Archive for November, 2009

Invasion of the Flying Cockroaches

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

My ongoing annoyance with the on-a-mission climate change deniers in this country (they are less common elsewhere for various reasons, but especially because it has become a partisan issue and one of our political parties speaks in an increasingly singular voice of insanity) has just been matched by Meg McArdle. She’s not a denier, she points out, rather she’s a moderate, an independent voice. This is the same territory she stakes out in her political opinions. She’s splitting the difference between whatever positions can be found on any given issue. If you don’t know, this is called the Middle Ground Fallacy.

This fallacy is committed when it is assumed that the middle position between two extremes must be correct simply because it is the middle position. this sort of “reasoning” has the following form:

  1. Position A and B are two extreme positions.
  2. C is a position that rests in the middle between A and B.
  3. Therefore C is the correct position.

This line of “reasoning” is fallacious because it does not follow that a position is correct just because it lies in the middle of two extremes. This is shown by the following example. Suppose that a person is selling his computer. He wants to sell it for the current market value, which is $800 and someone offers him $1 for it. It would hardly follow that $400.50 is the proper price.

What is the middle position between those who believe we are being visited by UFOs and those that don’t? That we are sometimes visited by UFOs but not as often as some claim? And yes, I do think climate change denial (aka climate change skepticism) is of a kind with those that believe in conspiracies of other sorts, like UFO visitation. That’s not ad hominem, I really do think it’s coming from a common instinct. It’s not that some of the the science supporting climate change could be wrong – some of it almost certainly is and we’ll discover what holds up and what doesn’t as evidence accrues.
But, here’s McArdle pontificating from, as far as I can tell, no evidence whatsoever other than her gut instinct:
What’s at stake is the degree of warming associated with our carbon dioxide emissions.  In particular, to what extent the earth’s many complex and not necessarily well understood feedback systems may mitigate (or exacerbate) temperature increases.  I’ve long been skeptical of the more catastrophic scenarios, because all this carbon used to be in the atmosphere, which probably defines a ceiling on how bad it will get–a ceiling well below “WE’RE ALL GOING TO DIEEEEEEEE!!!”  That said, I wouldn’t really want to live in the Jurassic, and not just because I’m afraid of hundred-foot lizards. (for example, I am also afraid of the huge flying roaches Palmetto bugs that live in our nation’s more southern climes). So that doesn’t mean I don’t worry quite a lot.

I have no idea where she gets the idea that “all this carbon used to be in the atmosphere”. I can’t even imagine what she even means by this. Is “all this” shorthand for “a lot“? Pretty sloppy writing if that’s the case. Or does she believe that fossil fuels is carbon that settled into the earth from the atmosphere? Egads. The best evidence (note the citations are from the journals Science and Nature and not simply yanked from the author’s behind) suggests that the levels of carbon in the atmosphere are higher than at any time in the past 15 to 20 million years!
“We then applied this technique to study the history of carbon dioxide from 800,000 years ago to 20 million years ago,” she said. “We report evidence for a very close coupling between carbon dioxide levels and climate. When there is evidence for the growth of a large ice sheet on Antarctica or on Greenland or the growth of sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, we see evidence for a dramatic change in carbon dioxide levels over the last 20 million years.
“A slightly shocking finding,” Tripati said, “is that the only time in the last 20 million years that we find evidence for carbon dioxide levels similar to the modern level of 387 parts per million was 15 to 20 million years ago, when the planet was dramatically different.”
My opinion matters just as much as Meg McArdle’s. Which is to say, not at all. Don’t listen to individuals. Argument from authority is just another fallacy (and George Will is not an authority in any case). If evidence arises that things aren’t as dire as current predictions, take it in. You’ll also want to discount much of what you find on Google. There is a fancy graph out there showing no correlation between CO2 and temperature but if you look at the home page of the sites publishing this stuff you’ll invariably find organizations or individuals who are dedicated to the denialists’ claims, and not to discovering truth.
I think it’s important to remember than scientists are contrarians. It’s a large part of my attraction to science – it debunks commonly held beliefs again and again. The scientific method is based on falsification of data, not on confirming what you already believe to be true. I’d like to say that there’s hope that the evidence for human-caused climate change will be overturned but that’s unlikely given the fact that the evidence is from many different lines of inquiry. If the worst that happens is a proliferation of Palmetto bugs as McArdle fears we’ll all be very, very lucky.
This fallacy is committed when it is assumed that the middle position between two extremes must be correct simply because it is the middle position. this sort of “reasoning” has the following form:
1.
2. Position A and B are two extreme positions.
3. C is a position that rests in the middle between A and B.
4. Therefore C is the correct position.
This line of “reasoning” is fallacious because it does not follow that a position is correct just because it lies in the middle of two extremes. This is shown by the following example. Suppose that a person is selling his computer. He wants to sell it for the current market value, which is $800 and someone offers him $1 for it. It would hardly follow that $400.50 is the proper price.

