2008.08.20

Good news: Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye have noted that Barack Obama is not the Antichrist. Repeat: Obama is not the Antichrist! Glad that one is now cleared up. We are still awaiting confirmation as to when he last beat his wife and on how often he attends Jesse Jackson's mosque. (Via Ed Brayton) 2008-08-20T07:02:20ZUntitled entry permalink

Prophetic anti-wisdom 2008-08-20T06:49:49ZTitled entry permalink

Just in case you thought that idiotic numerological analysis of the Bible died out with the waning popularity of prophetic equidistant letter search texts like The Bible Code in the late nineties and the brief flutter with The Da Vinci Code earlier this decade, let me point you to the latest incarnation of this kind of superstitious idiocy: Temple at the Center of Time (thanks to Ed Brayton for pointing to this gem of distilled madness). Having something of a tin ear for prophecy, I can't say I follow the premises of this argument, but it's broadly based on measurements of the size of the Temple of Jerusalem, and the distance between the temple and other things in the world. At first glance, I have to wonder what exactly that proves. Paris is x miles away from Barcelona, but that does not mean that in year x something magic is going to happen - and why miles? Surely if one does the calculation in kilometres or that good old Biblical measure of cubits (kilocubits?) or the number of miles it takes to drive the distance rather than as-the-crow-files, all the prophecy goes to pot.

I also notice that they are using old measuring points. In many cities, there are plenty of different places to measure from. In London, one can pick from hundreds: some tourist landmark like Big Ben or Nelson's Column, or perhaps Buckingham Palace, or Westminster Abbey, or 10 Downing Street. These days, most measurement in London is done from the Charing Cross - there is a small tower with a cross on top outside the railway station on the Strand. I do not know for how long it hs been the measuring point, but surely, if this is so important for God and prophecy, such that those of us in the twenty-first century need to be aware of this vital prophecy, God would have ensured that such trifling conditions of acceptance of prophecy as the points from which one measures cities are fixed, and that whichever pesky little bureaucrat in the Greater London Authority has tried to mess with prophecy would be instantly rebuked. It is God's plan, after all, and you don't fucking mess with stuff like that.

And there's no point in prophecy unless we have a date set for the apocalypse: and, of course, it's 2012. Scribble that one down. The Prince of Peace is coming back in 2012! Still, at least we won't have to endure the Olympic Games much longer, and I won't have to pay back my student loans.

2008.08.19

A. C. Grayling: [Richard Holloway] falls into the trap of attempting to assert an equivalence between atheists such as Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens (he does not name them) and those he describes as espousers of “strong religion”, those who believe they have a direct line to God and thus know what God wants. He criticises both for the assurance with which they assert their positions. But whereas some of the latter issue and carry out death threats, neither Dawkins nor Hitchins does. They shoot down ideas, the warriors of God shoot down living human beings. 2008-08-19T14:35:07ZUntitled entry permalink

I didn't know about RDF/XML Source Declaration. Looks like something I may pop in to Rena when I add non-conjunctive graphs. 2008-08-19T10:09:58ZUntitled entry permalink

Frances Berriman: What gets me the most is how on Earth is it beneficial for these companies to be so bad? It's not like they get to keep everything they fail to deliver. It costs them more time, more money (petrol, man-hours etc.) and they have companies and customers calling them all the time to ask them why they're so incompetent. 2008-08-19T10:07:36ZUntitled entry permalink

2008.08.12

Orson Scott Card should be living proof to all the geeks in the world that being a science fiction author does not protect you from being an idiotic douchebag. Or maybe that living in North Carolina fucks with your brain. He's calling for a violent overhtrow of the United States government... because he doesn't like gay marriage. Yeah. 2008-08-12T01:01:47ZUntitled entry permalink

Mike LaBossiere: If the discipline of philosophy is defined in a way that precludes achievement, then philosophy can (by definition) never achieve anything. The same sort of method can be used to "prove" that a liberal can never accomplish anything. Just define "liberal" such that if someone achieves something, then she is not a liberal. It's a variation on the No True Scotsman and a Straw Man. Certain otherwise rational people engage in rather idiotic anti-philosophical episodes - I'm currently writing about them. 2008-08-12T00:48:31ZUntitled entry permalink

