337 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2019
    1. Experts cannot even agree whether it is an alphabet, a syllabary, a mnemonic, or a rebus.

      so many types

    1. With the vacuum of verifiable information that the government has created on the matter, and all the rumor and speculation, one's truth compass begins to spin with reckless abandon as you dig into these issues.

      this seems to be the standard model under which they operate

    1. Art is always done within the constraints of a box.

      but does real art always follow rules

  2. Apr 2019
    1. But with the temptation of mistaking the familiar for the superior still etched into the mind, it is not beyond the human species to go to war over which country’s people carry out the most noble acts of random kindness.

      familiar is superior - this makes a lot of sense in the context of India

    2. You can’t reason people out of a stance they weren’t reasoned into in the first place.

      stance

    3. Nationalism is a product of human cognition, so cognition should be able to dismantle it, too.

      good point, it is social construct too

    4. At every turn, humans make automatic, value-laden judgments about social groups.

      this is happening all the time, whether we are conscious of it or not

  3. Jan 2019
    1.  but their main skill is capacity to pass exams written by people like them.

      this is the hallmark of modernity

  4. Aug 2018
    1. The attribution is empirically unconstrained.

      So there is no space for invisible entities.

    2. Loosely speaking, behaviorism is an attitude -- a way of conceiving of empirical constraints on psychological state attribution. Strictly speaking, behaviorism is a doctrine -- a way of doing psychological science itself.

      a broad understanding

  5. Jul 2018
    1. But is the classroom really where most of the serious learning occurs?

      Is classroom learning not natural?

    1. You prototype and iterate

      iterative design, helps to iron out the problems

    2. “game atoms,”

      The idea of hierarchical structure of games

    1. . Vision is not generally held by committees, and it has to be someone’s job to hold the vision.

      just as there is one person in the committee who matters

    2. hey are therefore a bit of a visual artist, a bit of a programmer, a bit of a logician and a bit of a philosopher, a bit of a psychologist and a bit of a manipulator.

      traits of a game designer

    3. Programmers are irrelevant to computer game design.

      Hmm. That is one premise to our course too.

    4. Explain why they disliked a film without being in the slightest capable of making one.

      What makes critiquing anything possible, even if we do not posses that skill to produce what is being criticised?

    5. It is absorbed by the intuition, not by the mind, and it is learned by doing. It is not taught.

      hence a practice based course is needed

    6. e. An artist’s name, or brand name, or company’s name, are only as good as their product.

      What about academics?

    7. ”how did he do that?”

      Do we become experts in the field once we are able to answer questions like these?

    8. There is no area of human endeavor which lacks antecedents

      We all look further by standing on the shoulders of giants...

    9. there are no arts that are not also crafts.

      Hmm. Can't think of any counter examples? But what exactly is a difference between the two?

    10. “The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games.”

      Of course :)

  6. Mar 2018
    1. To explain the mind, we have to show how minds are built from mindless stuff, from parts that are much smaller and simpler than anything we'd consider smart.

      This is already assuming there is no central control mechanism. Ghost in the shell, so to speak.

    1. Information is interpreted more easily and more uniformly if it is placed where most readers expect to find it.

      basic rule

    2. ince we read from left to right, we prefer the context on the left, where it can more effectively familiarize the reade

      also related to this is independent and dependent variables

    3. But, more significantly, the structure of the second table provides the reader with an easily perceived context (time) in which the significant piece of information (temperature) can be interpreted.

      context and framework for interpretation

    1. Why do people with “die-hard opinions” not know what they are talking about? Are the “experts” always right?

      Tyranny of the experts

    2. issues should be depoliticized as much as is feasible

      everything is political, science more so

    3. Intellectuals

      ?

    4. But Pinker largely fails to deal with the inconvenient fact that, at the time, it was not so obviously bad science.

      Hmm. Broca's Brain for example

    5. An average person of 1910, if he or she had entered a time machine and materialized today, would be borderline retarded by our standards.”

      Hmm, so by that logic have our scientists also have larger iq

    6. inequality matters less than actual levels of income and comfort

      How so?

