insufficiently advanced

Corollary to Clarke's Third Law: Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.

2007/01/23

Blogging for Choice: Why I am pro-choice


Blog for Choice Day - January 22, 2007


I am pro-choice -- by which I mean that I consider it immoral for the government to interfere with a person's reproductive decisions -- because I consider a person's self-ownership to be fundamental. That is to say, I consider my body to be under my control. I likewise consider other people's bodies to be under their control. The only legitimate limit on this self-ownership begins when an individual's decision regarding his or her own body has a non-trivial chance of negatively affecting another person more than limit affects the individual.

Additionally, I am not an essentialist. I do not consider a human blastocyst to be the moral equivalent of a human infant. In fact, I consider it morally incorrect to assert this equivalence. The only justification for asserting such a moral equivalence is either essentialism or a ridiculously reductionist definition of "person." This seems so blindingly obvious to me that I am surprised that the opinion is not universally understood.

2006/11/08

Evidently, Virginia is for hate-filled bigots

It seems that 57% of voting Virginians have such fragile marriages that allowing gays to decide who gets to visit them in the hospital, or who gets to inherit their property, or who gets default next of kin status will topple their loveless unions. Not happy with legislation outlawing gay marriage, these cowardly little people had to write their hate-filled bigotry in the Constitution of the Commonwealth. I can't imagine having a marriage so pathetic and loveless that the thought of gay people entering into civil marriage (there are plenty who can enter into a religious marriage through the United Church of Christ among others -- sorry bigots) endangers it. But a shitload of Virginians have admitted that is the best that they could have. I am sickened.

2006/01/25

What is Science?

In recent months, I have joined a group dedicated to the promotion of science, The Alliance for Science. There was recently a call for position statements for the website, which I am in the process of writing. In my research, I came across this speech on the title topic by Richard Feynman. It is a wonderful speech despite the sexism in parts. His definition of science is spot on. He starts by building up to a description of the development "intelligence" first as individuals solving problems, then as individuals communicating experience and ideas to other individuals creating a cultural "race memory." He continues
This phenomenon of having a memory for the race, of having an accumulated knowledge passable from one generation to another, was new in the world--but it had a disease in it: it was possible to pass on ideas which were not profitable for the race. The race has ideas, but they are not necessarily profitable.

So there came a time in which the ideas, although accumulated very slowly, were all accumulations not only of practical and useful things, but great accumulations of all types of prejudices, and strange and odd beliefs.

Then a way of avoiding the disease was discovered. This is to doubt that what is being passed from the past is in fact true, and to try to find out ab initio again from experience what the situation is, rather than trusting the experience of the past in the form in which it is passed down. And that is what science is: the result of the discovery that it is worthwhile rechecking by new direct experience, and not necessarily trusting the [human] race['s] experience from the past. I see it that way. That is my best definition.
That is a good definition. He boils it down to one sentence later in the speech "Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts."

Over at ScienceBlogs, Chad Orzel's Uncertain Principles has put out a call for votes for the Greatest Physics Experiment, offering up eleven candidates. One of the candidates is Galileo, for two experiments. One of them, the one on the motion of objects, I remember having to reproduce in high school. Galileo timed balls of different weights as they rolled down inclined planes to see if heavier ones reached the bottom of the run before the lighter ones. Aristotle had claimed that they would. That's what my "common-sense" told me before I did the experiment. But as anyone who has done the experiment remembers, it's not true that heavier balls reach the bottom before lighter balls. My common-sense had mislead me. I had fooled myself into thinking that I knew something -- something that was in fact false.

So I would add to Feynman's one-line definition something else, also said by Feynman: "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself - and you are the easiest person to fool." Thus, science is the belief in the ignorance of experts, and in the misleading nature of common sense. It is a method for minimizing the influence of biases; for weeding out "all types of prejudices, and strange and odd beliefs."