Improbulus: Wouldn't you be fed up if you attended a session in order to learn about a subject you're interested in, only to find yourself dumped into a group of equally ignorant attendees and forced to listen to people who know as little about the subject as you do, or even less, dominating the proceedings by virtue of egocentricity, pushiness and loudness rather than actual expertise in the subject matter? 2008-08-12T00:39:17ZUntitled entry permalink

2008.08.11

Kira at Londonist: A quick glance through the comments section in the Telegraph article seems to be all the proof necessary to justify the importance of teaching the concepts of feminism in schools. 2008-08-11T20:22:14ZUntitled entry permalink

I've reached a weirdly cool point: Podcast Inbox Zero. 2008-08-11T19:46:01ZUntitled entry permalink

Chandler isn't very interesting 2008-08-11T20:43:19ZTitled entry permalink

The Chandler Project, the ever-more-delayed PIM - "personal information manager" - is now 1.0. Here's the release notes.

It's what most people now see as a "GTD" app, only when they started building it back before normal people started using the Internet. Only like other GTD apps, it's feature-to-bloat ratio isn't very good. Imagine if you took iCal and OmniFocus, hacked them together with all the grace of Microsoft Outlook and made it take a long time to start up and shut down.

You can now get to-do list managers built on top of outliners and text editors, and they are generally very fast. I've been using Things.app on the Mac, and have been building a command line interface for it, mostly so that when I'm using my Palm Pilot or any of the other computers in my house, I can add stuff to my inbox. And we bind these things together very lightly - text, XML, Git and HTTP. CalDAV is for grandma.

Chandler lasted all of five minutes on my machine. Sorry guys - good luck and everything, but not for me.

2008.08.10

There's an interesting survey you can take about evolution. I like it. One thing that would be interesting is if they would add some questions on there about a person's profession and what they studied, when and how they learned about evolution and so on, so we could see where in life people end up (there's something of fun hypothesis that circulates amongst evolution supporters that creationists tend to be engineers, which seems something of a slight on engineers, and it'd be interesting to know which professions and courses tend to lead to people not accepting science). 2008-08-10T22:36:54ZUntitled entry permalink

Kafir Girl has started getting death threats. Feel the love of Allah! 2008-08-10T20:38:20ZUntitled entry permalink

If you think that tacky bloggers are destroying the blogosphere by being completely obsessed with their traffic, Google Juice, SEO and "Digg this!" shit, then you may find the little thing being dealt with indirectly by some of the very people who have been fundamental in destroying it, albeit through the inane meme that has been dubbed "Blogging 2.0", which allows them to side step personal responsibility and clear thinking. I cannot bring myself to link to such cretinous suck, so I'll point to Doc Searls, from where you can find links to the relevant offending parties. 2008-08-10T14:31:41ZUntitled entry permalink

There's an excellent story about Camp Inquiry up on NPR All Things Considered. 2008-08-10T14:20:56ZUntitled entry permalink

The Daily Mail actually has a news story on the front page. This is pretty amazing. 2008-08-10T14:16:54ZUntitled entry permalink

Austin Cline has a good post that should help people figure out what I do. Philosophy of religion is not theology. 2008-08-10T14:14:37ZUntitled entry permalink

voperm: permissions for the Web of Data 2008-08-10T13:54:16ZTitled entry permalink

Yesterday, I put up a draft of a new vocabulary I've started called voperm. It's based on a really simple premise: a simple, standard, cross-technological vocabulary to describe the sort of things you want to allow done with data - think by-laws for feeds and APIs.

The sort of permissioning I'm thinking of is as follows: how often a site should ask for updates, what sort of resyndication is allowed, requirements for linking back or providing notification and so on. I publish an RSS feed for my blog, but simply making my content available in a machine-readable XML format does not mean I give people the right to use that as spam-blog fodder. But I don't mind if someone were to take my feed and run it through something like Yahoo! Pipes so they could filter out all my posts about stupid people and just get the tech stuff. Many people want to attach a set of policies to data they provide.

