08-20-2011, 08:32 PM | #1 | |
Super stressed!
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: British Columbia
Posts: 8,081
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Seil Has Another Book About Hope And Truth And Beauty And Statistics!
So I went to a family reunion last week. Got a big sunburn. Found out I get a condition called "Swimmers Ear." Mosquitoes love me. Also, seeing the family was really great and I'm moving to Toronto early next year. Now that all that's outta the way, while I was in the airport, I walked around. (As I am wont to do.) In one of the wee shops they had a book called The Rational Optimist. It's by a dude named... lesse here... Matt Ridley.
But it's called rational optimism because it discusses how the quality of life, the quality of food and ideas and all sorts of stuff has evolved and gotten better and will continue to get better: Quote:
Really. For realsies. The chapter is titled "Ideas Having Sex." He also talks about statistics a whole lot, which is what you have to do in a book like this, I guess. Like that book thread about "The Moral Animal," I find the idea fascinating, but it's sort of like reading a textbook, and it puts me to sleep a little. It's really good for a plane ride, but I'd recomend Douglas Adams for after tea time at the family reunion. |
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08-21-2011, 12:16 AM | #2 |
Keeper of the new
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: A place without judgment
Posts: 4,506
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Like I've always said. Though it is nice to see one's ideas elaborated and put in print.
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Hope insistent, trust implicit, love inherent, life immersed |
08-21-2011, 07:40 AM | #3 | ||
Niqo Niqo Nii~
Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 6,240
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Quote:
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08-21-2011, 03:18 PM | #4 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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This only works if you pick and choose. He compares a stone axe to a computer mouse, for instance. A whole bunch of people from diverse backgrounds worked together and invented the nuclear bomb, too. Alternatively, multiple stone age men within their small villages worked together to kill large animals to the benefit of the entire tribe. It only took one man to shoot JFK in the head and end a legacy.
That being said, I'm not pessimistic. People live much longer than they used to and the majority of bacterial diseases are now curable and many of the viral ones have been controlled through vaccines. In first world countries, the main cause of death is obesity, since it relates directly to heart attacks and strokes. Only cancer still remains as a leading cause of death, but at least now it is treatable sometimes. BUT, human nature tends to be selfish and self-destructive of others. I don't think realizing this and trying to offset it before it gets out of hand is being pessimistic, just realistic. People can be realistically pessimistic or optimistic about different aspects of life and different things at different time. No one is wholly pessimistic or optimistic, or at least I'd hope not. You can't group entire sums of people under a label like "pessimists" without it being grossly inaccurate.
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The Valiant Review Last edited by Magus; 08-21-2011 at 03:21 PM. |
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