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Posts Tagged ‘opinion’

Homeless, Unemployed and Yet Mocked by Judge

In Singapore on August 21, 2009 at 10:58 pm

I just came across this article in the Straits Times, “Jailed for living in illegal tent”

“Homeless and unemployed, Noor Mohammad Yassin Ismail pitched a canvas tent at East Coast Park in May, 2007, and lived there for almost a month – without a lease or licence to do so. He was discovered on June 26 of that year, after he was apprehended by park rangers.

In court on Tuesday, Noor was asked to produce his Identity Card or passport but he said that he had lost both items.

It prompted District Judge Mr Shaiffudin Saruwan to retort in jest: ‘I suggest you use a bicycle chain to tie yourself to a tree or you may lose yourself as well.’

Pleading for leniency, Noor, who is tanned and skinny, said that he seldom ate, only doing so if friends gave him food. He added that his mother is paralysed and looked after by a younger sibling, while an elder sister does not care about him. He was fined $800 but could not afford to pay the fine so he was jailed four days instead. He could have been fined up to $2,000.”

This is unequivocally ridiculous. The callousness of the Judge Sharuwan is appalling on many levels. Though Mr. Noor might have been careless or irresponsibility with regards to his Identity Card and passport, I understand why he could not get it replaced. The replacement of the first loss of an IC costs $100, while subsequent misplacements cost $300 to replace, as set by the Immigration Checkpoints Authority.

A homeless, unemployed, penniless man straggling through life, relying on sustenance from occasional food donations from friends. I hardly find his situation deserving of the judge’s indifferent, un-compassionate mock.

Altruism and The Ethics of Reciprocity – “Do Unto Others as You Would Have Them Do Unto You”

In philosophy on December 9, 2008 at 5:06 pm

“Do not impose unto others what you do not desire yourself.” – Confucius

This phrase mirrors phrases in countless other scriptures, holy books and self-help guides. The ethics of reciprocity is a moral fundamental born from social interaction itself. It also illuminates the biological and hence, psychological ability for empathy.

It is degrading to say that any wise man was wise for having thought of it. Nor is it meaningful to label such a fundamental as exclusive to one’s religion.

It is as simple as, feeling sad when another fellow is grieving for his deceased loved ones. As straightforward as feeling indignant when a friend is incarcerated on false accusation. As fundamental as understanding punishment, pain and suffering, that we revolt at its use (even our own) towards another human being.

In this sense, this particular moral, is not a learned moral, but is typical and universal of human beings, and probably of all social animals others than ourselves.

You could also see this particular moral as being a social tool, to weed out selfish individuals who might be leeching from the benefits of the group. Knowing who does not reciprocate is hence a useful gauge of one’s cooperation, trustworthiness and personality. In social groups where this is a universal fundamental, it would therefore be most advantageous for all members of the group to exhibit reciprocation. “You scratch my back, and I’ll scratch yours”, so to speak.

Allow me to broaden your perspectives further, biological entities are typically selfish, or euphemistically, act upon self-interest. This is a truism. Because if we had evolved to not be selfish (excluding animals in social groups for the moment), then we would have died out long ago, for we would be outcompeted by our rivals quite simply. True altriusm, is not an Evolutionary Stable Strategy (forgive the biology jargon), because if selfish individuals arose in  a population of selfless beings, the selfish individual will outcompete, outlast and reap all the benefits from all the suckers around it.

In this sense, the selfish individuals will breed and proliferate in much greater number. And the selfless individuals who are short-changed, breed and proliferate to a smaller degree. Through generations of differential reproduction, the selfish individuals will start to overtake and become the predominant group of the population. Eventually, the last sucker might be short-changed so badly, that it might eventually perish under the competition.

You might be thinking, how does selflessness manifest then? Why are certain people constantly being portrayed as selfless, friendly and exceedingly helpful? Surely, that couldn’t possibly exist, if my explanation were true.

My explanation still stands because of two things.

I assumed the earlier population to be that of a non-social animal. Social groups deal with adversity in a different way. The group works in favour of both the individual’s needs balanced with the group’s. It might seem valuable, in certain situations to have one’s own needs to be fulfilled with the compromise of “social tribute” to the group in the form of reciprocations, sharing etc, than if one worked alone, and risked not satisfying one’s own basic needs due to the lack of help.

