Gaia Community: Anand's Blog tag:gaia.com,2008,:Gaia http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/feed en-us 20 Fri, 24 Jul 2009 16:14:56 GMT Gaia Community: Anand's Blog Does Mind belong to the Universe? http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-280586 Fri, 24 Jul 2009 16:14:56 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2009/7/does-mind-belong-to-the-universe <p>My mainstream friends and colleagues keep asking me why I am interested in the problem of consciousness. To some of them, showing an interest in this problem is symptomatic of a deeper psychological problem: for example, i) I could be a closet theist (heaven forbid) and am masking this by a philosophical masquerade, ii) I could be a vague new age/spiritual type (even worse) and trying to shore up some cred by feigning interest in philosophy or finally, iii) I am a mal-adjusted mathist/Platonist/transcendentalist who has failed to come to proper grips with the familiar tropes of neurobiology/evolution/emergence. In a nutshell: One is not supposed to begin thinking about consciousness until one solves the problem of the brain. In other words, we should all work on the brain and not on the mind for the next two hundred years or so or however long it takes to understand the brain as a complex, nonlinear chaotic dynamical system. And so much worse for society and culture at large where experiences, qualitative distinctions and choices obviously have value. <br /><br />In response, I&#39;ve decided to simplify my position a great deal. I came up with the following:<br /><br /><ol><li>The universe is physical.</li><li>I am a part of the universe.</li><li>I have a mind.</li><li>Therefore the universe has a mind or mental properties in general.<br /></li></ol><br />The resulting discussions have been very amusing to say the least since I uncompromisingly push the mental=physical angle following items i) - iv) above. Strangely, it is the neuroscience type who is most troubled by where this is headed. Let me explain why.<br /><br />The typical neuroscientist usually (unconsciously) assumes that mental properties are created by brain processes. What this does is relegate consciousness to that of epiphenomena in isolated brains. (And then you don&#39;t have to worry about it anymore.) When I go from point iii) to point iv) above, what I&#39;m trying to do is to take mental properties and push them out into the universe instead of confining them (or locking them up) in isolated brains. When I do this, it immediately creates a problem for the neuroscientist because mental properties are now directly coupled to physical properties and the brain can get bypassed in the process. This is troubling, nay, threatening.<br /><br />The usual response is dull and boring. The universe since the big bang has been evolving. We are the end products of evolution and mental properties have emerged full blown in us while being latent in primates and mammals (like cats and dogs). So the slide from iii) to iv) is non threatening since it is now temporally unpacked (with no mind in the universe until mammals or higher animals or somesuch). <br /><br />You have to wait patiently until this tedious tirade winds its way to its turgid ending. And then, you innocuously slip in the haymaker. If minds emerged so late in evolution, how can you possibly know that this story of a trajectory from the big bang to present day man (with mind) is actually true? That is, the big bang to emergence of mind story is an inference from physical facts and one that is heavily biased by the <em>a priori</em> assumption (driven by Cartesian intuition) that mental experience is supervenient on physical brains. (It is one thing to seek to prove this relationship and a completely different thing to tacitly assume it from the start.)&nbsp; Isn&#39;t it more likely (by the neuroscientist&#39;s own admission), that the true physical - whatever it is - may be beyond our reach exactly because of the neuroscientists&#39; own theory that we are isolated minds in a physical universe. And if this is possible, couldn&#39;t the starting assumption that we are epiphenomenal isolated minds in a physical universe also be false? <br /><br />The conversation breaks down at this point because from the neuroscientist&#39;s point of view, you are clearly a i) crackpot, ii) closet religious type, iii) postmodernist, iv) newage woolly headed type but thankfully not all of the above at least not at the same time :-)<br /><br />We have to move beyond this kind of name calling if we are to make any progress whatsoever on the problem of accommodating experience in the natural order. The emergence trope has started regressing into a kind of religious belief (no doubt driven by the evolution versus intelligent design culture wars) with the people espousing it starting to close ranks of late. </p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/consciousness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'consciousness'">consciousness</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/mind" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'mind'">mind</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/universe" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'universe'">universe</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/physical" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'physical'">physical</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/evolution" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'evolution'">evolution</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/emergence" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'emergence'">emergence</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/neuroscience" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'neuroscience'">neuroscience</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/chaotic+dynamical+system" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'chaotic dynamical system'">chaotic dynamical system</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/epiphenomena" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'epiphenomena'">epiphenomena</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/brain" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'brain'">brain</a> </p> End of an Era: Public, Private and Shared Spaces http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-254800 Thu, 05 Feb 2009 00:09:08 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2009/2/end_of_an_era_public_private_and_shared_spaces <p>And then the world changed. I look back at 2008 and see it as if it were a million years ago. We seem to have crossed over into something new - something frightening but new nevertheless.<br /><br />I campaigned a little bit for Obama and endured epithets such as &quot;I ain&#39;t votin&#39; for no f**king terrorist&quot; and again, this seems such a long time ago. The financial crisis tsunami hit, propelled Obama past the finish line, and now here we are.<br /><br />There are too many commentaries worth recommending for how we got here. Two stand out. Nouriel Roubini&#39;s <a href="http://www.rgemonitor.com/" target="_blank" title="RGE Monitor">RGE Monitor</a> for a daily dose of sobering reality and Michael Lind&#39;s &quot;<a href="http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2008/11/07/fourth_republic/" target="_blank" title="Fourth Republic">Obama and the dawn of the fourth republic</a>.&quot; The second essay, while somewhat sophomoric in its adherence to numerology, draws an irresistable overarching pattern which is worth describing and distilling.<br /><br />Lind claims that the US has had three republics: i) 1788-1860, ii) 1860-1932 and iii) 1932-2008. Each republic had a period of Hamiltonian infrastructure building and government consolidation followed by Jeffersonian free enterprise and de-regulation. And like the Matrix and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nightfall_(Asimov_short_story)" target="_blank" title="Nightfall">Lagash</a>, each republic ends in over-reach and hubris and has to be rebooted. If we accept Lind&#39;s pattern, we are about to enter the fourth republic of the US.<br /><br />But consider: The US is not alone in facing a financial crisis at this point in time. The globalized world is going through many of the same problems and all advanced (UK, Western Europe), developed (Russia, Argentina, etc.) and advancing (China, India, Brazil) economies have been hit hard. It is now clear that all banking institutions are sitting on 50 trillion dollars of bad paper (mortgage securities, credit default swaps etc.) and all talks of a &quot;bailout&quot; are probably fundamentally flawed since we can&#39;t even sort out the good from the bad paper. It will take years to resolve this mess and meanwhile the real economies are going to contract with millions losing their jobs and others losing their way of life (which has been taken for granted for a loooong time).<br /><br />What&#39;s the upside of all this? Every crisis presents opportunities for something new to emerge. Something new which could not have seen the light of day when the previous era was in full swing. And this possibility may allow us to break out of Michael Lind&#39;s Hamilton versus Jefferson deathmatch. Prior to 2008, when I discussed politics with someone, I typically got a knee jerk adolescent Ayn Rand libertarianism or a fairly standard social engineering liberalism - both of which are now dead. We don&#39;t need to ask &quot;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_Shrugged" target="_blank" title="Atlas Shrugged">Who is John Galt?</a>&quot; or shout that &quot;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_That_Is_Solid_Melts_Into_Air" target="_blank" title="Communist Manifesto">All that is solid melts into air</a>&quot;. We need something new.<br /><br />My very strong feeling is that Shared Spaces are the way out. If you look at the conflicted relationship between government and corporations, what stands out is the way both try and grind the ordinary citizen to dust. But in the information age that we are surely in, it is the second person, P2P, social networking or the shared space culture in general that is ascendant. Unfortunately, we are still technologically way behind the curve in terms of the user interface infrastructure necessary to foster the building of shared spaces - with the sorry state of virtual worlds and social networking sites (like this one) helping me buttress my opinion. And, we don&#39;t even know how we build up culture or the second person in general when you remove traditional structures such as family, tribe, church and team. This is likely to be a bigger stumbling block before we can realize that the space between public and private is vast and encompasses both.<br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Public" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Public'">Public</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/private" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'private'">private</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/shared" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'shared'">shared</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/P2P" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'P2P'">P2P</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Hamilton" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Hamilton'">Hamilton</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Jefferson" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Jefferson'">Jefferson</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/republic" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'republic'">republic</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/second+person" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'second person'">second person</a> </p> Post-Panpsychism: Using Strawson to go beyond Strawson http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-215771 Thu, 28 Aug 2008 04:26:22 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/8/post-panpsychism_using_strawson_to_go_beyond_strawson <p>In a <a href="http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2007/2/consciousness_does_physicalism_entail_panpsychism" target="_blank" title="Entail?">previous blog entry</a>, I explained my admiration for <a href="http://www.imprint.co.uk/jcs_13_10-11.html" target="_blank" title="Strawson">Strawson&#39;s target article</a> (and followup in the same issue) on panpsychism in the Journal of Consciousness Studies (JCS). As previously explained, Strawson lays out the case for panpsychism, contrasts it with most forms of emergence, delves into arcane <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/neutral-monism/" target="_blank" title="Neutral Monism">neutral monisms</a>, rehabilitates Descartes as a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-aspect_monism" target="_blank" title="Dual-aspect">dual-aspect theorist</a> and finally tries to nail the case that physicalism entails panpsychism.<br /><br />What&#39;s not to like, you may ask? After all, Strawson takes experience seriously (which I&#39;m less inclined to grant to emergentists in my more uncharitable moments). He simultaneously resists the lure of full-bore idealism, mysticism and all forms of eliminativism and emergence. He ends up championing a robust physicalism and is forced (and it looks like he&#39;s being pulled kicking and screaming) to accept that physicalism entails panpsychism.<br /><br />The trouble is - and I say this after numerous frustrating conversations with philosophers - most analytic philosophers don&#39;t understand theoretical physics at all.&nbsp; Many of them continue to conceive of physics as a kind of a dynamical system - which it is not. Or they have a causal network like description in mind - A caused B which caused C - and this is also not supported by physics. I don&#39;t think it is wrong to state outright that most analytic philosophers just don&#39;t understand that one of the basic problems in theoretical physics today is the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_gravity" target="_blank" title="QG">unification</a> of quantum mechanics with general relativity - which in a vast oversimplification can be recast as a problem of how a quantum measure changes without specifying a fixed background spacetime.<br /><br />In other words, in a completed theory of quantum gravity, you cannot assume spacetime as basic. You have to show how it emerges from something more fundamental. <br /><br />Contrast this with Strawson who writes (JCS, 13:10-11, page 9, 2007)&nbsp; &quot;(3) the universe is spatio-temporal in its fundamental nature&quot; to which he attaches a footnote &quot;Note that if temporality goes, i.e. not just spacetime(TM) but temporality in any form, then experience also goes, given that experience requires time. One of the fine consequences of this is that there has never been any suffering. But no theory of reality can be right that has the consequence that there has never been any suffering.&quot; OK, that&#39;s obviously a joke, but a very revealing one.