Posts Tagged ‘evolutionary psychology’
Monday Morning Links
* Local police deploying SWAT teams against friendly poker games and barbering without a license. Insanity.
* Over the past year and a half, in the wake of Thomas Philippon and Ariel Resheff’s estimate that 2% of U.S. GDP was wasted in the pointless hypertrophy of the financial sector, evidence that our modern financial system is less a device for efficiently sharing risk and more a device for separating rich people from their money–a Las Vegas without the glitz–has mounted.
* Inside the multimillion-dollar essay-scoring business.
* How the University Works, 1965: Football Game Continues as School Burns. More links below the picture.
* Russian Billionaire Dmitry Itskov Plans on Becoming Immortal by 2045.
* I’m nursing a pet theory. Which is that there are actually four main political parties in Westminster: the Conservatives, Labour, the Liberal Democrats, and the Ruling Party.
The Ruling Party doesn’t represent the general electorate, but a special electorate: the Alien Invaders and their symbiotes, the consultants and contractors and think-tank intellectuals who smooth the path to acquisition of government contracts or outsourcing arrangements — the government being the consumer of last resort in late phase consumer capitalism — arrangements which are supported and made profitable by government subsidies extracted from taxpayer revenue and long-term bonds. The Ruling Party is under no pressure to conform to the expectations of the general electorate because whoever the electors vote for, representatives of the Ruling Party will win; the only question is which representatives, which is why they are at such pains to triangulate on a common core of policies that don’t risk differentiating them in a manner which might render them repugnant to some of the electorate.
* To make matters even worse for restaurant workers and diners, a spate of “preemption bills”—which bar localities from makings laws requiring paid sick leave—has been surging through state legislatures with the help of the American Legislative Exchange Council and the National Restaurant Association, one of ALEC’s members. The first of these bills was passed in May 2011 in Wisconsin. Last week, Gov. Rick Scott signed Florida’s version into law, making it the eighth state to preemptively block paid sick leave for its workers (and the 13th to try) in just two years.
* A depiction of the logical (and historical) tendency of the capitalist system to collapse.
* Everything old is new again: Female inmates sterilized in California prisons without approval.
* A visual history of Bruce Springsteen.
* NSA Rejecting Every FOIA Request Made by U.S. Citizens. The innocent have nothing to fear…
* The Southwest’s Forests May Never Recover from Megafires.
* And another great Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal. I could post one of these every day.
Sunday Night Links 2
Even more Sunday night links.
* Ev psych on the ropes? We can only dare to hope.
* MetaFilter remembers the Stonewall protests.
* Also from MetaFilter: Are we doing enough to prevent the asteroid apocalypse?
* Pawlenty says he’ll finally let Franken be seated once the state Supreme Court issues its ruling. Aren’t we moving a little fast, Tim? It’s only been eight months.
* Katrina vanden Heuvel with Steve Benen against bipartisanship.
* 3 Quarks Daily’s top science blog posts of 2009.
* And Ze Frank plays “That Makes Me Think Of” again at Time, this week about thigns that are and aren’t black and white. Can’t we get The Show back already? We keep getting closer and closer.
Jared Diamon on the Evolution of Religion
Hour-long Jared Diamond lecture on the evolution of religion.
Missing the Old gerrycanavan.blogspot.com?
Thinking of the days when this blog wasn’t about the presidential election 24-7—just sixteen long days to go—here are a few links to more traditional gerrycanavan.blogspot.com fare.
* Life on earth may have originated in volcanic eruptions.
* Invest in solar, says solar industry.
* ‘Never Say Die: Why We Can’t Imagine Death.’ Via MeFi.
* Atomic explosions. Lots.
* Buy your own deep shelter underneath London.
* How British police foiled the IRA by opening a laundromat.
* Mad Men will be back for a third season, but showrunner Matthew Weiner may not be: he wants more money.
* Consistent with Environmental Security Hypothesis predictions, when social and economic conditions were difficult, older, heavier, taller Playboy Playmates of the Year with larger waists, smaller eyes, larger waist-to-hip ratios, smaller bust-to-waist ratios, and smaller body mass index values were selected. These results suggest that environmental security may influence perceptions and preferences for women with certain body and facial features.
Literary Darwinism Watch
Literary Darwinism: Because the only thing that can save literary criticism from its tendency towards jargony, poorly thought-out pseudoscience is more jargony, poorly thought-out pseudoscience.