Faro, Portugal
Occasional Musings
Studies on effects of social media [NewYorker]
There’s a general sense that it’s bad for society—which may be right. But studies offer surprisingly few easy answers. A recent article from New Yorker on a complexities of getting data to show the effects of social media. Also a serves as a good launching pad to dig further into this. Points to quite a few studies and researchers in this field.
More of this here: [The Link]
Science of Art
An interesting article from inference-review.com on the growth of science of art. What can we learn from digitizing, coding and using algorithmic tools on database of items and paintings and other art.
Few tools and methods taken from different fields of science: probabilities, evolutionary principle, genealogy trees, networks and others. Interesting lis t of projects are also mentioned in the article.
“…For now, as always, it is humans who find meanings in the world and science is just a way of testing their truth. All that is required for the use of science, or any other rational method of investigation, is a consensus that those interpretations not be solipsistic and equivocal, but public and falsifiable.”
“…The prospect of a science of art is, to me, dazzling. When I consider it I feel as Aristotle must have felt when he stood upon an Aegean shore and saw, for the first time, that living things might be the objects of science. A small shift of perspective and virgin vistas appear.” Art as objects of science…
More of this article here: [The Link]
[DOI: 10.37282/991819.22.16]
Meritocracy vs others
Is success achieved only through hard work? It is not so straight forward. Environment, luck, systemic biases all play a role to some extent. Interesting discussions around meritocratic systems and their moral implications..
- A More Perfect Meritocracy, Boston Review. Review of two books (1)The Cult of Smart: How Our Broken Education System Perpetuates Social Injustice by Fredrik deBoer and The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good? by Michael Sandel
- Morally Naked, sydney review of books. Review of Michael Sandel’s book
- The Woke Meritocracy, Tabletmag. How telling the right stories about overcoming oppression in the right way became a requirement for entering the elite credentialing system
- The Death Cult of Smart, americanaffairsjournal. Review of Fredrik deBoer’s book
- Earning Our Stripes, literary review UK. Review of The Aristocracy of Talent: How Meritocracy Made the Modern World By Adrian Wooldridge
- Equality and the elites, newstatesman. How political ideas such as “levelling up” draw on centuries of meritocratic thinking.
- In defence of meritocracy, newstatesman. Why an idea dismissed as an excuse for elitism offers Labour’s only path to victory. (by Adrian Wooldridge)
Review of The Dawn of Everything from LARB
Came across this interesting review of book on human history – The Dawn of Everything, A New History of Humanity by Graeber and Wengrow. Recently had read the books from Y. Harari on this topic, which was refreshing. Looks like this could be an interesting book to check on.
Brief summary: “Nevertheless, The Dawn of Everything is a thoroughly mesmerizing book. Its new story about human history is provocative, if not necessarily comprehensive. The book’s great value is that it provides a much better point of departure for future explorations of what was actually happening in the past. There are almost unlimited possibilities here to build upon, and a much more fruitful critical perspective from which to think about human history.”
Also has a passage, which summarize the current thinking of human history, a teleological model. ” … Human societies varied a lot. Now they don’t vary as much, but the technology they employ is wildly more complex. People live longer, but they aren’t necessarily healthier or happier during their long lives. The overall average levels of violence may have decreased (although the massive variability in early human societies suggests that “average levels” is not a particularly useful way to think about violence, or really anything else in the archaeological record), but the violence that does happen is more spectacularly destructive. Most importantly: We can now fail on a global scale, and we seem to be in the process of failing.
More of this article from LARB here: [The Link]
[Harpers]: Routine maintenance: embracing habit in modern world
Habit & Routine can be very helpful in some aspects but also can be crippling in other aspects. Came across this very interesting & thoughtful article about habits, its history, its relevance in social lifes from past and present, but also some thoughts on role of automation in society.
An interesting passage towards the end for balance & reflection:
“…But even the most ingrained human behaviors are accompanied by sensations that prompt us to pause and recalibrate when something goes wrong—a truth well known to anyone who has caught themselves driving home to a previous residence or gagging on the hemorrhoid cream they’ve mistaken for toothpaste. Ravaisson calls habit the “moving middle term,” a disposition that slides along the continuum between rote mechanism and reflective freedom. Weil, who similarly saw habit as a continuum, believed that we should strive to remain on the reflective side of that spectrum. The Stoics advised nightly meditation, so as to judge the virtue of the actions they’d taken that day, and Charles Sanders Peirce, the father of pragmatism, noted that in cases where habits have begun to work against a person’s interests, “reflection upon the state of the case will overcome these habits, and he ought to allow reflection its full weight.” It is this connection to thought that allows habits to remain fluid and flexible in a way that machines are not. Habits are bound up with the brain’s plasticity, a term James describes as “a structure weak enough to yield to an influence, but strong enough not to yield all at once.” Unlike algorithms, which lock in patterns and remain beyond our understanding, habits allow us to negotiate a livable equilibrium between thought and action, maintaining, as Weil puts it, “a certain balance between the mind and the object to which it is being applied.” .. ”
More about this article here: [The Link]
Microwork
Microwork is a series of microtasks, which sociologist Antonio Casilli defines as “fragmented and under-remunerated productive processes.” Companies break up big projects into small tasks that can be performed by anyone with an internet connection, then hire people to do them for very little money, usually through a third party that handles the staffing. Mega-corporations use private firms like Samasource, while smaller companies find workers through user-facing platforms like Amazon Mechanical Turk, Fiverr, and ClickWorker…
While it is noted automation might remove jobs, however trend seems to be that there is rise of this microwork (which may not be sustainable or suitable). Read more of this here:
Some predictions for 2050
Futurists are drawn to the sensational and the unlikely: brain uploading, magnetic floating cars. But the actual future will be more like today’s world. Here is an interesting list of predictions for the future by 2050. Some of them seems more US centric, but an interesting read nevertheless:
Technology related
- There will be Martian colony
- Marketization of everything
- AI will be most futuristic impactful change in day-to-day life
- supersensorium (supermarket like experience of entertainment) will grow
- A mostly storeless society
- Education will take place mostly online
- Genetic engineering of embryos to avoid disease will have become common
- Anti-aging tech will extend the health-spans of the rich
Demographics
- Huge improvements to standards of living
- Families will continue to decline in importance
- The future really is female
- The rise of the throuple
- A minority-led country
Political changes
- The world will not war
- The age of the mob will spur domestic turmoil
- Soft totalitarianism will become the norm
- People and culture will become boring
More of this here: [The Link]