<br /><br />It is obvious (to me at any rate) that Strawson is fighting a battle on two fronts, both of which he could well lose. On the one hand, he champions spacetime as basic and we have already seen that it is highly unlikely that theoretical physics will uphold that position. He also champions experience as basic - and hence the slide from physicalism to panpsychism - but ignores critics like <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/foucault/" target="_blank" title="Foucault">Foucault</a> who do not consider experience (phenomenology) to be basic. Isn&#39;t it more likely that we&#39;ll attempt to understand experience as a physical event wherein one &quot;portion&quot; of the universe separates itself (momentarily) from the rest and the resulting separation causes physical events to happen both at the boundary (behavior) and in the interior (experience)? Surely, this separation act which creates an experience is more fundamental than the experience itself, no?<br /><br />In any case, given the restrictive first principles assumptions that Strawson stakes out - spacetime as basic etc. - it should be straightforward to go post-panpsychist. The price of admission is a non-reductive physicalism which - face it - is going to be pretty bizarre. It is going to have experience produced by momentary &quot;subjects&quot; separating themselves from everything else which is a far cry from the particles and fields of present day physics. Luckily, present day physics is equally incomprehensible - in terms of a coherent picture - and this should give us the strength we need to complete the physicalist picture by accommodating experience. </p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Strawson" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Strawson'">Strawson</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/physicalism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'physicalism'">physicalism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/panpsychism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'panpsychism'">panpsychism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/quantum+gravity" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'quantum gravity'">quantum gravity</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/neutral+monism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'neutral monism'">neutral monism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/dual-aspect" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'dual-aspect'">dual-aspect</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/post-panpsychist" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'post-panpsychist'">post-panpsychist</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/non-reductive" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'non-reductive'">non-reductive</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Foucault" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Foucault'">Foucault</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/phenomenology" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'phenomenology'">phenomenology</a> </p> Silence and Solitude: Hiking in Denali, Alaska http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-202667 Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:57:53 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/7/silence_and_solitude_hiking_in_denali_alaska <p>I took advantage of a conference held in Anchorage, Alaska to put together a hiking trip in the <a href="http://www.nps.gov/dena/" target="_blank" title="Denali National Park">Denali National Park and Preserve</a>. Denali (the &quot;tall one&quot;) is the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athabaskan_languages" target="_blank" title="Athabasca">Athabascan</a> name for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_McKinley" target="_blank" title="Mount McKinley">Mount McKinley</a>, which at over 20,000 feet, not surprisingly dominates the park. Despite Alaska&#39;s reputation as being relatively under-developed, at least when compared to &quot;the lower 48&quot; states of the US, I found Denali National Park to be a bit too tourist friendly. Luckily, it was easy to escape the crowds. <br /><br />Before I went to Denali, a few of us took a trip to <a href="http://www.sewardak.org/" target="_blank" title="Seward, AK">Seward, AK</a> to see some glaciers. We saw some sea lions on a boat ride amidst a fantastic backdrop of snow-capped mountains rising up from the sea. <br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:500px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/40/397061/large/IMG_0266_2.jpg" height="375" width="500" /> <div class="asset_caption">IMG 0266 2</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_88271" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/>I then took the train to Denali. (Most of the travel and accommodations were handled through <a href="http://www.alaskatravel.com/" target="_blank" title="Alaska Tour &amp; Travel">Alaska Tour &amp; Travel</a> who were very helpful once you explain to them that you&#39;re not their typical tourist.) <br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Denali National Park&#39;s showcase is the Alaskan range and it&#39;s jaw dropping spectacular. You can take a bus ride deep into the park and get to within 90 miles of Mount McKinley itself. (We could only glimpse &quot;the tall one&quot; at very brief intervals before the clouds kept descending.) Some of the best views are at <a href="http://www.terragalleria.com/parks/np.denali.4.html" target="_blank" title="Eielson Visitor Center">Eielson Visitor Center</a> and at Wonder Lake.<br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:480px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/40/397063/large/IMG_0481.jpg" height="375" width="480" /> <div class="asset_caption">View from Eielson</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_88272" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/>There are plenty of opportunities to see real wildlife in the park and we were fortunate enough to spot some brown bears trying to catch a squirrel. The bears seem used to homo sapiens and weren&#39;t too bothered by us clicking away.<br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:480px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/40/397064/large/IMG_0526.jpg" height="220" width="480" /> <div class="asset_caption">Frolicking brown bears</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_88273" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/>The best part of the trip for me was a solitary hike into the wilderness. I took the <a href="http://wikitravel.org/en/Denali_National_Park" target="_blank" title="Savage River">Savage River</a> trail and proceeded beyond the tourist trap point and immediately left everything behind me literally and metaphorically. There was not a soul in sight. While the &quot;trail&quot; was somewhat rough in places, it is perfectly suited for a not-very-demanding hike. (I was told that one could keep on going on this trail. I turned back after a few hours.)<br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:480px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/40/397066/large/IMG_0878.jpg" height="293" width="480" /> <div class="asset_caption">Camouflage</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_88274" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/>To the person reading this, I hope you&#39;ll forgive some self-indulgent nature mysticism. What is it about these mountains that drives us to spend hours in solitude? Is it because the silently stoic ranges strike us dumb verbally and mentally? Why do we become completely insignificant in the face of such massive majesty? Why does that dazzling, shimmering river force us to keep flowing alongside with no regard for safe harbor? And, deep in the wilderness, there&#39;s this tangible feeling of solitude (and not loneliness) with the promise of renewal when we return.<br /><br />In Denali, the saga of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_McCandless" target="_blank" title="Christoper McCandless">Christopher McCandless</a> - a solitary hiker who died while braving the wilderness - tends to come up a lot. Quite a few tourists try to go partway up the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stampede_Trail" target="_blank" title="Stampede Trail">Stampede trail</a> which has become a pilgrimage after his death. Jon Krakauer popularized this story in &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Into-Wild-Jon-Krakauer/dp/0307387178/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1215441302&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank" title="Into the Wild">Into the Wild</a>&quot; (a book I haven&#39;t read but plan to pick up.) Regardless of the real story behind McCandless&#39; tragedy, the appeal of the Alaskan wilderness is undeniable. <br id="ze_clear_asset_202667" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Alaska" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Alaska'">Alaska</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Denali" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Denali'">Denali</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Mount+McKinley" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Mount McKinley'">Mount McKinley</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Seward" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Seward'">Seward</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/glaciers" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'glaciers'">glaciers</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/silence" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'silence'">silence</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/solitude" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'solitude'">solitude</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/nature++mysticism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'nature mysticism'">nature mysticism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/bears" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'bears'">bears</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/sea+lions" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'sea lions'">sea lions</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/hiking" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'hiking'">hiking</a> </p> Habeas Corpus, Authoritarianism and Perspective http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-198609 Mon, 16 Jun 2008 18:52:01 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/6/habeas_corpus_authoritarianism_and_perspective <p>In a <a href="http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/9/the_black_cloud_bardo" target="_blank" title="Black Cloud Bardo">previous blog entry</a>, I had lamented the fact that the US had seen it fit to deny <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habeas_corpus" target="_blank" title="Habeas Corpus">habeas corpus</a> to aliens who had been designated as &quot;enemy combatants&quot; by the president. Last week in a <a href="http://www.cise.ufl.edu/~anand/download/boumediene_bush_habeas_corpus.pdf" target="_blank" title="Boumediene vs. Bush">close 5-4 ruling</a>, the Supreme Court reinstated habeas corpus for prisoners held in Guantanamo. With Kennedy writing the majority opinion and Roberts, Alito, Thomas and Scalia (RATS in short) dissenting, it is instructive to look at the actual opinion to try to figure out the fault lines on the court which are a mirror of some of the fault lines in present day US society.<br /><br />The majority on the court based their opinion on the fact that some of the detainees at Guantanamo had not had charges filed against them in over six years of incarceration. They argue that the military tribunals set in place by the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detainee_Treatment_Act" target="_blank" title="Detainee Treatment Act">Detainee Treatment Act (DTA)</a> have not been effective in granting due process to the detainees which is why the civil court option afforded by habeas corpus is now necessary.<br /><br />And now to get to the main point of this blog entry: Scalia in a <a href="http://www.cise.ufl.edu/~anand/download/boumediene_bush_habeas_corpus.pdf" target="_blank" title="Boumediene vs. Bush (Scalia)">minority opinion</a> disagrees (to put it mildly). He begins by stating that &quot;Today, for the first time in our Nation&rsquo;s history, the Court confers a constitutional right to habeas corpus on alien enemies detained abroad by our military forces in the course of an ongoing war.&quot; [page 110]. Note the <a href="http://berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2003/10/27_lakoff.shtml" target="_blank" title="George Lakoff">framing</a>. First, the detainees are &quot;alien enemies&quot;,&nbsp; second,&nbsp; they have been detained &quot;abroad&quot; (Guantanamo) and we are in the midst of an &quot;ongoing war.&quot; Considering that the US has bases in about <a href="http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&amp;aid=5564" target="_blank" title="US bases">60 countries</a> with about 250,000 soldiers and personnel deployed overseas, it is a de facto empire - though very different from the British Empire that immediately preceded it&nbsp; - and speaking of an &quot;ongoing war&quot; is disingenuous at best. What I like about Scalia though is that he opens his mind to us even more by later stating that &quot;The game of bait-and-switch that today&rsquo;s opinion plays upon the Nation&rsquo;s Commander in Chief will make the war harder on us. It will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed.&quot; [page 111] <br /><br />What&#39;s going on here? Why is one of the Supreme Court justices resorting to garden variety scare tactics in his criticism of his colleagues. And note the use of &quot;Commander in Chief&quot; and &quot;the war&quot; in framing the argument. I think it should be clear that Scalia - and the 25-30% of 9/11 traumatized Americans that he represents - inhabit a very different perspective from most of the folks on Gaia. And strangely, it is Scalia and his ilk who frequently employ the bait and switch game - unconsciously accepting that we (the US) are a de facto empire at times while retreating to the standard imagery of an ordinary nation seeking to defend itself at other times. (This explains the &quot;Nation&#39;s Commander in Chief&quot; portion above.) <br /><br />I wonder if Scalia (and the millions that he represents) are fundamentally rooted in a rigidly authoritarian mindset which might explain why we can understand them but they can&#39;t understand us. Does that make us - assuming a consensus here of course and using a simple binary distinction - libertarian which has its own problems?&nbsp; I don&#39;t think so. I have no problem bowing to authority when the situation demands it. But, I think the asymmetry is more telling. When one perspective can model another perspective, then it is meta to the other and is capable of running the argument, &quot;If I looked at this from this other POV, I&#39;d get this&quot; etc. I would have no problem if someone who thinks like Scalia showed the ability to fully model a progressive/libertarian and there were avenues (Faux News etc.) where this ability was showcased. But we don&#39;t see this and that&#39;s the problem. To close with sorta a sermon (gack), we all need to go beyond just understanding the power of framing and the ability of running arguments from different POVs. In dialogue with someone like Scalia, we need to be able to employ rapid fire jiu-jitsu maneuvers to avoid being framed in an argument of the type &quot;Are you for or against aiding the enemy in granting them habeas corpus?