Saturday, July 14, 2012
Thursday, July 12, 2012
The Best-Laid Plans
It’s amazing the havoc that stress and lack of sleep can
wreak on your mind.
I’m what psychologists call a “highly sensitive person.” No, that does not mean
that I’m easily offended. It does
not mean that I fly off the handle at the slightest provocation. It means that
my brain processes information differently – in greater detail. It’s actually a relatively common trait
– occurring in about one in five people – and it appears to be biological.
Sometimes, I love this about myself. But sometimes, it exhausts me. One of the drawbacks to having a brain
that’s more sensitive to incoming information, is that it’s easily
overloaded. I hate crowds. I hate loud noises. I used to be absolutely inconsolable
during the 4th of July fireworks. They still scare me a little, if I’m too close to the
source. Combine the sensitivity
with my natural introversion (the traits are not always concurrent, but in my
case, they are), and if I’m around people for too long, I just want to
scream. It’s not the people – it’s
just my brain.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Enough
What do Daniel Tosh, Anita Sarkeesian, and
Jesse Lee Peterson have in common? Practically nothing, except that they
have all appeared in news stories this year about women’s issues that
have been quite frankly horrifying.
I wrote an article about Reverend Peterson earlier this year when he gave a sermon on why he believes women are destroying America. His sermon was filled with hateful vitriol about women, running the gambit from they can’t handle pressure to they’re all sluts to they aren’t even capable of love. In the article, I explained why we should pay attention to this blatantly bigoted small-time preacher:
We should bother ourselves with people like him because this ugly sentiment is buried deeply in American culture. We see it come out in media figures like Rush Limbaugh, in legislative efforts like the more than nine hundred bills introduced this year alone in state and federal legislature to limit women’s rights, in the thirty-one Republicans who voted against the Violence Against Women Act, and we see it glamorized in media portrayals of women as objects. When almost a third of female homicide victims are killed by their partner and one in five American women have been the victim of rape or attempted rape, we can’t afford to remain silent about this issue.The events in recent weeks involving Daniel Tosh and Anita Sarkeesian are exactly the sort of thing I was talking about.
Read more at The Inclusive.
Monday, July 9, 2012
Past Our Horizons
Science fiction as a genre has existed almost as long as storytelling
itself. Jules Verne wrote of travel to the moon in the eighteen
hundreds. The Princess of Mars, upon which Disney’s recent film John Carter of Mars
was based, was published in the early part of the twentieth century.
Even in Ancient Greece there was sci-fi: Lucian of Samasota wrote of creatures that resided on the sun and the moon
in the second century C.E. That’s right – nearly two thousand years
ago, someone wrote a book about aliens. Philosophy, science, and
literature have always sought to reach beyond our planet, and the
general public devours stories that combine this super-terrestrial
striving with the very human desire for adventure and exploration.
Last week, NASA released a panoramic photo taken by Opportunity, the sole remaining functioning Mars rover since Spirit fell silent in August 2010. (The new Mars rover, Curiosity, will not land until this August). This beautiful image (which you can click to make massively large) was seen worldwide – the alien landscapes of Mars brought home to Earth. This is the power of space exploration. Children dream of becoming astronauts. Consumers in cafés discuss the possibility of alien life. Dreams of exploring other planets, other galaxies, and even other universes enthrall the public. It is possibly the single greatest way to popularize science as a whole.
Read more at The Inclusive.
Last week, NASA released a panoramic photo taken by Opportunity, the sole remaining functioning Mars rover since Spirit fell silent in August 2010. (The new Mars rover, Curiosity, will not land until this August). This beautiful image (which you can click to make massively large) was seen worldwide – the alien landscapes of Mars brought home to Earth. This is the power of space exploration. Children dream of becoming astronauts. Consumers in cafés discuss the possibility of alien life. Dreams of exploring other planets, other galaxies, and even other universes enthrall the public. It is possibly the single greatest way to popularize science as a whole.
Read more at The Inclusive.
Sunday, July 8, 2012
The Face of God (Particles)
The Large Hadron Collider in Geneva Switzerland may have
caught a glimpse of the elusive “god particle” – a subatomic particle predicted
by the Standard Model of physics. This particle, officially named the Higgs boson, is called the “god
particle” because without it, the universe as we know it would simply not
exist.
Last week – as America was celebrating Independence Day –
European scientists were also celebrating.
CERN announced the discovery of a new particle – a boson that fits the
description of the Higgs.
They were careful to call the data preliminary, and stated that more analysis
was needed, but discovery of a particle that fits the parameters of a predicted
particle is exciting at least and world-shaking at most. If the results are verified, we could
essentially have proof for one of the most important theories in modern
physics. And I, for one, am
confident the results will prove to be the Higgs boson. The scientists said there is
approximately a one in two million chance that the data from the collision
would not correspond to the Higgs
boson. You don’t have to know much about
science to know that those odds are pretty good.
Friday, July 6, 2012
Photography: "Summer Blooms"
Getting up-close-and-personal with a beautiful bloom in my mother's garden, Georgia O'Keefe style. In honor of summer.
Available for purchase on my site.
Monday, July 2, 2012
Nothing Ever Ends: Mass Effect 3's Extended Cut DLC
Note: this article contains spoilers for the entire Mass Effect
trilogy
The platform was eerily quiet. The floating shadows of the
Reapers darkened the stars that hung around the Citadel while Earth burned
below. I contemplated my choices, feeling again the sinking dread in my
stomach. None of the three options given to me would be enough. With the entire
future of the galaxy riding on my decision, I couldn’t bring myself to pick any
of the choices the Catalyst presented me with. None were good enough for the
sacrifices made by my friends. My team. Here, at the end of our journey, I was
faced not with victory, but with discouragement.
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