63 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2026
  2. Jun 2025
  3. Apr 2025
  4. Mar 2025
  5. Jul 2024
    1. ( ~ 5:00 )

      The first stage of learning a complex skill is creating relevance, not in the sense of making knowledge relevant to your life; but rather in seeing what is relevant to learn at this point in the learning career.

      Building a map...

      The actions are exploration and challenge. Exploration = getting diverse opinions from others and learning the theory & variables. Challenge = open-mindedness for other beliefs and assumptions.


      Reminds me of 10 Steps to Complex Learning for curriculum design, where doing a skill decomposition is one of the first steps in designing the curriculum, and either being an expert or having access to experts is paramount.

  6. Jun 2024
    1. (~0:45)

      Justin mentions that a better way to think about learning is in systems rather than techniques. This is true for virtually anything. Tips & Tricks don't get you anywhere, it is the systems which bring you massive improvements because they have components all working together to achieve one goal or a set of goals.

      Any good system has these components working together seamlessly, creating something emergent; worth more than the sum of its parts.

    2. The main idea, able to be generalized, I get from this video is that in order to develop any skill, whether it is learning or something else, you need to break it down into its constituents, much like the 4 Component Instruction Design model argues, and figure out where your weak links are.

      The more accurately you know the system of your skill, the better you know what to potentially improve on. This requires research, and sometimes asking experts.

      Another benefit of networking.

    1. (~3:00) Syntopical Reading requires building a map of the topic across sources (coming up with one's own terms) in order to find out what each author is saying.

      How does one do this if the process of syntopical reading is the process by which one comes up with the knowledge? I believe the answer lies in a high skill level of Inspectional Reading

      Obviously, one cannot make a perfect map from the get go, and this should not be the intention (defeat perfectionism)... However, a rough sketch or map is far more valuable than none at all.

      I believe this is also the point of Dr. Justin Sung's prestudy... Building the barebone structure of the mindmap, finding the logic behind it all; the first layer.

  7. May 2024
  8. Jan 2024
    1. Die Schneedecken sind in einigen Regionen bder Nordhalbkugel wir den Alpen zwischen 1981 und 2020 pro Jahrzehnt um 10 bis 20% zurückgegangen. Eine Studie Leistung zum ersten Mal nach, dass dieser Prozess, auf die anthropogene globale Erhitzung zurückzuführen ist. Der Prozess wird sich fortsetzen und möglicherweise inGegenden, in denen die Flüsse bisher in großem Ausmaß von Schnee gespeist wurden, zu Trockenheit führen. https://www.derstandard.at/story/3000000202524/fehlender-schnee-geht-auf-menschengemachten-klimawandel-zurueck

      Studie: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06794-y

  9. Jul 2023
  10. Jun 2023
  11. Jul 2022
  12. Feb 2022
  13. Oct 2021
    1. I mean, I think Trudeau has shown us who he is, which is somebody who likes campaigning more than governing and is better at giving the speech than enacting the policies.

      Public relations for a colonial, corporate governance system dependent on the theft of land and resources and the disempowerment of the population through the mechanism of money.

  14. Apr 2021
    1. One important issue to keep in mind when evaluating a theory is back-ground information and context. Issues of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexual orientation can affect the composition of a theory and its acceptance. For example, discrimination in academic life meant sociological theories dealing with women and minorities were generally disregarded until the 1960s. Furthermore, the background of the theorist matters. For example, the first sociological theories dealing with African American communities were written by whites and depicted African American communities as pathological versions of the white community. They were written at a time when few African Americans found jobs in academia. Even though socio-logical works written by African Americans such as William E. B. DuBois (1868-1963) and Oliver Cox (1901-1974) existed, they were relegated to marginal status. Another issue to keep in mind is timing or time period. Sociologists do not exist in a vacuum. They are part of the social matrix of their time; that is, they are affected by history and the social institutions that surround them. As these change, arising issues lead sociologists to reflect and theorize about their world. As described below, environmental sociology itself is a product of a very specific period of time. Whole courses are taught in sociological theory. T

      When putting together theories its important to remember the intersections of race and class. In my urban studies class I took I read the differences between black stories written white sociologists and black sociologists. The white stories were more biased against black people saying that they were their own cause for poor working conditions. We know that was not true

    2. Karl Marx (1818-1883) argued that changes in the substructure of society (the economic base) lead to changes in the superstructure of society (its culture, politics, religion, etc.). He also argued that there are links between ideology and political life and between these and religion.