Also, while being selfish would certainly be a winning strategy in a group of friendly people, that might not really sit well with the members of the group. We all recall incidents or experiences with people where our friendliness or help have been taken without reciprocation, or even more preposterously returned with a stab in the back, or more mildly, taken for granted.

Equity, justice, fairness. These values arose from simple social and biological interactions such as empathy and reciprocation.

Secondly, and of more controversiality, is the different kind of reward that reciprocation brings – happiness. We couldn’t have relied on such a complex moral issue on pure rationality only. We must definitely have evolved a neurological (biological) way of rewarding our brain whenever such behaviour is carried out.

This might seem blasphemous that altruism and selflessness are performed in self-interest or pleasure, but allow me to explain. Many biological and social functions are dealt with biochemically. Thirst and hunger are biochemical. Libido is dealt with by the sex hormones. Happiness is biochemical (Recent studies have shown that an addiction to alcohol, smoking, exercise is due to an increasing de-sensitivity to the “happy chemical”, otherwise known as dopamine, which gives us the feeling of euphoria and temporary happiness). Empathy is a mixture of both neurological and biochemical inputs. How these are exactly elicited, is still being studied.

So, quite simply, the feeling of happiness and contentment associated with altruism and all those happy volunteers proud to have done their part is an adaptation to ensure that we keep to this social function. Morality seems so much less sacred as it is philosophy. It is biology.

In a nutshell, we are selfless, because we are selfish but sacrificed a bit of the reward for more certainty in the success of survival

How do social groups form then?

Obviously, social groups are exclusive entities, in that the members satisfy a certain list of club entry requirements. For humans, we might be at the extreme end of the spectrum, when it comes to the club entry requirements, but we’re not alike from other social animals in other respects. Most groups are formed out of this mutual cooperation or altruism. But what are the criteria?

In biology, there exist two hypothesis to explain altruism - Kin Altruism and Reciprocal Altruism. Kin Altruism is straightforward. Our family, or closely related family members, share many genes in common, due to our relatedness. Hence, it would be advantageous, for the gene (and the individual carrying it) to help members of one’s own family. This may appear to dilute familial love, but as I mentioned, familial love might be similar to how happiness manifests – as a biochemical, psychological and neurological phenomenon, for purposes I have already mentioned. If my body didn’t tell me via this means, that familial love is such a wonderful thing, I might end up treating family members as competition, which fundamentally, really is. It’s either a social family group helping the whole bunch of the same combinations of genes, or the chance that the entire group may be outcompeted by others or by each other and perish. Again, it’s perhaps a trade-off of probabilities.

Reciprocal Altruism has already been elaborated earlier. To summarize once more, it basically means, that I would “scratch your back, if you will scratch mine”. It can also be put in more crude terms, that one is selfless, only in one’s self-interest, and in the case of groups, in the group’s interest, as well.

So, in summary, social groups probably formed from reasons of increased survivability relative to the hardships of individual survival. They evolved in species that found it increasingly difficult to manage at the level of an individual and might be due to kinship, or simple benefits of mutual cooperation. Society or social groups is merely one of the many strategies that the biodiversity of this Earth has employed. Co-evolved with social behaviour is biochemistry, neurology, psychology, all of which manifested in our ability for emotion, empathy, sympathy, which then doubled as social “tools”.

Ultimately, I hope this essay does not put you off, because of various reasons relating to personal beliefs, religion or disagreement. You are welcome to ask me should you have questions. You are also welcome to argue with me, and point out logical flaws in this essay I might have missed out. My case is that morality and most, if not all morals, has a evolutionary origin. It is as I mentioned, degrading to say that any wise man were wise to have stumbled across moral truths, and self-righteous to give credit to religion for these values. It is also ignorant, to not accept or discuss or research further, into this, to understand ourselves, as a species, better.

Proper Nuclear Safety? Blah, Blah, Blah, Says John McCain. Literally.

