Communion Of Dreams


Follow-up.
June 16, 2008, 10:35 am
Filed under: ISS, NASA, Predictions, Preparedness, Science, Space, Survival, tech

Happily, Shuttle Discovery made it home safe and sound on Saturday, as scheduled, in spite of misgivings I expressed in my last post and in comments. But losing pieces of the shuttle (or any space vehicle) is always a concern, as discussed extensively by James Oberg in this item for MSNBC:

Why NASA watches out for true UFOs
Astronauts don’t keep mum about potentially life-threatening objects

HOUSTON – Friday’s brief orbital anxiety about threats from an unidentified object seen out the window of space shuttle Discovery underscore why NASA has always been interested in what can justifiably be called UFOs.

* * *

The reason is life-and-death. Since Mercury days, NASA engineers have realized that visual sightings of anomalies can sometimes provide clues to the functioning — or malfunctioning — of the spaceships that contain their precious astronauts. White dots outside the window could be spray from a propellant leak, or ice particles, flaking insulation, worked-loose fasteners (as in this latest case) or inadvertently released tools or components.

Whatever the objects might be, they pose a threat of coming back in contact with the spacecraft, potentially causing damage to delicate instruments, thermal tiles, windows or solar cells, or fouling rotating or hinged mechanisms. So Mission Control needs to find out about them right away in order to determine that they are not hazardous.

Oberg knows his shit, so take a few moments and read the whole thing.

As I’ve mentioned previously, we know that space travel is dangerous, and there is very little doubt that we will see more deaths.  But there’s no reason not to learn from our mistakes, and to make things safer as we can.

Jim Downey



“Was that the primary buffer panel?”*
June 13, 2008, 12:56 pm
Filed under: Firefly, Joss Whedon, movies, NASA, Science Fiction, Serenity, Space, tech

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Astronauts on the space shuttle Discovery spotted an unidentified object floating behind the craft as well as a bump on the shuttle rudder on Friday but neither was cause for concern, NASA said.

After carrying out routine testing the day before Discovery is due to land back on Earth on Saturday, “the crew indicated they had seen a 1-1.5-foot (30-45 centimeter) long rectangular object floating away from the shuttle from behind the rear portion of the right wing,” the US space agency said.

“Shortly afterwards, the crew described what they called a ‘bump’ on the left side trailing edge of Discovery’s rudder,” it said in a statement.

NASA experts back on Earth studied images and video of both the object and the bump but concluded that they posed no risk and Discovery was “ship-shape” for Saturday’s landing at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

I don’t know about you, but offhand I would tend to think that seeing parts of my spaceship floating away unexpectedly would give me more than a little pause, particularly given the history of the Shuttle program.

Hope they get home safely.

Jim Downey

*go to the eighth section.



“Just kidding.”
June 13, 2008, 8:16 am
Filed under: Failure, General Musings, Government, Health, MetaFilter, Society

I’m fighting some kind of summer bug, and ache all over. So I’m a little grumpy. That may explain why I think that this is the stupidest thing I’ve read all week:

OCEANSIDE, Calif. – On a Monday morning last month, highway patrol officers visited 20 classrooms at El Camino High School to announce some horrible news: Several students had been killed in car wrecks over the weekend.

Classmates wept. Some became hysterical.

A few hours and many tears later, though, the pain turned to fury when the teenagers learned that it was all a hoax — a scared-straight exercise designed by school officials to dramatize the consequences of drinking and driving.

What an incredibly bone-headed stunt for the school administrators and HP officers to pull. Toying with the emotions of high school kids. Teaching them that they cannot trust those who are supposed to be trustworthy. Demonstrating that it is OK to lie & cheat if your ‘intentions are good’ and you have the authority to get away with it.

Dipshits.

Here’s what the school guidance counselor said:

“They were traumatized, but we wanted them to be traumatized,” said guidance counselor Lori Tauber, who helped organize the shocking exercise and got dozens of students to participate. “That’s how they get the message.”

You bet, Lori. Traumatizing people is always good strategy to get them to believe you. That’s why it is completely defensible to call in bomb threats to schools and rattle the administrators and police over whatever cause you believe in, right?

Dipshits.

Jim Downey

Via MeFi. Cross posted to UTI.



“Just lie there, sir, it won’t take a minute.”*

This is disturbing:

‘Back from dead’ case stuns doctors

THE case of a man whose heart stopped beating for 1-1/2 hours only to revive just as doctors were preparing to remove his organs for transplants is fuelling ethical debates in France about when a person is dead.

