Friday, February 25, 2011

Pack Your Bags for Creativity


A good traveler has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving.  -- Lao Tzu
I subscribe to several magazines.  It's part of my hopeless effort to stay abreast of the flow of information.  I can't say "knowledge," which is what I am really seeking, because knowledge is organized information, and I'm not sure I am organizing anything very well.  One of those magazines is Scientific American: Mind with an interesting article explaining how living overseas may actually enhance a person's creativity.  It may be possible.  Living abroad certainly takes one out of the comfort zone where everything is familiar.  A person is exposed to different cultures, languages, thought patterns, habits, social norms ... and it is quite a challenge to adapt to the new, especially every two-three years.  Living abroad is much different than traveling.  Two weeks is fun, then you are back home in the familiar, with a few anecdotes and photos.  Living abroad means an extended time in another country, and that can change a person.  One Ambassador told me that the greatest thing a Foreign Service Officer (otherwise known as "diplomat") can have is flexibility, because everything is always changing and one has to adapt.  This means change.  Maybe this also means innovation and creativity as well.


So I like to think that I am flexible and adaptive ... but I'm still not willing to use a crouch toilet covered with shit ...


Pack Your Bags for Creativity


[From Scientific American: Mind]  Ernest Hemingway and Pablo Picasso were on to something: a recent study suggests that, by living abroad, artists may be fueling their creativity.  Researchers from the French business school INSEAD and Northwestern University studied responses from subjects in five separate experiments, finding that those who had lived abroad -- and had adapted to a nonnative culture -- more consistently showed innovation and creativity in negotiations, in the use of ordinary items, and in drawings.  More research is necessary to discern if an already creative person benefits more from living abroad than a non-creative person does, or if the noted higher levels of creativity are permanent.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

I Wonder How It Is That We Have Lost Our Way





Saturday, February 12, 2011

Atlas Shrugged: The Abridged Version





AYN RAND:
Hello, I'm Ayn Rand. I wrote a novel based on my Objectivist philosophy called The Fountainhead, but I don't think 700 pages was quite enough to get my point across, so I will write the exact same novel, only it will take 1100 pages this time.

READERS:
Hey, great.

HEROINE:
I'm Dagny Taggart. I am a railroad tycoon, woman-in-a-man's-world, stunningly beautiful heroine. I am the only person capable of running this railroad. I am the only woman in the universe worth a damn. I am also the only woman in the universe with a real job. I am basically the only woman in this novel.

LOVE INTEREST #1:
I have worshiped you, the only woman in the universe worth a damn, from afar for my whole life.

HEROINE:
That's nice.

LOVE INTEREST #2:
I have worshiped you, the only woman in the universe worth a damn, naked on the forest floor. Yet I will nobly step aside in the name of noble idealism, despite the fact that I love you and want you, the only woman in the universe worth a damn, desperately.

HEROINE:
Okay.

LOVE INTEREST #3:
I worship you, the only woman in the universe worth a damn. Let us have creepy rape fantasy sex now. I will not ask permission to do all these kinky things to you, but luckily you want to be forced into all the kinky things, you dirty bitch.

HEROINE:
This is clearly true love! Stick it in me.

ALL:
Who is John Galt?

AYN RAND:
I am not telling. Instead, please listen to someone pontificate about my Objectivist philosophy for a while.

SOMEONE:
[Pontificates]

VILLAINS:
There are many of us, but we are all exactly the same. We are caricatures of evil socialists and embodiments of pure evil.  Let us create a perfect socialist world order ruled by the inept! We all suck! Socialism sucks! Ha ha!

HEROES:
We are all exactly the same. We are noble and perfect and have very angular and insolent faces. We can read each other's minds and the minds of everyone else in this novel, leaving less room for misunderstanding and more room for pontificating.  And we are all in love with Dagny Taggart, the only woman in the universe worth a damn.

ALL:
Who is John Galt?

VILLAIN:
[Threatens hero.]

HERO:
If it's heads, I will gaze apathetically. If it's tails, I will laugh heartily.

VILLAIN:
Although these are the only two things any of you heroes have done for the past 800 pages, I am shocked at this response!  How could you! How dare you!?!

HERO:
I will now pontificate about Ayn Rand's philosophy. It has been at least 50 pages since you've heard it.

AYN RAND:
It is so convenient that all of my heroes are in perfect agreement about my philosophy so that their pontificating is so interchangeable.

ALL:
Who is John Galt?

JOHN GALT:
Hello. In this, the culmination of all the pontificating, I will explain Ayn Rand's philosophy for a full 57 pages. No, I am not kidding. This one monologue will last for 57 pages. Oh and also, I love Dagny.

DAGNY:
I love you too. Man, this is really going to suck for Love Interest #3.

LOVE INTEREST #3:
Despite my passionate love for you and enjoyment of our rape sex, and the fact that there is no other woman on earth worth a damn, and the fact that I sacrificed my life's passion on your behalf, and that I spent my entire fortune to get a divorce to be with you, I will now nobly step aside in the name of noble idealism.

DAGNY:
Great! I will miss our creepy rape sex. Farewell.

LOVE INTEREST #3:
Bye.

READER:
Wait, what?