In alternative energy, green policy, green politics, nuclear power on October 27, 2008 at 11:30 am

 

Source: “Proper Nuclear Safety? Blah, Blah, Blah, Says John McCain. Literally.“, treehugger.com. Business & Politics, Brian Merchant, 26th Oct 2008

At a campaign stop in Iowa today, presidential candidate John McCain touched on the importance of expanding nuclear power operations in the US. In his speech, McCain seemed to appeal to his party’s base when he drew laughs and cheers after saying the following:

“You know the other night in the debate with Senator Obama, I said his eloquence is admirable, but pay attention to his words—we talked about offshore drilling and he said he would quote ‘consider’ offshore drilling. We talked about nuclear power. Well, it has to be safe, environment, blah, blah, blah. And the fact is—”

This is where the crowd erupts in cheers, effectively cutting him off for a moment. He continues:

“Ask any navy veterans here, by the way, by the way, some of the greatest sailors come farthest away from the ocean, I found that to be true. Ask some of our navy veterans here, they’ll tell you, we’ve been sailing navy ships around the world for 50 years with nuclear power plants on them. I have news for Senator Obama: Nuclear power is safe. We ought to do it now.”

The logic, as I best understand it is as follows: Nuclear power is safe because some US navy ships carry nuclear reactors and have been sailing around for 50 years.

A critical assessment of that claim yields, at best, a severe lack of concern over nuclear power safety issues. Even though the statement was made at a campaign rally, where claims are notoriously bereft of hard policy, it demonstrates a few disconcerting aspects of John McCain’s philosophy towards nuclear power. Depending on how it’s interpreted, it displays either

1. A lack of a well considered plan of dealing with perhaps the most hazardous energy byproducts created by man, or,
2. A willingness to gloss over important details when rallying support for a plan, and appealing to an emotional element over a factual analysis when doing so.

Either one is alarming. And either could shed light on McCain’s potential conduct at the helm of an administration. Nuclear energy has long been a focal point of McCain’s campaign. On McCain’s website, he states that “nuclear power is a proven, zero-emission source of energy, and it is time we recommit to advancing our use of nuclear power.” But when he displays such nonchalance regarding the safe disposal ofnuclear waste, it’s difficult to view his energy strategy as being as adequately nuanced as it should be—nuclear power is perhaps the most serious, complicated energy source there is. Reducing the difficulties harnessing it presents to such slogan-esque “Drill, Baby, Drill” rhetoric is simply inappropriate, and potentially dangerous.

More on John McCain’s Nuclear Power Plans:
The Nuclear Option: McCain V. Obama on Nuclear Power
John McCain Reveals He’s a Nuclear Power NIMBY

Green Media Outreach: An Analysis

In Uncategorized on June 5, 2008 at 10:08 pm

 

That explains why the Channel NewsAsia logo at the bottom left of your TV screen takes on a green hue.

Logos on the other TV channels, as well as the mastheads for TODAY, 8 Days and i-weekly, have also adopted the same colour change. Channel NewsAsia presenters, too, are donning green. 

All these as MediaCorp launched its second ‘Saving Gaia’ initiative on Thursday. 

Various programmes and activities have been planned, with environment awareness in mind. These include the Gaia Life Challenge to be held at Bugis Junction from 21-24 June. Details are available at www.savinggaia.sg

While online, you can pledge your commitment to the environment. 

On air, advertisements will take on a strong public service message highlighting issues such as global warming, pollution and the depletion of natural resources. 

Arts Central will feature environment-related programmes. 

And, the “Saving Gaia” documentary returns for a second season on Channel NewsAsia. 

At the same time, MediaCorp’s radio stations will feature special segments and music carrying the green theme. 

The green issue will also take centrestage in MediaCorp publications like Style: Living, 8 Days and i-weekly. 

 

Source:

MediaCorp goes green in support of World Environment Day, Latest News, Channel News Asia Online, 5th June 2008

My Comments:

Its an extremely good start. Media social and environmental responsibility is probably the best conduit for public awareness as opposed to more group level talks, tours, speeches etc. But both must work in concert, if any meaningful impact were to occur. Media is always constrained by the lack of air time, other agendas, goals etc. Hence, more personal, group level educating is necessary to push understanding, maturity of ideas, informed opinion to a further level. This is obviously an oversimplification of issues, but it is a mere example of the different roles, not necessarily mutually exclusive ones at that, that the two general forms of outreach can take.

