I believe passionately in wonder. I believe in asking honest questions and striving for real answers. I believe in exploration and discovery. I get excited when I think of the immensity of things that remain unknown. It is our duty as humans to seek out the facts that can fill the gaps and chasms in our knowledge. Not only do I see this as our duty, but I embrace this idea and accept this challenge as an adventure that is worth the pursuit for its own sake.
We got up, packed up, and left the Gaia resort to visit Lassen. Before going anywhere, we had to visit the local Redding Wal-Mart for snacks and water and ice and things. We gassed up the car. Eventually we were heading east into the mountains. As we rose in elevation, we went from Utah-style scrub brush into thicker and thicker trees. We had to wait for a construction crew building some new huge road near the park, then got to the northern boundary after about an hour on the road.
Today was basically another travel day, but gave us more time and less distance so we were able to explore and have a little fun.
As we left our hotel, we swung by a local South San Francisco yacht club just to see the boats and the sights. There was a Miata owners club barbecue going on. The kids thought it was funny to see all the same model cars all parked in a row. The sight of the masts all reaching into the air with the San Francisco Bay in the background was nice.
It's better than it used to be traveling with kids. It still gets pretty miserable by evening, though. We left Jackson at 2:00pm CDT, spent a couple of hours in Dallas, then flew from Dallas to San Francisco from 5:30pm CDT to 7:00pm PDT. It's now 10:30, past midnight for the kids' internal clocks, and they've been ready to crash (though they wouldn't admit it verbally) for several hours, now.
We're staying in the Radisson near the airport. It's nice, seems comfortable. The indoor pool's open 'til 11.
Douglas Hofstadter wrote a book a few years ago entitled, "I Am a Strange Loop." I've been reading and enjoying it. He suggests that consciousness is a strange loop existing a level up from the physical reality of the brain. I'm wondering, however, if strange loops, as a mathematical construct, can explain everything in the universe that we have troubled ourselves over with beginnings and ends and finity. What would it mean to physics if all of our experience was exhaust from an underlying strange loop. Could we use the signature of the exhaust to explore the underlying reality?
I've been using putty for years. It's an absolutely fantastic tool for monitoring headless servers and cross-platform development. I don't think I've ever had a character set that was completely perfect, though. My most recent small frustration has been that rather than quotation marks, I get little 'a' characters with a carat over them. How you google for a specific character, which obviously differs depending on character set is completely beyond me. But I eventually found a solution and I'd like to share.
In the spirit of helping Google save those searching for help with cancer, I'm linking to the following blog entries that explain in more detail how Andreas Moritz is a quack. He's also probably an outright liar and exploiter; if not a liar, a well-meaning fool. Perhaps this is the difference between murder and manslaughter.
See more at:
Andreas Moritz at Respectful Insolence
Andreas Moritz at Pharyngula.
Post your own links to support truth and to prevent victims of cancer from being victims of Andreas Moritz.
I had a thought the other day that struck me as containing a lot of depth and wisdom. I've had the same thought many times before, and I'm certain that many others have had it before I have, but perhaps it struck me in a different context this time around.
Imagine winning a billion dollar lottery today and retiring tomorrow. Where would you live? What would you do with your time? Can you live there now? Can you be doing that now?
I have not even taken the time to find out what "Unscientific America" refers to, specifically. But I read this post on Pharyngula last night and was, again, impressed by PZ Myers' ability to lay it out.
http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2009/07/unscientific_america_and_thos...
Enjoy!
This is a recent email support conversation with Sprint. I understand that this isn't a huge deal. My question isn't terribly important. But the dialog really speaks for itself, here, so I'll hold my rant until the end.