Yin And Yang

Yin And Yang
Balance

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Ravens - Discover the Brainpower of the Bird in Black - Corvid Intelligence | Nature

Ravens - Discover the Brainpower of the Bird in Black - Corvid Intelligence | Nature

Generally, birds don’t get credit for being smart animals. Just think of the way the expression “bird-brained” is used. But corvids, which include magpies, crows, and ravens in particular, flutter in the face of this negative stereotype. Their behavior is often so clever, cunning, fun-loving, smart, and witty that it has motivated researchers to try to explain why. In fact, some scientists consider these black-feathered scavengers’ position on the intelligence spectrum to be on par with canids such as wolves, coyotes, and dogs, and have conducted experiments to try to quantify the raven’s brainpower.

In NATURE’s Ravens we see zoologist Bernd Heinrich of the University of Vermont work with ravens to see whether they could learn to distinguish between strings bearing food and strings bearing rocks and modify their behavior based on their understanding. The ravens performed well, even when the level of difficulty was increased by crossing the strings.

Heinrich has also used anecdotal evidence to point to raven cognitive intelligence. For example, the researcher flushed a bird off a frozen chunk of suet and observed upon inspection that the raven used its beak to carve a precise groove around the fat, allowing it to carry off a large chunk at once instead of several small morsels to eat one at a time. Heinrich commented that “the raven not only had thought ahead, but also had acted on that thought and shown intelligence.”

A central question that presents itself is whether the raven’s sharp behavior indicates complex cognitive processes associated with human learning. Johannes Fritz and Kurt Kotrschal of the University of Vienna, Austria, attempted to provide an answer with an experiment similar to Heinrich’s. Ravens were asked to perform a task — opening a box to get a reward — and then teach the behavior to their fellow birds. According to Henry Gee of Nature Magazine Online, while the birds’ performance indicates a high learning level, the results are inconclusive because it’s impossible to tell how the ravens learn: is it by a complex form of “imitative learning” or by a lesser process known as “stimulus enhancement”?

Gee suggests that while ravens might learn by stimulus enhancement, which means that a learner raven might simply come to link the act of opening a box with getting a reward, it seems likely that the corvids engage in imitative learning, which Gee states is “considered to be the most demanding category of social learning, because it requires the learner to translate what it sees (sensory input) into its own actions (motor output).”

How then can one account for corvids’ seemingly complex decision-making skills? After all, birds don’t have a cerebral cortex, so at one time their actions were considered robotic in nature. But in the 1960s, neurologist Stanley Cobb found that birds have a part in the forebrain, called the hyperstraiatum, that allows them to perform synonymous functions, and that ravens have among the largest brains of any birds as well as a relatively high number of brain cells. Natural history author Candace Savage writes: “Crows, ravens, magpies, and jays are not just feathered machines, rigidly programmed by their genetics. Instead, they are beings that, within the constraints of their molecular inheritance, make complex decisions and show every sign of enjoying a rich awareness.”

Beyond explaining how and why ravens act as they do, it’s how this innate intelligence manifests itself in behavior that makes these birds fascinating to observe. As seen on NATURE, ravens achieve mastery and possess manipulative powers over other creatures in their domain, often letting others do work for them. For example, ravens will call wolves and coyotes to prospective meals so they can expose the carcass and make the meat accessible to the birds. In addition, ravens will show their true scavenger colors by waiting for other birds with specialized foraging skills to make a catch and then cunningly seize the defeated prey for themselves.

Not all raven behavior is so devilish; some is merely mischievous and even good-natured. On NATURE, we are treated to a raven frolicking in the snow as well as the domesticated pet raven named Loki soothingly and majestically flying alongside her owner’s vehicle. Seeing how affectionate and keen these birds are, it’s easy to understand why one might want to keep a pet raven. As Loki’s owner, Rose Buck, says, “Loki’s bright, clever, very intelligent, and mischievous. Sometimes, he can be an absolute pain, but I wouldn’t be without him. He’s just great.”

