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vol VII: Notes

1982

Sunday 7 March 1982 - Saturday 13 March 1982

Sunday 7 March 1982
Monday 8 March1982

notebook: DREAMING 23/2/82, DB1

[page 31]

Tuesday 9 March 1982

Got mail, nothing from Byte (had acknowledgement card yesterday). Then sitting down at kitchen table someone brought in a large look like parcel. Thought it might be "Magic Scarf" ms returned, but it was too thick and I felt excited that they might have bought something. The package was damaged, but they had recycled my envelope as I has suggested, but they had put the stamps on wrong or somesuch - a lot of little witticims written on the envelope.

Perhaps wish that they would publish; that someone there would appreciate my sense of fun.

. . .

Stuck in valley rain . . .

Wednesday 10 March 1982
Thursday 11 March 1982
Friday 12 March 1982
Saturday 13 March 1982

 

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Further reading

Books

Click on the "Amazon" link below each book entry to see details of a book (and possibly buy it!)

Aquinas, Thomas, Summa Theologica (translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province), Tabor Publishing 1981 'Brother Thomas raised new problems in his teaching, invented a new method, used new systems of proof. To hear him teach a new doctrine, with new arguments, one could not doubt that God, by the irradiation of this new light and by the novelty of this inspiration, gave him the power to teach, by the spoken and written word, new opinions and new knowledge.' (William of Tocco, T's first biographer) 
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Keynes, John Maynard, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Macmillan 1936-1964 The classic twentieth century economics text that revealed that there are more ways to get an economy to grow than simply balancing the books.back
Kolmogorov, A N, and Nathan Morrison (Translator) (With an added bibliography by A T Bharucha-Reid), Foundations of the Theory of Probability, Chelsea 1956 Preface: 'The purpose of this monograph is to give an axiomatic foundation for the theory of probability. . . . This task would have been a rather hopeless one before the introduction of Lebesgue's theories of measure and integration. However, after Lebesgue's publication of his investigations, the analogies between measure of a set and mathematical expectation of a random variable became apparent. These analogies allowed of further extensions; thus, for example, various properties of independent random variables were seen to be in complete analogy with the corresponding properties of orthogonal functions ... ' 
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Malthus, Thomas, and Davis Souden (Editor), Works of Thomas Robert Malthus, Pickering & Chatto Ltd 1986 Amazon Product Description 'The Pickering Masters "Works of Thomas Robert Malthus" is the first and only collected edition of the works of this major thinker. Texts have been edited by an expert team to reflect the development of Malthus' thought. The collation of the texts of different editions of his major works show, both in small details and in the substantial development of the argument, the progression of the writer's ideas. Texts of the first and second editions of the "Principles of Political Economy" and of the second and sixth editions of the "Essay on the Principle of Population" have been collated and variant readings printed as footnotes. The first edition of Malthus' most famous book, the "Essay", is essentially a different work from the second and subsequent editions, and is here printed complete.' 
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Stephenson, Carl, and Frederick G Marcham, Sources of English Constitutional History: Volume II: A Selection of Documents from the Interregnum to the Present, Addison-Wesley Educational 1990 Jacket: '. . . All major parliamentary acts and proceedings are included, allowing the reader to trace the development of the British political stance from the constitutional experiment of the Interregnum to the present. Important new documents and a new bibliography are included in this edition.' 
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Stiglitz, Joseph E, Freefall: America, Free Markets and the Sinking of the World Economy, W. W. Norton & Company 2010 Amazon Product Description ' . . . The Great Recession, as it has come to be called, has impacted more people worldwide than any crisis since the Great Depression.