2006/01/13

ACLU Derangement

Over at the wonderfully named Dispatches from the Culture Wars, Ed Brayton has a few interesting posts on The ACLU Derangement Syndrome, which he got from Eugene Volokh, who named it after various earlier derangement syndroms. As Ed explains it:
The idea is that some subjects prompt such anger in some people that they are incapable of thinking rationally about that subject.
The ACLU derangement is, I think, frequently the result of an inability to distinguish between religious exercise by private parties and government preference for or sponsorship of a class of religions. The ACLU regularly opposes the government in latter case and defends private parties in the former case. I have run across quite a few people who feel that witholding government sponsorship of their religion is an infringement on their free exercise (rather than a limitation on government power,) and who thus view the ACLU as opposed to the free exercise of religion (particularly theirs.) They view the ACLU defense of religious exercise as inconsistent with their experience, and either ignore it outright or dismiss it as "window dressing."

2006/01/10

Creationism: Hijacking the Book of Genesis

This meeting of The Alliance for Science may be of interest to those in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area who follow the political origins debate.

(from the original flyer:)
THE ALLIANCE FOR SCIENCE (AfS)

Creationism: Hijacking the Book of Genesis


by

PAUL S. FORBES,

Co-Chairman of the Alliance for Science

Creationists oppose evolution because they claim it contradicts the inerrant word of God as revealed in the Book of Genesis. Does it? Learn what archaeology and the study of ancient texts reveal about Genesis and its origins.

Wednesday, January 25

7:00 to 9:00 PM

OAKTON HIGH SCHOOL, LECTURE ROOM

2900 SUTTON ROAD {Enter Door #5}

VIENNA, VA 22181

{The Vienna/Fairfax-GMU Metro Stop on the Orange Line}

The meeting will also address:
  • The Clergy Project (a new member of the AfS Council) and Darwin Sunday, February 12
  • The preparations for the AfS launch at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) national meeting on February 19 in St. Louis MO
  • Current status of the organization and how you can help

The Alliance for Science
The mission of the Alliance for Science is to achieve public understanding and support for science, and to preserve the separation of science and religion
info@allianceforscience.org


Directions to the Meeting:
  • From I-495, the capital beltway, take I-66 West.
  • Exit I-66 at Nutley Street, which is the first set of exits outside the beltway.
  • The Nutley Street exit is a long service road with three separate exit points.
  • Go to the 3rd and last of these exits. The sign will say, "Metro Parking."
  • Take the "Metro Parking" exit to a traffic light at Country Creek Road.
  • Turn left onto Country Creek Road. Oakton High School is dead ahead.
  • Go to the 4-way stop at Sutton Road.
  • Go straight through the stop sign into the Oakton High School parking lot.
Parking is available on all sides of the school, but the parking lot in the rear is larger, and is closer to the auditorium. If you park in the rear, enter the school at Entrance # 5.