The 45-year-old man suffered a massive heart attack and rescuers used cardiac massage to try and revive him without success before transferring him to a nearby hospital.

Due to a series of complex circumstances, revival efforts continued for longer than usual for a patient whose heart was not responding to treatment, until doctors started preparations to remove organs.

It was at that point that the astonished surgeons noticed the man was beginning to breathe unaided again, his pupils were active, he was giving signs that he could feel pain – and finally, his heart started beating again.

Several weeks later, the man can walk and talk.

As John Sheridan might say: “Death?  Been there, done that.”

Deciding on when someone is irrevocably dead is actually a very difficult thing to do, and through the ages there have been many instances where people thought to be dead have either spontaneously revived, or been re-animated through the use of medical technology.  The Victorians had something of a phobia about premature burial, but the concept of a lych gate has existed for centuries (my first encounter with such can be found here, towards the bottom).

When you add in a legitimate need for organs appropriate for transplantation, which need to be ‘harvested’ quickly, then you’re pushing two conflicting timelines.  This is evidently part of the problem which has led to the ethical debate mentioned above.  Add in new research into ‘suspended animation‘, and things are going to get even more confused.

Welcome to the future.

Jim Downey

*recognize the quote?



Some quickies.

Because who doesn’t enjoy a quickie now and then?

Both MeFi and Schneier report on the Subivor:

Whether it is a train fire, a highrise building fire or worse. People should have more protection than a necktie, their shirt or paper towel to cover their mouth, nose and eyes. As you know an emergency can happen at anytime and in anyplace, leaving one vulnerable. Don’t be a sitting duck. The Subivor® Subway Emergency Kit can aid you in seeing and breathing while exiting . This all-in-one compact, portable and easy to use subway emergency kit contains some items never seen before in a kit.

Well, unless you make your own, of course.

* * *

Via BoingBoing, this news:

Your papers please: TSA bans ID-less flight

In a major change of policy, the Transportation Security Administration has announced that passengers refusing to show ID will no longer be able to fly. The policy change, announced on Thursday afternoon, will go into force on June 21, and will only affect passengers who refuse to produce ID. Passengers who claim to have lost or forgotten their proof of identity will still be able to fly.

Because no terrorist would *ever* lie to the TSA and claim that they had lost or forgotten their ID.

*sigh*

More security theater. Forcing people to submit to showing ID has nothing to do with airline security, and everything to do with just forcing them to submit to the government’s authoritah.

* * *

And speaking of your civil rights:

Split Panel Affirms Warrantless Use of GPS Device

The warrantless use of a global positioning device on a vehicle by police does not violate a driver’s right to privacy under either the U.S. Constitution or the New York state Constitution, an upstate appeals panel decided last week.

* * *

As to the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the panel found that nothing prevents the use of technology, such as the satellite-aided positioning devices, to “surveil that which is already public.”

“Inasmuch as constant visual surveillance by police officers of defendant’s vehicle in plain view would have revealed the same information [as the GPS device] and been just as intrusive, and no warrant would have been necessary to do so, the use of the GPS device did not infringe on any reasonable expectation of privacy and did not violate defendant’s Fourth Amendment protections,” Justice Robert S. Rose wrote for the majority.

The dissenter, Justice Leslie E. Stein, argued that global positioning system devices are considerably more intrusive than traditional surveillance methods.

“While the citizens of this state may not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in a public place at any particular moment, they do have a reasonable expectation that their every move will not be continuously and indefinitely monitored by a technical device without their knowledge, except where a warrant has been issued based on probable cause,” Stein wrote.

Gee, a ‘warrant‘, based on ‘probable cause’.  What a concept.

* * *

And just so we don’t end on that depressing note, here’s a fun T-shirt site with a SF theme, thanks to Cory Doctorow.  A bit pricey at $32, but there are some very nice designs.

Jim Downey



That is *so* weird.

I discovered a couple of years ago that someone had created a Wikipedia entry for me.  It was weird to stumble across that when I was looking for something else (I no longer remember what).  Particularly since it seemed that the initial entry was made by someone for whom English was not a native tongue, and who only had some of their facts right.  In other words, it wasn’t a friend who did it, laying the foundation for some kind of joke on me.  My wife and I cleaned up the language a bit, got the facts corrected, expanded the entry to include stuff which had been missed.