&quot; This is going to take a lot of practice.<br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/habeas+corpus" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'habeas corpus'">habeas corpus</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/authoritarianism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'authoritarianism'">authoritarianism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/libertarian" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'libertarian'">libertarian</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/progressive" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'progressive'">progressive</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/perspective" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'perspective'">perspective</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Lakoff" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Lakoff'">Lakoff</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/framing" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'framing'">framing</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Scalia" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Scalia'">Scalia</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Guantanamo" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Guantanamo'">Guantanamo</a> </p> Experience, Information, Panpsychism http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-189703 Tue, 13 May 2008 16:24:03 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/5/experience_information_panpsychism <p>At the recently concluded <a href="http://www.consciousness.arizona.edu/tucson2008.htm" target="_blank" title="TUCSON 2008">Toward a Science of Consciousness</a> conference, I presented a <a href="http://www.cise.ufl.edu/~anand/pdf/post_physicalism.pdf" target="_blank" title="Post-physicalism">poster</a> on a new physicalism that can accommodate experience. The reception was fast and furious from some and wacky and weird from others. I&#39;ll summarize after explaining what the poster was about.<br /><br />Following <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Chalmers" target="_blank" title="David Chalmers">Chalmers</a>, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Place-Consciousness-Probing-Structure-Philosophy/dp/0195168143" target="_blank" title="Gregg Rosenberg">Rosenberg</a>, <a href="http://philrsss.anu.edu.au/~dstoljar/" target="_blank" title="Daniel Stoljar">Stoljar</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perspectivism" target="_blank" title="Nietzsche">Nietzsche</a> (via <a href="http://departments.bloomu.edu/philosophy/pages/content/hales/hales.html" target="_blank" title="Steven D. Hales">Hales</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Wilber" target="_blank" title="Ken Wilber">Wilber</a>), I&#39;ve been wondering for a while regarding a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physicalism#Non-reductive_physicalism" target="_blank" title="Non-reductive physicalism">non-reductive physicalism</a> that can accommodate experience. Since physicalism is still up for grabs (so to speak), the plan of action is simple: Expand physicalism so that experience is a natural by product. In particular, avoid assuming that experience is fundamental as the <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/panpsychism/" target="_blank" title="Panpsychism">panpsychist</a>, <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/neutral-monism/" target="_blank" title="Neutral Monism">neutral monist</a> or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-aspect_theory" target="_blank" title="Dual-aspect theory">dual-aspect theorist</a> typically does. if the result is panpsychism, at least it is <em>a posteriori</em> and not <em>a priori</em>. <br /><br />You would think that this essentially simple idea would find plenty of supporters. Instead, it simply raised controversy among the attendees who came by the posters and others to whom I explained the basic idea. Below, I&#39;ll do a caricature and response to the questions:<br /><br />1. Physicalism is really materialism and experience is a result of neural firings in the brain.<br /><br />Response: There&#39;s an <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explanatory_gap" target="_blank" title="Explanatory gap">explanatory gap</a> between neural firings and experience. Also, the brain is not a fundamental physical object. Furthermore, you&#39;re being Cartesian in correlating one subject to one brain. <br /><br />2. <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Consciousness-Its-Place-Nature-Physicalism/dp/1845400593" target="_blank" title="Galen Strawson">Strawson</a> has shown that physicalism entails panpsychism and if I had time I would destroy your position.<br /><br />Response: This is an almost exact quote. It is extremely disturbing that some people are already driven to panpsychism as the one and only way out. In any case, the whole problem with panpsychism is that it posits intrinsic properties like experience as basic and doesn&#39;t tell us where the boundary came from to demarcate <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrinsic_and_extrinsic_properties" target="_blank" title="Intrinsic and Extrinsic">intrinsic</a> from extrinsic. In other words, panpsychism takes objects in the world as unproblematic and this is precisely the problem in basic physics where there are currently no such boundaries. Unfortunately, Strawson&#39;s clout is such that it is quite likely that we&#39;ll start seeing panpsychism bigots and it&#39;s not a bad idea to start watching out for them from the start.<br /><br />3. The universe is really <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_information_processing" target="_blank" title="Quantum information processing">quantum information processing</a> and there are no such things as selves (subjects).<br /><br />Response: Not sure what you&#39;re really trying to say. If the universe is really information, then information is physical (by my definition of physicalism). There will then be an explanatory gap between information and experience. In addition, information can be parsed as in-formation (as opposed to out-formation) and this implies a boundary of some sort with in-formation being contextualized relative to the boundary. In that case experience is information in-formation :-) [Sorry, but that&#39;s actually pretty cute. Perhaps, I&#39;ll make that the title of my next paper.]<br /><br />4. The universe is really One without a second - a perfect unity in diversity with Love holding it all together.<br /><br />Response: Mysticism is not a scientific option for me (despite its many benefits including love and compassion). If that statement is unpacked as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idealism" target="_blank" title="Idealism">idealist</a>, then the burden of proof is on you to show why this particular opening in awareness with experiential content that exists right here and right now is actually Oneness of some kind.<br /><br />5. Your approach of focusing on a momentary physical boundary that separates one &quot;portion&quot; of the universe from the rest can explain why experiences are private. It doesn&#39;t explain why experiences are qualitative.<br /><br />Response: Kudos to the best question so far. It is quite likely that there are overlapping boundaries like the traditional Venn diagrams. Imagine that the overlapping aspect creates a shared language and this explains our verbalized thoughts which are usually expressed in some language. When there is no overlap, then there is no language of any kind and from this you can get the qualitative aspect of experience. This has to be carefully worked out obviously.<br /><br />Overall, I was both elated and crushed. Elated that there were many people who saw the value in what was being presented, crushed that there weren&#39;t more in depth questions except from a small minority.<br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Experience" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Experience'">Experience</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Information" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Information'">Information</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Panpsychism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Panpsychism'">Panpsychism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Stoljar" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Stoljar'">Stoljar</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Strawson" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Strawson'">Strawson</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Hales" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Hales'">Hales</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Wilber" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Wilber'">Wilber</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/boundary" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'boundary'">boundary</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/intrinsic" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'intrinsic'">intrinsic</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/extrinsic" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'extrinsic'">extrinsic</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Consciousness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Consciousness'">Consciousness</a> </p> Toward a Science of Consciousness (TUCSON 2008): Conf. Review http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-182939 Wed, 16 Apr 2008 17:11:44 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/4/toward_a_science_of_consciousness_tucson_2008_conf_review <p>I just returned from Tucson, AZ from attending the <a href="http://www.consciousness.arizona.edu/CenterforConsciousnessCenter.Tucson.Arizona.htmregister.htm" target="_blank" title="Tucson 2008">2008 edition</a> of the Toward a Science of Consciousness conference. I&#39;m now walking around campus with a huge smile on my face with my colleagues asking me what I&#39;m on. Yes, it was that good. Almost like a retreat but very different.<br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:300px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/37/361264/medium/tucson_2008.jpg" height="300" width="300" /> <div class="asset_caption">Tucson 2008</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_79176" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/><br />While I&#39;ve attended previous versions of this conference, I skipped the last two. ( I know: What was I thinking? ) It&#39;s not possible to summarize all the talks/posters, so I&#39;ll focus on the main trends and a few standouts.<br /><br />First, <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/panpsychism/" target="_blank" title="Panpsychism">panpsychism</a> is no longer crazy - it&#39;s the norm. (I&#39;ll wait for you to pick yourself up off the floor.) Following in the footsteps of <a href="http://www.iep.utm.edu/p/panpsych.htm" target="_blank" title="William James">James</a>, <a href="http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstract/112411410/ABSTRACT" target="_blank" title="Fechner">Fechner</a>, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Process-Lectures-Delivered-University-Edinburgh/dp/0029345707/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1208364304&amp;sr=1-9" target="_blank" title="Alfred North Whitehead">Whitehead</a>, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Unsnarling-World-Knot-Consciousness-Freedom-Mind-Body/dp/1556357559/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1208363747&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank" title="David Ray Griffin">Griffin</a>, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Vindication-Absolute-Idealism-Timothy-Sprigge/dp/085224455X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1208363663&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank" title="Timothy Sprigge">Sprigge</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Chalmers" target="_blank" title="David Chalmers">Chalmers</a>, <a href="http://members.aol.com/NeoNoetics/CONSC_INFO_PANPSY.html" target="_blank" title="Bill Seager">Seager</a>, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Place-Consciousness-Probing-Structure-Philosophy/dp/0195168143" target="_blank" title="Gregg Rosenberg">Rosenberg</a> and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Consciousness-Its-Place-Nature-Physicalism/dp/1845400593/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1209581445&amp;sr=1-1" target="_blank" title="Galen Strawson">Strawson</a>, a triumphalist note of sorts was struck especially by <a href="http://www.iep.utm.edu/p/panpsych.htm" target="_blank" title="David Skrbina">Skrbina</a>. <a href="http://al.nd.edu/resources-for/faculty-and-staff/faculty-list/bio/lstubenb/" target="_blank" title="Leopold Stubenberg">Stubenberg</a> contrasted panpsychism and <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/neutral-monism/" target="_blank" title="Neutral Monism">neutral monism</a> in a nice talk. What is starting to worry me - especially since I&#39;m going post-panpsychist - is that panpsychism might become a drug that causes us to forget trying to nail down what an experience is and how it relates to the physical. If we blithely accept that experiences run all the way down, this could happen. Thankfully, the problem of awareness will, in all likelihood rear up in protest and we&#39;ll have a whole new argument on awareness thresholds, the emergence of awareness, the impossibility of the emergence of awareness, blah, blah, blah.<br /><br />A plenary session on &quot;Libet and the timing of conscious experience&quot; was very illuminating. There&#39;s now a lot of evidence suggesting that conscious awareness of intention is behind the times. To put it crudely, our brains make up their minds about what to do before we become aware of its intention. (Sorry for being so Cartesian.) Please see <a href="http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/04/mind_decision" target="_blank" title="Wired">this Wired article</a> for more on this fascinating finding.<br /><br />The &quot;Sex and Consciousness&quot; plenary focused on altered states and peak experiences during sex. Jenny Wade summarized the findings from her recent book &quot;<a href="http://www.transcendentsex.org/pages/1/index.htm" target="_blank" title="Transcendent Sex">Transcendent Sex</a>.&quot; The upshot is that you and your partner could be having a satori-like peak experience triggered by sex and you may not be sharing that with each other. What was especially amusing was Wade narrating the story of a woman who had a peak experience while having the same, boring (sorry, sorry) sex with her husband for the umpteenth time. She was waiting for it to get over and then BAM! - altered state.