On a second note, media outreach has another kind of sociological effect. For one thing, environmentalism, or at least “Greenism”, wouldn’t be as compelling or appealing if there isn’t some kind of societal pressure to adopt these lifestyle and mindset changes. For example, a certain hotel (the exact details elude me) performed a certain experiment within its own establishment. At first, they had messages on water conservation put up in the toilets of all their rooms. The reasons, they gave, for water wastage were on how harmful its impact was on the local environment. There weren’t any statistics; it was a simple straightforward statement.

Expectedly, there was hardly any change to water consumption. So, they chose to try out a different approach. Instead of simply stating the negative impacts of water wastage, they put up a statistic that 70% of the other guests on average were also doing so. 

This time, they got results.

My point, as you might have surmised, is that sometimes, people simply do things because others are doing so too, like some sort of conformity in mindsets. Like an equilibrating social standard, which encompasses moral issues, social responsibilities etc.

Now applying this back to Mediacorp’s initiatives. It could be perceived by the general public that such changes in programming, could be due to a change in societal perspectives, from the majority of the “others”. And viola, a runaway effect of a gradually greening zeitgeist is born. It will be slow, but it will eventually happen. It could also be due to a similar form of influence or pressure from other the Green Zeitgeist in other countries, where such issues have grown to become a significant consideration in lifestyle, politics, industry, consumerism etc, that Mediacorp may have chosen to ride to boost viewership or improve its reputation. The results are arguable. And I suppose only Mediacorp will have the results on viewership.

Of course, things aren’t nearly so simple. So let’s continue with our Green ways, or start on it (for new Green Peeps), and watch the whole “Green Zeitgeist ” unfold.

The Cosmic Perspective

In Uncategorized on May 12, 2008 at 10:44 pm
The Cosmic Perspective

© Neil deGrasse Tyson
From Natural History magazine, April 2007

________________________________________________________

Of all the sciences cultivated by mankind, Astronomy is acknowledged to be, and undoubtedly is, the most sublime, the most interesting, and the most useful. For, by knowledge derived from this science, not only the bulk of the Earth is discovered . . . ; but our very faculties are enlarged with the grandeur of the ideas it conveys, our minds exalted above [ their ] low contracted prejudices.

—James Ferguson, Astronomy Explained Upon Sir Isaac Newton’s Principles, And Made Easy To Those Who Have Not Studied Mathematics(1757)

Long before anyone knew that the universe had a beginning, before we knew that the nearest large galaxy lies two and a half million light-years from Earth, before we knew how stars work or whether atoms exist, James Ferguson’s enthusiastic introduction to his favorite science rang true. Yet his words, apart from their eighteenth-century flourish, could have been written yesterday.

But who gets to think that way? Who gets to celebrate this cosmic view of life? Not the migrant farmworker . Not the sweatshop worker. Certainly not the homeless person rummaging through the trash for food. You need the luxury of time not spent on mere survival. You need to live in a nation whose government values the search to understand humanity’s place in the universe. You need a society in which intellectual pursuit can take you to the frontiers of discovery, and in which news of your discoveries can be routinely disseminated. By those measures, most citizens of industrialized nations do quite well.

Yet the cosmic view comes with a hidden cost. When I travel thousands of miles to spend a few moments in the fast-moving shadow of the Moon during a total solar eclipse, sometimes I lose sight of Earth.

When I pause and reflect on our expanding universe, with its galaxies hurtling away from one another, embedded within the ever-stretching, four-dimensional fabric of space and time, sometimes I forget that uncounted people walk this Earth without food or shelter, and that children are disproportionately represented among them.

When I pore over the data that establish the mysterious presence of dark matter and dark energy throughout the universe, sometimes I forget that every day—every twenty-four-hour rotation of Earth—people kill and get killed in the name of someone else’s conception of God, and that some people who do not kill in the name of God kill in the name of their nation’s needs or wants.

When I track the orbits of asteroids, comets, and planets, each one a pirouetting dancer in a cosmic ballet choreographed by the forces of gravity, sometimes I forget that too many people act in wanton disregard for the delicate interplay of Earth’s atmosphere, oceans, and land, with consequences that our children and our children’s children will witness and pay for with their health and well-being.

And sometimes I forget that powerful people rarely do all they can to help those who cannot help themselves.