      Its true its like a domino effect. Japan during the 90's the economy was down greatly. Then as a response young adults dressed more flashy. It is a strange correlation but studies show when the economy goes down, the heels go up.

    1. There is no technological imperative that says we must have power or weapons from nuclear fission or fusion, or t hat we must create and loose upon the earth organisms that will devour our oil spills. We could reach for, and grasp, solar power or safe coal-fired plants. and lhe safe ship designs and industry controls tlhat would virtually eliminate oil spills. No catastrophic potential flows from these.

      Capitalism does not breed innovation it breeds destruction. All of these "innovations" have done nothing, but further endanger the world

    2. High-risk systems have a double penalty: because normal accidents stem from the mysterious interaction of fail-ures. those closest to the system, the operators, have to be able to take independent and sometimes quite creative action. But because these sys-tems are so tightly coupled, control of operators must be centralized because there is little time to check everything out and be aware of what another part of the system is doing.

      The problem that there are so many systems interlocked with each other that leaves room for human error when working together. If someone makes a mistake then someone else and someone else it could lead to multiple failures

    3. systems that have high catastrophic potential, such as nuclear power plants, nuclear weapons systems, recombinant DNA production, or even ships carrying highly toxic or explosive cargoes.

      Literally the news recently was talking about how Japan is releasing nuclear waste in oceans. There is no telling diabolic this damage can and will be to the environment in not only Japan's waters but also wherever the nuclear waste carries as ocean riptides carry things across the world... this could leave a trail of destruction

  15. Mar 2021
    1. I. Protecting the biosphere 2. Practicing sustainable use of natural resources 3. Reducing, recycling, and safely disposing waste 4. Using energy wisely 5. Reducing risky practices 6. Selling only products that are safe 7. Fully compensating for any harm caused to people and the environment 8. Disclosing any damaging incidents

      If only every company followed these guidelines, we would not have constant oil spills and coral reefs dying. No disappearing wildlife and forests.

    2. vestors, however. They are also interested in profit for themselves. Owners and management usually decide to put as much profit as they can in their own pockets, after paying their debts, paying for needed reinvestment in the business, and paying employees enough to keep them coming to work. Thus it is a virtually universal pattern, although by no means economically necessary, that employers get paid more than employees.

      Just as I said before, the workers who make sure everything runs as it should get the smallest cut while the corporation gets everything. Corporations make millions while the people that work for them live pay check to paycheck.

    3. This generalization of the market has the important consequence of promoting political interest in economic growth. If everyone is to have more wealth at the end of the year than at the beginning of the year, the economy must grow. This is simple math. Most politicians therefore see economic growth as a potential way to maximize the number of people who have been made wealthier-and thus, they hope, to maximize votes. Consequently, virtually all modern governments seek to maximize economic growth.

      My problem with the economy is that in most instances it takes priority over the people that make sure its still going. The workers don't take the largest some of the wealth, it is those who are above them that do.

    4. Hurwitz, in other words, did not bring to Pacific Lumber some vast fund of knowledge about the woods, nor any great new ideas _for cutting costs. He brought to Pacific Lumber a massive debt,

      Hypothesis is not letting me annotate. but I see how the redwoods were sacrificed in order to make money back for the company.

    5. articular expertise in the timber indus­try. Hurwitz's first big move had come in 1973, when he took over McCulloch Oil. Selling off many assets, he soon acquired the Sim­plicity Pattern Company; there, according to the Houston Chroni­cle, he sold off the company's famous dress-pattern line.

      Getting the feeling that something bad is about to happen to the poor redwood trees.

    6. And Pacific Lumber seemed too good to be true in other ways as well. Wages were high; workers could rent cheap and tidy homes in the company-owned town of Scotia; every PL child got an $8,000 college scholarship.