<br /><br />When <a href="http://www.mpih-frankfurt.mpg.de/global/np/staff/singer.htm" target="_blank" title="Wolf Singer">Wolf Singer</a> started to give his talk on synchronization of oscillatory neural responses (gamma synchrony), I thought I&#39;d be bored out of my mind (ouch). And I was. Neural synchrony doesn&#39;t really solve any problem. The computational neuroscientists are quick to tell you that the brain is really a high-dimensional spike producing chaotic dynamical system and that any reference to relaxation oscillations to solve a &quot;binding problem&quot; is pretty neanderthal. But Singer redeemed himself. When asked what was going on in deep meditative states he opined &quot;I think they [the meditators] have found a way of being in an Aah Ha! state all the time&quot; [inexact quote] essentially without needing an Einstein-like scientific discovery to generate the flash of insight that presumably produces that state.<br /><br />The best session of the conference was on &quot;Brain Imaging and Mind Reading.&quot; <a href="http://www.neuroscience.cam.ac.uk/directory/profile.php?adrian" target="_blank" title="Adrian Owen">Adrian Owen</a> demonstrated that a few vegetative subjects were capable of performing mental imagery tasks which could be detected by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_magnetic_resonance_imaging" target="_blank" title="fMRI">fMRI!</a> [Umm, this means that they aren&#39;t really vegetative subjects.]&nbsp; This to me was the Wow paper of the conference even though I hate fMRI with a passion since it&#39;s a glorified heatsink detector. <br /><br />Finally, we had a parapsychology session. I&#39;ve never been very interested in parapsychology because there are more basic problems of consciousness - like how &quot;I&quot; am typing this sentence - that need to be solved. <a href="http://www.sheldrake.org/homepage.html" target="_blank" title="Rupert Sheldrake">Rupert Sheldrake</a> gave an entertaining talk on &quot;Alex&quot; the parrot who could read the mind of his owner (when looking at images). He also showed a time-synced video of a woman and her dog with the dog being particularly adept at figuring out when she intended to come home. (Yes: &quot;intended to come home&quot;) The dog would go the door/window and wait right after she decided to come home. [In this case, we have a curious incident of the dog but in daytime.] <br /><br />In summary, I met some amazingly wonderful people (and Dave Chalmers has posted <a href="http://consc.net/pics/eoc2008.html" title="Tucson 2008 pix">some pix here</a>), had my happiness threshold breached on numerous occasions and am still having a post-conference afterglow. I&#39;ll check with Jenny Wade to see if people get into altered states after attending spectacular conferences like this one :-)<br id="ze_clear_asset_182939" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/science+of+consciousness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'science of consciousness'">science of consciousness</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Tucson" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Tucson'">Tucson</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Chalmers" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Chalmers'">Chalmers</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/transcendent+sex" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'transcendent sex'">transcendent sex</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/vegetative+state" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'vegetative state'">vegetative state</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/fMRI" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'fMRI'">fMRI</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/mental+imagery" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'mental imagery'">mental imagery</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Sheldrake" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Sheldrake'">Sheldrake</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/parapsychology" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'parapsychology'">parapsychology</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/mind+reading" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'mind reading'">mind reading</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/panpsychism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'panpsychism'">panpsychism</a> </p> LOST: Locked Outta Space-Time http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-172088 Sat, 08 Mar 2008 19:44:59 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/3/lost_locked_outta_space-time <p>I&#39;ve become a <a href="http://lostpedia.com/wiki/Main_Page" target="_blank" title="LOST">LOST</a> junkie. Usually TV shows with science fiction (SF) themes are beyond horrid - yes they&#39;re THAT bad. The regression of Star Trek (though Star Trek:TNG showed some upswing) proves my point. Since the TV public is not very discerning about the differences between science fiction and fantasy, the former quickly regresses to the latter and we&#39;re back in a retro medieval costume saving damsels from dragons and all that crap.<br /><br />And then there&#39;s LOST. The logical successor to a fine line of SF: Dr. Who, <a href="http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0088846/" target="_blank" title="Brazil">Brazil</a>, Back to the Future, Star Trek&#39;s &quot;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cause_and_Effect" target="_blank" title="Cause and Effect">Cause and Effect</a>&quot;, <a href="http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0099871/" target="_blank" title="Jacob's Ladder">Jacob&#39;s Ladder</a>, Twelve Monkeys, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Third-Policeman-Flann-OBrien/dp/156478214X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1205014420&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank" title="The Third Policeman">The Third Policeman</a>, Philip K. Dick&#39;s <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Valis-Philip-K-Dick/dp/0679734465/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1205014458&amp;sr=1-1" target="_blank" title="Valis">Valis</a>, Groundhog Day, Dark City, The Matrix, Identity, Open Your Eyes, Pan&#39;s Labyrinth&nbsp; and - dare I say it - even the recent Premonition. LOST freely borrows from &#39;em all. What sets LOST apart from all other TV shows and especially from the execrable Heroes with its &uuml;bermensch is the central mystery the characters have to solve: &quot;Where, when, why and who are we?&quot;<br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:480px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/35/341995/large/250px-23psalmmonster.jpg" height="271" width="480" /> <div class="asset_caption">250px-23psalmmonster</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_73867" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/><div align="center">Eko meeting the smoke monster<br /></div><a href="http://lost-theories.com/" target="_blank" title="LOST theories">Theories</a> abound on the net. Are they all dead <span class="l"><em>&agrave; la</em> Jacob&#39;s Ladder? Is it a role playing game (RPG) crossed with Survivor? Perhaps the island has special powers and it sucks people to it on a regular basis. If so, how does this explain the deep connection between the people on the doomed Oceanic flight 815 before they even got to the island? Who is Jacob, why can&#39;t he be easily seen and why does his hut randomly move around the island? Why do some people quickly heal - Rose&#39;s disappearing cancer, Locke surviving a gunshot, Patchy mysteriously reappearing after being killed - while others die (Charlie, Ethan, Shannon, Boone, Ana-Lucia, Goodwin, Libby, Eko etc.) ? What is the nature of the smoke monster? What&#39;s up with the island&#39;s projection and sound system? It seemingly has the ability to apparate people and objects at will with the whispers heralding a new projection. <br /><br /></span> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:400px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/35/342817/large/Constant8-600px.jpg" height="226" width="400" /> <div class="asset_caption">Constant8-600px</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_74056" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/> <div align="center">Space-time calculations<br /> </div><br /><span class="l">Besides its surreal landscape, LOST indulges in furious name dropping with some creative juxtapositioning: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Locke" target="_blank" title="John Locke">John Locke</a>, Danielle <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Jacques_Rousseau" target="_blank" title="Rousseau">Rousseau</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram_Dass" target="_blank" title="Richartd Alpert">Richard Alpert</a>, Desmond <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hume" target="_blank" title="David Hume">David Hume</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._S._Lewis" target="_blank" title="C. S. Lewis">Charlotte Staples Lewis</a>, Daniel <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Faraday" target="_blank" title="Faraday">Faraday</a>, George <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Minkowski" target="_blank" title="Minkowski">Minkowski</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penelope" target="_blank" title="Penelope">Penelope</a> Widmore, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_Bakunin" target="_blank" title="Bakunin">Mikhail Bakunin</a> to name a few! What does all this add up to? The LOST writers are clearly head and shoulders better than most TV writers. By announcing that the show will end in three seasons, they&#39;ve confidently started staking out the endgame. At the very end of season 3 and now in season 4, the show features flash-forwards which is a new dramatic device. Rather than be one possible future, the writers have indicated that it is THE future. This season is about how the Oceanic Six makes it off the island, the next season is about why they need to get back to the island and the final season is about what happens when they do get back - if it&#39;s even an island. Barring the obvious idea that it is all a simulation, I cannot see how the writers can resist a <em>deus ex machina</em> approach to story resolution. But I don&#39;t care. As long as it hangs together, treats the characters with respect and provides a plausible resolution, I&#39;ll be happy.<br /><br />The best LOST recaps that I&#39;ve found are by <a href="http://fishbiscuitlandblog.blogspot.com/" target="_blank" title="Fisbiscuit">Fishbiscuit</a> and <a href="http://www.powells.com/blog/?author=104" target="_blank" title="J. Wood">J. Wood</a>. The <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Lost-Philosophy-Reasons-Blackwell-Culture/dp/1405163151/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1205151693&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank" title="Lost and Philosophy">Lost and Philosophy</a> book looks intriguing.<br /></span><br id="ze_clear_asset_172088" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/LOST" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'LOST'">LOST</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Matrix" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Matrix'">Matrix</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Philip+K.+Dick" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Philip K. Dick'">Philip K. Dick</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/time+travel" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'time travel'">time travel</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/science+fiction" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'science fiction'">science fiction</a> </p> Quickies: Travel to India, Dubai, Rio and Guanajuato (Mexico) http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-167578 Fri, 22 Feb 2008 21:27:04 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2008/2/quickies_travel_to_india_dubai_rio_and_guanajuato_mexico <p>Hmm...haven&#39;t updated this blog in quite a while. I&#39;ve seen many an abandoned blog on the web. Don&#39;t want this one to become a &quot;Blog in a Bog&quot; or a blog that has sunk in the morass of the web.<br /><br />I traveled a helluva lot last year. <br /><br />First, I went back to India - mainly Bangalore (now Bengaluru) - to spend a month and a half in a research lab. Once again, I ended up meeting a whole bunch of people in the Bangalore pubs and restaurants. Bangalore has plenty of young kids funded by NGOs crawling around. These kids are from all over the planet, they are bright, well educated and motivated to make a difference. I caught <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerosmith" target="_blank" title="Aerosmith">Aerosmith</a> while I was there. I&#39;ve never seen a stadium act in India at close quarters and it was quite an experience. I wrote about it <a href="http://www.last.fm/event/216156/reviews" target="_blank" title="Aerosmith at the Palace Grounds">here</a>. <br /><br />On the way back to the US, I stopped over in <a href="http://www.dubai.com/" target="_blank" title="Dubai">Dubai</a>. Now, this was an unexpected treat. First, I want to mention the ease with which I could get a visa, hotel and desert adventure package booked - all from Bangalore. I merely went to the Emirates office, paid them some money and they took care of the rest. You&#39;re met at the airport, a taxi takes you to your hotel and you start the adventure tour after a short rest. The driver of the Toyota 4x4 - and this is mentioned for a reason - was from Syria and he had the disconcerting habit of playing a CD which alternated between Bollywood and &quot;Western&quot; tunes creating an odd juxtaposition in my mind since you don&#39;t often taste this brew in the US. After showing us the city, he proceeded to drive into the sand dunes, over the sand dunes, under the sand dunes, well you get the picture. A sand dune roller coaster ride - a first for me. And then we were introduced to dune buggies, sandboarding, some serious (ahem) hookah action, fantastic food topped off by a belly dancing lesson. Unfortunately, I don&#39;t remember too much of the late evening. I think I had a good time...<br /><br />After that we took a trip to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guanajuato" target="_blank" title="Guanajuato">Guanajuato</a>, Mexico. This is a very pretty town nestled in the middle of some hills. Has quite a bit of history too. This is where all the action took place in 1810-1811 when <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miguel_Hidalgo" target="_blank" title="Miguel Hidalgo">Miguel Hidalgo</a> - widely considered to be the father of the Mexican independence movement - inspired many Mexicans to get up and fight. We took a tour of the neighboring towns including a narrated tour of Hidalgo&#39;s house which has been preserved as a museum. Again, I&#39;m struck by the general friendliness in the air - in sharp and unpleasant contrast to arriving back in Houston to the sounds of an overbearing security guard bellowing instructions on the right way for us to get through the line.<br /><br />Finally, Rio... A bizarre place. Imagine you are decked in your finest, sipping some fantastic wine and duelling at the same time. The duel is for real, the saber goes through you like butter, bright red blood oozes from the many wounds and you keep drinking and bleeding, drinking and bleeding...that&#39;s Rio in a nutshell. Four people from our conference group got mugged in broad daylight. I made eyecontact with at least three bums who got up from the side of the street to follow me and then abandoned the idea - with a smile - after I made eye contact. Never wear sunglasses in Rio. We went as a group to a nightclub and found that there were more women than men in the nightclub and quite possibly many a transgender as well. I was mercilessly hit on by numerous &quot;women&quot; who all turned out to be hookers. Now I know how women feel. And when I asked a woman to dance with me, she informed me that she wasn&#39;t for sale.