2006/01/09

Ten answers to ten questions

I am probably not the target of these questions, since I am not pro-immediate withdrawal, but I found them interesting none-the-less. I probably would have left answers to a few of the ones I found more compelling as a comment over on Positive Liberty, but comments were closed. Since this is more than a comment, I will answer them all.
1) When, if ever, is preemptive war is justified?
I'll assume that "war" means a commitment of U.S. military forces with the intent of overthrowing a government. Grenada was a war by this definition. When
  • there is a consensus that there is a imminent and specific threat to United States interests to preempt
  • the evidence for and against the imminence of this specific threat has been communicated to the American people
  • there is sufficient political support for a universal draft to support the war effort
Anything short of that, and a preemptive war is not justified.
2) When, if ever, is the United States justified in removing a foreign dictator from power?
When said dictator has comitted an act of war against the United States or against someone with whom the United States has treaty obligations with which require our intervention; in the situation covered in question 1; and in the case of a broad international consensus action which is also supported by the citizenry.
3) Do you agree with the position—recently quoted approvingly on this blog by Dr. Kuznicki—that Islamic terrorism is not a serious threat, but a hobgoblin used by the Bush Administration to increase its authority?
To some extent. I think the administration's failing is not so much in the overstatement of the threat of terrorism as in the conflation of that threat with the problems in Iraq.
4) Precisely what (if anything) do you propose the United States do about the Iranian nuclear weapons program?
The same thing we do about the North Korean nuclear weapons program.
5) Do you believe that the United States should defend Israel, either militarily, by the sale of arms, or in other ways (please specify)?
Yes. I also think that the U.S. should call Israel on violations of international law no more (and no less, not that that has been a real issue) than it calls Syria, the PA or Saudi Arabia on such violations.
6) Can you name a specific case in which an American dissenter, not actually affiliated with a terrorist organization, has been jailed or otherwise deprived of civil rights under the PATRIOT Act?
Can you name a specific case in which a specific act of terrorism was prevented for each provision of the PATRIOT Act? I don't need a specific case of bad faith on the part of the federal government to question giving it some power or other; the government needs to give me some justification for ceding to it a given power.
7) Do you believe that we ought to remove American troops from Iraq immediately, regardless of the consequences to Iraqis?
No. However, I do believe that the Iraqis should have a say in the matter.
8) With regard to interrogation or incarceration: do you believe that infringements of religious sensitivities (e.g., mistreating the Koran) or personal sensibilities (e.g., making men wear women’s underwear on their heads) ought to be regarded as comparable with physical torture?
No. But I should note that being "regarded as comparable with physical torture" is an extremely low bar.
9) What, if any, legal consequences do you believe flow from a declaration of war?
I disagree with Clarence Thomas that executive actions are immune from judicial review after a congressional authorization of military force. The executive should be given some latitude during a time of war, but that does not exempt it from review.
10) Do you believe that the Bush Administration purposely manipulated intelligence information in order to persuade the Congress to authorize military intervention in Iraq?
I do believe that the "mushroom cloud" language used by the administration was intentionally hyperbolic. I believe that the administration did not share the caveats of the intelligence community regarding the threat of Saddam Hussein with the people in order to minimize opposition to the war. I also believe that the reasons that motivated the administration to war in Iraq, the establishment of a Democracy (other than Israel) in the Middle East, did not have the support of the American people, and that the administration intentionally overstated the threat of Iraq and intentionally mingled references to the threat of Saddam Hussein with references to September 11th in order to generate additional support. And I believe that these actions have had the effect that you cite in this earlier post (quoting Angelo Codevillia)
The United States is not at peace, and it is not making war. To this extent alone the accusation of empire—the dawdling kind that wastes its core resources—sticks. If we continue to trifle with empire rather than establishing peace, we shall reap stalemate, retreat, and the domestic strife that is empire’s bitterest consequence.
The Bush administration brought us into war without the full and informed support of the American people, and without an adequate post-war strategy. Bush should have listened to his father:
"Had we gone the invasion route, the United States could conceivably still be an occupying power in a bitterly hostile land. It would have been a dramatically different--and perhaps barren--outcome."
--George Herbert Walker Bush, A World Transformed, 1998
By ignoring this, George W. Bush has harmed our country.

2006/01/06

Idolators

My opinion is that there is a very thin line between belief in the existence of a personal god and idolatry. The type of idolatry varies, but it is my experience that fundamentalists of all stripes worship a personification of their own prejudices. It is not sufficient that they think someone is wrong, it must also be the GOD has declared that the aforementioned someone is WRONG! The variant of fundamentalist matters little. The Washington Post adds another data point in support of my position.
Iranian Leader, Evangelist Call Prime Minister's Illness Deserved

By Alan Cooperman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 6, 2006; Page A12

The television evangelist Pat Robertson and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad may not agree on much, but both suggested yesterday that the severe illness of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was deserved. Both men's comments were immediately condemned by religious leaders.

Speaking on his Christian Broadcasting Network's "700 Club," which says it has 1 million viewers, Robertson said God was punishing Sharon for dividing the land of Israel. Sharon, who engineered Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip last year, suffered a massive stroke Wednesday.

...

Ahmadinejad, elected in June, previously made headlines by calling the Holocaust a myth. "Hopefully, the news that the criminal of Sabra and Chatilla has joined his ancestors is final," he was quoted by the Iranian press as saying yesterday.
Those who interpret various disasters as evidence of their dieties' agreement with them are despicable.