      That seems nice, until I read the rest of this and realize how horrible this company is to the environment

    1. American Indian Buddhist Christian Confucian Ancient Greek Hindu Islamic Jewish Taoist Source: Durning ( 1992) Teaching and Source "Miserable as we seem in thy eyes, we consider ourselves ... much happier than thou, in this that we are very content with the little that we have." (Micmac chief) "Whoever in this world overcomes his selfish cravings, his sorrows fall away from him, like drops of water from a lotus flower:' (Dhammapada, 336) "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God:' (Matthew 19:23-24) "Excess and deficiency are equally at fault." (Confucius, Xl.15) "Nothing in Excess:' (Inscribed at Oracle of Delphi) "T hat person who lives completely free from desires, without longing ... attains peace:' (Bhagavad-Gita, 11.71) "Poverty is my pride:' (Muhammad) "Give me neither poverty nor riches:• (Proverbs 30:8) "He who knows he has enough is rich." (Tao Te Ching) Yet still we try. We can all be like the Collinses, but although consumption may be an act of community, there is more to it than that. So we try to be like Bill Gates instead. Meanwhile, Bill Gates has gotten even richer. The result is no end to our wants and little improvement in our satisfaction, despite increased consumption of goods. This whole process of moving materially ahead without making any real gain in satisfaction can be termed the treadmill of consumption. 54 (I'll discuss a parallel treadmill, the treadmill of production, in the next chapter.)

      These religions have been with humans for quite along time, but it feels like people have strayed far from the teachings.

    2. Meanwhile, the cycle of competitive and communal consumption accelerates. As one tries to keep up with the Joneses, the Joneses are trying to keep up with the neighbor on the other side, and up the line to Liberace,

      It's so funny how people in power have the ability to just buy and take whenever they want to the point where it is a competition. I feel it would be better if people with that much money gave back, but they never seem to unless it is beneficial to them.

    3. nw Leisure Class

      To be wealthy is to spend in access and to have in surplus. It does not matter what exactly you're doing with it, it all depends if you have. To be a mass consumer of things is something to be proud of even though you may be taking away from those in need.

    4. xhibit 2.1 Maslow's hierarchy of needs. "basic needs" "higher needs" (ideal needs) Aesthetic Knowledge and Understanding Self Actualization Esteem Belongingness and Love \safety Physiological "lower needs" (material needs)

      I've been seeing this diagram a lot in many memes over the internet. In reality though when I think about it, it's very sad how these are are not met for many people. Individuals live their live their lives without basic needs.

    5. One common answer to the question of why we consume so much more than we need is that people are greedy. In the words of Mahatma Gandhi "The world has enough for everybody's need, but not enough for everybody'~ greed."2 There is much wisdom in Gandhi's aphorism. Better sharing of the world's resources would go a long way toward resolving the three central issues of environmentalism, and this is a theme that subsequent chapters will continually return to. But Gandhi was also implying something else,

      Greed has been an issue in humans as long as we've been in existence. Also Ghandi was a horrible human being.

    1. The existing notion that environ-mental problems are scientific conundrums that can ultimately be resolved through the application of technicized expert knowledge ignores the incontrovertible real-ity that these issues are situated at the intersection of inseparable social and technoscientific systems. Moreover, efforts to innovate toward more sustainable systems of provision-what some scholars have begun to refer to as transition management-will require a high degree of coordination among markets,

      Translation: The world has to work together in order to prevent climate change, instead of nations doing things separately

    2. Although the United States was not alone in this regard, the voluntary provisions of the Framework Con-vention on Climate Change signed in Rio in 1992 proved to he utterly ineffective and initial endorsement of the Kyoto Protocol in 1997 was an unprecedented Pyr-rhic victory. The Senate repudiated the treaty and the White House evinced no inclination to expend its dwindling supply of political capital to make the case for ratification. For all of the high drama in which leading environmental

      It feels like at the time government's were actively trying to do something about climate change, but collection disinterest made it seem unimportant.

    3. t should not be surprising that environ-mentalism has fallen out of favor with the public. It is actually possible to trace the movement's slide into death back to the early 1990s. The leading environmental organizations define their own effectiveness, at least in part, in terms of ability to pass federal legislation. Using this metric. the last major victory came with passage of the 1990 round of Clean Air Act amendments. This bill had been percolating for more than a decade and it was no small

      People have low attention spans, it does not take a lot for people to begin not to care about things that are really important.

    4. . Central to their strategy is the New Apollo Project, a 2-year-old initiative to launch a broad coalition to champion a national renewable energy development program.

      What's sad is that I have never heard of this until right now

    1. Environmentalists and other liberals have convinced themselves that, in politics, it's the issues that matter, and that the public is with us on such issues as the environment, jobs, and healthcare. So how can we be winning on the issues and losing politically?

