Connectivity Amongst Friends

I’ve been using G-Mail as my main e-mail tool for a month or so.
It’s still beta but I’ve not had a single hitch – if Google can’t make it scale no-one can – and they’re offering a free Gig of mailbox space – it’s web-mail with POP3 capability and a neat threading interface – I love it.

I have 12 free GMail accounts to give anyway if anyone is interested.

Talking of beta connectivity – I just downloaded Grouper – like a personal VPN for file-sharing amongst groups using Napster / Kazaa style P2P approach. Anyone see any applications (beyond sharing music / pictures) and fancy giving it a try ?

(Use comments or e-mail on contact page if preferred.)

Norman Mailer on The Big Empty

Another article at Adbusters, taken from New York magazine.

Good message – capitalism & corporations are not intrinsically wrong per se, it’s the global corporate “culture” that is stultefying. The objective bottom-line value systems on which such coporations operate are so narrow (even if they “account” for environmental issues), that the quality is all “static”, the dynamic quality is driven out, flattened.

Evolution to new species needs isolation, as well as a supportive environment. Total global communication of memes is not necessarily a good thing. Competing ideas need space to flourish as well as compete, not drowning at birth.

Shelley’s Ozymandias

Reminded by Matt Bartlett of this poem (that I’d forgotten was Shelley !) that made a big impression on me at school.

Also picked-up on this Glen Colquhoun Link.

Also via Matt, this Vision of Christian Education – Our Cultural Context (1.7 Meg PDF link)

I like the contrasting Modernist and Post-Modernist “Apostle’s Creeds” that Matt extracts.

In Summary
Belief in progress through man’s scientific rationality vs belief in more than one context dependent truth, and science is not it.

Thanks Matt.

I met a traveller from an antique land,
Who said—”Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed;
And on the pedestal, these words appear:
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley

Quality Meme for 2005 ?

Could this take off into wider public awareness ? Here’s hoping.

This is one of Adbuster.Org’s Biggest Ideas for 2005 – called Clarity of Mind. Brought to my attention by David Hodgson [blogged here at Digital Falcon], via contact with Reed Burkhart.

Also from contact with Rudy van Stratum, links to the work of the late Dr Harvey Rosenberg via Meta-Gizmo Knowing the mechanics of a piece of HiFi Audio Equipment is as an-ashtray-on-a-motorcycle to knowing good quality sound when you hear it – parallel’s Pirsig’s motorcycle mechanics. The brain really is hard-wired by evolution to know quality / value / good / truth in ways that transcend objective analysis, etc. (also Minsky on music and humour too.)

[Quote from Meta-Gizmo] For those who know about [Quality], no explanation is necessary. For those who don’t, no explanation is possible. [Unquote] It’s that Catch-22 again – no explanation is possible – to a “western” brain.

The Clarity of Mind meme goes a step further … Clarity of Mind [and good decision making] is being lost in the western culture – the values of cold impersonal objectivism dominating subjective social interaction, for example. The signs are there, that without a change of mental culture, the end-game will be played out either in mental institutions or in drug-use, or both (or escapist games and reality TV perhaps).

Pirsig scholars (and many others) will empathise with that message. In fact the message is as old as man’s quest to understand life and values, but has been suppressed by the Aristotelian / Cartesian stanglehold on value systems in the west. If we don’t break that stranglehold sometime soon, the human brain may evolved to a point where that hard-wired-quality is lost forever. The bad memes lead the genes astray.

Adbuster’s biggest idea for 2005 is to place concern and action to improve our environment in terms of “mental ecology” at the same level the eco-movement has driven sustainable global ecology into public awareness, and the workings of political systems and economies in the last few decades. Good idea.