    7. The Better Angels of Our Nature

      reading list

    1. ffspring were larger when their mother first mated with a male that had been well fed as a maggot, even if this male was not their father.

      can this be true for humans too?

    2. distinction between genetic and nongenetic variation

      NS is substrate independent

    1. “Instead, you’re expected to find some small problem, like students don’t understand historical chronology, so you might add a reading to address that. You’re supposed to make something up every semester, then write up a narrative”

      find a problem first, then a solution for that problem. and solution should be viable within the classroom, no polic level solutions acceptable

    2. Faced with outrage over the high cost of higher education, universities responded by encouraging expensive administrative bloat.

      The tyranny of testing is upon us!

    3. It was politically convenient to hold universities accountable for all this, rather than to scrutinize neoliberal austerity measures.

      After all it is universities where they come to learn, not to the policy makers

    4. “It has forced academic departments to use data that’s not very good,” he added. “And the process of getting this data that’s not very good can be very painful.”

      I think this is another symptom of the QWERTY effect described by Papert. People tend to think that something that is existing in the system, must be there for a good cause. It had perhaps a good cause, when it was initiated, but over time it has become redundant or is just an appendage.

    5. On many campuses, professors must include a list of skills-based “learning outcomes” on every syllabus and assess them throughout the semester.

      Continuous, comprehensive assessment anyone?

    6. But the ballooning assessment industry — including the tech companies and consulting firms that profit from assessment — is a symptom of higher education’s crisis, not a solution to it.

      Spot on. They are a solution looking for a problem to solve. We have this technology, ho can we sell this to you?

    7. quantifiable data that reveal what skills students are learning.

      wasn't this always required? that for many is the whole purpose of testing, and standardized testing particularly.

    1. Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?

      reading list

    2. Yuval Noah Harari in Sapiens (2011)

      Added to the reading list

    3. We lost our exclusive position in the animal kingdom, not because we overestimated ourselves, but because we underestimated our cousins.

      Anthropocentrism?

    1. digestive trac

      is this really contained on the fossils?

    2. If the custom emerged this early, it could explain a defining feature of our species: the increase in brain size that occurred around this time.

      is this any correlation with intelllgence?

    3. modern humans are biologically dependent on cooking.

      is this any correlation with intelllgence?

  7. Feb 2018
    1. Newton saw religious and philosophical truth as two almost wholly distinct entities, each to be pursued with its own methodology and rhetorical strategy

      isn't this true for many scientists?

    1. But the frustrated and humiliated intellectual, the rich and scared speculator, the spoiled son, the labor tyrant, the fellow who has achieved success by smelling out the wind of success—they would all go Nazi in a crisis.

      what are the Indian counterparts to these?

    2. “Why don’t you American in- tellectuals ever get to them; talk to them?”

      do intellectuals need to talk to proles?

    3. He is certainly an intellectual, but an intellectual smelling slightly of cow barns and damp tweeds.

      has a very different connotation in the cow-belt thought...

    4. Mr. G will never be a Nazi, because he will never be anything. His brain operates quite apart from the rest of his apparatus. He will certainly be able, however, fully to explain and apologize for Nazism if it ever comes along.

      is this the fate of intellectuals throughout?

    5. She will titillate with pleased excitement to the first popular hero who proclaims the basic subordination of women.

      the housewives

    6. Were he primitive and brutal he would be a criminal—a murderer. But he is subtle and cruel.

      violence of the mind is far more dangerous than the violence of the body

    7. He was a poor white-trash

      Poor Brahmins of India are equivalent

    8. Although he has no money, his unostentatious distinction and education have always assured him a position. He has never been engaged in sharp competition. He is a free man. I doubt whether ever in his life he has done anything he did not want to do or anything that was against his code. Nazism wouldn’t fit in with his standards and he has never become accustomed to making concessions.

      So are more ambitious people are more likely to piggyback on fascist regimes?

    9. He has been fed vitamins and filled with energies that are beyond the capacity of his intellect to discipline. He has been treated to forms of education which have released him from inhibitions. His body is vigorous. His mind is childish. His soul has been almost completely neglected.

      Too much resource?