I'm not the first to suggest this. The Web Services people have taken a stab at this, but they came at it with the Web Services frame which means the whole thing is pretty much irrelevant. The DataPortability people are also intending to do something about it, but they seem to have more important things on their mind like engaging in masturbation about leadership and standing quora committees and other such tedious wank. Can't be bothered with that. If anything like this is going to work, it needs to just be a bunch of smart people without administrative time-wasting.

Here's how I plan to develop this: the vocabulary is up on GitHub. tommorris/voperm is the repository. Feel free to fork the repository and do whatever you like with it. If you think you can make it better, just try it. Then send me a pull request. If your idea is good, I'll pull it in and merge it. If you have an idea or issue with how it currently works, feel free to post your problems on the issue tracker. Or find me on IRC and tell me what the problem is. Or send me an e-mail.

Basically, I'm using this to see if we can develop a simple vocabulary in the same way as some of the bleeding edge Ruby open source people develop code - without bureaucratic overhead. Because, frankly, that stuff sucks. In the Rena development so far, we haven't really had to use a mailing list. It's been really good. Just version control, IRC, bug tracker and a few private e-mails. (I'm not ruling out ever having a mailing list, but I'm holding off for now.)

Anyway, how is voperm going to work? I'm hoping that we can develop it as an RDF vocabulary, but we can also find ways to make it fit with other technologies: obviously, RSS/Atom feeds are a good starting place for this, as well as ther XML format that people use to publish content. The RDF community are a good group to start this, as they have a pretty good idea of how to develop vocabularies. We need to design it in a way so that it works well for RDF data, but can also work for non-RDF data. This could be as simple as having a way that people can point to permissions profiles.

I'm hoping that lots of non-RDF people can get involved - microformateers, XML-o-nauts, RESTers and everybody else. N3 syntax and OWL constructs are fairly easy to start using - just look at the existing code, perhaps if you are using TextMate, get the N3 bundle for syntax highlighting.

I'd love to work on this at VoCamp, but I'm not on the list, alas. Might do a session at the next BarCamp, which will be BarCamp Brighton 3.

How not to fail at academia 2008-08-10T21:41:21ZTitled entry permalink

The Washington Post has an article about students on a course run by the University of Virginia who have been expelled because of Wikipedia citations, or rather not citing Wikipedia.

I don't get it. It's really not that complicated. Learn to write. Learn to cite sources (a task which technology can help with: use LyX and BibDesk or JabRef). And bloody well get on with it. Don't copy anything without attribution - not on paper, not electronically. Be really anal about references. And, seriously, it's not exactly that difficult for a student to write a summary of the plot of a film. If you forget the name of a character or actor, go look it up on IMDb. If you don't know how to write a footnote or endnote correctly, you can find hundreds of guides on how to do it on many university websites or if you are anywhere near a Blackwell's bookshop (most of the big universities in Britain have one close by), you can buy a little pamphlet for about one pound all about writing references.

And this bit is rather grating: One student wrote, after reading Routman's paper, that the online encyclopedia Wikipedia was one of the few resources that students had. Except all those expensive databases which the university has no doubt paid for a subscription to, and then not adequately trained students in the use of. I've been using my database access heavily recently - especially JSTOR - and it's amazing how much stuff I do have access to (I was reading papers published in ethics journals of the 1890s the other day). And it's not like there's a whole Internet out there other than Wikipedia.

There are a few guilty parties here, and I don't think universities are one. If schools are sending people off to higher education, they need to be adequately prepared - which means that schools need to raise their damn standards and insist that all GCSE/A-level homework and essays are referenced in some kind of consistent way. I mean, even that bowl of fail Microsoft Word has a footnote feature, so teach the critters to use it (or better yet, teach them to use a word processer that doesn't suck). I do think that there has been a lot of utter idiocy surrounding Wikipedia and academic citations. Wikipedia ought to be as citable in academic contexts as the Encyclopedia Britannica: in other words, it shouldn't be. But that's not because it's on the Internet and because it's written by JoeySexMachine1337 rather than a distinguished board of academic editors. No, it shouldn't be cited, because it's a general reference work, and you probably should be reading a work specifically on that topic written by the relevant experts.

