Archive for category Actual Events
Bias
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Ranting & Ravings on July 15, 2007
I know we’re all biased, but I’m getting so tired or people who insist on how right they must be and how absurd their opposition is. I truly think that these people believe that what they believe is correct. It’s just bizarre though how they are completely unable to see the other possibility. When I say that something is “credible” or “believable” I mean that it appears to be a possible truth. The credibility of some article, story, or book has nothing to do with what I currently believe or hold to. In addition when I say that something is “compelling” or “convincing” I mean that the article or story, drives one to believe the conclusion. It makes conclusions based on credible presuppositions that if true, propel the reader to adopt the position or opinion of the author. Now, if I believe that the facts are wrong, it doesn’t mean that the book isn’t compelling. I find the conclusion to be false but only because I feel confident in the correctness and validity of my facts over the credible facts presented in the argument. However, if I later find that I was wrong, then I would be inclined to adopt the position advocated.
This seems to make sense to me but not to anyone else. Practically everyone I talk to will make statements about an argument as if the argument is absurd. Some of the time, I feel that the argument was excellent. The flaw was the presupposed facts. Granted, there are some flakey, illogical arguments that are commonly advocated today, but these relatively easy to spot. They simply don’t stand up to scrutiny and can be shown to be wrong through internal confusion or contradiction. But to simply attack the argument as “bad” when one means that one simply disagrees with the underlying presuppositions seems to be most unhelpful. For example, when a person states that the 9/11 plane crashes were a government conspiracy, the facts are credible (it’s actually quite amazing what evidence can be provided) and the argument is consistent and logical. I don’t know what happened on September 11, but I feel that I’m in the minority because I don’t rabidly reject one or the other possibility. I’m somewhat inclined to doubt that the U.S. government could do such a thing (have you seen how efficient they are at other tasks?) but there is credible evidence to support the conspiracy.
I don’t agree with athiests. However, I find it silly to refer to their arguments as “bad” simply because they start with different facts. Their underlying faith in certain facts and truths is what I believe to be faulty. It all comes down to what a person starts with. If you believe that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners you start with a very different perspective than someone who believes that the universe has always existed and that the sum of what we observe in the physical universe is all that really is. From these two extremely different springboards, we can easily construct logical and “good” argument. But the athiest and Christian will never agree despite how logical and excellent these arguments may be.
It seems like an insane amount of time is spent disproving the validity of an atheist’s argument when the problem isn’t in the argument, it’s in the facts that are presented as fact in the argument. If someone tells me that the world is supported on the back of a giant turtle I have reason to doubt. I have never seen said turtle and have no reason to believe that it exists. However, if I suspend my disbelief and assume that it may be true, a compelling conclusion may follow. It’s still not very credible but this is because I have much evidence to support the fact that the reptile in question is fictitious and little evidence to the contrary. Facts and truths underly the validity of arguments but not their logical conclusion. I could still conclude, for example, that if I was to be convinced of the existence of the turtle, I would also agree with the conclusion drawn from this fact. I think most people though would say that the argument was absurd. It isn’t though — the fact is absurd. It’s absurd because it’s not supported by evidence.
In scientific circles, observation of physical phenomena is what establishes “fact”. If one scientist believes he has seen a giant, 27-foot long gerbil, he is challenged. He is challenged because he is alone in his observation and his peers suspect him of hitting the Wild Turkey too hard. However, when more evidence presents itself (“New York City residents flee before enormous rodent!”), scientists are willing to accept this as fact. If an event or object is observed only once, it’s credibility is considered dubious. Repeatability is important. If 26-foot long gerbils were observed to exist, a scientist reporting a 27-foot gerbil would be believed perhaps without any verification by other scientists. Here we see also that “facts” established already are the impetus for the adoption of similar facts. If, after the 27-foot gerbil is recorded as actually in existence, a new discovery shows that the observation of the first 26-foot gerbil was inaccurate (The scientist was looking at the gerbil the wrong way through his binoculars) then the 27-foot gerbil “fact” will again be challenged. Fact builds on fact.
The issue with “science” vs. “religion” is fundamentally that science is about believing what we sense with our five senses and religion is about believing what we sense within our minds. Our five senses indicate the orientation of the physical world around us. Our minds indicate the orientation of something else entirely. We feel guilt and shame, we feel that there is a problem with the way the world is, we feel that certain things are “wrong” and others are “right”. Using language like this is using constructs to describe experiences of thought just as “blue” and “yellow” are constructs that describe experiences of vision. Psychology attempts to explain the mind as if it were simply yet another thing to be understood with our five senses. However, understanding it eludes us. Yes, chemical reactions are observed that trigger complex mental activity and behavior but what causes us to ask the questions of existence and meaning? Is it simply more chemical interactions and hormonal responses? Are we simply exerting energy like a an imperfect artificial intelligence, clogging the binary gateways of its unknown progenitory motherboard in an attempt to describe a feeling that is in fact nothing more than the complex arrangement and interaction of the selfsame binary gateways? This is the fundamental question. Are we wasting our time trying to find order and meaning and purpose when we were random and chaotic? Is it possible for random and chaotic systems to search for order and patterns? Where does the order come from?