&nbsp; We got out of that place in a hurry...but certain body parts were black and blue. Again, Rio is a very friendly place once you get away from the strip. I don&#39;t think there&#39;s any race consciousness and the sensuality in the air has less machismo than in a former Spanish colony - Brazil having a Portuguese background. To know more about Rio, watch <a href="http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0317248/" target="_blank" title="Rio">City of God</a>. Shows a side of Rio&#39;s reality that you do not want to see.<br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/India" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'India'">India</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Dubai" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Dubai'">Dubai</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Guanajuato" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Guanajuato'">Guanajuato</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Rio" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Rio'">Rio</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/favela" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'favela'">favela</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Aerosmith" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Aerosmith'">Aerosmith</a> </p> Nagarjuna and Shunyata (Emptiness) http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-62766 Fri, 09 Mar 2007 12:09:03 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2007/3/nagarjuna_and_shunyata_emptiness <p>Lately, I&#39;ve been reading <a href="http://www.smith.edu/philosophy/jgarfield.html" target="_blank" title="Jay L. Garfield">Jay L. Garfield</a>&#39;s stunningly beautiful translation of&nbsp; Nāgārjuna&#39;s Mūlamadhyamakakārikā or &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Fundamental-Wisdom-Middle-Way-Mulamadhyamakakarika/dp/0195093364" target="_blank" title="The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way">The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way</a>.&quot; It is very demanding reading but will pay off especially if you have an analytic philosophy background. Garfield&#39;s translation is rigorous and precise - hence the effort needed to comprehend it.<br /><br />Rather than babble about <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shunyata" target="_blank" title="Shunyata">emptiness</a> (Śūnyatā in Sanskrit), I think it is better to let other more qualified people give a description. Emptiness refers to our innate ability to see forms, patterns, events, possibilities and perspectives as they are rather than the way we&#39;d like to see them. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ch%C3%B6gyam_Trungpa" target="_blank" title="Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche">Ch&ouml;gyam Trungpa Rinpoche</a> in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Cutting-Spiritual-Materialism-Shambhala-Editions/dp/0877730504" target="_blank" title="Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism">&quot;Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism&quot;</a> - another phenomenal book - describes emptiness as: &quot;So form is empty. But empty of what? Form is empty of our preconceptions, empty of our judgments. If we do not evaluate and categorize the maple leaf falling and landing on the stream as opposed to the garbage heap in New York, then they are <em>there</em>, what <em>is</em>. They are empty of preconception. They are precisely, what they are, of course! Garbage is garbage, a maple leaf is a maple leaf, &quot;what is&quot; is &quot;what is.&quot; Form is empty if we see it in the absence of our own personal interpretations of it.&quot; [page 188]<br /><br />Unfortunately, and because of the subtlety of emptiness, we can be misled. Emptiness does not mean that we should see - let&#39;s say - a physical world for what it is rather than our preconceptions of it. The problem here is that the very notion of a physical world <em>is</em> a concept and obscures the real world. And it does not help to equate emptiness with a Buddhist no-self position either since the concept of no-self is, er, just another concept.<br /><br />As Garfield&#39;s translation gathers pace, he writes &quot;The root delusion---the fundamental cognitive error---is the confusion of merely conventional existence with inherent existence. The realization of emptiness eliminates that fabrication of essence, which eliminates grasping, contaminated action, and its pernicious consequences.&quot; [page 248]<br /><br />And this is followed by,<br /><br />Chapter 18:6<br /><br /><div align="center">&quot;That there is a self has been taught,<br />And the doctrine of no-self,<br />By the buddhas, as well as the<br />Doctrine of neither self nor nonself.&quot;<br /><br /><div align="left">To neither the concept of self nor to no-self does there correspond an entity. These designations are conventional through and through and the mistake we keep making is trying to reify conventional designations. Garfield writes &quot;To say neither self nor non-self is, from this perspective, not to shrug one&#39;s shoulders in indecision but to recognize that while each of these is a useful characterization of the situation for some purposes, neither can be understood as correctly ascribing a property to an independently existing entity. And if they cannot be understood in this way, what are we really saying?&quot;<br /><br />And almost immediately following this, he says &quot;Nagarjuna begins to move toward his famous and surprising identification of nirvana with samsara, and of emptiness with conventional reality.&quot; [page 249]<br /><br />If there are no entities lurking behind our conventional designations, aren&#39;t our conventional designations, er, merely conventional and empty of being ultimates? It is our tendency to reify conventions that causes problems, right? <br /><br />Nāgārjuna&#39;s Śūnyatā is literally groundbreaking - sorry, sorry, couldn&#39;t resist - and paved the way for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tantra" target="_blank" title="Tantra">tantra</a> and the realization of only Ati to emerge (at the very least in Buddhism and in Hinduism).<br /><br /><br /></div></div></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Nagarjuna" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Nagarjuna'">Nagarjuna</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/shunyata" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'shunyata'">shunyata</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/emptiness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'emptiness'">emptiness</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Buddhism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Buddhism'">Buddhism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Garfield" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Garfield'">Garfield</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/middle+way" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'middle way'">middle way</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Trungpa+Rinpoche" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Trungpa Rinpoche'">Trungpa Rinpoche</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/spiritual+materialism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'spiritual materialism'">spiritual materialism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/tantra" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'tantra'">tantra</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Ati" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Ati'">Ati</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/conventional+designation" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'conventional designation'">conventional designation</a> </p> Consciousness: Does physicalism entail panpsychism? http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-56919 Sun, 11 Feb 2007 17:18:00 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2007/2/consciousness_does_physicalism_entail_panpsychism <p><div id="ze_container_19403" class="ze_ItemNonEditable ze_container" style="float: none"><div class="ze_holding" style="width: 300px"><img id="19403" class="mceZaadzImage ze_image" src="http://www.imprint.co.uk/jcs13_10-11.jpg" alt="Does physicalism entail panpsychism?" title="Does physicalism entail panpsychism?" width="300" height="474" /></div></div><br /><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galen_Strawson" target="_blank" title="Galen Strawson">Galen Strawson</a> asks &quot;<a href="http://www.imprint.co.uk/jcs_13_10-11.html" target="_blank" title="Does physicalism entail panpsychism?">Does physicalism entail panpsychism?</a>&quot; (<a href="http://web.gc.cuny.edu/philosophy/people/strawson/rmwpep.pdf" target="_blank" title="Realistic Monism">pdf</a>) and answers in the affirmative. I don&#39;t think so. I used to think that it does but have since changed my mind. I&#39;ll explain why.<br /><br />The problem of experience is one of the most challenging problems facing science and philosophy today. How does our first person experience - our <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qualia/" target="_blank" title="Qualia">qualia</a> - relate to the physical world? It is a serious problem for physicalism - the view that everything is physical. And different approaches such as idealism, mysticism, emergence, and dualism do not help&nbsp; since they have to first come to terms with the stunning effectiveness of physicalism.<br /><br />I&#39;ve always liked Galen Strawson. For a philosopher with his pedigree, his writing is amazingly accessible. If you&#39;re interested in the mind-body problem, read everything he writes. Strawson begins by arguing that everything is physical. This means that your first person experience is physical. This has unexpected consequences. If you accept that experience exists and must be explained, and not explained away as philosophers like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Dennett" target="_blank" title="Daniel Dennett">Daniel Dennett</a> are wont to do, you have to relate experience to the physical. Since, in this physicalist view, you are nothing but an arrangement of physical &quot;stuff&quot;, it follows that an arrangement of physical stuff has experience - or has an interiority with events happening in the interior. Strawson follows this particular rabbit hole as far as it goes, and after rejecting radical emergence - the doctrine that experience emerges from the physical only at a certain level of complexity - he is forced to accept the conclusion that experience is a fundamental aspect of nature. That is, nature has an interior aspect which is fundamental. <a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/panpsychism/" target="_blank" title="Panpsychism">Panpsychism</a> - the theory that fundamental constituents of nature have experiential aspects or properties - looms. <br /><br />In a previous <a href="http://tantranand.zaadz.com/blog/2006/8/consciousness" target="_blank" title="Daniel Stoljar">blog</a> entry, I explained how <a href="http://philrsss.anu.edu.au/~dstoljar/" target="_blank" title="Daniel Stoljar">Daniel Stoljar</a> cleverly avoids panpsychism by appealing to our ignorance of the true physical. His argument essentially is that, even if our present physicalism - call it physicalism A - cannot accommodate experience, there is no reason why a new physicalism - call it physicalism E - cannot accommodate experience. Since <a href="http://www.imprint.co.uk/jcs_13_10-11.html" target="_blank" title="JCS 13(10-11), 2006">this issue</a> of the Journal of Consciousness Studies has reviews and responses to Strawson&#39;s target article, I wanted to see Stoljar&#39;s criticism of Strawson and his response. Their exchange is disappointing. Stoljar argues that Strawson&#39;s belief that &quot;there is no non-experiential fact <em>n</em> such that it is intrinsically suitable to wholly yield the experiential fact&quot; [my edit] is wrong. Strawson accepts Stoljar&#39;s point but counters with &quot;I will not be greatly troubled, for until more is said it amounts to simply dismissing of the considerations brought in favor of the intuition that the experiential cannot emerge from the non-experiential&quot;.<br /><br />But Strawson is wrong. Following Chalmers, Stoljar, Nietzsche and <a href="http://wilber.shambhala.com/html/books/kosmos/excerptC/intro-1.cfm/" target="_blank" title="Wilberian Perspectives">Wilber</a>, as explained in a previous <a href="http://tantranand.zaadz.com/blog/2006/8/naturalized_perspectivism" target="_blank" title="Naturalized Perspectivism">blog</a> entry, I don&#39;t see why we cannot begin with a new physicalism that at bottom contains physically possible worlds and physical perspectives, neither of which are experiential. Experience then is supervenient on perspectives and possible worlds. Strawson would probably argue that beginning with (physical) perspectives is much worse than his panpsychism but at the very least, by going in this direction, we should be able to conceive of a new physicalism that accommodates experience. The new physicalism with perspectives would be rather weird especially in comparison to our old physicalism with its bits of matter floating around under the action of forces but it would be a physicalism just the same.<br /> </p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/consciousness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'consciousness'">consciousness</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/physicalism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'physicalism'">physicalism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/panpsychism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'panpsychism'">panpsychism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/experience" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'experience'">experience</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/qualia" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'qualia'">qualia</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/perspectives" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'perspectives'">perspectives</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Strawson" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Strawson'">Strawson</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Stoljar" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Stoljar'">Stoljar</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/possible+worlds" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'possible worlds'">possible worlds</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Chalmers" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Chalmers'">Chalmers</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Wilber" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Wilber'">Wilber</a> </p> Departed Spirits - Ramana Maharishi and Sri Aurobindo http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-51665 Wed, 17 Jan 2007 17:05:58 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2007/1/departed_spirits_-_ramana_maharishi_and_sri_aurobindo <p>I decided (with the help of my cousin) to visit both the <a href="http://www.sriramanamaharshi.org/teachings.html" target="_blank" title="Ramana Maharishi">Ramana Maharishi</a> and <a href="http://www.sriaurobindosociety.org.in/index.htm" target="_blank" title="Sri Aurobindo">Sri Aurobindo</a> ashrams. They are not that far from each other and so it was easy to first go to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiruvannamalai" target="_blank" title="Tiruvannamalai">Tiruvannamalai</a>, visit the Ramana Maharishi ashram, stay the night and then head to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pondicherry" target="_blank" title="Pondicherry">Pondicherry</a> and visit the Sri Aurobindo (and The Mother&#39;s) ashram.