Archive for the ‘Critical Thinking’ Category

Day 209 – Alpine Responsibility

July 28th, 2010, posted in 365 Challenge, Critical Thinking, Photography

Alpine Responsibility

208/365 (July 28, 2010) – Took the motorcycle for a nice ride this morning/afternoon. Didn’t put a ton of mileage on it, about 60km, but there weren’t many people on the roads I took so it was lovely. Rode out to Deep Cove via Dollarton Highway, then up Seymour Parkway and up into Mount Seymour Park to the ski hill. Took a break up there and wandered around a bit, it’s always strange being up at a ski hill out of season. A few hikers, some cyclists, pretty quiet.

Saw this sign and pondered the philosophy behind responsibility.

Responsibility. It’s a simple word, but people don’t seem to get it. We need to take responsibility for our actions, but in today’s society we seem more likely to blame anyone else and avoid responsibility at all costs.

Accepting responsibility for your own actions that result, even moderately, in something unpleasant, is admitting a mistake, and unfortunately, no one likes to admit mistakes. So we justify our actions and convince ourselves that we are innocent, without any blame in the situation. The simple act of consciously putting one’s self into something that has the potential to become a situation should be enough to lead to admission of, at least, partial responsibility.

If you are foolish enough to put yourself in a position that obviously could lead to a negative impact on you, then take responsibility for the fact that you put yourself there. No one else did, and any consequences are yours to bear, not the government’s, not the business’s, not “the other guy”.

If you can’t afford your mortgage payments, maybe it’s because you took out too big a loan rather than live within your means. The banks aren’t evil, they just did what you asked them to, gave you lots of money that you might not be able to afford payments on if your current financial status changed. If you are unhealthy because you eat McDonald’s 7 days a week, it’s not McDonald’s fault that you chose to have an unhealthy balance in your diet. If you trip on a curb and hurt yourself, it’s not the municipality’s fault for not putting a sign warning you that there is a curb (you do have eyes in your head). If you spill a coffee on yourself it’s not the coffee shop’s fault that you burnt yourself, perhaps you need to take responsibility for losing your grip on the cup. If you lose control of your car when a child runs out into the street, it’s not the child’s fault, it’s largely yours for not being aware of your surroundings while controlling a dangerous machine. If you receive a poor mark in your class it’s not the instructors fault for “not understanding you” it’s yours for not taking the time to ensure that you are aware of the requirements for successfully completing the course. If you get lost when going out of bounds and someone dies, it’s not the parks responsibility for not holding your hand, it’s yours for ignoring the rules. If you are arrested for being in a protest that turns ugly, it is not the fault of the police for not recognizing you in a crowd of thousands as being “innocent”. It is your fault for placing yourself in a position that any intelligent person recognizes as having the potential to turn into a riot with the right spark.

Sometimes the sense of entitlement and lack of taking responsibility today drives me over the deep end. If you make a mistake, admit it, then move on. If you make a less-than-intelligent decision, accept the consequences. You gain more respect through admission than from any attempt to shift the blame. Shifting the blame makes you look like you are in grade two.

“It’s my fault” “I accept responsibility” “I am (at least) partially to blame” See, not so hard!

And guess what, usually the conflict will cease because accepting responsibility for your actions also tends to defuse conflict.

End of rant.

Richard Dawkins on militant atheism

May 27th, 2010, posted in Critical Thinking, Random Musings

Long, but a great and highly entertaining lecture.

Richard Dawkins urges all atheists to openly state their position — and to fight the incursion of the church into politics and science. A fiery, funny, powerful talk.

If you don’t know of Dawkins -

As an evolutionary biologist, Richard Dawkins has broadened our understanding of the genetic origin of our species; as a popular author, he has helped lay readers understand complex scientific concepts. He’s best-known for the ideas laid out in his landmark book The Selfish Gene and fleshed out in The Extended Phenotype: the rather radical notion that Darwinian selection happens not at the level of the individual, but at the level of our DNA. The implication: We evolved for only one purpose — to serve our genes.

Of perhaps equal importance is Dawkins’ concept of the meme, which he defines as a self-replicating unit of culture — an idea, a chain letter, a catchy tune, an urban legend — which is passed person-to-person, its longevity based on its ability to lodge in the brain and inspire transmission to others. Introduced in The Selfish Gene in 1976, the concept of memes has itself proven highly contagious, inspiring countless accounts and explanations of idea propagation in the information age.