Though it might be tempting to run right out to your local pet store to buy a raven, they aren’t available and, more importantly, are federally protected in the United States; it’s illegal to buy or even hold a raven (unless one has a difficult-to-obtain permit). However, many people successfully raise orphaned, nestling crows under 3-4 weeks old to the point where they are able to eat independently, and then release the birds when they are approximately eight weeks old. Information on diet and care of orphaned ravens, as well as a wealth of other material, can be found on the American Society of Crows and Ravens Web site.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Self-Respect is an empowering emotion that can be cultivated.

—Thoreau said,

"What a man thinks of himself, that it is which determines, or rather indicates, his fate."

"Man is the artificer of his own happiness." — Journal, 21 January 1838


Have a clear idea of the person you wish to be then begin acting like you are already that person, show compassion and do random acts of kindness if that is your goal. Start now, where you are with the tools at hand.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Karen Armstrong


Winner of £1m Templeton prize attacks ‘fundamentalism’ of Dawkins - Times Online

Winner of £1m Templeton prize attacks ‘fundamentalism’ of Dawkins - Times Online


From The Times
March 26, 2010
Winner of £1m Templeton prize attacks ‘fundamentalism’ of Dawkins
Hannah Devlin


The “scientific fundamentalism” promoted by the atheist Richard Dawkins was criticised yesterday by the winner of a prize he had attacked.

Professor Francisco Ayala, who won the £1 million Templeton Prize for scientific thought, said that attacking religion and ridiculing believers provided ammunition for religious leaders who insisted that followers had to choose between God and Darwin. “Richard Dawkins has been a friend for more than 20 years, but it is unfortunate that he goes beyond the boundaries of science in making statements that antagonise believers,” he said.

Professor Ayala, of the University of California, Irvine, who is an authority on evolution and genetics, won the prize for his contribution to the question “Does scientific knowledge contradict religious belief?”. The prize, the largest of its kind, was founded by the late entrepreneur Sir John Templeton to honour scientists who contribute to progress in religion.

The professor, who was born in Spain and is a naturalised American, says science and religion cannot be in contradiction because they address different questions. It is only when either subject oversteps its boundary, as he believes is the case with Professor Dawkins, that a contradiction arises, he said. “The scientific fundamentalism proposed by Dawkins implies a materialistic view of the world. But once science has had its say, there remains much about reality that is of interest. Common sense tells us that science can’t tell us everything.”

This week Professor Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Oxford, attacked the US National Academy of Sciences for hosting the Templeton ceremony. He said on his blog: “The US National Academy of Sciences has brought ignominy on itself by agreeing to host the announcement of the 2010 Templeton Prize. This is exactly the kind of thing Templeton is ceaselessly angling for — recognition among real scientists — and they use their money shamelessly to satisfy their doomed craving for scientific respectability.”

Professor Ayala was ordained as a priest in 1960, but left the priesthood to study genetics. He maintains links with the Vatican, but would not reveal whether he believed in God. “My arguments are valid independent of my personal beliefs,” he said. Professor Ayala has been a fierce opponent of the teaching of creationism and intelligent design in schools alongside evolution “for the same reason that we don’t teach witchcraft in medicine or alchemy in chemistry classes”.

Man’s “flawed” design made evolutionary theory more compatible with the idea of a benevolent creator than intelligent design. “Because of the flawed design of our reproductive systems more than 20 per cent of all pregnancies end in spontaneous abortion,” said Professor Ayala. “Do you want to blame God for that? No, science has provided an answer. It is the clumsy ways of nature and the evolutionary process.”

The Duke of Edinburgh will present the prize to Professor Ayala on May 5 in a private ceremony at Buckingham Palace.

Paul Davies, a cosmologist at Arizona State University and previous winner of the prize, said that the rise of fundamentalism had dampened what was once a productive dialogue between scientists and the religious community. “Most people do care whether there’s a deeper meaning to life and the Universe,” he said. “Some of the founders of science were religious thinkers. This prize is part of that tradition.”

