Sunday, November 29, 2009
Animal Procedures
Mark Norman from the Museum of Victoria shares his enthusiasm for all sorts of amazing aquatic animal behaviours.From the Science Show on ABC radio national.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Kate Grenville
Friday, October 16, 2009
Mushroom intelligence
Forget rhizomes... start thinking through fungi. Mushroom guru Paul Stamets covers a lot of ground in this Ted talk and gives us plenty of food for thought (or should that be decaying matter for mycelium growth) in thinking through the philosophical implications of a fungal becoming.
Militant atheists
Yes these guys are a bit of a bore... or so I thought until I saw the following talks by two of the leaders of the atheist orthodoxy. These guys are actually very engaging. In this TED talk Richard Dawkins argues that science is much weirder than anything religion can come up with. Look out for his tips on training children to understand quantum phenomena.
Continuing with the atheist fundamentalism Christopher Hitchens discusses his book "God is not Great: Religion Poisons Everything". His views are oddly compatible with the author mentioned in the previous post.
Continuing with the atheist fundamentalism Christopher Hitchens discusses his book "God is not Great: Religion Poisons Everything". His views are oddly compatible with the author mentioned in the previous post.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Eagleman's Alternate Afterlives
In two programs from RN David Eagleman discusses both his neuroscientific work and his recently published collection of short stories. A synesthesia researcher by day and a writer of spiritually themed alternate rationalities by night Eagleman, when asked about his own beliefs regarding what occurs after life, describes himself as "a celebrant of the size of the possibility space". It is this notion that no doubt guided him in his writing of forty different post-death scenarios in which he considers all sorts of permutations, many of which are significantly less appealing, (but no less possible), than those offered to us by mainstream religions.
Labels:
alternate rationalities,
neuroscience,
religion
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Michael Pollan
Michael Pollan is a journalist who has written extensively on food. In this talk from fora tv Pollan discusses deep agriculture. As with most of fora's videos the embedded version below isn't the full presentation (follow the link for that).
You can also get a podcast of Pollan reading from his book The Omnivores Dilemma from Radio National's first person program. All episodes are listed here.
You can also get a podcast of Pollan reading from his book The Omnivores Dilemma from Radio National's first person program. All episodes are listed here.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Religion as Art
In this book show program from the Sydney writer's festival Ramona Koval speaks with Richard Holloway who describes religion as good poetry rather than bad science.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Endangered Languages
An insight into another dimension of linguistic reality. Daniel Everett's discussion of the language, oral culture and alternate rationality of the Piraha people of Brazil.
Labels:
alternate rationalities,
language,
linguistics
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Reinventing the Sacred
The brief mention of Stuart Kauffman's book Reinventing the Sacred on the Guardian's books blog sent me on a search for interviews and podcasts in order to find out more about what sounded like an particularly interesting alternate rationality. The first podcast-interview with the author that I came across was this one (right click to save). In this interview Kauffman outlines aspects of the argument that he makes in his book. Central to his thesis is a shift away from the deterministic, reductionist approaches that have produced many of the laws and theories associated with modern science towards a study of emergance and creative processes. The sacred referred to in the title of his book also marks a shift but this time in religious thought. Rather than the conception of a creator-god he suggests that we might think of creativity as god. That is creativity in all its manifestations; from the creative capacity of bacteria to respond to their surroundings to the adaptions of fish that produced our auditory system. Beyond the biological Kauffman sees a similar emergent creativity in economics and other cultural spheres. The videos below cover much the same territory as the podcast that I linked to above.
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Massey Lectures
Debt and the shadow side of wealth is the title of Margaret Atwood's Massey lectures. In this series of lectures Atwood gives us an at-times-humorous historical overview of the way we think about debt through myths, stories and language generally. Nouveau Scrooge's spiritual journeys in the final lecture are particularly entertaining.
Labels:
economics,
history,
humor,
literature,
religion
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Unwritten Books
The book show, (one of my favorite radio nation programs), is back from the summer break with the new programs. My pick of the first week's shows would have to be this recording (right click to save) featuring George Steiner discussing his unwritten books. Steiner covers many themes including the varying rationalities of sexual intimacy across different languages. This stuff is great inspiration for those wanting to learn another language or fully engage with the art of memory.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Dark Matter
This video doesn't quite have the same humor and flair as Neil DeGrasse Tyson's explanations of back hole death but it is very clear explanation of the evidence that suggests the existence of dark matter and dark energy.


Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Not So Rational...
In this video Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist from Duke University, demonstrates how and why our decision making is often less than rational. There are some obvious connections to be made between this presentation and the aspects of Lakoff's work that deal with what he sees as the out-dated notion of enlightenment reason. Aside from the intellectual content this is worth watching for its entertainment value. Who would have thought an economist could be this funny.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Black hole death
In this hilarious, entertaining and informative discussion writer and astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson discusses death by astrophysical phenomena including being sucked into a black hole and being wiped out by an asteroid-impact tsunami. Discussing the possibility of avoiding a specific asteroid impact that may occur in 2036 by blowing the thing out of the sky Tyson says "We, particularly Americans, are very good at blowing stuff up... we're less good at understanding where the pieces go after it blows up." So much insight in so few words. The other interesting fact about the larger asteroid impacts (like the one that wiped out the dinosaurs) is that subterranean bacterias are in the best place to survive them, perhaps another reason to think of those bacterias as "the most intelligent organisms on earth". Here's the link to the full program (well worth it for the extra five minutes of this gem).
Monday, January 5, 2009
Free Markets?
In the current climate a title like "free speech, free minds, free markets" suggests that we're in for a last ditch effort by the right to deploy democratic ideals in a bid to avoid tighter regulation of the financial system. So I was pleasantly surprised to find out that in this case it referred to a presentation by Jimmy Wales (founder of Wikipedia) talking about the ideals of the organization and his plan for an open source search engine. His plan definitely represents an alternative rationality to the advertising driven search-engines that dominate our current use of the internet. If you have some listening time I recommend the full program rather than the excerpt I've posted below.
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Fake Memoirs
From the book show on radio national an excellent program on the proliferation of faked memoirs recently re-aired as part of the summer series of repeats. Presenter Ramona Koval talks to a film-maker, a journalist/editor/academic and a publisher about people who fake it. There are some interesting answers in here to the question of why these people don't just write fiction.
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