    1. And our brains – only temporarily hijacked by books – will now be hijacked by whatever comes next.

      printed book is a technology that will not survive in the coming decades

    2. The deep reading that a novel demands doesn't come easy and it was never "natural." Our default state is, if anything, one of distractedness.

      Hmm, it requires enormous self-discipline to get something done, including habit of creating a self-discipline

    3. he needed the panoply, the stream, the comfort of attending entertainments.

      the data feed, feeding us?

    4. This doesn't mean we're reading less – not at all. In fact, we live in a text-gorged society in which the most fleeting thought is a thumb-dash away from posterity. What's at stake is not whether we read. It's how we read.

      is it because now the units of publishing have become common?

    5. We become, "more intolerant of moments of time that pass without the arrival of new stimuli."

      the shrinking of psychological time due to digital technologies

    1. “A company of bomb throwers can’t start hiding the evidence when a bomb goes astray,”

      hmm.

    2. Information’s most consistent quality is its evanescence. Information is fugitive in its very nature.

      so to devise a digital record for the generations to come?

    3. Because history is a fight we’re having every day. We’re battling to make the truth first by living it, and then by recording and sharing it, and finally, crucially, by preserving it. Without an archive, there is no history.

      History is public memory of the era?

    1. Just because hundreds of people found something offensive doesn’t mean that it was, in fact, offensive.

      mobocracy: democracy ke naam par lagane lag gaye ban!

    1. They can skim the abstract, mine the literature review, scan the data, and grab the conclusions without wasting valuable time actually reading.

      Hmm. win win.

    2. grading papers for meaning takes a lot more time and involves a lot more judgment than grading for form

      tyranny of testing?

    3. much more difficult for both student and teacher.

      convenience for both and for the system

    4. Now students use Google as their primary ‘research’ tool, and the top search result for most topics tends to be Wikipedia.

      changing educational realities in the era of internet

    5. these systems are better at identifying the formal characteristics of these essays than at discerning their meaning.

      for how long?

    6. The key distinction here is between form and formalism. A form is useful and necessary as a means for achieving a valued outcome. But when form becomes the valued outcome, then it has turned into formalism.

      Hmm. Plug and chug. Remembering the formula is more important than actually being able to understand how it was derived or what its physical meaning is.

    7. Goodhart’s Law, which says: ‘When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.’

      add to clever lines series

    8. Content, meaning, style, originality and other such values are extraneous – nice but not necessary.

      can the same be said about research?

    9. The issue is this: as so often happens in subjects that are taught in school, the template designed as a means toward attaining some important end turns into an end in itself.

      qwerty effect?

    10. The point is that learning to write is extraordinarily difficult, and teaching people how to write is just as hard.

      Writing is a third order cognitive exercise

    1. Anything physical can be made virtual.

      Hmm. So we can simulate anything? To an extent?

  8. Jan 2018
    1. This is the intellectual tradition we work in. Take it or leave it.’

      epistemicide

    2. European intellectuals increasingly accepted and systematised views of white racial superiority that entailed that no non-Caucasian group could develop philosophy.

      intended epistemicide

  9. Dec 2017
    1. I realize he hadn’t felt left out, because he’d already left.

      Hmm, niceway to put it.

  10. Nov 2017
    1. indicating a cognitive interaction between motor production and visual recognition of letters. That’s one reason, incidentally, why it’s valuable to train children to write by hand at all, not just to use a keyboard.

      point to be discussed

    2. There’s also some suggestion that the difference in appearance between cursive and manuscript could inhibit the acquisition of reading skills, making it harder for children to transfer skills between learning to read and learning to write because they simply don’t see cursive in books.

      makes case for print type

    3. s. Because cursive writing is more challenging for motor coordination and for sheer complexity of the letters, some early research from the 1930s to the 1960s indicated that children develop their writing skills sooner and more legibly with manuscript.

      hmm

    4. It suggests that what teachers “know” about how children learn is sometimes more a product of the culture in which they’re immersed than a result of research and data.

      this is true for most of education

    5. There is ample evidence that writing by hand aids cognition in ways that typing does not:

      what type of evidence?

    1. The both of us agreed that the only reason we continue to write is because we love to write. And that the time spent in writing is the only time we feel are pure and sacred. I suspect it may be the kind of moments the spiritually inclined may feel when in prayer.