It’s almost time for the war on Christmas

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Some dolt on BBC Radio interviews Richard Dawkins on the topic of Christmas. For what it’s worth, I like Christmas every bit as much as Dawkins. Which is to say, it’s alright.

YouTube Preview Image

There are no dirty words, ever. – L. Cohen

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

A lady journalist from Winnepeg once said he had the stoop of an aged crop picker and the face of a little boy.

Pitchfork has a pre-Songs of Leonard Cohen documentary about Leonard Cohen, the renowned poet. He does some stand-up comedy, smokes some cigarettes, reads aloud much of his poetry, plays with the I Ching, speaks French (naturally), and bits of Greek. He’s a vegetarian. He plays a guitar and sings, then plays a harmonic, poorly. He talks about sex. This is Leonard Cohen before he was a musician, a star, a ladies’ man, a spiritual seeker. The surprise, if it is a surprise, is that he already was all of those things in 1964 when this film was made. He’d sold more than 400,000 copies of his novel Beautiful Losers, far more than his recording debut sold, at least initially.

As an addendum, the end of the film has a bit of self-referencing as Cohen watches footage of himself sleeping and bathing. It’s an interesting moment because it presages what became something of a trend by the late 60’s. The Rolling Stones documentary Gimme Shelter ends in an editing room. In 1969 the art film Medium Cool took self consciousness to new heights.

Web App for iPhone and Android

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Some screenshots of an web-based iPhone app I’ve been working on. I downloaded the Android SDK recently. The screenshots here are from the Android emulator. It’s awesome that Android and iPhone web apps are completely cross-platform. Obviously there are some advantages to using a native API, like Cocoa Touch, but for companies looking for a mobile presence a web app is the natural choice. I feel that a mobile version of a site is really not enough. The best approach is to mimic the behavior of native apps as much as possible. That means building AJAX user interfaces and controls meant for fingers rather than cursors.

Anyway, some screenshots.

list view

iphone list view

android list view

android list view

iphone list with sortable columns

iphone list with sortable columns

iphone company details

iphone company details

android company details

android company details

As you can see, there are only some styling difference between the two platforms. The behavior is essentially identical in each.

results from search

iphone results from search

contact details

iphone contact details

You may have noticed that the browser chrome and location bar is not visible in these shots. That effect is easy to achieve and contributes to the look and feel of a native app.

Obviously this app allows for data entry and search as well.

The Meaning of Mass Murder

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Another mass shooting. James Fallows reacts to the theorizing that goes on in the media immediately after.

The shootings never mean anything. Forty years later, what did the Charles Whitman massacre “mean”? A decade later, do we “know” anything about Columbine? There is chaos and evil in life. Some people go crazy.

James Fallows is a fine journalist but this is just really wrong for me. It’s true that the media chatter after these events is often a grab bag of cliches and trite observations and bad information. I’m sure there is some of that out there this time too. But there are explanations and ways to get at the truth. Good journalism can bring together an accurate narrative behind such events through a close study of law enforcement, science and medicine, the insights of those close at hand and so on. Columbine is a good case in point. The initial narrative about Columbine was almost entirely wrong. The explanation had to do with outcast kids getting revenge on their more popular peers. It seemed to make sense and, as far as I can tell, it stuck. But it’s wrong. Dave Cullen wrote a book after spending years investigating the Columbine massacre. I haven’t read his book, only this part on Slate, and I’ve listened to him speak about it so I’ve gotten the gist of it. Eric Harris was a psychopath, in the clinical sense, and Dylan Kleibold was a depressive who was suicidal and homicidal, not an unusual combination. There is much about the human condition that can be learned from Columbine. So, yes, it has meaning. I think the same applies to Virginia Tech, the Killeen Texas cafeteria murders, and etc. That’s not to say that there is one all-encompassing observation that can be made. There isn’t and I won’t try to make one. The meanings are various and multiple and will be fought over. But they are out there.

Update: And, by the way, Marty Peretz is still a stupid fucking racist and stark raving crazy too.