The answers to these questions lay down the most basic of all facts and are therefore the basis of all “high-level” beliefs. I think more books should be written concerning these answers and the arguments and supporting evidence for them, with an attempt at showing evidence for these presuppositions than merely bashing high-level arguments that clearly aren’t resting on the same foundation. The rest is unimportant — the most logical argument in the world is useless if the facts are wrong. So why start there?
Antinomianism
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Somewhat Random on June 21, 2007
Rev. Rayburn preached on Mark 3:31-35 this last Sunday.
And his mother and his brothers came, and standing outside they sent to him and called him. And a crowd was sitting around him, and they said to him, “Your mother and your brothers are outside, seeking you.†And he answered them, “Who are my mother and my brothers?†And looking about at those who sat around him, he said, “Here are my mother and my brothers! For whoever does the will of God, he is my brother and sister and mother.â€
It’s interesting to note that Christ mentions specifically the “doing of his will” as being what makes a person a member of His spiritual family. He doesn’t mention believing here but doing. It must have made an impact. Both of Jesus’s brothers, probably confused at the time that Jesus told them this, later understood and wrote fairly strong words that put the doctrine of grace into perspective.
James 2:14
What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can that faith save him?
Jude 3b,4
I found it necessary to write appealing to you to contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints. For certain people have crept in unnoticed who long ago were designated for this condemnation, ungodly people, who pervert the grace of our God into sensuality and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.
Interesting stuff… It’s neat to realize that the particular circumstances that led to the convictions that James and Jude held were probably the rather dramatic event in Mark 3. Yes, it’s inspired, but it somehow feels so much more human when you see these things.
War
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Ranting & Ravings on June 21, 2007
If tyranny and oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. Of all the enemies to public liberty, war is perhaps the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few. The loss of liberty at home is to be charged to the provisions against danger, real or imagined, from abroad.
James Madison
Photoshop
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Somewhat Random on June 18, 2007
Had some fun with Photoshop and thought I’d show the progression of work. It’s not very impressive (blending a picture into a background, but it was fun.
More PHP script…
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Geekiness on May 23, 2007
I found this code useful recently to track statistically how many people are blocking javascript from executing on their system. It also acts as a basic logger for IPs and hostnames that are hitting your website…
$handling = fopen(â€ips.htmlâ€, ‘a’); $StringData = date(’Y.m.d H:i:s’).â€,â€.$_SERVER[’REMOTE_ADDR’].â€,â€.gethostbyaddr($_SERVER[’REMOTE_ADDR’]).â€nâ€; fwrite($handling, $StringData); fclose($handling); |
iTunes server on Gentoo?
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Geekiness on April 28, 2007
The post says it all — I have all my music on Gentoo Linux but I would really like it if I could stream music onto the computers around the house using the iTunes interface. It’s easier than browsing files and it’s got nice built-in search features.
Lo-and-behold, you can do it! Thanks to Apple for making software that can actually be interfaced with! Also thanks for to the wonderful users of Gentoo who somehow find time to write HOWTO guides for practically everything. The details can be found here.
FLAC -> MP3
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Geekiness on April 28, 2007
So… I finally got my hard drives installed on my home server and now I just need to get my music collection into shape so I can actually play stuff. When I originally made copies of my CDs I converted them to FLAC. Why FLAC? Because I was being anal and didn’t want to “downgrade” my music to a measily 192kbps MP3 format. I know this is probably trivial, but if I retain the FLAC versions, it’s as if I have the original CD. Yes, I can’t tell the difference between 192kbps MP3 and the lossless FLAC, but the point is, if I ever want to convert all my music into AAC or (heaven’s forbid!) WMA format, I can do it fairly easily if I’m starting from a lossless format. If I start from the 192kbps MP3 I’ll start getting really degraded sounding stuff pretty quickly. So that’s my excuse.
How to accomplish this? In the past I’d used mpg321 to do the conversion but this time I used ffmpeg. I have all my CD collection in a directory on my system.
find "/var/mirror/Data/Audio/My CD Archive/" -name *.flac -exec /var/scripts/convert.sh {} \; |
And /var/scripts/convert.sh contains:
ffmpeg -y -i "$1" -ab 192 "`echo "$1" | sed -e 's/.flac/.mp3/g'`" |
This seems too much mess, but it appears to be working. The drawback? ffmpeg doesn’t seem to parse the “tag” information for each file so I’m ending up with “naked” MP3s (no ID3 tag). Not the end of the world. I’ll clean them up when I’m done.
The process is still chugging away — it’s completed about half of my collection.
Edit: I went ahead and figured out what I need to do to get the tags across. I installed the flac and id3 ebuilds and can now run the following script (using the same find command) to get the tags to match up from the flac files to the mp3 files.