I occasionally forget those things because, however big the world is—in our hearts, our minds, and our outsize atlases—the universe is even bigger. A depressing thought to some, but a liberating thought to me.

Consider an adult who tends to the traumas of a child: a broken toy, a scraped knee, a schoolyard bully. Adults know that kids have no clue what constitutes a genuine problem, because inexperience greatly limits their childhood perspective.

As grown-ups, dare we admit to ourselves that we, too, have a collective immaturity of view? Dare we admit that our thoughts and behaviors spring from a belief that the world revolves around us? Apparently not. And the evidence abounds. Part the curtains of society’s racial, ethnic, religious, national, and cultural conflicts, and you find the human ego turning the knobs and pulling the levers.

Now imagine a world in which everyone, but especially people with power and influence, holds an expanded view of our place in the cosmos. With that perspective, our problems would shrink—or never arise at all—and we could celebrate our earthly differences while shunning the behavior of our predecessors who slaughtered each other because of them.

* * *

Back in February 2000, the newly rebuilt Hayden Planetarium featured a space show called “Passport to the Universe,” which took visitors on a virtual zoom from New York City to the edge of the cosmos. En route the audience saw Earth, then the solar system, then the 100 billion stars of the Milky Way galaxy shrink to barely visible dots on the planetarium dome.

Within a month of opening day, I received a letter from an Ivy League professor of psychology whose expertise was things that make people feel insignificant. I never knew one could specialize in such a field. The guy wanted to administer a before-and-after questionnaire to visitors, assessing the depth of their depression after viewing the show. “Passport to the Universe,” he wrote, elicited the most dramatic feelings of smallness he had ever experienced.

How could that be? Every time I see the space show (and others we’ve produced), I feel alive and spirited and connected. I also feel large, knowing that the goings-on within the three-pound human brain are what enabled us to figure out our place in the universe.

Allow me to suggest that it’s the professor, not I, who has misread nature. His ego was too big to begin with, inflated by delusions of significance and fed by cultural assumptions that human beings are more important than everything else in the universe.

In all fairness to the fellow, powerful forces in society leave most of us susceptible. As was I . . . until the day I learned in biology class that more bacteria live and work in one centimeter of my colon than the number of people who have ever existed in the world. That kind of information makes you think twice about who—or what—is actually in charge.

From that day on, I began to think of people not as the masters of space and time but as participants in a great cosmic chain of being, with a direct genetic link across species both living and extinct, extending back nearly 4 billion years to the earliest single-celled organisms on Earth.

* * *

I know what you’re thinking: we’re smarter than bacteria.

No doubt about it, we’re smarter than every other living creature that ever walked, crawled, or slithered on Earth. But how smart is that? We cook our food. We compose poetry and music. We do art and science. We’re good at math. Even if you’re bad at math, you’re probably much better at it than the smartest chimpanzee, whose genetic identity varies in only trifling ways from ours. Try as they might, primatologists will never get a chimpanzee to learn the multiplication table or do long division.

If small genetic differences between us and our fellow apes account for our vast difference in intelligence, maybe that difference in intelligence is not so vast after all.

Imagine a life-form whose brainpower is to ours as ours is to a chimpanzee’s. To such a species our highest mental achievements would be trivial. Their toddlers, instead of learning their ABCs on Sesame Street, would learn multivariable calculus on Boolean Boulevard. Our most complex theorems, our deepest philosophies, the cherished works of our most creative artists, would be projects their schoolkids bring home for Mom and Dad to display on the refrigerator door. These creatures would study Stephen Hawking (who occupies the same endowed professorship once held by Newton at the University of Cambridge) because he’s slightly more clever than other humans, owing to his ability to do theoretical astrophysics and other rudimentary calculations in his head.

If a huge genetic gap separated us from our closest relative in the animal kingdom, we could justifiably celebrate our brilliance. We might be entitled to walk around thinking we’re distant and distinct from our fellow creatures. But no such gap exists. Instead, we are one with the rest of nature, fitting neither above nor below, but within.

* * *

Need more ego softeners? Simple comparisons of quantity, size, and scale do the job well.

