Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The day culture died

Culture as we perceive it is dead and this time we are going to leave it in the past. It seems to me that it probably died on August 5, 1858. That was the day that Cyrus West Field ,the force behind the first transatlantic telegraph cable completed a practical transatlantic cable. Culture in its many forms depicts an us vs. them scenario and it focuses on location and locality. This was motivated by the differences in people from different locations. The internet and instant communications have ended those differences. We are not really very different. Homo-sapiens seem to be the same every where and the short sighted and simplistic view that we are better than them is eventually going to go the way institutionalized chauvinism went.

Culture as in excellence of taste in the fine arts and humanities does not make sense in a world where everyone has access to the same knowledge, it is simply a bourgeoisie way of looking at the world that is mostly motivated by ignorance and insecurity. There are no excellent tastes, there are individual preferences and given enough knowledge everyone prefers the practical preference.

Culture is also defined as an integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behavior that depends upon the capacity for symbolic thought and social learning. Knowledge is the same everywhere no matter how its codified. People everywhere want to make the same choices, often for the same reasons.

Culture as a set of shared attitudes, values, goals, and practices that characterizes an institution, organization or group ended when Nationalism died. Nations as many people have recently noticed are an inadequate way to solve modern problems. Patriotism is meaningless if you spend most of your time on social networks and consume products from all over the world. Your Nation is not important to you any more, it might have been important to your parents but now its just another form of ignorant unnecessary discrimination. Local issues are now global issues unless you are so dumb as to believe that the rest of the world exists so that you can exist.

Nationalism is still a popular way of looking at the world because most people are pessimistic about our common destiny. Nationalism in all its forms is the last hold out in the war to preserve culture. A war that is doomed to fail because human progress does not move at anybody’s time table. The progress that is in our future will not happen where we want it.

Culture is dead and we are all going to be better for it. We all begun as one group that was different from all the other apes in Africa. It has taken over a thousand centuries for us to populate the planet. It will take us less than a century to populate the solar system and ultimately someday the galaxy will have homo sapiens in every corner of its expanse. That is our destiny and that is why culture had to die, it has served its purpose and it was slowing us down.

According to both genetic and fossil evidence, archaic Homo sapiens evolved to anatomically modern humans solely in Africa, between 200,000 and 100,000 years ago, with members of one branch leaving Africa by 60,000 years ago and over time replacing earlier human populations such as Neanderthals and Homo erectus. –see Wikipedia

Culture (from the Latin cultura stemming from colere, meaning "to cultivate")[1] is a term that has different meanings. For example, in 1952, Alfred Kroeber and Clyde Kluckhohn compiled a list of 164 definitions of "culture" in Culture: A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions.[2] However, the word "culture" is most commonly used in three basic senses:

  • excellence of taste in the fine arts and humanities
  • an integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behavior that depends upon the capacity for symbolic thought and social learning
  • the set of shared attitudes, values, goals, and practices that characterizes an institution, organization or group.

When the concept first emerged in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Europe, it connoted a process of cultivation or improvement, as in agriculture or horticulture. In the nineteenth century, it came to refer first to the betterment or refinement of the individual, especially through education, and then to the fulfillment of national aspirations or ideals. In the mid-nineteenth century, some scientists used the term "culture" to refer to a universal human capacity.

In the twentieth century, "culture" emerged as a concept central to anthropology, encompassing all human phenomena that are not purely results of human genetics. Specifically, the term "culture" in American anthropology had two meanings: (1) the evolved human capacity to classify and represent experiences with symbols, and to act imaginatively and creatively; and (2) the distinct ways that people living in different parts of the world classified and represented their experiences, and acted creatively. Following World War II, the term became important, albeit with different meanings, in other disciplines such as sociology, cultural studies, organizational psychology and management studies.

On Culture From Wikipedia

Science cannot solve the ultimate mystery of nature. And that is because, in the last analysis, we ourselves are part of nature and therefore part of the mystery that we are trying to solve.

Max Planck

The Devil himself had probably re-designed Hell in the light of information he had gained from observing airport layouts.

Anthony Price




When did blogging die?

Image representing Robert Scoble as depicted i...

Image via CrunchBase

Seems like Blogging has been dying a long slow death for the past five years. We don’t know who killed it, some people say Scoble killed it, nobody can’t tell for sure. What i do know is that it has been dying slowly and surely for as long as I can remember. Like many things Blogging never died, it evolved and is evolving. It became micro blogging then social networking and later real-time something ….I don’t know what blogging is today but I know it never died.