Saturday, March 27, 2010

David Pogue says "Simplicity sells" | Video on TED.com FUNNY

David Pogue says "Simplicity sells" Video on TED.com




Technology columnist


David Pogue is the personal technology columnist for the New York Times and an Emmy Award-winning tech correspondent for CBS News. He's also one of the world's bestselling how-to authors, with titles in the For Dummies series and his own line of "Missing Manual" books.

.Why you should listen to him: .Which cell phone to choose? What software to buy? Are camera-binoculars a necessity or novelty? As release cycles shorten and ever-shrinking gadgets hit the market with dizzying speed, it's harder and harder to know what's worth the investment. A tireless explorer of everyday technology, David Pogue investigates all the options so we don't have to.

After happily weathering installation nightmares, customer service hiccups, and an overwhelming crush of backups, upgrades and downloads, Pogue reports back with his recommendations via his many columns, TV appearances and how-to books. And he does it all with relatable insight, humor and an unsinkable sense of pun, er, fun. All that, and he sings, too.

Kurstin gives me a joyous feeling. Harmonics of Joy?

Kurstin: Theremin player


Pamelia Kurstin excavates a dusty artifact from the prehistoric strata of electronic music -- and demonstrates how to squeeze soul from an instrument you can't even touch.

.Why you should listen to her: .The theremin, the first electronic instrument ever invented, was on the brink of historic oblivion when it was rescued from obscurity by director Steven Martin's classic 1994 documentary Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey . And while a few brave souls have sought to master this temperamental instrument since then, none have done so with more sly effervescence than Pamelia Kurstin.

From the rock-steady composure she assumes behind the instrument (necessary lest her breathing drive the sensors out of tune), one might presume a shrinking conservatory personality, but a quick glance at the MySpace page or website of the self-described "bird-punching rollerskating thereminist" will quickly dash any of these quaint notions. Far from being a quirky curiosity, however, Kurstin is a sensitive, emotional stylist capable of coaxing sublime melodic content out of an instrument usually doomed to B-movie sci-fi soundtracks. (And her walking bass imitation is pretty cool too.)

Born in Los Angeles, Kurstin currently resides in Vienna, and performs with acclaimed eccentric rockers Barbez, among many others. Her latest solo CD, Thinking Out Loud, was released in 2007 on John Zorn's legendary Tzadik label. She'll bathe your dog and give you a haircut ("if you're daring," she warns) in exchange for a six-pack.

"Eclectic barely cuts it. Like the more familiar chameleons, Josh Redman, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Branford Marsalis and many others normally associated with jazz, electronica, even classical, Pam Kurstin represents the most recent version of the eclectic, improvising musician"

allaboutjazz.com

Pamelia Kurstin plays the theremin | Video on TED.com

Pamelia Kurstin plays the theremin Video on TED.com

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Whispers of the Beloved

In your absence, tears prevent me.
You watch me My Beloved
On each sleepless night and
Only You see the difference

Looking at my life
I see that only Love
Has been my soul’s companion
From deep inside
My soul cries out:
Do not wait, surrender
For the sake of Love.

If you can’t smell the fragrance
Don’t come into the garden of Love.
If you’re unwilling to undress
Don’t enter into the stream of Truth.
Stay where you are.
Don’t come our way.

All year round the lover is mad,
Unkempt, lovesick and in disgrace.
Without love there is nothing but grief.
In love… what else matters?

Love is our Mother and
The way of our Prophet.
Yet it is in our nature
To fight with Love.
We can’t see you, mother,
Hidden behind dark veils
Woven by ourselves.

Do you want to enter paradise?
To walk the path of Truth
You need the grace of God.
We all face death in the end.
But on the way, be careful
Never to hurt a human heart!

Do you know what the music is saying?
“Come follow me and you will find the way.
Your mistakes can also lead you to the Truth.
When you ask, the answer will be given.”