Take water. It’s simple, common, and vital. There are more molecules of water in an eight-ounce cup of the stuff than there are cups of water in all the world’s oceans. Every cup that passes through a single person and eventually rejoins the world’s water supply holds enough molecules to mix 1,500 of them into every other cup of water in the world. No way around it: some of the water you just drank passed through the kidneys of Socrates, Genghis Khan, and Joan of Arc.

How about air? Also vital. A single breathful draws in more air molecules than there are breathfuls of air in Earth’s entire atmosphere. That means some of the air you just breathed passed through the lungs of Napoleon, Beethoven, Lincoln, and Billy the Kid.

Time to get cosmic. There are more stars in the universe than grains of sand on any beach, more stars than seconds have passed since Earth formed, more stars than words and sounds ever uttered by all the humans who ever lived.

Want a sweeping view of the past? Our unfolding cosmic perspective takes you there. Light takes time to reach Earth’s observatories from the depths of space, and so you see objects and phenomena not as they are but as they once were. That means the universe acts like a giant time machine: the farther away you look, the further back in time you see—back almost to the beginning of time itself. Within that horizon of reckoning, cosmic evolution unfolds continuously, in full view.

Want to know what we’re made of? Again, the cosmic perspective offers a bigger answer than you might expect. The chemical elements of the universe are forged in the fires of high-mass stars that end their lives in stupendous explosions, enriching their host galaxies with the chemical arsenal of life as we know it. The result? The four most common chemically active elements in the universe—hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen—are the four most common elements of life on Earth. We are not simply in the universe. The universe is in us.

* * *

Yes, we are stardust. But we may not be of this Earth. Several separate lines of research, when considered together, have forced investigators to reassess who we think we are and where we think we came from.

First, computer simulations show that when a large asteroid strikes a planet, the surrounding areas can recoil from the impact energy, catapulting rocks into space. From there, they can travel to—and land on—other planetary surfaces. Second, microorganisms can be hardy. Some survive the extremes of temperature, pressure, and radiation inherent in space travel. If the rocky flotsam from an impact hails from a planet with life, microscopic fauna could have stowed away in the rocks’ nooks and crannies. Third, recent evidence suggests that shortly after the formation of our solar system, Mars was wet, and perhaps fertile, even before Earth was.

Those findings mean it’s conceivable that life began on Mars and later seeded life on Earth, a process known as panspermia . So all earthlings might—just might—be descendants of Martians.

Again and again across the centuries, cosmic discoveries have demoted our self-image. Earth was once assumed to be astronomically unique, until astronomers learned that Earth is just another planet orbiting the Sun. Then we presumed the Sun was unique, until we learned that the countless stars of the night sky are suns themselves. Then we presumed our galaxy, the Milky Way, was the entire known universe, until we established that the countless fuzzy things in the sky are other galaxies, dotting the landscape of our known universe.

Today, how easy it is to presume that one universe is all there is. Yet emerging theories of modern cosmology, as well as the continually reaffirmed improbability that anything is unique, require that we remain open to the latest assault on our plea for distinctiveness: multiple universes, otherwise known as the “ multiverse ,” in which ours is just one of countless bubbles bursting forth from the fabric of the cosmos.

* * *

The cosmic perspective flows from fundamental knowledge. But it’s more than just what you know. It’s also about having the wisdom and insight to apply that knowledge to assessing our place in the universe. And its attributes are clear:

The cosmic perspective comes from the frontiers of science, yet it is not solely the provenance of the scientist. It belongs to everyone.

The cosmic perspective is humble.

The cosmic perspective is spiritual — even redemptive — but not religious.

The cosmic perspective enables us to grasp, in the same thought, the large and the small.

The cosmic perspective opens our minds to extraordinary ideas but does not leave them so open that our brains spill out, making us susceptible to believing anything we’re told.

The cosmic perspective opens our eyes to the universe, not as a benevolent cradle designed to nurture life but as a cold, lonely, hazardous place.

The cosmic perspective shows Earth to be a mote, but a precious mote and, for the moment, the only home we have.

The cosmic perspective finds beauty in the images of planets, moons, stars, and nebulae but also celebrates the laws of physics that shape them.

The cosmic perspective enables us to see beyond our circumstances, allowing us to transcend the primal search for food, shelter, and sex.