But it is still a weird feeling.

And something similar happened again today.

This morning, I was doing my routine check on the stats for the download of Communion of Dreams, and saw that there had been another of the periodic spikes.  As I have mentioned previously, when this happens I will sometimes check to see if there is a referring site where a link to the novel has been posted.  I’m just curious as to how word of the book spreads, and whether someone has some commentary or criticism that I should know about.  And this morning in the ‘referring’ stats was a link to a Wiki page titled “Titan in fiction“, explained by this simple single sentence:

Titan is the largest moon of Saturn. It has a substantial atmosphere and is the most Earth-like satellite in the Solar System, making it a popular science fiction setting.

And there, next-to-last in the ‘Literature’ section, just two entries after Ben Bova’s novel Titan, was this:

Communion of Dreams (2007), a novel by Jim Downey. An alien artifact is discovered on Titan that has strange effects on anyone who observes it.

I could quibble with the description, but I won’t.  I’m too weirded-out by seeing it.  With almost 10,000 downloads of the book, it is unsurprising that someone who has read it would think to add links in Wikipedia about it.  Unsurprising, that is, unless you’re the one it happens to.

I do not have ‘false modesty’.  I’ve got an ego, as any of my friends will attest, and I’m not afraid of a bit of self promotion.  But in the face of repeated rejections from publishers and agents, it is more than a little odd to see that Communion is slowly creeping into the culture this way.  It’s just plain weird – a touch of dissonance.

Well, anyway.  As always, if anyone knows of places where Communion has been recommended, and now I suppose where it has been linked in another context, please let me know.

Jim Downey



Reality is what happens to you while you’re busy coming up with other theories.*

*Apologies to both John Lennon and Philip K. Dick.

Last Saturday, my sister and her husband came to town, and we celebrated Thanksgiving.  Yes, about six months late.

* * * * * * *

About two weeks ago Sean Carroll of Cosmic Variance had a teaser post up about a new article of his in Scientific American.  Carroll has long been one of my favorite reads in cosmology, and his discussion of the cosmological basis for time’s arrow was delightful.  From the opening of the article:

Among the unnatural aspects of the universe, one stands out: time asymmetry. The microscopic laws of physics that underlie the behavior of the universe do not distinguish between past and future, yet the early universe—hot, dense, homogeneous—is completely different from today’s—cool, dilute, lumpy. The universe started off orderly and has been getting increasingly disorderly ever since. The asymmetry of time, the arrow that points from past to future, plays an unmistakable role in our everyday lives: it accounts for why we cannot turn an omelet into an egg, why ice cubes never spontaneously unmelt in a glass of water, and why we remember the past but not the future. And the origin of the asymmetry we experience can be traced all the way back to the orderliness of the universe near the big bang. Every time you break an egg, you are doing observational cosmology.

The arrow of time is arguably the most blatant feature of the universe that cosmologists are currently at an utter loss to explain. Increasingly, however, this puzzle about the universe we observe hints at the existence of a much larger spacetime we do not observe. It adds support to the notion that we are part of a multiverse whose dynamics help to explain the seemingly unnatural features of our local vicinity.

Carroll goes on to explore what those hints (and the implications of same) are in some detail, though all of it is suitable for a non-scientist.  The basic idea of how to reconcile the evident asymmetry is to consider our universe, as vast and ancient as it is, as only one small part of a greater whole.  We are living, as it were, in a quantum flux of the froth of spacetime of a larger multiverse:

Emit fo Worra
This scenario, proposed in 2004 by Jennifer Chen of the University of Chicago and me, provides a provocative solution to the origin of time asymmetry in our observable universe: we see only a tiny patch of the big picture, and this larger arena is fully time-symmetric. Entropy can increase without limit through the creation of new baby universes.

Best of all, this story can be told backward and forward in time. Imagine that we start with empty space at some particular moment and watch it evolve into the future and into the past. (It goes both ways because we are not presuming a unidirectional arrow of time.) Baby universes fluctuate into existence in both directions of time, eventually emptying out and giving birth to babies of their own. On ultralarge scales, such a multiverse would look statistically symmetric with respect to time—both the past and the future would feature new universes fluctuating into life and proliferating without bound. Each of them would experience an arrow of time, but half would have an arrow that was reversed with respect to that in the others.

A tantalizing hint of a larger picture, indeed.

