Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Friday, July 21, 2017

Internet Magazine

Kinda sums up the online DailyMail.com experience, and that of so many other internet news and social media sites.
The New Yorker ~ Roz Chast

Friday, July 14, 2017

Orphaned

My mother died on Father's Day. She was 85 and had been in hospice care for 15 months. She was usually alert but bed-ridden and heavily medicated with Fentanyl and Lidocaine patches for assorted musculoskeletal pain.

My father, her husband for 59 years, died in 2013. She lost much of her will to live after that, but soldiered on for nearly four more years in her stoic Maine Yankee fashion. As her mobility and body declined, she kept in reasonably good spirits, reading, and listening to music and books on her iPod. On rare occasions when pain and frustrations overcame her she'd make melancholic and pointed remarks like "Where's the gas pipe?"

Losing my surviving parent has been less about grief and more about the finality of death. No more visits or phone conversations, stories and remembrances, questions asked and answered, and weekly notes mailed in between the visits and calls. She's gone.

I'm an orphan now but certainly not in the Dickensian sense one fears when young. It's also the realization and acceptance of generational rhythms and the natural order of things, and the fact that my new place as an elder and patriarch has moved closer to the end of that line. My wife's mother died in 1987 and her father in 1995. She's experienced these feelings for some time.

I walked by a Pottery Barn store this morning and saw this pillow on a couch. It stopped me in my tracks. I sat down and thought long and well about her, and said aloud "I love you Mom." She didn't answer back. I got up and left, alone in my thoughts.

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Runyonesque

Nathan Detroit, Sorrowful Jones, and Sam the Gonoph have it all over these guys and dolls, one and all.

The New Yorker ~ Tom Chitty


Tuesday, July 4, 2017

The METI Debate

The New York Times ~ Paul Sahre
Since 1960, NASA has funded and supported efforts to search for extraterrestrial life. NASA's SETI, short for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, is now a privately funded group that continues to look for signals. Some of its latest searches are guided by scientist Stephen Hawking and funded by the Russian billionaire Yuri Milner.

A newer and related group, METI, for Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence, also known as Active SETI, goes beyond passive searching and actively targets radio messages to known star systems that fit the Goldilocks zone profile of planets presumed capable of supporting life.

Recent transmissions of prime numbers and other visual and tonal mathematical data known as exosemiotics have stirred debate about the wisdom and consequences of advertising life here on Earth. Proponents say these "Hey, here we are!" messages are the continuum of man's existential search for meaning. Opponents warn that evolution pits species against one another and mankind's track record of exploration and colonialism is ample proof of the potential for "extinction-level risk."

As reported last week in The New York Times, Greetings E.T., Please Don't Murder Us:
"There is something about the METI question that forces the mind to stretch beyond its usual limits. You have to imagine some radically different form of intelligence, using only your human intelligence. You have to imagine time scales on which a decision made in 2017 might trigger momentous consequences 10,000 years from now. The sheer magnitude of those consequences challenges our usual measures of cause and effect. Whether you believe that the aliens are likely to be warriors or Zen masters, if you think that METI has a reasonable chance of making contact with another intelligent organism somewhere in the Milky Way, then you have to accept that this small group of astronomers and science fiction authors and billionaire patrons debating semi-prime numbers and the ubiquity of visual intelligence may in fact be wrestling with a decision that could be the most transformative one in the history of human civilization."
Calvin & Hobbes ~ Bill Watterson
An observation. Nowhere in this long and thoughtful article, or in as far as I got in the Comments section, did I find the word God. Is intelligent design purely a terrestrial notion? Cognitive scientists advance the ideas of teleological naturalism and Panpsychism that claim a universal proto-consciousness. Isn't that why are we searching for intelligent life beyond Earth?