The Master who’s full of sweetness
Is so drunk with love, he’s oblivious.
“Will you give me
some of your sweetness?”
“I have none,” he says,
unaware of his richness.

You know what love is?
It is all kindness, generosity.
Disharmony prevails when
You confuse lust with love, while
The distance between the two
Is endless.

This Love is a King
But his banner is hidden.
The Koran speaks the Truth
But its miracle is concealed.
Love has pierced with its arrow
The heart of every lover.
Blood flows but the wound is invisible.

Rumi

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Saving the World



Why you should listen to her: .Jane McGonigal asks: Why doesn't the real world work more like an online game? In the best-designed games, our human experience is optimized: We have important work to do, we're surrounded by potential collaborators, and we learn quickly and in a low-risk environment. In her work as a game designer, she creates games that use mobile and digital technologies to turn everyday spaces into playing fields, and everyday people into teammates. Her game-world insights can explain -- and improve -- the way we learn, work, solve problems, and lead our real lives.




McGonigal directs game R&D at the Institute for the Future, a nonprofit forecasting firm where she developed Superstruct, a massively multiplayer game in which players organize society to solve for issues that will confront the world in 2019. She masterminded World Without Oil, which simulated the beginning of a global oil crisis and inspired players to change their daily energy habits. McGonigal also works with global companies to develop games that build on our collective-intelligence infrastructure -- like The Lost Ring, a mystery game for McDonald's that became the world’s biggest alternate reality game, played by more than 5 million people. (Not to mention the delightful Top Secret Dance-Off, which taps that space in our brains where embarrasment and joy mingle.) She's working on book called Reality Is Broken: Why Games Make Us Happy and How They Can Change the World.

"Instead of providing gamers with better and more immersive alternatives to reality, I want all of us to be become responsible for providing the world with a better and more immersive reality."

Jane McGonigal

Edinburugh Skeptics Interview Dr. Singh

Dr. Simon Singh on Alternative Medicine

Chiropractor b and Simon Singh BBC Reporter

Chiropractors a

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Pablo Picasso

"For me there are only two kinds of women - goddesses and doormats."

Monday, March 15, 2010

Good Passage

For this very reason, make every effort to add to your faith goodness; and to goodness, knowledge; and to knowledge, self-control; and to self-control, perseverance; and to perseverance, godliness; and to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, love. For if you possess these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective and unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.”- 2 Peter 1:5-8

Monday, March 8, 2010

China

If you are planning for a year, sow rice; if you are planning for a decade, plant trees; if you are planning for a lifetime, educate people.

Simplify

"Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell."

- Edward Abbey, writer, essayist, novelist (1927-1989).

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Misspelled Tattoos

Misspelled Tattoos

Simple as in K.I.S.S.

  'simplicity is the outcome of technical subtlety; it is the goal, not starting point'.
- Fernand Braudel, from the foreword to The Wheels of Commerce, Civilization & Capitalism--15th-18th Century.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Ave Maria (German)


Barbara Bonney

Fourth Movement

Nara City Home Page>Network for Ancient and Modern Nara City>Introduction of World Heritage>8 properties of the World Heritage>T�dai-ji Temple

Nara City Home Page>Network for Ancient and Modern Nara City>Introduction of World Heritage>8 properties of the World Heritage>T�dai-ji Temple

Tôdai-ji Temple photo1Tôdai-ji Temple Great Buddha photo3Tôdai-ji Temple photo2

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9NaVpv9jsTo

SARABANDE Dedicated to the Great Buddha TODAIJI Temple in Nara, Japan  by Yo Yo Ma

YouTube - Yo-Yo Ma plays the prelude from Bach�s Cello Suite No. 1

YouTube
- Yo-Yo Ma plays the prelude from Bach�s Cello Suite No. 1
: "http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZn_VBgkPNY"

YouTube - Pablo Casals plays BACH - Suite no 1 for Cello - part 1

YouTube
- Pablo Casals plays BACH - Suite no 1 for Cello - part 1
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YouTube - Yo-Yo Ma plays the prelude from Bach�s Cello Suite No. 1