Blanket bans on Wikipedia are stupid. Sometimes a citation of a general encyclopedia is appropriate, and there's no reason why one shouldn't cite Wikipedia when you would otherwise cite a similar offline, non-collaborative source. That said, when citing Wikipedia, I like to see something that others don't cite: a permanent link to the edit that you are actually referring to (note the "Permanent link" on the sidebar - right click it, copy the URL and use that). Academics need to be able to drop down to the diff stream, for therein lies accountability. You could also use cite resources from the Citizendium, but that's some way off being a usable reference yet (we're getting there!).

2008.08.03

2008.08.01

How not to do JavaScript. Still, at least crappy JavaScript is keeping people away from a website that encourages tobacco usage. 2008-08-01T15:03:24ZUntitled entry permalink

If, like me, you happen to play video games and if those long hours in front of Grand Theft Auto and Sonic and Knuckles haven't turned you into a violent killer (which, according to certain segments of the media and government establishment, is the only outcome), you may wish to participate in this public consultation on video game censorship. My response? We should disband the BBFC and sell games and films in the same way as we sell books. If, as the reports say, children can't tell fantasy from reality, then that applies just as much to Harry Potter as it does to Ghost Recon. Anyway, in an age of BitTorrent, I'm not really sure what the point of film and game certificates. 2008-08-01T14:49:04ZUntitled entry permalink

California couple face sixty-two felony offences for child abuse after many years of tying their children up and torturing them. As Pam points out, it's a straight couple. Funnily enough, so was the Josef Fritzl case. Does rather put pay to the propaganda of 'family values' perpetrated by the 'think of the children' brigade. 2008-08-01T11:24:30ZUntitled entry permalink

Mark Sheehan has a good post up on Practical Ethics about the issue of informed consent and embryonic stem cell research. I'm not sure that the issue of consent here is particularly important: when you consider that an embryo being used for stem cell research is basically heading for the dustbin anyway. Yes, in an ideal world, it would probably be better to get permission from the parent of the embryo, but it seems far less of a concern than consent issues in other areas of bioethics - although, no doubt, for those "OMG embryos are human beings!!!1" people, it's the most important thing ever. 2008-08-01T11:19:05ZUntitled entry permalink

Murder reforms 2008-08-01T14:45:08ZTitled entry permalink

I haven't written yet about the murder law reforms here in Britain. The Guardian describe it as follows: People who kill their partners after years of abuse would be able to use a new defence that they had acted in response to extreme "words and conduct", under government plans to change the law on murder. This part is to change the law to avoid situations like those in R v. Thornton and R v. Ahluwalia (I would like to link you to the original material, but it's hidden inside the corporate-owned databases and law reports, rather than on the open, public Internet). The reform would also make infidelity no longer count as a valid provocation defence.

The murder laws do need reform, but I am very much unsure about these changes. I think instead that the government should reform the murder laws so that judges can have more flexibility in sentencing: either through introducing degrees of murder, as is done in the United States, or by simply getting rid of the mandatory sentence and having flexible sentencing guidelines.

Morality requires religion 2008-08-01T14:59:10ZTitled entry permalink

CNN: An evangelical preacher killed his wife several years ago and stuffed her body in a freezer after she caught him abusing their daughter, according to police and court documents. (Via PZ)

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Tom Morris
Currently in: East Sussex, England
Usually in: East Sussex, United Kingdom
AIM: tommorris
YIM: tom.morris

I am a , an , like to code in and noodle about with and the . I also have a BA in philosophy from London, and am studying for an MA. My philosophical interests are in Victorian-era German philosophy, Kierkegaard, Robert Nozick, hermeneutics and current approaches to the demarcation problem in the philosophy of science. Musically, I like jazz fusion, soul and P-Funk. My musical nirvana would be a mixture of Beethoven, Miles Davis and George Clinton topped with a side-serving of Erykah, Jill and Angie.

I also write for the Citizendium, an online encyclopedia project. If you know about stuff, you should join in.

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