      Also Orwell's Why I Write

    2. They also imagine themselves as more intelligent than everybody else because they are professional critics often employed at a media house. So, they think it incumbent to criticise everything.

      hmm

    3. “If you think I lean to the Left, yes, I lean to the left, because I am among those who got left out.”

      lolwa! look so funny i am,

    4. To do that, he was deploying rhetoric, not logic.

      standard operating procedure

  11. Oct 2017
    1. When a new feature is evolved it's much easier to slap it on the end of existing embryonic development than to modify an intermediate stage where any change could cause cascading effects throughout the entire embryo.

      Hmm, how about the features which are old and modified?

    1. Medication ain’t hold a candle to how far away from your true self you feel during depression.

      hmmm

  12. Sep 2017
    1. According to our model, open forums such as Twitter, in which anyone can interact with anyone else, might be great for sharing information, but terrible at promoting cooperation between users. Institutions that encourage fewer, stronger connections might have a better shot at getting individuals to work together for their common good.

      hmm interesting

    2. for cooperation to thrive, a few strong ties are better than a myriad weak ones.

      weighted connections?

  13. Aug 2017
    1. . Because it was a choice of 0 or 1, it was a “binary digit.” In one of the only pieces of collaboration Shannon allowed on the entire project, he put it to a lunchroom table of his Bell Labs colleagues to come up with a snappier name. Binit and bigit were weighed and rejected, but the winning proposal was laid down by John Tukey, a Princeton professor working at Bell. Bit.

      Wow, didn't know Tukey named bit

    2. “He never argued his ideas. If people didn’t believe in them, he ignored those people,”

      Seems like many around us

  14. Jun 2017
    1. There are many subsystems. Not two, but dozens or hundreds or thousands of little mechanisms that are highly specialized and interact in our brain.

      Thinking in levels.

    2. Plants stay put, so they don’t need cognition. They stay in the same place. They don't take the risk of moving. Moving provides new opportunities, but also huge risks.

      Hmm.

    3. You can still overcome the limits of trust by producing arguments that they can evaluate on their own merits, and if they find that these arguments are good enough, then they will possibly be convinced by what you’re saying.    

      Can this be used in the classroom context?

    4. One way we converge is by reasoning together or by exchanging reasons and coming to see things in the same way.

      How can be this seen in the context of education?

    5. that what makes culture possible is high fidelity copying.

      How about the vedas?

    1. Plan 1

      We can have these as plans for different persons and ask for a comparative study of them. Another variation can be to choose for a plan for themselves and prove that the plan is better because... by graphical and algebraic means

  15. May 2017
    1. The internet is a copy machine. At its most foundational level, it copies every action, every character, every thought we make while we ride upon it. In order to send a message from one corner of the internet to another, the protocols of communication demand that the whole message be copied along the way several times.

      Right to copy is our birthright

  16. Apr 2017
    1. People experiencing unusually high levels of negative affect search for relief; if healthy and effective means are not available, they may choose dangerous means for palliation.

      what would count as healthy?

    1. Research distillation doesn’t have to be you, but it does have to be us.

      collaboration is paramount

    2. It’s tempting to think of explaining an idea as just putting a layer of polish on it, but good explanations often involve transforming the idea.

      marking a deviation from the standard

    3. Conversely, if we can’t explain an idea well, that’s often a sign that we don’t understand it as well as we could.

      This one is for teachers and teacher educators

  17. Nov 2016
    1. And you are an alarmist. You are saying that this must lead to this, and you can’t prove it. These are the beginnings, yes; but how do you know for sure when you don’t know the end, and how do you know, or even surmise, the end? On the one hand, your enemies, the law, the regime, the Party, intimidate you. On the other, your colleagues pooh-pooh you as pessimistic or even neurotic. You are left with your close friends, who are, naturally, people who have always thought as you have.

      don't be different attitude

    2. Uncertainty is a very important factor, and, instead of decreasing as time goes on, it grows. Outside, in the streets, in the general community, ‘everyone’ is happy. One hears no protest, and certainly sees none.