In recent years, Dawkins has become outspoken in his atheism, coining the word “bright” (as an alternate to atheist), and encouraging fellow non-believers to stand up and be identified. His controversial, confrontational 2002 TED talk was a seminal moment for the New Atheism, as was the publication of his 2006 book, The God Delusion, a bestselling critique of religion that championed atheism and promoted scientific principles over creationism and intelligent design.

“Dawkins … is a master of scientific exposition and synthesis. When it comes to his own specialty, evolutionary biology, there is none better.” Jim Holt, The New York Times

Everything is Amazing and No One is Happy

May 23rd, 2010, posted in Critical Thinking, Technology

This is a video that really does make you reflect a bit on the absurdity of the things that we complain about….

Food is life

May 6th, 2010, posted in Books, Critical Thinking, The Environment

World without us.jpg

I just finished reading an interesting book that a friend passed on to me. It’s called The World Without Us by Alan Weisman. It was quite the thought experiment and there is a website that revolves around the book (http://www.worldwithoutus.com/)

And then Kirk came home and told me about a video he saw on the CNN site yesterday. It told of toxic waste and garbage dumped in fields and on roads in Southern Italy and the impacts it was having on agriculture, animals, and human health. 60-70% of all  the food produced in the region is toxic. The milk contains dioxins. People’s lives are significantly shortened. Cancer rates are sky high.

We have made two trips to the Mediterranean (Greece) and both times were horrified at the attitude towards the environment…mostly indifference. Garbage is tossed into the se without a backwards glance, where it gets caught up in vessel props and coolant intakes, where it is eaten by unsuspecting marine animals thinking it is food, where it collects and smothers shores and the sea floor. Most towns have no sewage treatment, the wastes flow directly into the local streams and harbours though pipes that are hundreds, if not in some cases thousands, of years old.

As Alan Weisman shows, and as the videos demonstrate…perhaps this world would be better off without us here. In the meantim, what does it take for governments to realize that our agricultural land should be treated with kid gloves.

Back here at home we may not dump toxic waste at the end of the street, but we do something just as bad that takes healthy food out of the stores. We take prime agricultural land out of the land reserves and we build subdivisions on them.

Humans think they need everything. We think we are owed it for some strange reason. Instead of being grateful for what we have, we feel that we need more, want more. And in doing so we fuel the problems by being over-consumers or items we don’t really need and will probably discard soon after we attain them.

If we could all find a way to live a little smaller, leave a lighter footprint, give a little more. Maybe this world will have a chance to continue to support us.

Day 107 – On Guard

April 17th, 2010, posted in 365 Challenge, Critical Thinking, CritterTalk, Photography

Day 107 - On Guard!

107/365 (April 17, 2010) – I know people don’t like to leave their pets alone at home. But is this really any better? If you are heading out for a meal at the pub, do you really think your dog wants to sit in an enclosed space and wonder if you are going to come back or not? At least at home he’d be in familiar territory waiting for you.

It’s chilly out, and a rainy day, so he’s not in any danger. But seriously, in the summer I just want to break the windows on vehicles that do this. People are simply not being kind when they take their animals and leave them in the car.

North Vancouver has a bylaw that states “No person may cause an animal to be confined in an enclosed space, including a car, without adequate ventilation.” Unfortunately, people think cracking a window equals adequate ventilation. The problem is, that in a very short period of time temperatures can be punishingly hot within the confines of a car. Many dogs die of hyperthermia from being left in parked cars. Contrary to what most people believe, dogs overheat more quickly than humans do. They wear their fur coat all year long and they do not sweat. They cool their bodies by panting, or blowing out heat, which is much less effective than sweating. They also release heat through their paws, that’s why they go stand in water puddles when they are hot. Their blood flows through a counter current heat exchanger that is very effective in their feet. On summer days the air and upholstery in your vehicle can heat up to high temperatures that make it impossible for pets to cool themselves.

Even if you are comfortable, your dog may be too hot! The temperature in a parked car, even in the shade with the windows partly open, can rapidly reach a level that will seriously harm or even kill your furry friend.

He can live without you for a few hours. And if you are traveling and have no choice, then put the leash on and take him with you, or leash him inside the vehicle and open the windows completely…or something! But don’t just crack the windows an inch and think it’s OK. It’s not.