Reality Check
by David Brin
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The Giving Plague
by David Brin
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If This Isn't Nice, What Is?: Advice for the Young
by Kurt Vonnegut
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The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty
by Eudora Welty
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The Stories of Paul Bowles
by Paul Bowles
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Stardust
by Neil Gaiman
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Fire in the Hole: Stories
by Elmore Leonard
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Underworld
by Don DeLillo
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The Tree
by John Fowles
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Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking
by Susan Cain
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If on a winter's night a traveler
by Italo Calvino
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A Passage to India
E.M. Forster
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Asst. Malcolm Gladwell
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Arc: Volume 1
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APB-SAL is a blog about education, science, science education, fiction, science fiction, literature, literary stories, poetry, and anything else that strikes the blogger's fancy. NOTE: This blog interrogates art. It rarely make moral proclamations. For that attend the church or politician of your choice. This blog concerns aesthetics, not propaganda. Consider this as interviews with books where the interviewer presents interviewees, so you get what you need to do your own thinking.
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Showing posts with label Malcolm Gladwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malcolm Gladwell. Show all posts
Monday, December 16, 2013
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Links on Success, Short Sentences, Starships, Campus Novels and Quantum Physics
Malcolm Gladwell on success (I could listen to this guy for hours)
A success story: "Donal Ryan, a civil servant from Limerick, Ireland, wrote two novels. He sent them to agents and publishers and got back 47 rejections over three years [until two were published and one] made the cut for the Man Booker Prize long list."
Others: Top internet stories of 2012--Story South's Million Writers: includes Alan Baxter, Christopher Barzak Justin Howe, Molly Gloss, Ellen Klages, Yoon Ha Lee, Mari Ness, Christie Yant, Caroline M. Yoachim, among others.
The success of having friends write you into novels.
On the success of the short sentence.
Thursday September 26th 12 noon PDT / 3pm EDT Geoff Landis, Physicist and Science Fiction Author and Allen Steele, Award Winning Science Fiction Author, will hangout with SETI Institute scientists Cynthia Phillips and Franck Marchis (host & moderator) to discuss on the Starship Century book and symposiums dedicated to the exploration of our galaxy using a starship
50 campus novels
A success story: "Donal Ryan, a civil servant from Limerick, Ireland, wrote two novels. He sent them to agents and publishers and got back 47 rejections over three years [until two were published and one] made the cut for the Man Booker Prize long list."
Others: Top internet stories of 2012--Story South's Million Writers: includes Alan Baxter, Christopher Barzak Justin Howe, Molly Gloss, Ellen Klages, Yoon Ha Lee, Mari Ness, Christie Yant, Caroline M. Yoachim, among others.
The success of having friends write you into novels.
On the success of the short sentence.
Thursday September 26th 12 noon PDT / 3pm EDT Geoff Landis, Physicist and Science Fiction Author and Allen Steele, Award Winning Science Fiction Author, will hangout with SETI Institute scientists Cynthia Phillips and Franck Marchis (host & moderator) to discuss on the Starship Century book and symposiums dedicated to the exploration of our galaxy using a starship
50 campus novels
Quantum Physics:
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Paul Ekman & Facial Emotions
As soon I heard this Fresh Aire program on Dr. Paul Ekman (wiki, website, blog)--a researcher who decoded universal emotional reactions and teaches others to do the same--I had to buy the book, Emotions Revealed. Unfortunately, like many books that didn't immediately grab me, it collected dust.
Reading Blink by Malcolm Gladwell, I revisited Ekman's website and this time bought the basic facial recognition program. It takes about an hour to complete. (Background on Micro Expressions, 8 basic facial expressions which Ekman's software trains you to spot, TV program Lie to Me based on Ekman's research, Ekman research used with parenting, Ekman research used with law enforcement, On the Media.)
While it is thrilling to "read people's minds" as Gladwell puts it or to know whether someone is lying as the above websites put it less judiciously, I'm not sure that glimpsing these split-second emotions tell the whole story. Here's a personal example from my early post-high-school days:
My father made a comment to me, which aggravated me for a fraction of a second. I dismissed the emotion as quickly as it came because my father hadn't meant anything by it. So I forgot the emotion and responded in a normal, rational tone. However, my father replied in anger. I was puzzled: Why was he angry? As it so happened, the door was open at an angle that reflected my facial expression back at me. It still contained that earlier aggravation. It took me a moment to recall that flash of emotion that I had felt and dismissed. I felt no aggravation. If I had flashed aggravation and later denied it, would I be lying?
Could it be that the emotions we feel are our pre-packaged reactions, not true emotions (unless some people operate purely on pre-packaged emotions) taught to us by experience with our environment? These would help us cope with life using split-second reactions--reflexes or knee-jerk responses--much as one would remove his hand from a stove were it hot.
Perhaps Dr. Ekman responds to this in that dusty book of mine.
Reading Blink by Malcolm Gladwell, I revisited Ekman's website and this time bought the basic facial recognition program. It takes about an hour to complete. (Background on Micro Expressions, 8 basic facial expressions which Ekman's software trains you to spot, TV program Lie to Me based on Ekman's research, Ekman research used with parenting, Ekman research used with law enforcement, On the Media.)
While it is thrilling to "read people's minds" as Gladwell puts it or to know whether someone is lying as the above websites put it less judiciously, I'm not sure that glimpsing these split-second emotions tell the whole story. Here's a personal example from my early post-high-school days:
My father made a comment to me, which aggravated me for a fraction of a second. I dismissed the emotion as quickly as it came because my father hadn't meant anything by it. So I forgot the emotion and responded in a normal, rational tone. However, my father replied in anger. I was puzzled: Why was he angry? As it so happened, the door was open at an angle that reflected my facial expression back at me. It still contained that earlier aggravation. It took me a moment to recall that flash of emotion that I had felt and dismissed. I felt no aggravation. If I had flashed aggravation and later denied it, would I be lying?
Could it be that the emotions we feel are our pre-packaged reactions, not true emotions (unless some people operate purely on pre-packaged emotions) taught to us by experience with our environment? These would help us cope with life using split-second reactions--reflexes or knee-jerk responses--much as one would remove his hand from a stove were it hot.
Perhaps Dr. Ekman responds to this in that dusty book of mine.
Labels:
blink,
decisions,
emotions,
Lie to Me (TV),
Malcolm Gladwell,
Paul Ekman
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