* * * * * * *

Philip K. Dick, tormented mad genius that he was, said something that has become something of a touchstone for me:  “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.”

It is, in fact, a large part of the basis for my skeptical attitude towards life.  But it also leaves open the idea of examining and incorporating new information which might be contrary to my beliefs.  It is this idea which I explored over the 132,000 words of Communion of Dreams, though not everyone realizes this at first reading.

But what if reality only exists if you believe in it?

That’s a question discussed in another longish piece of science writing in the current issue of Seed Magazine, titled The Reality Tests:

Most of us would agree that there exists a world outside our minds. At the classical level of our perceptions, this belief is almost certainly correct. If your couch is blue, you will observe it as such whether drunk, in high spirits, or depressed; the color is surely independent of the majority of your mental states. If you discovered your couch were suddenly red, you could be sure there was a cause. The classical world is real, and not only in your head. Solipsism hasn’t really been a viable philosophical doctrine for decades, if not centuries.

But that reality goes right up against one of the basic notions of quantum mechanics: the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.  Or does it?  For decades, the understanding of quantum effects was that it was applicable at the atomic-and-smaller level.  Only in such rare phenomenon as a Bose-Einstein Condensate (which in Communion is the basis for some of the long-range sensors being used to search for habitable planets outside our solar system) were quantum effects seen at a macroscopic scale.  But in theory, maybe our whole reality operates at a quantum level, regardless of scale:

Brukner and Kofler had a simple idea. They wanted to find out what would happen if they assumed that a reality similar to the one we experience is true—every large object has only one value for each measurable property that does not change. In other words, you know your couch is blue, and you don’t expect to be able to alter it just by looking. This form of realism, “macrorealism,” was first posited by Leggett in the 1980s.

Late last year Brukner and Kofler showed that it does not matter how many particles are around, or how large an object is, quantum mechanics always holds true. The reason we see our world as we do is because of what we use to observe it. The human body is a just barely adequate measuring device. Quantum mechanics does not always wash itself out, but to observe its effects for larger and larger objects we would need more and more accurate measurement devices. We just do not have the sensitivity to observe the quantum effects around us. In essence we do create the classical world we perceive, and as Brukner said, “There could be other classical worlds completely different from ours.”

Indeed.

* * * * * * *

Last Saturday, my sister and her husband came to town, and we celebrated Thanksgiving.  Yes, about six months late.   Because last year, going in to the usual Thanksgiving holiday, we had our hands full caring for Martha Sr and didn’t want to subject her to the disconcerting effect of having ‘strangers’ in the house.  Following Martha Sr’s death in February, other aspects of life had kept either my sister or us busy and unable to schedule a time to get together.

Until last weekend.  And that’s OK.  Because life is what we make of it.  Whether that applies to cosmology or not I’ll leave up to the scientists and philosophers for now (though I have weighed in on the matter as mentioned above and reserve the right to do so again in other books).  This I can tell you – it was good to see my sister and her husband, and the turkey dinner we ate was delicious.

Jim Downey



Escape from . . . D.C.???

I didn’t realize that this was one of the sequels. But it sure sounds like it.

WASHINGTON

D.C. police will seal off entire neighborhoods, set up checkpoints and kick out strangers under a new program that D.C. officials hope will help them rescue the city from its out-of-control violence.

Under an executive order expected to be announced today, police Chief Cathy L. Lanier will have the authority to designate “Neighborhood Safety Zones.” At least six officers will man cordons around those zones and demand identification from people coming in and out of them. Anyone who doesn’t live there, work there or have “legitimate reason” to be there will be sent away or face arrest, documents obtained by The Examiner show.

Wait. They think that they’re serious.

“This is a very targeted program that has been used in other cities,” Nickles told The Examiner. “I’m not worried about the constitutionality of it.”

Others are. Kristopher Baumann, chairman of the D.C. police union and a former lawyer, called the checkpoint proposal “breathtaking.”

Shelley Broderick, president of the D.C.-area American Civil Liberties Union and the dean of the University of the District of Columbia’s law school, said the plan was “cockamamie.”

Gee, ya think? A site devoted to DC area news has more information, including this comment:

Can you say Police State? The Examiner has the scoop on a controversial new program announced today that would create so-called “Neighborhood Safety Zones” which would serve to partially seal off certain parts of the city. D.C. Police would set-up checkpoints in targeted areas, demand to see ID and refuse admittance to people who don’t live there, work there or have a “legitimate reason” to be there. Wow. Just, wow.