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Predicting the death of blogging

  • Peter Black AM: The end of blogging?

    The end of blogging? This morning's Western Mail poses the question: 'Is this the end of the blogger?' I have to accept some of the blame for this rather ...
    peterblack.blogspot.com/2008/08/end-of-blogging.html - 65k -

  • Tim Lucas Video WatchBlog: The End of Blogging Days - A Rumination

    Could the End of Blogging Days be upon us? So soon? Fortunately, my friend -- the Best Man at my wedding 33 years ago -- did survive his operation. ...
    videowatchdog.blogspot.com/2008/05/end-of-blogging-days-rumination.html -

  • DemConWatch:: The end of blogging as we know it?

    What is blogging? As a noun "blog" is defined, at base, as a web-based diary, with the verb form relating to making entries, adding material, ...
    www.demconwatchblog.com/diary/1321/the-end-of-blogging-as-we-know-it -

  • 2007 Prediction: Blogs will be replaced « Messaging….. Technology ...

    Even though some (wrongly) predicted the end of blogging and Facebook’s immediate demise — both are still here … going strong and gaining [...] ...
    joshuamaher.com/2006/12/18/2007-prediction-blogs-will-be-replaced/ -

     

    This blog is dead! ORLY?

    I see a few people are talking about the death of A-list blogging. Including my blog in that as evidence.

    Actually you’ll see me blogging more and social networking less. Why? Cause I’m starting to have longer thoughts again. Might have something to do with not being able to drink Diet Coke anymore due to my kidney disease.

    I can’t wait for Dan Lyons to predict the death of Facebook or Twitter because I’m blogging again.

    Anyway, I think Twitter is blogging. When I go back and look at my blog back in 2004, for instance, it looks a whole lot like Twitter. Short item with a link. So some of that content behavior has moved elsewhere. Big whoop.

    But now that I’ve done 18,000 tweets I find I’m getting bored there and want to play around with longer blog posts again. Mostly because I find I’m having something to say.

    Welcome back to the dead. :-)

     

     

     

     

     

  • The time line of all the main events in the history of the Universe

    {{Potd/2007-08-12 (en)}}

    Image via Wikipedia

    Below is a time line of all the main events in the history of the Universe. (via historyoftheuniverse)

    The Stories in date order are:

    15 Billion Years ago
    Alpha Particles Atom Big Bang Cosmic Background Radiation Cosmos Electric Charge Electron Expansion of the Universe False Vacuum Field Gas Gravity Higgs Fields Inflation Interactions Macrocosmos Neutron Nuclear Fusion Particles Positron Proton Radiation Beta Radioactivity Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking Universe
    13 Billion Years ago
    Clusters of Galaxies Disc of Galaxy Galaxies Globular Star Cluster
    12 Billion Years ago
    Binary Stars Birth of a Star Galaxy Problems How a Star Works Milky Way Galaxy Open Star Clusters Spiral Arms Stars
    11 Billion Years ago
    Black Holes Cosmic Dust HONC Atoms Hydrogen Bond Ice Molecules Neutron Star Nova Red Giant Supernova Water White Dwarf Star
    4.7 Billion Years ago
    Earth Earth Origin Planets Solar Disc Solar System Solar System Model Sun
    4.5 Billion Years ago
    Earth Magnetic Field Earth Structure Radioactive Dating Radioactivity Alpha Radioactivity Volcanoes
    4 Billion Years ago
    Amino Acid Chains Amino Acids Base Pairing Biological Environment Causes of Ice Ages Climate Continental Drift Dry Joining Early Atmosphere Enzyme Enzyme breaks target Evolution Genes Genetic Problems Greenhouse Effect Ice Ages Life Liquid Water Making Protein Meteorite Era Mutation Nucleic Acid Nucleic Acid Bases Nucleic Acid Message Origin of Life Process of Life Protein Rain Reproduction Sunlight Weather Weathering of Rock
    3.9 Billion Years ago
    Cell Membrane Cell Wall Fermentation
    3.8 Billion Years ago
    Cell Division Chromosomes
    3.5 Billion Years ago
    Energy Crisis Archaebacteria Bacteria Bacterial Spores Nitrogen Cycle Photosynthesis Viral Diseases Viruses
    3 Billion Years ago
    Blue Green Bacteria Oxygen Poisoning
    2 Billion Years ago
    Ozone Respiration
    1.5 Billion Years ago
    Algae Eukaryotes Fertilization Mitochondria Protozoa Sex Symbiosis
    1 Billion Years ago
    Air Colony of Algae Death Ecosystem Fungi Hormones
    700 Million Years ago
    Continental Drift Movie Earth 700 my ago Sponge
    650 Million Years ago
    Earth 650 my ago Jellyfish
    600 Million Years ago
    Earth 600 my ago
    570 Million Years ago
    Ancestral Flatworms Animal Groups Arthropods Mollusk
    550 Million Years ago
    Earth 550 my ago
    500 Million Years ago
    Bone Earth 500 my ago Fish Immune System Immune System Diseases Jawless Fish Vertebrates
    470 Million Years ago
    Moss
    450 Million Years ago
    Bony fish Earth 450 my ago Lichen
    400 Million Years ago
    Earth 400 my ago
    390 Million Years ago
    Lobe Finned Fish Ray Finned Fish Sharks
    380 Million Years ago
    Insects
    350 Million Years ago
    Amphibians Earth 350 my ago Ferns Invertebrates onto Land
    300 Million Years ago
    Earth 300 my ago Gondwanaland Invertebrates Free From Water Reptiles Seed Plants
    250 Million Years ago
    Dinosaurs Earth 250 My ago
    200 Million Years ago
    Earth 200 my ago Fruiting Plants Invertebrate Reproduction Mammals
    150 Million Years ago
    Birds Earth 150 my ago
    100 Million Years ago
    Earth 100 my ago
    65 Million Years ago
    Meteorite
    50 Million Years ago
    Earth 50 my ago Grasses Horse Family Primates Spread of mammals
    40 Million Years ago
    Cow Family
    3 Million Years ago
    Homo Erectus Recent Ice Age
    700 Thousand Years ago
    Fire
    200 Thousand Years ago
    Neanderthals
    100 Thousand Years ago
    People
    11 Thousand Years ago
    Farmers Nomads
    6 Thousand Years ago
    Cities
    5 Thousand Years ago
    Kings and Peasants
    3 Thousand Years ago
    Empires Iron Middle East Migrations
    2 Thousand Years ago
    China Greeks India Roman Empire South America
    1.6 Thousand Years ago
    Byzantium
    1500 Years ago
    Dark Ages
    1400 Years ago
    Islam
    1000 Years ago
    Middle Ages
    550 Years ago
    Colonialism Renaissance
    450 Years ago
    Copernicus
    350 Years ago
    Science
    250 Years ago
    Industrial Revolution
    225 Years ago
    Capitalism Democracy Law
    200 Years ago
    Industrial Growth
    150 Years ago
    Communism
    100 Years ago
    New Industrial Nations
    75 Years ago
    Industrial Wars Totalitarian Dictatorships
    55 Years ago
    Fascism Nuclear Weapons
    50 Years ago
    Other Technology The Past 50 Years
    Today
    Climate Threats Computers Futures Longer Term Threats Modern Technology National Governments Opportunities Pollution Poverty Social Strengths SWOT Analysis Threats Trade War Weaknesses
    20 Years in the future
    Future of Medicine
    200 Years in the future
    Future of Energy
    2 Thousand Years in the future
    Future of Climate Future of Humanity
    10 Thousand Years in the future
    Future of Computers
    10 Million Years in the future
    Earth 10 my in future
    20 Million Years in the future
    Earth 20 my in future
    30 Million Years in the future
    Earth 30 my in future
    40 Million Years in the future
    Earth 40 my in future
    50 Million Years in the future
    Earth 50 my in future
    60 Million Years in the future
    Earth 60 my in future
    70 Million Years in the future
    Earth 70 my in future
    80 Million Years in the future
    Earth 80 my in future
    90 Million Years in the future
    Earth 90 my in future
    100 Million Years in the future
    Earth 100 my in future
    110 Million Years in the future
    Earth 110 my in future
    120 Million Years in the future
    Earth 120 my in future
    130 Million Years in the future
    Earth 130 my in future
    140 Million Years in the future
    Earth 140 my in future
    150 Million Years in the future
    Earth 150 my in future
    160 Million Years in the future
    Earth 160 my in future
    170 Million Years in the future
    Earth 170 my in future
    180 Million Years in the future
    Earth 180 my in future
    190 Million Years in the future
    Earth 190 my in future
    200 Million Years in the future
    Earth 200 my in future
    250 Million Years in the future
    Future of Earth
    5 Billion Years in the future
    Future of the Sun
    10 Billion Years in the future
    Future of Galaxy
    1000 Billion Years in the future
    Future of Universe
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