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ideafestival
We don't say it often enough. Thanks for following along! #staycurious
ideafestival
"Intelligence not [just a] 'lump of something that’s in our heads' but 'a transaction among people.'” buff.ly/12W0RBD |
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Worn Out by the Apocolypse
| 29.05.2012
The fact is, we're much too confident in our assessments. SciAm: It’s natural for us to reduce the complexity of our rationality into convenient bite-sized ideas. As the trader turned epistemologist Nassim Taleb says: 'We humans, facing limits of knowledge, and things we do not observe, the unseen and the unknown, resolve the tension by squeezing life and the world into crisp commoditized ideas.' But readers of popular psychology books on rationality must recognize that there’s a lot they don’t know, and they must be beware of how seductive stories are. The popular literature on cognitive biases is enlightening, but let’s be irrational about irrationality; exposure to X is not knowledge and control of X. Reading about cognitive biases, after all, does not free anybody from their nasty epistemological pitfalls. The past 200,000 years or so of human development has honed a biological heuristic for dealing with all of the world, all at once. We imagine. We create. We fill in the gaps. We tell stories, some of them better than others. But our sentient, mirrored selves are quick to swivel back to threats. Our grapefruit-sized brains still buzz about the unknown. Is that rustling in the bush friend or foe? "Exposure to X is not knowledge and control of X." Here's the question: Do we believe the best or worst? Do we use our imaginative faculties to ask great questions or to seek out threats? On a recent Sunday afternoon passing through an airport bookstore, I stopped to admire the placement of two books, side by side: Jonah Lehrer's "Imagine" and Michael Savage's "Trickle Down Tyranny." While they were stocked because of their appearance on the New York Times best seller lists, their positioning - one hopeful and future oriented and the other cynical and despairing - got my attention, and I wondered if the bookstore employee had placed them together in an act of protest. I don't know about you but the apocalypse is wearing me out. Jonah Lehrer, by the way, spoke at the 2008 IdeaFestival. In our compressed and constantly pinging culture we often forget just how enormous it all is and how small, really, our understanding. Ulcerative opinions and strained theories don't make discoveries that can be used over and over again, nor do they lead to worthwhile futures. They just fill the gaps with our first and worst. So when I let those stories seduce me, I don't have a reality problem. I have a me problem. Being "irrational about irrationality" is also called faith. I just need to be reminded from time to time that I still believe. Wayne Image:
Nikky Finney - "The will of the human heart to speak its own mind," it can never be controlled
| 24.05.2012
Will you be as moved by Nikky Finney's speech accepting the 2011 National Book Awards honor for her poetry as I was? My heavens these words are gorgeous. Following her on stage, host John Lithgow said this short speech was the finest acceptance speech he had ever heard - for any award. Start at about the 4:40 mark in the video embedded here and prepare to be transported. And yes, you'll want to get to your seats early to see her at IdeaFestival 2012. Wayne
Physicist Lisa Randall on extra dimensions: "a word is worth a thousand pictures"
| 22.05.2012
Using the Victorian novel "Flatland" to answer a question from Charlie Rose about how we can conceptualize the dimensions beyond the familiar three, theoretical physicist Lisa Randall sketches a scenario in which Flatlanders might infer the existence of a third dimension. Similarly, she says, we can use mathematics of relativity to arrive at conclusions about the true, if bizarre, nature of our own universe. "When dealing with higher dimensions, a word is worth a thousand pictures." By that I think she means that math or langauge are transcendent human accomplishments, capable of not just representing nature, but of understanding it deeply. Randall, who will speak at IdeaFestival 2012, was recently awarded the Andrew Gemant Award, which is given annually for significant contributions to the cultural, artistic, or humanistic dimension of physics. She will speak at IdeaFestival 2012 on the truth-is-stranger-fiction nature of our own universe. Stay curious. Wayne |
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IdeaFestival/ICI, Inc. | 200 West Vine Street, Suite 420 | Lexington, KY 40507 | idea@ideafestival.com | phone: 866-966-4607 toll-free or 502-966-4607 | fax: 859.259.0986 Copyright @ ICI, Inc. 2013 |
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