Posts Tagged With: Uncategorized

More news from the department of worry

A report in New Scientist slams our worship of IQ. Money quote:
The problem with IQ tests is that while they are effective at assessing our deliberative skills, which involve reason and the use of working memory, they are unable to assess our inclination to use them when the situation demands.
Paul Graham thinks that persistence is more important. Coaching at Excel, with 200 kids per week distinguishing themselves for better or worse, has made me believe the same.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Dogs and pigs: a double standard

On the theme of animal suffering, Jonathan Safran Foer wrote an op-ed about eating dogs.
Dogs are wonderful, and in many ways unique. But they are remarkably unremarkable in their intellectual and experiential capacities. Pigs are every bit as intelligent and feeling, by any sensible definition of the words. They can't hop into the back of a Volvo, but they can fetch, run and play, be mischievous and reciprocate affection. So why don't they get to curl up by the fire? Why can't they at least be spared being tossed on the fire? Our taboo against dog eating says something about dogs and a great deal about us. [...] Responding to factory farming calls for a capacity to care that dwells beyond information. We know what we see on undercover videos of factory farms and slaughterhouses is wrong. (There are those who will defend a system that allows for occasional animal cruelty, but no one defends the cruelty, itself.) And despite it being entirely reasonable, the case for eating dogs is likely repulsive to just about every reader of this paper. The instinct comes before our reason, and is more important.
I am not ready to give up meat (yet) nor am I ready to begin eating dog. I'm troubled, but am I bothered enough to do something about it? At the margin, my consumption of meat isn't changing much. Is it enough to say that I'll support higher taxes on meat, and the end of feed subsidies? As a vegetarian you might say that if everyone followed your stance then the horrible treatment of animals would end. But I can argue in turn that if everyone supported higher taxes on meat and the end of feed subsidies, then those problems would also be highly mitigated. In the end, I don't think my opinion or my stance matters very much. After a decade of being the pickiest eater in the family I'm now the most adventurous. My brother and sister are both vegetarians, which is great for them.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Evaluation of my writing experiment

Back on September 27th I made a promise to write at least one post a day between now and Halloween. It's been a fantastic success. When you write every day there's no pressure to "come back" with a really good post; you just write about whatever's on your mind. Also, getting in the habit of writing leads you to start reading things with an eye on writing about them; lots of times I'd write three or four posts and schedule them for consecutive days. I've also started writing for CMCForum which has about fifty times as much traffic. In three weeks I've written more posts there than any other author this semester; I would attribute this to making writing a habit and also not being as busy as many other students. I hope to keep writing every day going forward.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

The end of Annie Hall

(the clip is queued to 6:00 so it's only 3 minutes long)
"After that it got pretty late, and we both had to go, but it was great seeing Annie again. I... I realized what a terrific person she was, and... and how much fun it was just knowing her; and I... I, I thought of that old joke, y'know, the, this... this guy goes to a psychiatrist and says, "Doc, uh, my brother's crazy; he thinks he's a chicken." And, uh, the doctor says, "Well, why don't you turn him in?" The guy says, "I would, but I need the eggs." Well, I guess that's pretty much now how I feel about relationships; y'know, they're totally irrational, and crazy, and absurd, and... but, uh, I guess we keep goin' through it because, uh, most of us... need the eggs."

