate. You reason with the author, exploring and following his train of thought from beginning to end.

Unfortunately this is why many people will not read this book. Even though it provides much more than just a rehash of new age values (like the recent The Secret) it is not as accessible. You have to dig a little.

11Jun/070

Speed Reading Made EZ

Found the following in some newsgroup. Some more detail on speed reading here:
Speed reading - wikibooks
Test your reading speed with this handy Online Reading Speed Test.

  1. Sit down at a well lit table and sit up straight.
  2. Take a hard cover book with big easy to read print. preferably not a novel -- some kind of no-brainer non fiction works best.
  3. Take your finger or a pen and underline the words as you read them. Get used to pacing with your finger for a few minutes.
  4. Now speed up. Simply move your finger FASTER THAN YOU CAN SOUND OUT THE WORDS. You probably will not be able to understand what you read. In fact, if you think you can comprehend what you are reading, speed up till you simply see a blur of words that you recognize. If you are having problems and keeps sounding out the words compulsively -- hum a tune. This disables your brain's capacity for verbalizing words.
  5. Aim your eyes above the line of text you are reading, as if you were trying to read "between the lines". This makes it easy to focus your attention on GROUPS of words rather than your eye stopping on individual words, which slows you down. At first you are not aiming to understand; you are trying to train your brain to accept that it can see and know what phrases of words mean simply by looking at them.
  6. Practice this exercise for no more than 15 minutes at a sittting, no more than one sitting per day, usually after your morning wake-up ritual when you are at your prime. If you practice for more than 15 minutes, you will exhaust the overworked neurons that are trying to adapt to a new skill, and will have to wait for 2 to 3 days and restart. If you try to push too hard or too fast, your brain hardware will resist you.
  7. After 8 or so sessions, your brain will start to abandon trying to comprehend what you read as "sounds" and instead will visually grab words and process them in parallel, instead of one at a time. Typical reading speeds at this point in time are around 800 to 1500 words per minute.
  8. The ultimate key to speed reading is realizing that your brain is learning to process words with the process of seeing them in groups, then processing their meaning. We are taught to read by seeing words, sounding them out, and then using our spoken speech hardware to comprehend what we read. The brain doesn't need this slow speech step.
  9. After a number of sessions in which you are comfortable with this technique, get rid of the finger and use a small brown index card with three black semicircular dots along one edge on it. The black dots tell you where to position your eyes as you read across the page. Take this card, and drag it down the page, scanning each line 123 123 123 123 with your eyes fixating either on the dots or above the text lines. With your finger out of the way, you can pick up some serious speed. As with before, don't expect perfect comprehension right away.
  10. Lose the card. Get in the habit of just scanning with your eyes. (If I'm tired, sometimes I still pull out the card. It's a great crutch.)

There are more techniques for speed than just these. I used to crank along at 30K WPM. This 10 step plan is good for about 3K WPM or sometimes a little more. The fantastic rates come from learning to scan in text essentially out of order, grabbing entire paragraphs as your eyes pop around them almost at random.

Practice Practice Practice.

As you read, try to ask questions to yourself about what is going on, or who the material is suitable for, or something to allow you to "correlate" it. If you are not reading with need or potential purpose in mind, your brain won't remember it. In fact, your brain will not even process it. It will just see words flying by. The purpose of studying for an exam just doesn't cut it. You have to try to imagine using the material in the real world, or sifting it for "junk" or planning something to do with it, and considering what effect what you are reading will have on your plan or your needs. In short, your brain will slowly get in the habit of "asking questions" at lightning speeds. It won't even bother to sound these questions out or formulate them -- just instantly come up with them and compare them relative to the material being read.

You will remember what you read relative to the questions you thought up as you read the material.

Some people try to speed read novels. Forget it. It really doesn't work so well. They become lifeless, because you have to read for "this did happen and this did etc." Speed-read novels often lose that sense of life. If you have an exam in a Lit class, then speed reading is for you. Just expect the novel to be a little less "alive" than it might otherwise be when you otherwise read slowly and can feel the emotions that were conveyed in the words.

2Jun/071

RichardDawkins.net – The Official Richard Dawkins Website

Christopher Hitchens - Religion Poisons Everything.

Havent had a chance to read it in full, but here's the link...

Filed under: Blogroll, religion 1 Comment
16May/060

Special Assignment on cell towers

As a regular Special Assignment viewer I'm generally very impressed by the presentation and the level of investigation in most of the programs.
I must say though that I was dismayed at the lack of proper investigation on the program about cell masts. It is clear that they should stick to social and political issues because when it comes to informing the public on scientific issues they are miserably failing. But of course that is not their goal. They just report news worth stories.

This is a very important and sensitive issue and will certainly become even more important as more people take advantage of wireless technology. It will not be solved by reporting anecdotal stories and speculating about things without understanding the issues involved.

There are no evidence that suggest radiation within the approved levels are dangerous.
There was as far as I could tell no effort made to investigate other causes for the ill effects the people in the program experienced.
There was no mention of checks on the cell towers to make sure they are operating within safe limits.
There was no mention of why cell towers are making buzzing sounds or even if the buzzing sounds are from the microwave transmitters.
With the number of cell phone towers in the world, why are there only one family that turned grey?

I find it amusing that one of the 'experts' were a homeopath. Other than the cell phone radiation issue, homeopathy does have a lot of research proving that it is only as effective as the placebo effect.

The placebo effect of living next to a cell tower will now have to be neutralized by the placebo effect from an expensive 'hi tech' (magnetic) pendant on a chain. :| :? :roll:

Wikipedia is a good start

12May/060

Rolling Stone : Inside Scientology

Rolling Stone : Inside Scientology

It's always funny when you read about silly people with silly notions, and that is how I felt when I started reading that article. But if you read until the end, you will realize that this "church" is messing with real people and real emotions. It is not harmless. There are people that clearly benefit from the the work of others.
That is not freedom.

"I'd like to start a religion," Eshbach recalls Hubbard saying. "That's where the money is."

12May/060

Self help sham


Scientific American: SHAM Scam
by Michael Shermer

If you need to pay for someone's help, why is it called "self-help"?

Exactly.

Filed under: Blogroll, religion No Comments