YouTube
- Yo-Yo Ma plays the prelude from Bach�s Cello Suite No. 1
: ""

YouTube - Yo-Yo Ma &Bobby McFerrin

YouTube
- Yo-Yo Ma &Bobby McFerrin
: ""

YouTube - Bobby Mcferrin improvisation with Richard Bona

YouTube
- Bobby Mcferrin improvisation with Richard Bona
: ""

YouTube - Celtic Woman - Ave Maria

YouTube
- Celtic Woman - Ave Maria
: ""

YouTube - Schubert - Ave Maria (Opera)

YouTube
- Schubert - Ave Maria (Opera)
: ""

YouTube - Bobby McFerrin - Ave Maria

YouTube
- Bobby McFerrin - Ave Maria
: ""

YouTube - World Science Festival 2009: Bobby McFerrin Demonstrates the Power of the Pentatonic Scale

YouTube
- World Science Festival 2009: Bobby McFerrin Demonstrates the Power of the Pentatonic Scale



Saturday, February 20, 2010

The National Portrait Gallery

The National Portrait Gallery

Marc Pachter | Profile on TED.com

Marc Pachter | Profile on TED.com

Famous Portrait photographer

Vishal Vaid's hypnotic song | Video on TED.com




"Vaid takes the classical tradition seriously,
and perhaps modernizes it in a controlled way."
Amardeep Singh

Vishal Vaid has trained
in the traditional art of ghazal
(an ancient form of poetry, often 

performed in song) since
he was three years old.
Today, his performances blend Eastern 

and Western, ancient
and contemporary to create spellbinding
music. He has performed throughout the world,
appearing on television shows in New York,
London, India, and Morocco, and has worked
with renowned artists Anoushka Shankar, Bill Laswell,

 Michael Franti, and Karsh Kale.

In addition, he provided vocals to the
electronic-oriented band Bhoom Shankar

 formed by Karsh Kale and credited with beginning
the popular genre of music known as Asian

 Massive within the electronica community.

Vishal Vaid's hypnotic song | Video on TED.com

http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/fre_fr/david_merrill_demos_siftables_the_smart_blocks.html

David Merril gives a great demo of the future of building blocs...



http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/fre_fr/david_merrill_demos_siftables_the_smart_blocks.html

Edward Burtynsky on manufactured landscapes | Video on TED.com

Edward Burtynsky on manufactured landscapes | Video on TED.com


Thursday, February 18, 2010

Assassination in Dubai

The elaborate assassination of a Hamas official last month in Dubai has all the earmarks of a Mossad operation and was likely sanctioned by Prime Minister Netanyahu, says a former case officer in the Israeli intelligence service.

Victor Ostrovsky, who wrote a controversial book about his four years with the Mossad in the 1980s, says that many of the details in the surveillance video of an alleged 11-person assassination team indicate that the operation was likely rushed, and that the use of aliases belonging to Israeli citizens is a common tactic of the Mossad, though generally not for assassination plots.

The video and assassination have sparked extensive debate in the media, inside and outside Israel, over, among other things, the alleged assassin team’s use of forged passports from the United Kingdom, Ireland, France and Germany. At least seven of the passports used the names of residents in Israel who hold dual citizenship in other countries and who say they were not part of the operation. They are now concerned that they could be targeted for revenge by Hamas or others.


Source:http://www.wired.com/

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Leonard Cohen knows


"Everybody Knows"

Everybody knows that the dice are loaded
Everybody rolls with their fingers crossed
Everybody knows that the war is over
Everybody knows the good guys lost
Everybody knows the fight was fixed
The poor stay poor, the rich get rich
That's how it goes
Everybody knows
Everybody knows that the boat is leaking
Everybody knows that the captain lied
Everybody got this broken feeling
Like their father or their dog just died

Everybody knows the deal is rotten
Old Black Joe's still pickin' cotton
For your ribbons and bows
And everybody knows

And everybody knows that the Plague is coming
Everybody knows that it's moving fast
Everybody knows that the naked man and woman
Are just a shining artifact of the past
Everybody knows the scene is dead
But there's gonna be a meter on your bed
That will disclose
What everybody knows

*bits and pieces of LC's song...

