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Campus personalities present and past Rebecca C. Brown and Tommaso Sciortino tackle the issues. This week on a very special CalJunket: Rebecca learns not to chew with her mouth open and Tommaso finds out his best friend is addicted to no-doze. Site feed: caljunket.blogspot.com/atom.xml
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Saturday, January 31, 2004
I've been reading your alternate explanation for why the 2nd law doesn't apply and I still can't follow it. The reason the 2nd doesn't apply is exactly because we are not in a closed system and for no other reason. Chemical reactions that produce heat are still increasing entropy (disorder) and would eventually fizzle out in a closed system. Heat is energy, but it is non-recoverable as work. The point you are indicating (which to me seems to be a very different argument) is that certain creationists claim that the complexities apparent in life could not have evolved in the time necessary. This I think is a rather weak argument since any kind of calculation would make so many assumptions as to be meaningless. More interestingly, humans have a built in bias for how to solve problems and what we consider an “easy” or “complex” solution. For us, an easy solution is one that is similar to one used previously, to evolution an easy solution is one which uses a physical configuration similar to the one in currently in use. I studied this effect when I wrote a computer program to evolve programs to play chess. Without being told the rules, the “chess-bots” were forced to play each other and the worst playing ones got replaced with mutant versions of the better ones. I ran the program for 11 days continuously and churned through (literally) a million chess-bots and you know what? They really sucked. They could only last in the game for about 5 moves, mostly didling with the pawns. However, when I looked at how the chess-bots were making their decisions, I found a baffling array of equations and functions. Evolution had produced a crappy program for playing chess which was almost incomprehensibly complex to me. I know this isn’t going to convince anyone, but the point is, anyone who tells you that they know that life’s complexities are impossible or even improbable is speaking with the certainty that only blind faith can provide. And quite honestly, God didn’t give us our intellect so we could ignore it. Would it be nice for evolution if this point could be proved? Yes. Is it a fatal stumbling block? Hardly. It is well within reason to believe that it is possible, and certainly much more plausible than believing God would have set up the universe so poorly that he would have had to break his own laws to create life. On a different note, I have difficulty understanding the faith of those who wish to see physical law breaking miracles everywhere. (This is especially prevalent in the Catholic Italian community) I like to think that every physical law and rain drop and moving electron is a blessing and a miracle. Just because they happen everyday should not lead us to grow jaded and seek out miracles that contradict them. Perhaps it is because I take to heart the warning given to my patron saint, “You see and believe. Blessed are those who do not see, and believe.” Those who build their faith on what they see as physical evidence of God’s existence blind themselves to the true majesty of God’s creation. (0) comments Misguided religious doctrine and fact collide in Peach State; peanut farmer, former Commander in Chief, and Habitat for Humanity founder responds: Wednesday, January 28, 2004
No? Yeah, that's what I thought you'd say. Whatever. In other news, ASUC Apple senator Misha Leybovich has a groin of steel. (0) comments Blood, Sweat, and Tears Wednesday, January 21, 2004
Sigh. Looks like our vitriol will have to wait. In the meantime, Squelch has future comedy legend Arj Barker on Monday night. Just show up to the Bear's Lair before 8pm or find us on Sproul that day to buy tickets. He's one of the funniest men on the scene right now. (0) comments I'm retracting my prediction. Wednesday, January 14, 2004
My prediction, yet again, is that by the time the California primary rolls around, only Dean, Kerry, Gephart, Sharpton, and Kucinich will still be in. Lieberman, Edwards, and Clark will also stop spending their respective monies on an unwinnable campaign. I'm 60-40 on Gephart, and 80-20 in thinking that Kerry staying in. Sharpton and Kucinich, of course, have too much zeal (or stubburness?) to drop out. Kucinich is Nader in elf's clothing. Braun's drop and subsequent endorsment of Dean shows yet again that women can only mildly succeed in politics if they are total sell-outs. Index Arianna Huffington and Hillary Clinton. With the DC caucus under our belt, I'll be the first on CalJunket to say that they should get two senators and a representative. They have more people than Wyoming, and they pay federal taxes. I really don't see why there is even a debate on the matter. Speaking of how our nation is a federation, cheers to California for having the lowest smoking rates of any US state (besides Utah, of course) at 16.4%. Jeers to Kentucky at 32.6%. This just goes to show that if you make any semi-public smoking prohibtively difficult by law and thus contribute to decreased smoking rates, then you can gently ram nearly any value system down a population's throat. I'm totally for it, too. Of course general public opinion and mainstream culture values determine law, but to a small extent law can help change public opinion. Make butt sex legal and Joe Citizen might not be so grossed out by butt sex, says I. (0) comments BOOKSWAP!!! Saturday, January 10, 2004