The cosmic perspective reminds us that in space, where there is no air, a flag will not wave—an indication that perhaps flag waving and space exploration do not mix.

The cosmic perspective not only embraces our genetic kinship with all life on Earth but also values our chemical kinship with any yet-to-be discovered life in the universe, as well as our atomic kinship with the universe itself.

* * *

At least once a week, if not once a day, we might each ponder what cosmic truths lie undiscovered before us, perhaps awaiting the arrival of a clever thinker, an ingenious experiment, or an innovative space mission to reveal them. We might further ponder how those discoveries may one day transform life on Earth.

Absent such curiosity, we are no different from the provincial farmer who expresses no need to venture beyond the county line, because his forty acres meet all his needs. Yet if all our predecessors had felt that way, the farmer would instead be a cave dweller, chasing down his dinner with a stick and a rock.

During our brief stay on planet Earth, we owe ourselves and our descendants the opportunity to explore—in part because it’s fun to do. But there’s a far nobler reason. The day our knowledge of the cosmos ceases to expand, we risk regressing to the childish view that the universe figuratively and literally revolves around us. In that bleak world, arms-bearing, resource-hungry people and nations would be prone to act on their “low contracted prejudices.” And that would be the last gasp of human enlightenment—until the rise of a visionary new culture that could once again embrace the cosmic perspective.

________________________________________________________

Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Frederick P. Rose Director of New York City’s Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History. His most recent book, Death by Black Hole: And Other Cosmic Quandaries (W.W. Norton, 2007), is a collection of his favorite Natural History essays from the past dozen years.

Here’s the URL: http://research.amnh.org/~tyson/18magazines_cosmic.php

S’porean Environmental Apathy

In Uncategorized on May 10, 2008 at 12:40 am

A particular problem for me, considering that I’m a semi-active (due to NS) environmentalist, and maintain an environmentally-friendly, perhaps sustainable lifestyle as far as possible. Its especially annoying, for the reasons for it, I seriously believe, lie in the appeal for free will. Here’s how an argument on taking baths against showers went (it happened while I was in Taiwan with friends):

“Why would you go for a bath? Its as good as soaking in your own dirty bathwater. Whereas a shower removes the grime as you have it. (An Appeal to Common Sense)”

“Because shiok mah.”

“But its a waste of water. (An Appeal to Environmental & Social Responsibility(I kinda forgot the statistics to support this. Too long from my job…)

“Its Taiwan’s water. Plus I’m not paying for it.”

“Water isn’t owned by anyone. Its a natural resource.”

I stopped arguing at this moment. Not because he was right, but because it was pointless. The argument would eventually return to the fact that it was for his own hedonistic pleasure and that I had no say or authority over what he wants to do. That’s free will. Not exactly responsible, but free will nevertheless.

Now, any sufficiently discerning Singaporean could say that S’poreans are screwed up, the government is screwed up, the policies are screwed up. However, it would take more than just a keen “new-age” following of singapore politics and society to understand that the two issues, singapore society and the government are interdependent.

Winning the argument above through reason is probably impossible. Even if I manage to show that baths were more environmentally taxing and a waste of water, and a waste of funds recycling that water, and that it would have ultimate negative impacts on the environment that would ultimately affect him. All he would have to say would be “So?”. If he doesn’t care, I wouldn’t be able to do anything to convince him out of his apathy, bigotry or irresponsibility. Highly probably, he’s not the only one in Singapore that’s like that. Highly probably, he’s one of many of the Singaporeans that’s like that.

And in such a scenario, if the government or any leader for that matter is unable to convince the public, then the only choice would be to impose it on the Singaporean people. And the people will complain. Rising prices for water and other utilities, incentives for savers, disincentives for those who use too much. There will then be the problem of deciding how much is too much and so on.

“I am often accused of interfering in the private lives of citizens. Yet, if I did not, had I not done that, we wouldn’t be here today. And I say without the slightest remorse, that we wouldn’t be here, we would not have made economic progress, if we had not intervened on very personal matters – who your neighbor is, how you live, the noise you make, how you spit, or what language you use.

We decide what is right, never mind what the people think. That’s another problem.”

(Tremewan, 1994, as cited in Privacy and Human, 2003).

How difficult the job of Singaporean environmentalists.

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