ATLAS:
[Shrugs]

THE END

Sunday, February 6, 2011

America the Ignorant

[As seen in Newsweek]

Here is a small sample of some of the crazy things that Americans believe.  If you're a believer, then you are in good company.  In fact, a remarkably high number of Americans believe the most unusual things.  Here's a sampling of the nuttiest.

1 Obama and His Religion

Opponents of President Obama have been spreading false rumors about his religion for quite some time. Recently, however, it seems that the number of Americans who believe these untruths is on the rise. Among respondents to a Pew poll, 18 percent believed Obama was a Muslim, up from 11 percent in March 2009. A Time magazine poll last week found similar results: 24 percent believed he was a Muslim, while only 47 percent correctly identified him as a Christian. 

2 Evolution

To mark the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth, Gallup thought it might be a good idea to poll Americans on their beliefs of the British naturalist's theory. But the results must have had Darwin spinning in his grave, since only 39 percent of Americans believed in the theory. The good news: only a  quarter said they didn't believe it; the remaining portion either didn't have an opinion or didn't answer. (Also, only 55 percent correctly linked Darwin's name with the theory.) However, it appears that views may, um, evolve: younger people believe in evolution at far higher rates than older ones.

3 Witchcraft

It seems obvious that it's not a good idea to put too much stock in witchcraft. But it turns out that 21 percent of Americans believe there are real sorcerers, conjurers, and warlocks out there. And that's just one of the several paranormal beliefs common among Americans, according to Gallup: 41 percent believe in ESP, 32 percent in ghosts, and a quarter in astrology. In fairness, the numbers in this poll are a little old—they date back to 2005. But then again, if people haven't changed their mind since the Enlightenment, it's not clear another half decade would make much difference.

4 Death Panels

From Facebook to faith: that's how a spurious rumor became part of the national dialogue. On Facebook, Sarah Palin wrote in August 2009 that Obama would institute a "death panel" as part of health-care reform. Soon pundits and politicians were demagoguing the issue into common currency. Even in August 2010, one year after the initial burst and five months after health reform was signed into law, the belief lingers. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, four in 10 Americans mistakenly believe the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act creates a panel that makes decisions about end-of-life care.

5 Saddam's WMDs and 9/11 Involvement

Even years after claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction or had links to the September 11 attacks had been debunked, not all Americans were convinced. In a June 2007 NEWSWEEK poll, four years after the invasion of Iraq, 41 percent believed Saddam was involved in 9/11—even though President Bush had said otherwise as early as September 2003. Wild views on 9/11 are in fact still rampant. In September 2009, Public Policy Polling found that a quarter of Democrats suspected Bush had something to do with the attacks. Meanwhile, many Americans also remain convinced that Saddam had WMDs, even though inspectors haven't found any in the seven years since the invasion. Still, as of 2006, half of Americans believed that, according to Harris. Who knows where they got that idea?  (Note: Answer -- Cheney.  Even now, he is still adamant that Saddam had WMD.  He forced the CIA to change its intelligence analysis, and he sold us a war on this lie.  Powell, who embarrassed himself in the UN showing the "proof" to the world, now regrets doing this and now knows he was set up and "used" to promote a war.)

6 Heliocentrism


Didn't we clear this one up in the 16th century? Copernicus be damned, 20 percent of Americans were still sure in 1999 that the sun revolved around the Earth. Gallup, the pollster that conducted the study, gamely tried to dress it up by celebrating the fact that "four out of five Americans know Earth revolves around the sun," but we're not buying.

7 History of Religion

If mutual understanding is the key to tolerance, we're in trouble. According to Newsweek's 2007 "What You Need to Know" poll, barely half of Americans were correctly able to state that Judaism was older than both Christianity and Islam. Another 41 percent weren't sure; in case you're in that group, here goes: Judaism is the oldest of the Abrahamic faiths, followed by Christianity -- which reveres the Jewish prophets (including Moses, above) -- and then Islam, which reveres the Jewish prophets and also hails Jesus as a prophet.

8 Supreme Court vs. Seven Dwarfs

It's hard to imagine what inspired the pollsters at Zogby to ask the question, but the answer is striking: in a 2006 poll, more than three quarters of Americans could name at least two of the seven dwarfs, while not quite a quarter could name two members of the Supreme Court. Newsweek's response is a split decision, if you will: on the one hand, Disney is as much a symbol of America as the high court, and those dwarfs are adorable. On the other hand, it should be easy to name only two out of a pool of nine options. Objection sustained!

9 World Geography

Lost? Don't ask an American. Sixty-three percent of young Americans can't find Iraq on a map, despite the ongoing U.S involvement there. Nine out of 10 can't find Afghanistan -- even if you give them the advantage of a map limited to Asia. And more than a third of Americans of any age can't identify the continent that's home to the Amazon River (above), the world's largest.

10 Three Stooges vs. Three Branches

What a bunch of knuckleheads: according to Zogby, the majority of Americans -- three in four -- can correctly identify Larry, Curly, and Moe as the Three Stooges. Only two out of five respondents, however, can correctly identify the executive, legislative, and judicial branches as the three wings of government.

11 Freedom of Religion

Who needs constitutional constructionism? Not one in three Americans, apparently: that's the proportion that said in a 2008 First Amendment Center poll that the constitutional right to freedom of religion was never meant to apply to groups most folks think are extreme or fringe -- a 10 percent increase from 2000. In 2007, two out of five Americans told the FAC that teachers should be allowed to lead prayers in public schools.