Wednesday 6 December 2017

raison d’être

There is a concept in Japanese culture—especially enshrined among the population of Okinawa—similar to the French philosophical invocation above called ikigai (生き甲斐), which is generally translated as “a reason for being.”
Finding one’s true calling and intrinsic worth is not an easy task and not one that’s admitting to short-cuts (I think that one of the most important lessons that’s at least a glancing acquaintance if not something learnt and taken to heart, is that prayer—in whatever form you give it to include mediation and mindfulness—is not supposed to be petitionary but the chance to reflect and to assemble and articulate what’s missing or what’s falling short plus garner solidarity and that affecting change takes work) but the search and discovery (it’s hard but not elusive or impossible as deriving meaning and satisfactory from life is far from being unattainable) is character-building and gives searchers a reason to persevere.

erbe fondamentali

Fascinatingly, as the Washington Post reports, the Italian government has charged its military with the production and distribution not only of medical marijuana but also with the responsibility for supplying so called “orphaned drugs” that treat rare diseases which don’t court much attention from pharmaceutical companies due to the extremely limited market.
With oversight from growth to harvesting (and sterilising it with gamma rays, which I didn’t realise was a done thing) to the logistics of getting it to pharmacies around the country, the task fell to the military once it was realised that private firms were unwilling to try to navigate the complex system of prerequisites in order to receive the necessary licenses and permits. Access to healthcare and therapeutic drugs was nonetheless a governmental mandate and sought an alternate route to cover its population. What do you think about that? Poised to expand capacity, there are some detractors that decry the efficiency and potency of the army’s product (here and here are a few counter-examples of unhealthy relationships with cannabis) but they are able to undercut imported cannabis at least than a tenth of the cost and seem very dedicated and sincere in their mission.

soldier of fortune

In order to fight the firmly entrenched agents of the “deep state,” conventional, bureaucratic government and further undermine the intelligence services of the US, apparently the Trump regime has approached the founder of a controversial mercenary outfit to explore subverting established protocols and procedures with a private spy network.
Those deemed not sufficiently loyal to the administration would be summarily outed and deposed. Though CIA spokespeople (under the leadership of another antithetical figure) vehemently deny the veracity of the claim, the company’s founder is already under investigation (after a fashion) for his willingness to be the architect behind a back-channel line of communication between the White House and Moscow and has been a go-between for foreign business deals. Familial connections to the regime, being the brother of the Secretary of Education and Ponzi-Scheme Heiress Betsy DeVos, probably also has its benefits—and liabilities.

Tuesday 5 December 2017

week-by-week

As we are rapidly propelled to the end of another year and the time comes for annual superlatives, we are treated again by Kottke to fifty-two things that consultant Tom Whitwell has gleaned over the past year personally and professionally.
The index is a fascinating revue of not only contemporary times but also many are contextualised as historical development, like the bit of trivia that the first Automated Teller Machine cards were mildly radioactive paper vouchers that were machine readable or that phosphorus-rich dust from the Sahara carried aloft is crucial for the sustainment of the Amazon rainforest. What are some of the facts that you’ve learnt this year? Be sure to check out the whole list and you might come across a few items you first heard of at PRfC.

8x8

modernistmas: a collection of modernist gingerbread architecture

wizard sniffer: the stellar rise in popularity of the interactive, choose-your-own-adventure fiction, via Waxy

domo arigato: the international robotics exposition in Japan

the jones act: GOP tax reform levies a twenty percent tariff on goods manufactured in Puerto Rico

payload: to demonstrate his new, reusable rocket’s mettle, Elon Musk will apparently launch his own Tesla Roadster into orbit around the Sun, extending out as far as Mars

the clanking of the chains that jacob marley forged in life: soundtracks for Melania Trump’s festive White House

lb&scr e2 class: extreme stunts with a Thomas the Tank Engine playset

we’ll be having a wonderful christmas time: Sir Paul McCartney’s lost experimental 1965 album was meant to be a present to his bandmates

synesthesia

Apparently twenty percent of the population are susceptible to the “noisy GIF” phenomenon and hear a thudding sound in time with this animation. Do you hear these electric pylon jumping rope? It seems like a natural enough association to make in anticipation but I wonder why only some perceive it and others do not. It makes me think about the deaf couple that ran a boutique specialising in fine glassware that I visited a few times. The way that they handled vases were shudder-inducing for me—certain that they’d shatter something but I realised that they knew the tolerance and fragility of their items far better than I did and hearing glass on glass was not necessarily insightful.

Monday 4 December 2017

hallux

The always engrossing Hyperallergic invites us to consider another uniquely enigmatic aspect of Leonardo da Vinci’s work aside from Mona Lisa’s smile with his attention to human anatomy found in the feet of his subjects. Living and working in age when feet and toes were not generally shod and kept out of public sight, the artist was doubtless keenly aware of feet physiology and endowed his super human subjects with speculatively his own minor deformation (not a sign of lycanthropy)—called Morton’s toe (for an American orthopaedic surgeon) and classically a “Greek foot” (pied grec, piede greco) where the second toe appears longer than the big toe.
Many statues of antiquity were executed in this way—including homages like the Statue of Liberty—as opposed to the Egyptian foot where the greater toe is longer. Many more pedary profiles (there’s no science behind this—sort of like palmistry or phrenology) are to be found and Da Vinci’s characters amazingly exhibit them all.

sloppy joes

A quick read of the tea leaves on how the US Department of Agriculture—the agency responsible for maintaining the integrity of America’s foodstuffs—might relax some of the stricter standards put in place to ensure that public school meal programmes (for comparison, here are some global examples) were healthful and nourishing, Naked Capitalism hit upon an interesting, adjacent campaign combatting food-waste.
Many of the dissenting voices who’ll advocate classifying catsup the tomato paste of pizza as a vegetable say that kids end up throwing away big portion of these healthier meals and while the problems that afflict institutional lunches are not new and schools have challenges staying in compliance, some districts are engaging their pupils by setting food sharing and donation programmes to reduce the amount of food that gets thrown away. Students are required to fill their trays with a balanced meal—including a portion of vegetables, a carton of milk, et cetera—but after passing through the line, they are empowered to trade something unwanted (within reason) for an extra helping of something desired and know that they are giving food away to the hungry and disadvantaged of their communities. Instead of ingratiating processed foods at a formative age, it’s probably a far more important lesson to imprint that waste and choice has consequences.