Papers, please.

Jim Downey

(Via BoingBoing. Cross posted to UTI.)



“Lies, damned lies, and statistics.”
June 2, 2008, 8:51 am
Filed under: Feedback, Mark Twain, Predictions, Promotion, Writing stuff

My monthly update on some stats . . .

Communion of Dreams has now been downloaded over 9,500 times.  I would like to thank the three people who have been busy downloading so many copies to make my stats look good.  😉

No, seriously, this is still really cool.  Like April, May saw about 500 downloads – a little bit slower pace than in some earlier months, but still very heartening.  Particularly since it still seems to be completely word of mouth.  We should cross 10,000 downloads sometime this month.

The blog is now just under 20,000 hits, and the average is still running about 70 unique visits a day.  Thanks to one and all who visit regularly.

And bonus points to anyone who can ID the source of the title quote without having to look it up.

Jim Downey



Do you see what I hear?
June 2, 2008, 7:15 am
Filed under: Art, Kromofons, MetaFilter, Music, Science, Synesthesia

The last time I mentioned synesthesia was in connection with Kromofons, the effort by Dr. Lee Freedman to systematize a color context for the alphabet which would allow for people to “read” color blocks as easily as they read letters. As I said in that post:

This is part of the way I use synesthesia in Communion of Dreams: as a method by which the human brain can layer meaning and information in new ways, expanding the potential for understanding the world. It is noteworthy that many synesthetes will associate colors with a given word or even letter – it may be possible that Lee Freedman drew upon such an experience to create his color alphabet.

(An aside – I have experienced mild episodes of synesthesia upon several occasions. Sometimes these episodes have been induced by drugs, sometimes by intense concentration, sometimes of their own accord. I think that this is a latent ability everyone has, but not something which we usually access, because it is poorly understood by the general populace.)

And now someone has tried to come up with a way to test what he calls “Associative Musical Visual Intelligence“:

This is a completely new way to measure an often overlooked aspect of intelligence – I guarantee that you’ve never seen (or heard!) anything like it.
What is AMVI? Associative Musical Visual Intelligence (or “amvi” for short) is a type of intelligence that’s difficult enough to define, let alone test. Many creative people can associate across sensory domains: they “hear” hints of shapes and can “taste” the essense of colors. At its most extreme this phenomenon is called synesthesia. However, I believe that creative people subconsciously employ elements of synesthesia every day when attempting to think of things in new ways. This is a logic test that attempts to measure one’s ability to correlate musical phrases with abstract shapes and symbols.

It’s an interesting idea – try and come up with a new ‘language’ for visually understanding music. And I give him a lot of credit for trying to do so, just as I gave credit to Dr. Freedman for attempting to overlay a color interpretation to letter forms. But for me the test was very frustrating – the simple visual system that Mandell has created just did not jibe with my sense of what was going on with the music. As someone on MeFi (where I found this) said in comments:

I got 95% and so, independently, did my girlfriend. We both got the exact same percentage distribution on the categories in the final score, leading me to believe that we both got exactly the same one wrong.

Which would be interesting, except, as naju points out, this test as NOTHING to do with synesthesia or the ability of visualize sound as shapes and colors or vice-versa.

It’s a very simple pattern recognition test where, once you figure out the intended pattern, it’s very easy. Vertical positioning correlates to change in pitch, color correlates to differences in timbre, shape distortion correlates to small-scale melodic change, and shape change correlates to large-scale melodic change. Add a couple other fairly obvious curveballs (shape complexity equated to rhythmic complexity once) and it’s not that hard. The one my gf and I both got wrong was probably unintentionally vague.

* * *

Real synesthetic visualization is much more personal, much more complex, and much harder to pin down. Yes, upward pitch movement does grossly correspond to upward spatial movement for a lot of people, but it’s hardly so straightforward as that, and the relations of color and shape to melody are much richer and stranger. This test is like a “spot the differences” cartoon in the Sunday comics advertising itself as a means of identifying latent Picassos.

Exactly. Oh, and when I took the test last night, I got something like 30%. The only ones I got right were when I gave up on trying to correlate my visualization of the music passages and simply tried to predict what the ‘correct’ answer was. Which is fine, since Mandell describes the test as one of logic.

Anyway, thought you might have some fun with it.

Jim Downey




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