<br /><br />For those not in the know, Ramana Maharishi was an Indian mystic who is famous for his &quot;<a href="http://www.arunachala-ramana.org/whoami.htm" target="_blank" title="Nan Yar?">Who am I?</a>&quot; self inquiry approach. You can always gauge your progress in meditation (and spirituality) by trying to discover what Ramana Maharishi meant by his statement &quot;That which does not occur in deep [and dreamless] sleep is not real.&quot; Since nothing whatsoever occurs in deep, dreamless sleep, what could this statement mean? Since I&#39;ve never had this experience, I can only conjecture that Ramana Maharishi wants us to maintain awareness in deep, dreamless sleep. Maintaining awareness during waking hours leads to awareness of thoughts and feelings, maintaining awareness in REM sleep leads to lucid dreaming, but maintaining awareness in deep sleep leads to ???? You know that you have some ways to go if you have never had a moment of awareness during deep sleep - assuming that such a state of mind is even possible.<br /><br />The ashram in Tiruvannamalai is well maintained. It has two meditation halls - a big hall with a shrine and a smaller one which is more intimate. The place was packed when we went there and had a mix of about 50% Indians and 50% foreigners. Unfortunately, while the ashram is quiet and serene, Tiruvannamalai is a mess. Too many people living in squalor and in unhygenic conditions. The roads are dirty and littered. It looks like the leadership of the ashram has made no attempt to extend their disciplined habits to the village beyond their borders. We did the 13km walk around the Arunachala mountain - a <a href="http://www.angelfire.com/electronic/bodhidharma/mountain2.html" target="_blank" title="GiriValam">GiriValam</a> - and while I tried to maintain awareness&nbsp; during the trek, I cannot say that I felt any subtle energies . However my chronic racking cough (due to a dust allergy) did subside. Was that due to the endorphin releasing walk or the subtle energies of Mount Arunachala or both? Who knows?<br /><br />Sri Aurobindo was a contemporary of Ramana Maharishi and was also an Indian mystic. He is well known for trying to integrate evolution and consciousness along lines similar (but not identical) to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Teilhard_de_Chardin" target="_blank" title="Teilhard de Chardin">Teilhard de Chardin</a>. Aurobindo and Ramana died in the same year - 1950 - but never met since Aurobindo could not leave Pondicherry - a French colony - at that time. (He would have been arrested and imprisoned by the British if he had.) The crucial extra element that Aurobindo brought to Indian philosophy/mysticism is a collective aspect of spirit. While he describes communion, union and identity with Spirit in a manner that is similar to Vedanta, he later articulates the descent of the <a href="http://hinduwebsite.com/divinelife/auro/auro_natureofsupermind.asp" target="_blank" title="Supermind">Supermind</a> along with the creation of a new Man and a new advanced society. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mother" target="_blank" title="The Mother">The Mother</a> (Mirra Alfassa) attempted to carry out this program and helped found <a href="http://www.auroville.org/" target="_blank" title="Auroville">Auroville</a> - a model for such an advanced society. In recent times, this theme has been further developed in a (constructive) postmodern direction by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Wilber" target="_blank" title="Ken Wilber">Ken Wilber</a> and his followers. <br /><br />The ashram in Pondicherry is also immaculate. Due to The Mother&#39;s influence, it has beautiful floral arrangements. In contrast to Ramana Maharishi&#39;s ashram, it has much smaller meditation spaces (at least public ones). Through some contacts, we managed to get passes to go to the upper floor of the ashram and observe the living quarters of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother since these have been preserved. You&#39;re greeted by the exhortation &quot;Cling to the Truth&quot; as you climb the stairs. I tried to meditate while sitting in the presence of Aurobindo&#39;s portrait and was rewarded with an unexpected communion with his rather arresting eyes when I opened my own and looked up after the meditation. The area surrounding the ashram is very well kept and maintained - in sharp contrast to the squalor in Tiruvannamalai - and this is no doubt due to the &quot;descent of the Supermind&quot; community-centric philosophy and The Mother&#39;s influence. The meditation areas left much to be desired though.<br /><br />In conclusion, and on a somewhat downbeat note, I felt that these spirits had really departed. Both ashrams have a mausoleum-like feel and no new leaders with anything close to these personalities have emerged. Tough act to follow I must admit. I&#39;m going to check out Auroville the next time I&#39;m in India.<br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Ramana+Maharishi" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Ramana Maharishi'">Ramana Maharishi</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Sri+Aurobindo" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Sri Aurobindo'">Sri Aurobindo</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/The+Mother" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'The Mother'">The Mother</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Mirra+Alfassa" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Mirra Alfassa'">Mirra Alfassa</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Tiruvannamalai" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Tiruvannamalai'">Tiruvannamalai</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Pondicherry" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Pondicherry'">Pondicherry</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Supermind" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Supermind'">Supermind</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Auroville" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Auroville'">Auroville</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/meditation" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'meditation'">meditation</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/awareness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'awareness'">awareness</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/evolution" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'evolution'">evolution</a> </p> Music: TrancePop? http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-47116 Fri, 29 Dec 2006 13:21:09 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/12/music_trancepop <p>Is there a recent trend toward incorporating trance elements in popular music? The reason why I&#39;m asking this is that when I listen to two fairly recent pop songs - one western pop and the other eastern pop (for lack of a better word), I find that I&#39;m being drawn to them because they induce a trance state of mind.<br /><br />The two songs are<br /><ol><li>Coldplay&#39;s, &quot;<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFG_-upFRK4" target="_blank" title="Speed of Sound">Speed of Sound</a>&quot;, and<br /></li><li>Himesh&#39;s, &quot;<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRRRIJGQYxw" target="_blank" title="Tera Surroor">Tera Surroor</a>&quot;.</li></ol><br />(Hopefully the YouTube links work.) If you managed to watch part/all of the songs, it may actually be better to just listen to the songs with eyes closed. This is definitely recommended for the second song since the video is moronic and cheesy at best.<br /><br />I wish someone would do a good <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_magnetic_resonance_imaging" target="_blank" title="fMRI">fMRI</a>/<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography" target="_blank" title="EEG">EEG</a> analysis of subjects listening to trance music. My bet is that they&#39;ll reveal an altered <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trance" target="_blank" title="Trance State">trance</a> state, slower brainwave patterns and more. My nine year old son for example is currently totally entranced by Himesh&#39;s manipulative trance-pop.<br /><br />This got me to thinking about pop/rock songs that are kinda trippy. So I made a list. Here goes:<br /><br /><ol><li>Pink Floyd, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B00008CLOA001007/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_007/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Any Colour You Like">Any Colour You Like</a>&quot;. Now you could pick a much better example than this one obviously - &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B000002U8G001006/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_006/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Echoes">Echoes</a>&quot; comes to mind - but thinking back to all those years ago, it was this song that would put me in a trance. And it would do so only if I had listened to at least a minute of the end of &quot;Us and Them.&quot; Later on I tried to consciusly enter a trance state by playing this song in isolation but it never works for me. If I play the two songs together though, my mind is prepped for trippin&#39;.</li><li>Led Zeppelin, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B000002JSN001006/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_006/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Kashmir">Kashmir</a>&quot;. Obvious choice I know. Heavier than most trance but still does the job, especially that beautiful bridge section.</li><li>Genesis, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B000002J1O001003/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_003/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Firth of Fifth">Firth of Fifth</a>&quot; (<a href="http://www.cise.ufl.edu/~anand/download/firth_of_fifth_frag.mp3" target="_blank" title="Firth Of Fifth">mp3 fragment</a>). Peter Gabriel&#39;s flute solo followed by Steve Hackett and Tony Banks on guitar and keyboards has to rank as one of the very best early trance rock. A friend of mine who&#39;s into hiking claimed that this song invariaby gave him visions of climbing Annapurna.</li><li>Yes, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B00009Z574001009/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_009/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="On The Silent Wings Of Freedom">On the Silent Wings of Freedom</a>&quot;. Odd choice I know. But the first three minutes of Howe/Wakeman followed by Anderson&#39;s exceptionally trippy vocals works for me. Even now. Too bad the rest of the album is total crap (except for that whale song).</li><li>Tangerine Dream, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B000000HZC001002/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_002/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Tangrame Set II">Tangram Side II</a>&quot;. This whole side of the album even has a trancey buildup and climax which is very unusual. But it works. <br /></li><li>The Police, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B00008BRB5001009/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_009/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Wrapped Around Your Finger">Wrapped Around Your Finger</a>&quot;. Mebbe we could call this trance negative since the images conjured up by Sting&#39;s vicious lyrics and Andy Summers&#39; ethereal and minimalistic solos are not pretty. A bad trip definitely.</li><li>Wavestar, &quot;<a href="http://www.groove4all.com/sfx/g/gr-010-5.m3u" target="_blank" title="Moonwind">Moonwind</a>&quot;. Blatant ripoff of &quot;Shine On You Crazy Diamond&quot; but done very well.</li><li>Dead Can Dance, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/music/wma-pop-up/B000002MQ9001007/ref=mu_sam_wma_001_007/105-3883782-3954032" target="_blank" title="Summoning of the Muse">Summoning of the Muse</a>&quot;. Lisa Gerrard&#39;s vocals drive this intensely trippy piece. <br /></li><li>King Crimson, &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Power-Believe-King-Crimson/dp/B00008BXJF" target="_blank" title="The Power To Believe II">The Power to Believe II</a>&quot; (<a href="http://www.cise.ufl.edu/~anand/download/kingcrimson_ptbii.mp3" target="_blank" title="The Power To Believe II">mp3 fragment</a>). The middle eastern beginning, the east Asian bridge and back to a middle eastern finish create a powerful imagery. <br /></li></ol><br />Hopefully the rave generation is waking up to trance in a big way. I listen to trance radio from time to time but it becomes very repetitive after a while. If trance goes mainstream, there&#39;ll be better writers, composers and players for this material which is exactly what it needs. Will this pan out?</p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/trance" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'trance'">trance</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/east" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'east'">east</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/west" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'west'">west</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/trance+pop" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'trance pop'">trance pop</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/fMRI" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'fMRI'">fMRI</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Pink+Floyd" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Pink Floyd'">Pink Floyd</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Genesis" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Genesis'">Genesis</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Dead+Can+Dance" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Dead Can Dance'">Dead Can Dance</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/King+Crimson" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'King Crimson'">King Crimson</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Tangerine+Dream" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Tangerine Dream'">Tangerine Dream</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Himesh" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Himesh'">Himesh</a> </p> Living (for a while) in India in the 21st century http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-41760 Fri, 01 Dec 2006 04:38:24 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/12/living_for_a_while_in_india_in_the_21st_century <p>I decided to spend a few months in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangalore" target="_blank" title="Bangalore">Bangalore</a>, India this year - hence the lack of blog updates. Basically, I wanted to check out for myself what the fuss was all about. I&#39;ve been visiting India every two years or so but only for a couple of weeks and so hadn&#39;t really absorbed all the changes that have been happening over the past fifteen years or so. (I grew up in India but have lived in the US for the past twenty two years.)