OUTF=`echo "$1" | sed s/\.flac/.mp3/g` ARTIST=`metaflac "$1" --show-tag=ARTIST | sed s/.*=//g` TITLE=`metaflac "$1" --show-tag=TITLE | sed s/.*=//g` ALBUM=`metaflac "$1" --show-tag=ALBUM | sed s/.*=//g` GENRE=`metaflac "$1" --show-tag=GENRE | sed s/.*=//g` TRACKNUMBER=`metaflac "$1" --show-tag=TRACKNUMBER | sed s/.*=//g` id3 -t "$TITLE" -T "$TRACKNUMBER" -a "$ARTIST" -A "$ALBUM" -g "$GENRE" "$OUTF" |
Thanks to this page for the info.
Life
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Ranting & Ravings on March 26, 2007
It goes on… Thinking of refinancing the house and that’s about all that’s new. I’ve been spending very little time with computers recently. I got two new 500 GB hard drives and a nice RAID card that I was going to set up in a mirrored array but I’ve been slow on that. Other than that, it’s just been work and boring stuff. Spring is here and things are starting to become more green and colorful. Hopefully it stops frosting soon…
I think I need to stop doing projects for a little bit and just relax. Maybe catch up on some reading that’s been piling up. I have about 20 books that I’ve started but not finished. That’s not good.
Anyway — more interesting stuff when my life becomes more interesting…
Happy New Year!
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Geekiness on January 6, 2007
Ho hum — been a bit slow on the blog posts of late. Okay, well, November 20th was the last one. To be fair, I did start a post in draft format and I never actually made the post. And then I accidentally lost it and I can’t even remember what it was about.
Lots of new stuff and yet, not really all that much is new. I took the GRE in mid-December. Did well enough to most likely get into the graduate program that I’m looking at. Not stellar, but good enough. Now I just need to figure out what classes I will need to take to be considered fit to begin. The problem is that my undergraduate degree is in “Computer Information Systems” which isn’t really Computer Science. It’s a bit weak on the in-depth computer programming and particularly the math. I’m not too concerned with being able to do the catch-up, but it just feels like a waste of time.
The wife and I have been busy around the house trying to get things straightened up and to our liking. Lots of painting projects. I think we’re almost done. I keep saying that, and this time I hope it’s true. We’re still a “young couple” and we have WAY too much stuff. It’s kind of sad… Stuff accumulates and starts to drag you down with all the maintenance and organization that it requires. I think a good policy to help address this issue is to only buy replacement stuff and to get rid of the old when you’ve purchased the replacement. It’s hard to do though. Old stuff has some value and it’s hard to part with it.
On the geek front I’ve been fairly stagnant. I did spend some serious time getting into some Python and in particular Django and TurboGears— both are web development frameworks that run on Python. It’s a lot of fun but it’s hard to squeeze in time to practice. I’m hoping to implement one of these solutions down the road a little bit on one of my work projects where I have some freedom to choose the implementation. I was able to get into using AJAX with PHP for one of my last projects. It was sloppy code and very non-object oriented but I was able to get a good feel for designing template-driven websites using PHP and play with some AJAX libraries like Script.aculo.us and others. I also looked at Ruby on Rails again but didn’t get far on that either. All fun stuff and I’m sure that much of it is valuable for the future, but it’s hard to tell how much of it will morph between now and then. I’ve been trying to advance my C# skills but I don’t think I’m getting too much new done with it. We’ll see how that goes…
I’m hoping to stop biting my finger nails (filthy habit) and drop some weight this year. I started off the year with a nasty cold that has convinced me to stay out of the gym. It’s not hard to convince me. Oh, and there are still cookies that need finishing off and you’re supposed to feed a cold, right? I’m trying to prep for taking some Microsoft Certification exams, get ready for graduate school, and get in shape for possibly joining the Air National Guard. Maybe by the time I next post, I will have accomplished one of those goals. Or maybe I’ll actually start posting regularly!
When it rains, it pours
Posted by Andrew Flanagan in Actual Events, Ranting & Ravings on November 20, 2006
Today was not a good day. I did not get enough sleep last night and was out of the house by 4:30am. I then proceeded to get blamed for a major “incident” at work which was actually something that I had been assigned to do by another manager. Then I got raked over the coals for a report that apparently didn’t meet snuff (although, evidently it wasn’t read very clearly since all the things they said to correct were in fact already in the report I had given them). I was unable to solve the one trivial and unimportant problem that I had hoped to tackle today and got tied up at work so I had to leave a little late. Traffic was absolutely the worst I have ever seen and it took me 2.5 hours to get home. I went out shopping with my 2-year old son who proceeded to steal some butter from Safeway and smear it all over himself and the cart when I wasn’t looking. On the way out the door, I got the largest paper-cut I’ve ever seen from the receipt.
Oh, and it’s pouring outside.