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Avoiding far bias

Robin Hanson has a good post on our tendency to moralize and offer suggestions about people that are far away from us:
At my Georgetown lecture last night on our robot future, the smart econ students focused their questions almost entirely on ethics. They seemed to assume they understood enough about the social situation, and were obsessed with the ethical ways for humans to treat robots, robots to treat humans, etc. I’ll bet they’d also be quick to condemn Roman centurions’ ethics, also figuring they understood enough about their social situation. But I think they’d need to learn lots more about either of these worlds before they could begin to offer useful ethics advice. Some of my young idealistic friends like to talk about figuring out what they could do to most help the world, and might go to Burma to see how the really poor live. I tell them one has to learn lots of details about a place to figure out how to improve it, and they’d do better to try this on a part of the world they understand better. But that doesn’t sound nearly as fun as saving the whole world all at once.
Democracy in America has a nice example of the perils of far ethics:
THERE is this third-world country that's both a major producer and transition zone for drugs, that has a long, difficult-to-control border through rough, arid terrain where populations that share a common language and ethnicity on either side seem to transition freely, where the police are so lawless and ineffectual that the government has to replace them with regular army troops, where local government is so corrupt and so enmeshed with the warlords who control the drug trade that some people are talking about devolution to failed-state status, and where open gun battles raging on a near-daily basis between army troops, drug warlords, and civilians have killed thousands of people so far this year; and it’s not Afghanistan. [...] Should we deploy troops to northern Mexico, employing an extensive counterinsurgency strategy to hunt down drug gangs and protect local populations, and send thousands of aid workers to establish jobs programmes and reduce corruption in the Mexican government? Most Americans would treat such a proposal as absurd. And rightly so. The job of suppressing drug gangs and reasserting the legitimacy of the state in Mexico is a task that will be carried out by the Mexican state, and America can only play a limited role in assisting that, particularly given the long and touchy history of American interference in Mexican affairs. And yet for some reason we believe that American policy is capable of accomplishing things in Pakistan and Afghanistan that we would never dream it could do in Mexico, even though Mexico is right next door.
So before you judge, walk a mile in someone's shoes. Ethics are context-dependent.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Quote of the day

The social stigma of defaulting on a home loan is fading quickly. In Miami,
• Property values have plummeted by an average of 50% • In Q4 2008, strategic defaults were 28% of defaults (Miami-Dade and Broward Counties) • Same locations, Q4 2006: Strategic defaults were 20%; • In September ‘09, homeowners owed $62.7 billion more than their homes were worth (CoreLogic) • Broward County 2006 purchases had a median negative equity = $75,000 • Miami-Dade 2006 purchases had a median negative equity = $63,000, • Nationally, estimated 588,000 strategically defaulted in 2008 (Experian) • Strategic defaulters with good credit scores (who remain current on other credit lines) can rehabilitate their FICO scores within 24 months after foreclosure.
Hat tip to the Big Picture, and the Miami Herald.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

How much is a delta smelt worth?

If you've ever wondered what the "CONGRESS CREATED DUST BOWL" signs along the dry, dusty section of I-5 mean, look no further than page 27 of this week's Economist, which explains California's water problems. In 2007 a federal judge ordered the state to reduce pumping from the Sacramento Delta because the delta smelt, a three-inch long fish, were getting sucked into the pumps and killed, and the delta smelt is a protected fish. Anyway, as the Sacramento Delta is the primary water source for farmland in the Central Valley, many farmers have let some fields lay fallow for lack of water, resulting in high unemployment, livelihoods hurt etc. Now normally I don't pity farmers much because of the generous subsidies they get from Congress every year but the question is interesting. There's an old joke where a man asks a woman if she would sleep with him for 5 million dollars and she says Of course. Then he asks her if she'd sleep with him for 5 dollars, and she says "What type of woman do you think I am?" He replies, "We've established that, now we're haggling over price." The man was probably an economist. The point of the joke is everything has a price; if something, like preservation of delta smelt, had infinite value, it would be worth spending all of our money trying to achieve it and the economy would head down the drain. Let's go ahead and establish upper and lower bounds on the price. While some in PETA may disagree I think that if it would cost our entire National GDP for one year to save the smelt, we should probably let them go. And most everyone would agree that if we could save them for free (and actually for free, not in a way that hurts other animals), we should go ahead and do that. So the true value of preserving the delta smelt is between zero and $3 trillion, an encouraging start. Can we estimate how much the fish would pay to avoid a horrible pumping death? No. For humans, we generally do this by seeing how much people are willing to pay for life insurance, preventative surgery, and then figuring out their implied valuation. If I'm willing to pay $10,000 dollars to reduce my chance of death by 1 percent, then I value my life at $1 million. This is impossible to do with fish. Does it necessarily follow that the price of a fish's suffering should be zero? No, although judging by the rate at which we slaughter chicken and cows, it's going to be pretty low. All of the ways to measure the price depend on how the thing would impact humans. There's no real other way to look at the problem, at least until fish develop their own market economy. We could look at each of the following: - The chance the extinction of delta smelt would ruin the ecosystem and the economic consequences of the ruin of the ecosystem, in terms of local fishing economy, adverse weather, flooding etc, all of which we can estimate. - The amount of money environmentalists are willing to spend to save the delta smelt. Judging the amount of money environmentalists spend trying to save various animals may be a way of figuring out an animal value system. Is a panda worth more than an elephant? Inquiring minds want to know. - The chance that we can later reintroduce the delta smelt, through genetics or cryonics or something, if they do go extinct. If this chance is high the value on their current preservation should be low. - The amount of pain and sadness everyone in the world would feel if the fish were to go extinct. In a sense I think this is what environmentalists work so hard to prevent; their own future sadness. - The economic consequences of unemployment and drought in the Central Valley if we don't keep the water flowing. All of these will be messy, but unlike the problem of figuring out how much the fish hates pain, at least we'd be able to try; there's no doubt the question's complicated but we should probably be able to get within a factor of ten of the correct value.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Finding things to write about