      That is true its one thing to have the publics opinion, but another to have politiicians supporting you

    2. The problem is not external to us; it's us. It's a human problem having to do with how we organize our society. This old way of thinking isn't anyone's fault, but it is all of our responsibility to change."

      Not to just say I agree, but I agree. Like people (mostly those in charge of large corporations) need to work on their organization. Meaning like how they're working with their emissions etc.

    3. What do we worry about when we worry about global warming? Is it the food shortages that will result from reduced agricultural production? If so, shouldn't our focus be on increasing food production? Is it the potential collapse of the Gulf Stream, which could freeze upper North America and northern Europe and trigger, as a recent Pentagon scenario suggests, world war? Is it the refugee crisis that will be caused when Caribbean nations are flooded? If so, shouldn't our focus be on building bigger sea walls and disaster preparedness?

      All of the above. If climate disaster happens every possible problem we are worried about will happen in a domino like effect.

    4. Most environmentalists don't think of the environment as a mental construct at all -they think of it as a real thing to be protected and defended

      This is where I stand, like we kind of live here permanently.

    5. "To preserve people's jobs in this country, we must accept higher levels of pollution in the future" increased from 17 percent in 1996 to 26 percent in 2000. The number of Americans who agreed that "most of the people actively involved in environmental groups are extremists, not reasonable people" leapt from 32 percent to 41 percent over the same period.

      Like see exactly the general public thinks climate change is something that can be put on the back burner, it doesn't feel important for people to care about. People just have pre-conceived notions about these movements and they're usually wrong. They're not trying to force people to hug trees, but they're trying to save where we live from collapse. We live on Earth, not fossil fuel land.

    6. Environmentalists are in a culture war, whether we like it or not. It's a war over our core values as Americans and over our vision for the future, and it won't be won by appealing to the rational consideration of our collective self-interest.

      Exactly because American's are very set in their ways, which are not going to help us in the long run.

    7. not one of America's environmental leaders is articulating a vision of the future commensurate with the magnitude of the crisis. Instead they are promoting technical policy fixes such as pollution controls and higher vehicle-mileage standards - proposals that provide neither the popular inspiration nor the political alliances necessary to deal with the problem.

      No exactly like everyday we see government officials working WITH climate change it feels like. Unnecessary spending and usage of resources in the US.

    8. Over the last fifteen years, environmental foundations and organizations have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in combating global warming. We have strikingly little to show for it.

      It is sad because its true. Everyday there are news articles talking about how much closer we are to the 12th hour. It feels like nothings really happening even though money is being poured into combating climate change.

    1. me divided mto three camps: mainstream, radical, and conserva-tive. Members of mainstream groups are ba.,ically "pragmatists" seek-ing incremental reforms and trying to work marginally to reduce po llu-tion, con serve energy, and protect nature by making basic c hanges in the nature o f the political and economic systems. The mainstream groups work with government and the political parries and "while often battling with business and industry

      It is easier to be seen as a official movement when you work with government officials, but that is not always true. Many of the most important movements have worked without government help.

    2. Some deep fault lines separate sectors of the environmental move-ment, none of them deeper than the argument-specious in my view-over a human-centered versus a nature-centered environmentalism.

      I can see this becoming a problem because people are more concerned about the preservation of human life in relation to nature. It decenters nature in environmental activism.

    1. Approximate Late nineteenth Mid-twentieth Beginnings century century Primary Conservation of Protection of Goals natural resources environmental quality Dominant Natural resources Environmental Ideology should be used quality should be efficiently for the protected for a high good of all society quality of life Worldview \ Anthropocentric Anthropocentric Nature of Geographically Geographically Issues bounded (typically dispersed (often rural), specific, urban); delayed, unambiguous subtle, and indirect effects; potentially harmful to human health Example Over-logging of a Urban air and water specific forest area pollution Cost of Relatively small, Often substantial Solution localized Tactics Lobbying Lobbying, litigation, citizen participation Opposition/ Natural-resource Corporations, Culprits industries; local economic growth, economic interests mo dern life styles (loggers, hunters) Ecologism Late twentieth century Maintenance of ecological sustainability Ecosystems should be protected for the benefit of all species Ecocentric Extremely diverse; systemic and synergistic effects; potentially irreversible and harmful to all life on Earth Global environmental change Potentially infinite Lobbying, litigation, electoral action, direct action, life-style change Status quo; excess human production, consumption, and population

      As time goes on, movements change and grow. As climate change evolves with industrialization so do the objectives of Environmental activism. Objectives were simple in the beginning of activism, but as time went on as I said, their objectives grew with growing problems that did not exist before.