Why then, do I bother arguing about for example, whether people are right to celebrate gay pride parades? The reason is I think that while people may not change their minds, hearing a countervailing opinion may dull the edge of their political will. It all goes back to feelings vs. beliefs. Although a lot of people would have you believe that feelings and beliefs often contradict, I posit that they less often in conflict than they appear. More often than not, if someone feels that (again, for example) it’s ok to cheat on a test, when asked they’ll say, “Really, I know it’s wrong… but I feel like I have too. I’m so conflicted!” What they actually mean “Really, I don’t believe it’s wrong, but let’s just pretend, OK?” They want to appear conflicted so they don’t have to feel the societal pressure of disapproval. This is why, though more people at my high school probably cheated then were Republican, the Young Republicans had a club and the cheaters did not. This faux-conflict is crucial. Since an individual’s interests will never be perfectly aligned with society’s it makes sense that society needs a way to dull the collective power of selfishness. Politics then, is not so much a battle to change people’s minds, but to change “society’s” mind. When a policy analyst tut-tuts Bush’s incoherent economic policy, she is not aiming to convert anyone. She is trying to introduce doubt into the mind of those with whom she disagrees. To turn them from a cohesive group who can organize and take affirmative action on their feelings, to a disorganized group unwilling to act collectively for fear of societal pressure. Regardless of how many people agree, if no one is willing to defend the ideology, or if the only people willing to do so are clearly fools*, then no effectively led movement can form. In Politics then, it pays to be able to justify your feelings. The Communists knew this and so they funded communist groups all around the world when they had the power to do so. In most of the developing world (where people had a real emotional hatred for the changes capitalism could bring) Communism was an acceptable school of thought, like any other. After the USSR fell, and the money dried up, these groups pretty much disappeared except where they had become part of the local power structure. It’s not like a bunch of hard core communists changed their mind the day after the Soviet collapse. Unable to socially justify their hate for capitalism, they slunk back into the shadows. Republican’s know the value of having a good argument, too. That’s why they’ve (or rather, their many rich, rich benefactors) spent billions supporting think tanks, policy forums, and whole media enterprises in order to come up with some logic behind their… well, I guess I’m partisan now, so I’ll say it: the logic behind their anti-social agenda. After all, you know and I know that it’s wrong to steal from your children to pay your own debts, but if you have someone muddle along while occasionally saying the words "supply side economics" for half an hour, it suddenly seems to be a matter of opinion. It’s all a struggle to take ideas that would never pass the giggle test (like the idea that businesses can regulate themselves) and make them socially acceptable. This same system can work in society’s favor as well. If the Republicans (with a little NAFTA help from Bill Clinton to work the tough crowd) hadn’t done a good job pushing the logical reasons for free trade, the US would have missed out on the economic benefits and opted for protectionism and stagnation instead. This effect isn't the whole story. Given enough time people actually will change their minds, but in the meantime, it is my honor to participate in this contest of ideas. Now, if only I had a dependable intelligent and respectable opposition. * Tommaso’s favorite blogging moment of 2003: Capitalist Worker referring to Petty Bourgeois as a “researcher in the field of Chicano nationalism”. Update: fixed some gramatical errors and enahnced USSR section. (0) comments HR3687 Lays the Smack Down
The Heuristic Squelch is back in action this week, and the guts of our magazine go to the printer on Wednesday, January 14 at midnight. That means you have six days to submit any funny articles, newsflashes, top tens, page 18s, or generally funny ideas and try to convince us to put it in our issue. submit@squelched.com. Also, if you have any Adobe InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator, or PageMaker skills, or if you have business skills and are looking to be a member of the coolest group on campus, drop us a line. feedback@squelched.com. Look for the new issue on Sproul or in you dorm, frat, or co-op the first day of school. (0) comments |