      mass happiness, perception management

    3. You see," my colleague went on, "one doesn’t see exactly where or how to move. Believe me, this is true. Each act, each occasion, is worse than the last, but only a little worse. You wait for the next and the next. You wait for one great shocking occasion, thinking that others, when such a shock comes, will join with you in resisting somehow. You don’t want to act, or even talk, alone; you don’t want to ‘go out of your way to make trouble.’ Why not?—Well, you are not in the habit of doing it. And it is not just fear, fear of standing alone, that restrains you; it is also genuine uncertainty.

      little steps

    4. Each step was so small, so inconsequential, so well explained or, on occasion, ‘regretted,’ that, unless one were detached from the whole process from the beginning, unless one understood what the whole thing was in principle, what all these ‘little measures’ that no ‘patriotic German’ could resent must some day lead to, one no more saw it developing from day to day than a farmer in his field sees the corn growing. One day it is over his head.

      asymptotically moving towards slow transformatio

    5. "The dictatorship, and the whole process of its coming into being, was above all diverting. It provided an excuse not to think for people who did not want to think anyway. I do not speak of your ‘little men,’ your baker and so on; I speak of my colleagues and myself, learned men, mind you. Most of us did not want to think about fundamental things and never had. There was no need to.

      Perception management

    6. This separation of government from people, this widening of the gap, took place so gradually and so insensibly, each step disguised (perhaps not even intentionally) as a temporary emergency measure or associated with true patriotic allegiance or with real social purposes. And all the crises and reforms (real reforms, too) so occupied the people that they did not see the slow motion underneath, of the whole process of government growing remoter and remoter.

      Isn't this what is happening now to us in India?

    7. Now you live in a world of hate and fear, and the people who hate and fear do not even know it themselves; when everyone is transformed, no one is transformed.

      Change in frame of reference

  18. Oct 2016
    1. Kuhn's own demarcation criterion is the capability of puzzle-solving that he sees as an essential characteristic of normal science.

      2

    2. Belief in authority: It is contended that some person or persons have a special ability to determine what is true or false. Others have to accept their judgments. Unrepeatable experiments: Reliance is put on experiments that cannot be repeated by others with the same outcome. Handpicked examples: Handpicked examples are used although they are not representative of the general category that the investigation refers to. Unwillingness to test: A theory is not tested although it is possible to test it. Disregard of refuting information: Observations or experiments that conflict with a theory are neglected. Built-in subterfuge: The testing of a theory is so arranged that the theory can only be confirmed, never disconfirmed, by the outcome. Explanations are abandoned without replacement. Tenable explanations are given up without being replaced, so that the new theory leaves much more unexplained than the previous one. (Hansson 1983)

      Multi criteria

    3. a research program is progressive if the new theories make surprising predictions that are confirmed. In contrast, a degenerating research programme is characterized by theories being fabricated only in order to accommodate known facts.

      1

    4. Popper's demarcation criterion has been criticized both for excluding legitimate science (Hansson 2006) and for giving some pseudosciences the status of being scientific

      Some examples in this regard

    5. science changes over time, science is heterogenous, and established science itself is not free of the defects characteristic of pseudoscience.

      These criteria present the crux of the demarcation problem in a way

    6. why fraud in science is not usually regarded as pseudoscientific.

      So what does it entail?

  19. Sep 2016
    1. I am asking what kinds of innovation are liable to produce radical change in how children learn.

      Constructionism vs instructionism

    2. bricolage

      In the practical arts and the fine arts, bricolage (French for "DIY" or "do-it-yourself projects") is the construction or creation of a work from a diverse range of things that happen to be available, or a work created by such a process. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bricolage

    3. vivent les differences!

      Long live the differences

    4. constructionism as a matter of "taste and preference" rather than a matter of "scientific truth."

      Is education a science?

    5. Constructionism--the N word as opposed to the V word--shares constructivism's connotation of learning as "building knowledge structures" irrespective of the circumstances of the learning. It then adds the idea that this happens especially felicitously in a context where the learner is consciously engaged in constructing a public entity, whether it's a sand castle on the beach or a theory of the universe.

      This is one definition of disctinction

    Annotators

  20. Feb 2016