    1. A "medium-fcmltty scenario" prep.ired hy the United Nations, which assumes char global fertility will stabih1.e at slight!)' more than two thildrcn pe, woman, projects that the global population will reach 9.4 billion by 2050 and I 0.8 b1ll1on hy 2 150. If fertility rate'> remain at 1990-J 995 lcvds, world population would re:ich an unthinkable 296 billion people by 21 50.~

      I was just watched a movie called, "what happened to monday" and it was scary similar to this excerpt here. To avoid a higher number of people being born, the government took the first born child.

    2. In many areas of existence, our species has improved its status in ways unimaginable in past ages. We have conquered many dreaded diseases and ~ubstantially extended the span during which mo~t of us can expect to remain alive and healthy. We have eased our labor while dramatically expanding our production of food, clothing, and shelter along with a cornucopia of other goods and amenities.

      I think about how we have made our lives on earth much easier, but I worry about the amount of damage we have done to the planet. These fast improvements humanity has made may be too fast for the planet to sustain. Who knows where we will be in 50 years at this current rate.

  16. May 2019
    1. According to many of the descriptions and texts I have read, it is very dangerous to allow someone with body dysmorphia to have access to surgery because it is not treating the problem and may ultimately do harm.

      If anyone knows the series Botched then they know it is about plastic surgery. Justin Jedlica, famous for his modeling, is a gay man who I believe suffers from Body Dis-Morphia due to his constant surgery addiction. He has had over 60 surgeries. While watching an episode of Botched he made an appearance and asked for another surgery. The surgeon refused, saying that it could be highly dangerous for Justin and could even end his life. Justin was peeved and complained to his then partner about how the doctors were wrong and he will just have to find another place to get it done. Being a gay man is clearly not the issue, however it possibly correlates with Justin's modeling career and the need to look perfect (or his version of perfect).

      With that being said, anyone can have Body Dis-Morphia. Their gender preference and sexual preference should not be confused for the cause. Everyone has their own idea of their perfect selves. If anything, being a gay man with Body Dis-Morphia also correlates with the gay society's vision of the perfect homosexual man (in regards to beauty) and is proof that society too has standards. If there was no pressure to be perfect either as a gay man or a straight man, I wonder if Justin (and others) would have developed this illness at all (food or thought).

  17. Sep 2016
  18. May 2016
  19. www.seethingbrains.com www.seethingbrains.com
    1. she was looking at was Gregor, screamed out in a high pitched raw voice “Oh God, oh God” and fell with outstretched arms, as if she was surrendering everything, down onto the couch and lay there motionless. “Gregor, you. . .”

      In this sentence, Muir and Johnston vary in the way that they describe Grete’s reaction as she discovers Gregor in his new form. In Johnston’s text, he writes that Grete screamed before she was “truly aware” of her discovery, while Muir writes that she screamed before she was “really conscious”. The use of the phrase “really conscious” is far deeper than the use of, “truly aware” because it better describes the mental state Grete was in before entering Gregor’s room. Grete finally being “aware” is too specific and neglects to describe that the change that occurred would be lasting and drastically change her way of life. In contrast the use of “conscious” implies that seeing Gregor in his new form jolted Grete to be aware of her current role in the Samsa household. The two translations also differ in the way they describe Grete’s exclamation as she opens the door. In Muir’s translation, he describes Grete’s voice as “loud” and “hoarse”. The word “loud” denotes the high volume of Grete’s explanation and implies that her opinion and voice are worthy of being heard in the Samsa household. The use of the word “Hoarse” implies that Grete’s voice is rough and harsh from constant vocal strain, which could imply that Grete is metaphorically screaming so that her voice can be heard. In comparison, Johnston uses “high-pitched” and “raw” to describe her voice. By using “high-pitched”, Johnston implies that Grete’s reaction is ordinary because her “high-pitched” scream mirrors stereotypes of how women react to frightening encounters.

  20. Jun 2015