<br /><br />My conclusion: This place has gone nuts. Absolutely frigging bonkers. India in the early 21st century is like an acid trip - good and bad - mainly because all human achievements and foibles over the past 8000 years or so are preserved in living color. India never throws anything away - and I mean that - nothing is thrown away.<br /><br />What you have then is hunter gatherers living side by side technogeeks. I exaggerate obviously but one quick scan of the TV channels reveals this juxtaposition. You have ancient <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigveda" target="_blank" title="Rig Veda">Rig Vedic</a> incantations on one channel, a tango and salsa influenced <a href="http://www.bollywoodworld.com/" target="_blank" title="Bollywood">Bollywood</a> dance on the next and a discussion of the Indian IT scene on third and so on. The Indian mind of the 21st century is a highly contextual filing system. Every moment invokes a particular context and perspective. One moment you&#39;re praying to the fire gods, the next moment you&#39;re debugging your cell phone.<br /><br />I think India is striving for completeness in a way that makes the US&#39;s earlier attempt look like a joke. In religion, you have a baby Jesus shrine on a major intersection, the Muslim call for prayer at 5AM every day, and innumerable Hindu temples, Sikh shrines etc. all over the place. All the religious forces are here clamoring for attention. On one channel you have <a href="http://www.god.tv/" target="_blank" title="GOD TV">GOD TV</a>, the next one is <a href="http://www.maatv.com/index2.htm" target="_blank" title="MAA TV">MAA TV</a> etc. In music, you have hip hop fused with Indian ragas with some rap and salsa beats thrown in. There&#39;s plenty of <a href="http://www.orientalblues.com/" target="_blank" title="Jazz-raga fusion">jazz-raga fusion</a> going on and there&#39;s also a fairly nascent rock scene emerging. I got a chance to play with a roadside band in Bangalore a few weeks ago to promote the <a href="http://standingonfish.spaces.live.com/" target="_blank" title="Standing on Fish Live">standingonfish blog</a> which was a lot of fun. If all goes well - and this is a big if - India should have a developed full spectrum culture in about 100 years with unimagined levels of mixing and fusion of disparate world cultures. Imagine a newly constructed cybertech village with postmodern gurus next door to a premodern village from 6000BC which practices cannibalism - and you get the idea. From Cannibals to Cannabis&nbsp; - now that&#39;s a nice slogan for India of the 21st century.</p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Bangalore" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Bangalore'">Bangalore</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/India" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'India'">India</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Rig+Veda" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Rig Veda'">Rig Veda</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/premodern" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'premodern'">premodern</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jazz" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jazz'">jazz</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/raga" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'raga'">raga</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/fusion" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'fusion'">fusion</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/fundamentalism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'fundamentalism'">fundamentalism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/mystics" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'mystics'">mystics</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Bollywood" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Bollywood'">Bollywood</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/context" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'context'">context</a> </p> Genetic Journeys and Ancestors http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-31217 Fri, 06 Oct 2006 17:43:12 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/10/genetic_journeys_and_ancestors <p>I signed up for National Geographic&#39;s <a href="http://www.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/" target="_blank" title="Genographic Project">Genographic</a> project a while ago. They sent me a DNA testing kit in the mail. It contained two cheek swabs. You swirl the cheek swab around in your mouth, collect the DNA samples, drop the swab in a bottle and mail it to them. They create a web page with only your project number on it (for the sake of privacy) and you check your genetic ancestry there.<br /><br />It turns out that I belong to the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_R2_(Y-DNA)" target="_blank" title="R2 (M124) haplogroup">R2 (M124) Y chromosome haplogroup</a>. Now, I&#39;m no molecular biologist but will take a crack at explaining what R2 is. First, as a male, I inherited a Y chromosome from my dad and an X chromosome from my mom. The Genographic project only tests Y chromosomes in men, so the rest of the info below is restricted to Y chromosomes. <br /><br />R2 (M124) is a Y chromosome <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Y-chromosome_DNA_haplogroup" target="_blank" title="Y chromosome haplogroup">haplogroup</a>. A haplogroup is distinguished by a series of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allele" target="_blank" title="Alleles">alleles</a> at specific locations on the chromosome. An allele is a particular sequence of a DNA coding (GATC for example) at a certain location. [Here, GATC stands for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guanine" target="_blank" title="Guanine">Guanine</a>-<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adenine" target="_blank" title="Adenine">Adenine</a>-<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymine" target="_blank" title="Thymine">Thymine</a>-<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytosine" target="_blank" title="Cytosine">Cytosine</a> each of which is a chemical compound made up of nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen atoms.] What this boils down to is that molecular biologists look for specific patterns of alleles. In order to classify people into haplogroups, they look for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_tandem_repeats" target="_blank" title="Short Tandem Repeats">Short Tandem Repeats (STRs)</a> which are repeating segments that have a high mutation rate. [For example, I have a repeat of TAGA 12 times at a particular location which is considered significant for classification purposes.]<br /><br />To cut a long story short, after examining the Y chromosome for significant repeating patterns, the chromosome is classified into a haplogroup. My haplogroup is R2 (M124) which basically means that my chromosome is the result of a specific set of mutations - M168 -&gt; M89 -&gt; M9 -&gt; M45 -&gt; M207 -&gt; M124 of an African ancestor who was born about 60000 years ago. Way cool!<br /><br />For more information, please check out National Geographic&#39;s <a href="http://www.nationalgeographic.com/genographic" target="_blank" title="Genographic Project">Genographic project</a>, <a href="http://www.ysearch.org/" target="_blank" title="ysearch">ysearch</a> and the <a href="http://dna-forums.org/" target="_blank" title="DNA forum">DNA forum</a>. And for more information on R2, please see Jean-Gregoire Manoukian&#39;s <a href="http://www.ethnoancestry.com/Haplogroup_R2_2006_02_19.pdf" target="_blank" title="Synthesis of R2">paper</a>.<br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Genographic+project" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Genographic project'">Genographic project</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/R2+%28M124%29" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'R2 (M124)'">R2 (M124)</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Y+chromosome" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Y chromosome'">Y chromosome</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/haplogroup" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'haplogroup'">haplogroup</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/alleles" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'alleles'">alleles</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/short+tandem+repeats+%28STRs%29" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'short tandem repeats (STRs)'">short tandem repeats (STRs)</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/ancestor" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'ancestor'">ancestor</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/genes" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'genes'">genes</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/evolution" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'evolution'">evolution</a> </p> Linux, Open Source, Free Software and Politics http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-29657 Fri, 29 Sep 2006 12:16:49 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/9/linux_open_source_free_software_and_politics <p>I&#39;ve been using linux as my primary desktop operating system since early 1996. I used to be a UNIX guy before that and so the transition from UNIX on a Sparcstation to linux on a PC was quite straightforward. <br /><br />When you run linux, you almost cannot help getting involved in various open source communities and you cannot help knowing more than you ever wanted to know about various open source licenses such as the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html" target="_blank" title="GNU GPL">GNU GPL</a>, <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php" target="_blank" title="BSD">BSD</a>, <a href="http://www.trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/qpl" target="_blank" title="QPL">QPL</a>, <a href="http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/" target="_blank" title="MPL">MPL</a> etc. <br /><br />Which brings me to an intriguing battle shaping up between the <a href="http://www.fsf.org/" target="_blank" title="FSF">Free Software Foundation (FSF)</a> on the one hand and Linus Torvalds and the linux kernel developers on the other. The battle is over the next version of the GNU <a href="http://gplv3.fsf.org/gpl-draft-2006-07-27.html" target="_blank" title="GPL v3">GPL license version 3</a> - to be precise - up from the current version 2. <br /><br />The FSF wants, in the name of freedom, to ensure that &quot;Tivoization&quot; does not occur. What is &quot;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tivoization" target="_blank" title="Tivoization">Tivoization</a>&quot; you ask? Essentially, &quot;Tivoization&quot; is what happens when you buy a device like a Tivo which runs linux and which you cannot modify in the sense of adding or removing all software because the device is locked down. It has cryptographically signed binaries on it which are not easy to circumvent. <br /><br />From the <a href="http://trends.newsforge.com/trends/06/08/02/2210213.shtml?tid=147" target="_blank" title="FSF perspective">FSF perspective</a> (which is further elaborated <a href="http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20060925204515114" target="_blank" title="groklaw">here</a> on groklaw), they do not want to allow companies which use the GNU GPL version 3 to sell devices with cryptographically signed binaries which you cannot modify and then execute on the same hardware.<br /><br />From&nbsp; <a href="http://lkml.org/lkml/2006/9/24/246" target="_blank" title="Linus&#39; perspective">Linus Torvalds&#39; perspective</a> and the <a href="http://lwn.net/Articles/200422/" target="_blank" title="kernel developer position">linux kernel developers&#39; perspective</a>, they do not want to place restrictions on device manufacturers in terms of what the manufacturers can or cannot do with the devices that they sell. Cryptography is now a basic technology they argue and if you (as a consumer) don&#39;t like digital rights management (DRM) on the device that you buy, then don&#39;t buy it. Support manufacturers that do not have DRM on the devices that they sell.<br /><br />This seems a legitimate debate, right? I&#39;ve been following it to some extent. What elevated the debate recently is a set of responses by Linus Torvalds which confirm (for me) that I was right in having him as one of my heroes.<br /><br />His argument which you can follow <a href="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/450619" target="_blank" title="Linus reply 1">here</a> and <a href="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/450659" target="_blank" title="Linus reply 2">here</a> is essentially simple. Even if what Tivo did was wrong, trying to stop future Tivos is a greater wrong. It will do more harm than good and will place the FSF in an authoritarian position since they will in effect be passing a draconian law that manufacturers (who use the GPL version 3) would struggle to abide by. He also points out that the GPL version 2 was essentially about &quot;share and share alike&quot; and was very libertarian in that sense whereas the GPL version 3 would be far more authoritarian.<br /><br />Linus reveals himself to be a <a href="http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=18872&amp;hed=Linus+Torvalds+on+the+GPL+Fight" target="_blank" title="Passionate Moderate">passionate moderate</a> which is exactly my politics as well! There&#39;s a huge difference between a pragmatist and a passionate or <a href="http://craicpipe.blogspot.com/" target="_blank" title="Radical Moderate">radical moderate</a>. Tony Blair is a pragmatist who compromises between the EU and the US. Linus Torvalds is a radical moderate who shouts from the rooftops when necessary. <br /><br />Perhaps a simple solution to the problem is to rename the licenses. Call the GPL v2 the GPL libertarian license and GPL v3 the GPL authoritarian license :-) Or pick less incendiary names but have both licenses running in parallel but with no name confusion.<br /><br /><strong>Update (2006/10/02):</strong> groklaw has a new <a href="http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20060930140129423" target="_blank" title="New groklaw discussion">discussion</a> on this topic which clears up quite a few misunderstandings. The fault lines between Free Software and Open Source are also front and center here.