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Daily Effort.

Remember to seek progress over perfection and seek to do a little every day to achieve your goals.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Just get started.

Do your best with what you have from where you are.

Circumstance does not make the man, they need to be seen as your baseline because the realistic assessment of where your life is at at this moment in time is needed to plan interim steps to achieving your big goals.

Learning



Learning is acquiring new knowledge, behaviors, skills, values or preferences. It may involve processing different types of information.   


The ability to learn is possessed by humans, animals and some machines. Progress over time tends to follow learning curves.

Human learning may occur as part of education or personal development. It may be goal-oriented and may be aided by motivation. The study of how learning occurs is part of neuropsychology, educational psychology, learning theory, and pedagogy.

To be an autodidact is a person who has learned a subject without the benefit of a teacher or formal education; a self-taught person.



Being a self-taught person has become easier in this current Age of Information.  The World Wide Web contains information useful to anyone conducting their own program of learning about just about any topic they can choose to study.

You never stop learning.

Plan and select what you learn rather letting television brainwash you on behalf of the marketing departments of giant corporations.  You live in a consumer society but you do not need to be a victim.

Informal Learning that Scales

Qualifier for Learning Style Theories.

Learning Styles

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Focus your efforts on your one Big Idea for best results.

"There is a quote by Paul Valery.  He met Einstein at a party in the 1920s, and he asked him

'Do you carry a notebook' around?

 Einstein asked, 'Why?',

and Valeria said 'To write down your ideas, to put them down,'

and Einstein said, 'I only have one idea.'

Conclusion:
 To succeed, you only have to have one idea—two ideas, you’re dead.

Or at least this is how Nassim Taleb interprets this conversation.

 He says he has only one big idea:  UNCERTAINTY.


Uncertainty regarding markets has two parts:
i) math and computation
ii) psychology

Monday, February 8, 2010

It is a big world out there.



A Pakistani Muslim Sufi devotee smokes a cannabis cigarette in a Christian grave yard next to the Data Darbar the burial place of the Saint Syed Ali bin Osman Al-Hajvery shrine, popularly known as Data Ganj Bakhsh, during the three-day annual ''Urs'' religious festival in Lahore on February 3, 2010.

In popular Sufism (i.e., devotional practices that have achieved currency in world cultures through Sufi influence), one common practice is to visit the tombs of saints, great scholars, and righteous people.

Data Ganj Bakhsh was a Persian Sufi and scholar during the 11th century. He was born in Ghazni, Afghanistan (990 AD) during the Ghaznavid Empire and settled and died in Lahore spreading Islam in South Asia. During the festival the shrine is lit up with candles and lights, donated dinner is prepared for the people and Sufies dance around and musicians play music for hours.


He significantly contributed to the spreading of Islam in South Asia.  Born around 990 CE in Ghazni, Afghanistan during reign of the Ghaznavid Empire and died in Lahore (in present day Punjab, Pakistan) in 1077 CE. His most famous work is The Kashf Al Mahjub ("Unveiling the Veiled") written in Persian language. The work debates Sufi doctrines of the past.

Hujwiri belonged to the Junaidia school of Sufism. These sufis followed Junaid Baghdadi of Baghdad. Hajwiri is also viewed as an important intercessor for many Sufis.

Classical Sufi scholars have defined Sufism as "a science whose objective is the reparation of the heart and turning it away from all else but God." Alternatively, in the words of the renowned Darqawi Sufi teacher Ahmad ibn Ajiba, "a science through which one can know how to travel into the presence of the Divine, purify one’s inner self from filth, and beautify it with a variety of praiseworthy traits.




Whirling Dervish at  Rumi's Tomb

Vanishing Point from Bonsajo on Vimeo