Can't think of anything to write about? I'm sure that you're interesting; the problem probably lies in your process. - Start by reading more. When you read more you start to see the interconnections between what you are reading and what you've already read. You also tend to have a context and the ability to form opinions when your professors assign reading. If you go to the Claremont Colleges you can request any book in the world, for free, through Link+ or Interlibrary Loan. When I was in 5th grade we took a field trip to a retreat, but I spent the whole day reading. The cutest girl in the school came and sat right next to me and I kept on reading (books don't give you very good advice about what to do in those situations). In 6th grade we had to keep a reading chart and were supposed to read 100 pages in a quarter; I had about 2100 pages and that was counting only books I could remember reading and not counting the newspaper. Around 8th grade I started reading nonfiction and I've hardly read fiction since then. If you don't have time to read, either schedule time or quit your least favorite activity. Justine Musk says to develop a writer's intuition, you should read more. Reading is the best way to boost your vocabulary (and SAT verbal score), get a sense of how to write and spell. Phonics stink. - Keep track of every good idea that you have. When I'm away from my computer I use the notes app on my phone. Most of my ideas come right before bed, in the shower or in transit. I keep a Google Doc with possible post topics. If you're short on ideas ask other people what they've been thinking about lately instead of how their day's been going. Or like the above, start reading RSS of interesting people. Good ideas tend to snowball together. - Write every day. Writing every day is actually much easier than trying to write occasionally, and makes essay writing easier. When you write every day you're not worried that you have to write the greatest thing the world has ever seen, you can just write whatever you think will be interesting and wait for good ideas to bubble up. If you're staring at a blank screen, try outlining your post/essay and then following the script. Separating planning from process makes it way easier. - Get as much feedback as you can. Tell people that if you write something crappy, you want to know it. The best way to do this is to write for an audience, and the bigger the better. There, I just wrote 350 words in 20 minutes - more than a page. The truth is that you already do a lot of writing every day, on Facebook and Twitter and text messages and email. Ostensibly this post is about writing but it really applies to any area of life in which you'd like to improve.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Fareed Zakaria

Fareed Zakaria spoke at the Ath last night. I enjoyed his stories and fun facts, but when you try to be funny and don't cite things I'm not going to be very convinced about the points you're making. I am skeptical of using narratives and making predictions as a way of explaining the world. First he pointed out that the world is much more stable than it was, and listed three reasons why that was the case, about technological progress and central banks dealing with inflation and so on. Also he said that one main reason is we're not fighting the Soviet Union anymore, and that none of the top seven economies are fighting each other. He is right that the world is much more stable than it was before, but I disagree that we can project this peace out into the future. For one thing, we've been lucky in terms of natural disasters. One giant volcano eruption and a whole lot of people would go hungry fast as global crop supply would fail to meet demand. Or a solar eruption could cause such a large burst of electromagnetism that it would wipe out the entire East Coast transmission bank. Or some leader could decide to be unhappy with his lot and invade another country, or start boosting his army. He also pointed out that the USA is losing its competitive edge, and that we lack the political will to impose any short-term pain for long term benefit. Very well. I guess when you pay Fareed Zakaria to come to your school you should expect wide geopolitical commentary. I was concerned about the shaman-like nature of the questions in the Q&A session. He sounded smarter than he does on TV.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.