<br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/linux" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'linux'">linux</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/open+source" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'open source'">open source</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/free+software" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'free software'">free software</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/FSF" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'FSF'">FSF</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/GPL" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'GPL'">GPL</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Linus+Torvalds" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Linus Torvalds'">Linus Torvalds</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/DRM" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'DRM'">DRM</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Tivoization" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Tivoization'">Tivoization</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/radical+moderate" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'radical moderate'">radical moderate</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/politics" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'politics'">politics</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/groklaw" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'groklaw'">groklaw</a> </p> The Black Cloud Bardo http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-29374 Wed, 27 Sep 2006 18:45:48 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/9/the_black_cloud_bardo <p>It cannot be good to have a crushing depression that just about saps your soul, right? And I can&#39;t even help it. I walk outside my office and see some Jehovah&#39;s Witnesses attempting to recruit people by talking about their perceived problems in evolutionary theory. And there&#39;s another person asking me to repent immediately in order to be saved. And there are some Hare Krishnas playing hippie music and frolicking on the lawn. This odd juxtaposition ought to cheer me up but it doesn&#39;t. I discussed this &quot;black cloud&quot; that I feel more than see with a friend and his response was that everyone in the US now feels a black cloud hovering over us. So, it&#39;s not just me which is a comfort.<br /><br />Meditation doesn&#39;t seem to help much. Whenever this depression descends, I try and watch it rather than succumb to it and it sorta helps but as usual I get into a limit cycle: Depression --&gt; Watching Depression --&gt; Depression --&gt; Watching Depression....... It would help to make an instant movie that captures one&#39;s mood. For this black cloud, I&#39;d have an audio track of several fingers simultaneously and constantly scratching a blackboard in the background, a horrid little room with dried up food everywhere and rats happily scurrying around&nbsp; and finally the protagonist sitting in the middle kinda out of focus and with that Pink Floyd &quot;<a href="http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0084503/" target="_blank" title="Pink Floyd - The Wall">The Wall</a>&quot; faceless face. Just another blotch in the room. <br /><br />I keep getting reminded of &quot;<a href="http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0099871/" target="_blank" title="Jacob's Ladder">Jacob&#39;s Ladder</a>&quot; whenever this cloud descends. Tim Robbins does such a wonderful job in that movie. He has that faceless face down pat as he goes through the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bardo" target="_blank" title="Bardo">bardo</a>. I wonder how long we have to wait.<br /><br /><strong>Update (2006/09/29):</strong> According to the <a href="http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0928-27.htm" target="_blank" title="Habeas Corpus">New York Times</a>, the new anti-terrorism bill would permit the US to deny me (as a resident alien of the US) <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habeas_corpus" target="_blank" title="Habeas Corpus">Habeas Corpus</a> which has only been around since the <a href="http://www.bl.uk/treasures/magnacarta/magna.html" target="_blank" title="Magna Carta">Magna Carta</a>. Yippee! Party at my place in Guantanamo.<br /><br /><strong>Update (2006/10/04):</strong> Actual text of bill <a href="http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?c109:4:./temp/~c1090m9CAq:e116515:" target="_blank" title="Habeas Corpus suspension">here</a>. Excerpt follows: <br /><ul> `(e)(1) No court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the United States who has been determined by the United States to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant or is awaiting such determination.<br /></ul></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Depression" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Depression'">Depression</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/movie" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'movie'">movie</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/black+cloud" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'black cloud'">black cloud</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Jacob%27s+Ladder" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Jacob's Ladder'">Jacob's Ladder</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Pink+Floyd" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Pink Floyd'">Pink Floyd</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/bardo" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'bardo'">bardo</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/The+Wall" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'The Wall'">The Wall</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Habeas+Corpus" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Habeas Corpus'">Habeas Corpus</a> </p> Perspectivism http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-25489 Mon, 04 Sep 2006 03:58:28 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/9/perspectivism <p>I&#39;ve been reading &quot;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Nietzsches-Perspectivism-International-Nietzsche-Studies/dp/0252068661/ref=ed_oe_p/102-0581610-1965704?ie=UTF8" target="_blank" title="Nietzsche&#39;s Perspectivism">Nietzsche&#39;s Perspectivism</a>&quot; by Steven D. Hales and Rex Welshon lately. Tremendous book. Especially for people caught in a naiive relativist trap - y&#39;know where &quot;It&#39;s all relative anyway&quot; said in a vague, unfocused tone for maximum effect. The effect in this case being the throbbing of a particular vein on my forehead followed by the vein threatening a walkout.<br /><br />First, Hales and Welshon formulate a version of strong perspectivism which is (approximately)<br /><br />&quot;Every statement is true in some perspective and untrue in another.&quot;<br /><br />Still somewhat vague. Hales and Welshon&#39;s notes unpack this as<br /><br />For all x, there exists a y and there exists a z such that P(x) implies [R(y) and R(z) and T(x,y) and the negation of T(x,z)]<br /><br />where P is a one place predicate &quot;is a statement&quot;, R is a one place predicate &quot;is a perspective&quot; and T is a two place predicate &quot;is true in.&quot;<br /><br />If strong perspectivism is true in all perspectives, then there exists a statement that has the same truth value in all perspectives, namely, the strong perspectivism statement above. Big problem since that would mean that strong perspectivism is absolutely true. Oops.<br /><br />Hales and Welshon, after carefully diagnosing this problem, go on to formulate a version of weak perspectivism which is (approximately)<br /><br />&quot;There is at least one statement such that there is some perspective in which it is true and some perspective in which it is untrue.&quot;<br /><br />Hales and Welshon&#39;s notes unpack this as<br /><br />There exists an x and there exists a y and there exists a z such that&nbsp; P(x) and R(y) and R(z) and T(x,y) and the negation of T(x,z) is true.<br /><br />Weak perspectivism is different from strong absolutism. The authors go on to point out that weak absolutism (the negation of strong perspectivism above) and weak perspectivism are consistent. That is, they can co-exist happily since weak absolutism implies that there could be statements which have the same truth value in all perspectives and weak perspectivism implies that there is at least one statement that has different truth values in some perspectives.<br /><br />Great stuff, right? There&#39;s a lot more. Check it out.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/perspectivism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'perspectivism'">perspectivism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Nietzsche" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Nietzsche'">Nietzsche</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/weak" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'weak'">weak</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/strong" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'strong'">strong</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/absolutism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'absolutism'">absolutism</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/relativism" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'relativism'">relativism</a> </p> Festivals and Religion http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-23085 Tue, 22 Aug 2006 03:52:18 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/8/festivals_and_religion <p>I attended a local Onam festival over the weekend. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onam" target="_blank" title="Onam">Onam</a> is &quot;an annual harvest festival, celebrated mainly in the Indian state of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerala" target="_blank" title="Kerala">Kerala</a>.&quot; In the principal Hindu mythological story related to Onam, Vishnu comes to earth as an avatar - Vamana - and sends Emperor Bali into the netherworld. Since Bali is actually a benevolent ruler, Vishnu permits him to return once a year to visit his subjects. Onam is a celebration of the king&#39;s return.<br /><br />What I find interesting about Onam is the wholehearted participation of Kerala Christians and Muslims in the festival. Onam has attained a reputation of being celebrated across the caste and religious spectra which is very refreshing and positive, especially in light of the regressively religious times we live in. Clearly, the media should be turning the spotlight on festivals such as these which embody an un-selfconscious religious harmony. For instance, considering the ancient traditions that the Lebanese have inherited, are there similar cross-religious festivals in Lebanon that bring Christians and Muslims together? Would be good to know.<br /><br />In other news, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bismillah_Khan" target="_blank" title="Bismillah Khan">Ustad Bismillah Khan</a> passed away today. He was a noted exponent of the shehnai - a reed woodwind instrument - in the Indian classical music tradition. Unfortunately, I know next to nothing about Indian classical music but I do know that Bismillah Khan is sorta the Indian equivalent of Miles Davis which will give you some idea of his impact. And Bismillah Khan seems to have cheerfully blended being a Shia Muslim together with a devotion to Saraswati - the goddess of the arts. (Saraswati can play a mean guitar solo since she has four hands :-) Another expression of cross-religious harmony.<br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Onam" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Onam'">Onam</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/harmony" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'harmony'">harmony</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/festival" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'festival'">festival</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Christian" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Christian'">Christian</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Muslim" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Muslim'">Muslim</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Bismillah+Khan" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Bismillah Khan'">Bismillah Khan</a> </p> Music http://tantranand.gaia.com Anand tag:gaia.com,2006:Gaia-21803 Tue, 15 Aug 2006 15:35:03 GMT http://tantranand.gaia.com/blog/2006/8/music <p>I saw Steely Dan at the Ford Amphitheater, Florida State Fairgrounds in Tampa on Thursday, August 10. I had never seen Steely Dan before and consequently didn&#39;t know what to expect. It was a tremendous show with quite possibly the best acoustics I had ever heard at a rock concert. In contrast, Jane&#39;s Addiction at an indoor venue in Gainesville sounded atrocious. I hadn&#39;t listened to any of Steely Dan&#39;s new albums but much to my surprise, they didn&#39;t play even one song from the new stuff. That&#39;s not good for a band that wants to stay relevant. They were joined by Michael McDonald for a few songs at the end. The setlist (approximately) was<br /><br /> Bodhisattva<br /> Time Out of Mind<br /> Aja<br /> I&rsquo;ve Got The News<br /> Hey 19<br /> Josie<br />Deacon Blues<br /> Green Earrings<br /> Black Friday<br /> Dirty Work<br /> Peg<br />The Fez<br />FM<br /> Don&rsquo;t Take Me Alive<br />Do It Again<br /> Kid Charlemagne<br />My Old School<br /><br />The highlights were Bodhisattva, Aja and Don&#39;t Take Me Alive. The lowlight was Do It Again. And that&#39;s because the mental picture I have of Do It Again didn&#39;t square with a soulful Michael McDonald singing lead. My mental picture involves a video backdrop showing a bunch of lemmings with glazed looks in their eyes jumping off a cliff while vigorously pulling down a handle with their hands in sync with a robotic beat. I want to hear the venom in Donald Fagen&#39;s voice not Michael McDonald crooning. On the plus side, Donald Fagan mentioned that this is how they&#39;ve done the song since McDonald joined. The horror, the horror. <br /><br />I really liked Steely Dan&#39;s guitarist <a href="http://jonherington.com/" target="_blank" title="Jon Herington">Jon Herington</a>. So fluid, melodic and great rapport with Walter Becker. The rest of the band gelled really well. There was a horn section, two backup singers, a keyboard player and bass along with Fagan on keyboards and Becker on guitar. The drummer was superb as well. This is still a very relevant band and I think I&#39;ll check them out again on future tours.<br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jazz" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jazz'">jazz</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/pop" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'pop'">pop</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/blues" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'blues'">blues</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/guitar" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'guitar'">guitar</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/Steely+Dan" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'Steely Dan'">Steely Dan</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/rock" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'rock'">rock</a> </p>