Friday 8 July 2016

at arm’s length or (personal) space invaders

Via the always brilliant Nag on the Lake, comes an excellent primer on the fascinating topic of proxemics, the study of the non-verbal narrative that is dictated by proximity and confines and is as culture specific and as richly limned as language.
First introduced as a branch of sociology by American anthropological researcher Edward T Hall in the mid-1960s, the research and received terminology not only was the compass for describing the circles that define an individual’s spheres of comfort for various interactions—territories from intimate to public and how that physical space is reflected in the virtual too—but also informs the surrounding (or underlying) architecture, hygiene and group norms. Just think how cubicles might effect on the job etiquette or the boundaries that are thrown up once we feel violated. These sorts of different nudges and cues, which beforehand went unarticulated, are pretty engrossing to think about. Find out more and see a video demonstration at the links above.

Thursday 7 July 2016

tonkin ghosts or mess-o'-potamia

Finally released seven years after the beginning of the investigation and five years after its conclusion, with publication delayed several times, the Chilcot Report (or the Iraq Inquiry) brought back a surge of memories and is confirmation of what many if not most of us suspected:
diplomatic solutions had not been exhausted, Iraq presented little imminent threat beyond its neighbours and the actions of the US and the UK undermined the United Nations’ authority through the unilateral determination, the case for war of their leaders. Legality and thus the ability to indict or exonerate anyone of war crimes was outside of the scope of the investigation, and thirteen years on it is difficult to conceive how a world with or without Hussein might be. The forces that rushed in to occupy that void in power does seem rather like a hydra instead of any improvement, and prosecuting regime-change under once dubious and now patently false fears and scaremongering seems beyond regrettable.  Sadly, this publication will not vindicate the suffering of Iraqis or service members that have been pained by this pretext, and I wonder if the political fall-out will be momentous and haunting enough to ensure that such adventures are not embarked upon again.  The world’s threshold and memory sometimes seems woefully inadequate.

Wednesday 6 July 2016

game on or it’s dangerous to go alone – take this

Just as the soundtracks to video games are scored to be memorable and catchy and to motivate on to persevere and hone one’s attention for a specific goal, our arcade friends and familiars (and play in general) is far from a frivolous activity and could in the broad sense teach us resilience and give us a quiver of tools for success.
Recently, I found out about the existence of a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) of an unusual sort, a forum called SuperBetter for a technique that a games researcher developed when she resolved to use her academic passion to work through a rough patch her own life. Resolving either to give up or turn her challenge into a sort of Sanity Quest, peopled with level-bosses and power-ups that were allegories of her own daily challenges, and other players, companions that she could surreptitiously recruit for her personal mission. Transforming one’s goals into a game allows one to be more pragmatic while still attached and recognise the potential outcomes of incremental moves and be less discouraged by set-backs. Modifying the programme—just a brilliant way of thinking really and not tethered to any specific venue other than to share success stories and hearten other players, to fit one’s own aims has seen some pretty amazing and enduring changes in behaviour and attitude.

Tuesday 5 July 2016

interferometry or duel aperture

This September China’s just completed gargantuan radio telescope will be brought on-line.
Twice as big as the observatory of Mount Arecibo, the Five-Hundred Meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), I appreciate how the article reprinted the unsourced scalar comparison that if the dish were filled to the brim with wine, it would be enough for five bottles for every man, woman and child on Earth—a rather distracting analogy, though, since all I could think about afterwards was, “Hmm—wine.” Magnitude aside, the telescope will enhance the search for extra-terrestrial life and the study of the strange phenomena of the Cosmos that don’t fall within our visual spectrum.