Few are more qualified to comment during this turbulent time than Joseph E. Stiglitz. Winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Economics, Stiglitz is “an insanely great economist, in ways you can’t really appreciate unless you’re deep into the field” (Paul Krugman, New York Times). In Freefall, Stiglitz traces the origins of the Great Recession, eschewing easy answers and demolishing the contention that America needs more billion-dollar bailouts and free passes to those “too big to fail,” while also outlining the alternatives and revealing that even now there are choices ahead that can make a difference. The system is broken, and we can only fix it by examining the underlying theories that have led us into this new “bubble capitalism.” ' 
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Papers
Hulme, Mike, et al, "Relative impacts of human-induced climate change and natural climate variability", Nature, 397, 6721, 25 February 1999, page 688-691. 'Assessments of the regional impacts of human-induced climate change on a wide range of social and environmental systems are fundamental for determining the appropriate policy responses to climate change. Yet regional-scale impact assessments are fraught with difficulties, such as the uncertainties of regional climate-change prediction, the specification of appropriate environmental-response models, and the interpretation of impact results in the context of future socio-economic and technological change6. The effects of such confounding factors on estimates of climate-change impacts have only been poorly explored. Here we use results from recent global climate simulations and two environmental response models to consider systematically the effects of natural climate variability (30-year timescales) and future climate-change uncertainties on river runoff and agricultural potential in Europe. We find that, for some regions, the impacts of human-induced climate change by 2050 will be undetectable relative to those due to natural multi-decadal climate variability. If misleading assessments of—and inappropriate adaptation strategies to—climate-change impacts are to be avoided, future studies should consider the impacts of natural multi-decadal climate variability alongside those of human-induced climate change.'. back
Nowak, Martin A, Joshua B Plotkin and Vincent A A Jansen, "The evolution of syntactic communication", Nature, 404, 6777, 30 March 2000, page 495-498. Letters to Nature: 'Animal communication is typically non-syntactic, which means that signals refer to whole situations. Human language is syntactic, and signals consist of discrete components that have their own meaning. Syntax is requisite for taking advantage of combinatorics, that is 'making infinite use of finite means'. . . . Here we present a model for the population dynamics of language evolution, define the basic reproductive ratio of words and calculate the maximum size of a lexicon.'. back
Links
Boltzmann constant - Wikipedia, Boltzmann constant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'The Boltzmann constant (k or kB) is the physical constant relating energy at the particle level with temperature observed at the bulk level.'Values of k[ Units 1.380 6504(24) × 10−23 J K−1 8.617 343(15) × 10−5 eV K−1 1.380 6504(24) × 10−16 erg K−1 back
Byte (magazine) - Wikipedia, Byte (magazine) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'Byte magazine was an American microcomputer magazine, influential in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage.[1] Whereas many magazines from the mid-1980s had been dedicated to the MS-DOS (PC) platform or the Mac, mostly from a business or home user's perspective, Byte covered developments in the entire field of "small computers and software", and sometimes other computing fields such as supercomputers and high-reliability computing. Coverage was in-depth with much technical detail, rather than user-oriented. Print publication ceased in 1998 and online publication in 2013.' back
Lebesgue integration - Wikipedia, Lebesgue integration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'In mathematics, Lebesgue integration refers to both the general theory of integration of a function with respect to a general measure, and to the specific case of integration of a function defined on a sub-domain of the real line or a higher dimensional Euclidean space with respect to the Lebesgue measure. This article focuses on the more general concept.' back
Mustapha Kemal Atatürk - Wikipedia, Mustapha Kemal Atatürk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (indeterminate, 1881–10 November 1938) was a Turkish army officer, revolutionary statesman, and founder of the Republic of Turkey as well as its first President. Atatürk became known as an extremely capable military officer by being the only undefeated Ottoman commander during World War I. Following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire, he led the Turkish national movement in the Turkish War of Independence. Having established a provisional government in Ankara, he defeated the forces sent by the Allies. His successful military campaigns led to the liberation of the country and to the establishment of Turkey. During his presidency, Atatürk embarked upon a program of political, economic, and cultural reforms. An admirer of the Age of Enlightenment, he sought to transform the former Ottoman Empire into a modern, democratic, and secular nation-state. The principles of Atatürk's reforms, upon which modern Turkey was established, are referred to as Kemalism.' back
Paganism - Wikipedia, Paganism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'Pagan The adoption of paganus by the Latin Christians as an all-embracing, pejorative term for polytheists represents an unforeseen and singularly long-lasting victory, within a religious group, of a word of Latin slang originally devoid of religious meaning. The evolution occurred only in the Latin west, and in connection with the Latin church. Elsewhere, "Hellene" or "gentile" (ethnikos) remained the word for "pagan"; and paganos continued as a purely secular term, with overtones of the inferior and the commonplace. —Peter Brown, Late Antiquity, 1999[
The term pagan is from Late Latin paganus, revived during the Renaissance. Itself deriving from classical Latin pagus which originally meant "region delimited by markers", paganus had also come to mean "of or relating to the countryside", "country dweller", "villager"; by extension, "rustic", "unlearned", "yokel", "bumpkin"; in Roman military jargon, "non-combatant", "civilian", "unskilled soldier". It is related to pangere ("to fix", "to fasten") and ultimately comes from Proto-Indo-European *pag- ("to fix"). back
Planck constant - Wikipedia, Planck constant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 'The Planck constant (denoted h), also called Planck's constant, is a physical constant reflecting the sizes of energy quanta in quantum mechanics. It is named after Max Planck, one of the founders of quantum theory, who discovered it in 1900. . . . Planck discovered that physical action could not take on any indiscriminate value. Instead, the action must be some multiple of a very small quantity (later to be named the "quantum of action" and now called Planck's constant).' back
Teresa Cerojano, Phillipine health chief, church fight over condoms, The Associated Press
Monday, March 8, 2010; 3:21 AM

'MANILA, Philippines -- On Valentine's Day, Philippine government health workers hit the streets of Manila to hand out roses and condoms to passers-by.

The message was clear in a country with a relatively small but rapidly growing HIV-positive population: Avoid unprotected sex.

It didn't get far. Within days, leaders of the powerful Roman Catholic Church began urging the faithful to reject condoms, reigniting a long-running battle over contraception in the overwhelmingly Catholic nation ." back

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