Truly dangerous

“… I’d also like to point out that large financial centers in certain cities around the planet are certainly going to kill millions of us by destroying our social safety networks in the name of their imaginary financial efficiency. You’re a thousand times more likely to die because of what some urban banker did in 2008 than from what some Afghan-based terrorist did in 2001. *Financiers live in small, panicky urban cloisters, severely detached from the rest of mankind. They are living today in rich-guy ghetto cults. They are truly dangerous to our well-being, and they are getting worse and more extremist, not better and more reasonable. You’re not gonna realize this havoc till you see your elderly Mom coughing in an emergency ward, but she’s going there for a reason.”
Bruce Sterling

A Universe of Clouds

“Karl Popper, the great philosopher of science, once divided the world into two categories: clocks and clouds. Clocks are neat, orderly systems that can be solved through reduction; clouds are an epistemic mess, “highly irregular, disorderly, and more or less unpredictable.” The mistake of modern science is to pretend that everything is a clock, which is why we get seduced again and again by the false promises of brain scanners and gene sequencers. We want to believe we will understand nature if we find the exact right tool to cut its joints. But that approach is doomed to failure. We live in a universe not of clocks but of clouds.”
Jonah Lehrer

Another kind of blank space

Anyone visiting here recently will have been greeted by white space – a blank. Well this blank space in text is really just to say I am still around and hope to be up to producing some things purposive drifty in the near future. Meanwhile, as I have said before, there really are some very tasty links scattered around this site, so take a look, you might be in for a pleasant surprise.

Listen to intriguing voices

“One has to learn to develop senses that help us listen to intriguing voices that are hidden amongst the noise. Owlish ways to hear the rustle of the mouse. Do that and the future will be fun and rewarding. We all might even help, at this time of great change and threat, to develop further a world of justice, understanding and equity.”
C.S. “Buzz” Holling
http://www.peopleandplace.net/perspectives/2009/1/26/collapse_and_renewal

Have a heart part two

Two open heart operations, three bursts of general anaesthetic and various complications in the last six months seem to have left my brain reeling, but hope to resume normal service soon. Meanwhile, please feel free to explore the rest of the site.

Watch this space

Still a bit feeble after my operation in January, but planning to start some heavy purposive drifting once my body and, more importantly, my mind regain some vigour.

Update on Rich

Richard seemed quite cheerful when I spoke to him briefly today. The new, technologically-augmented Richard has an artificial valve to replace the problem one. More soon.

Rich update oops

Got out of hospital yesterday, but forgot to ask Ben to do a final update, before we revert to more purposive drifty things.
Thanks to everyone for all their support – I could really feel the love.
Mr Kolvekar, my surgeon, did a fantastic job – instead of just plonking in a new artificial valve with all their associated problems, he managed with some considerable degree of creativity to repair my old one, with all the benefits associated with that.
This ties in with what is going to be one of my future themes, exploring the idea of “metis” ( Do a search on this site and you’ll find some earlier thoughts on it)
But for now I must focus on recovery, so I’m not sure how frequently I will be posting.

Rich update 3

Richard should be moved out of the observation ward soon.
The surgeon mentioned to him that he was particularly proud of his own work, as he was able to repair the problem valve rather than replacing it.
Richard is feeling a lot better, and is looking forward to going home.