Wednesday, September 17, 2025

E. B. White on the moon

"Notes and Comment
by E. B. White

The moon, it turns out, is a great place for men. One-sixth gravity must be a lot of fun, and when Armstrong and Aldrin went into their bouncy little dance, like two happy children, it was a moment not only of triumph but of gaiety. The moon, on the other hand, is a poor place for flags. Ours looked stiff and awkward, trying to float on the breeze that does not blow. (There must be a lesson here somewhere.) It is traditional, of course, for explorers to plant the flag, but it struck us, as we watched with awe and admiration and pride, that our two fellows were universal men, not national men, and should have been equipped accordingly. Like every great river and every great sea, the moon belongs to none and belongs to all. It still holds the key to madness, still controls the tides that lap on shores everywhere, still guards the lovers who kiss in every land under no banner but the sky. What a pity that in our moment of triumph we did not forswear the familiar Iwo Jima scene and plant instead a device acceptable to all: a limp white handkerchief, perhaps, symbol of the common cold, which, like the moon, affects us all, unites us all.

The Moon Hours
(The following pieces were written by various reporters.)

By 10 P.M. Sunday, twelve hundred people had gathered at the intersection of Sixth Avenue and Fiftieth Street, between Radio City Music Hall and the Time-Life Plaza. Rain had been falling since 7:30, and umbrellas shifted from side to side and poke up above heads, obscuring some people's view of the thing everyone was trying to watch—a fifteen-by-fifteen-foot screen, on which NBC's coverage of the moon landing was being shown in color. A large sign read "Life and nasa Present Apollo: Man to the Moon," and huge photographs of the three Apollo astronauts stood in windows of the Time & Life Building. To the north of the television screen, a full-scale model of the lunar module was shielded from the rain by a plastic canopy, and other equipment had been given protective covers. The intersection was brightly lighted—two searchlights played on nearby buildings—and at this hour the area was extremely noisy. The noise was a constant, high-level mixture of automobile engines, horns, police whistles (twenty policemen were patrolling the area), the shouts of benders (they moved through the crowd selling pennants, souvenir buttons, pretzels, and ice cream), the voices and beeps from the TV audio system, and the chatter of the people crowded on the sidewalks behind police barricades. But as the time for the astronauts' exit from the LM drew near, the crowd began to grow quiet. Anticipation was obvious in people's faces, and the talk became a sort of nervous undertone. At ten-fifteen, a newcomer—a young man carrying a pack on his back—approached a man in a blue jacket and said, "I presume they've got to the moon."

"You don't know?" the man in blue asked. "Where have you been all day."

"Just flown in. English," said the young man,

"
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1969/07/26/comment-5238#:~:text=Notes%20and%20Comment,the%20young%20man%2C

Monday, September 8, 2025

Dear Time

 It does make some of us sentimental, and grateful.


Dear time On this fair occasion I’d like to say you given me More than what you’ve taken Hey time Working well together I know it’s not forever We’ll both be moving on Look what I’ve collected A little box of memories Somewhat disconnected Tied with twine Each a small remembrance One inside the other On rewind, tonight I find them Dimmed by wine Hey time Thank you for the lovers The ones that went astray and Thank you for the one that stayed Hey time Accepting of each other Hold off on that buzzer For a little while Look what I’ve collected A little box of memories Somewhat disconnected Tied with twine Each a bit of color Winter, spring, fall and summer Set to burn, they return, a warm blue flame Dear time You know I’m at your service Thank you for the extra heartbeats I’m not so sure I earned them Dear time I heard you are efficient I cancelled my physician Whatever you decide How much have I forgotten? In the little box of memories Edges start to soften Lose their shine Each a little wonder A faded watercolor All unsigned, on standby In my mind Look what I’ve collected A little box of memories Somewhat disconnected Tied with twine Could I trade them in for A visit with my mom and dad Or throw the ball with my old dog One more time Hey time Look at what you made me Sentimental Slightly crazy Dear time On this fair occasion I’d like to say you given me More than what you’ve taken Dear time

Swallowed by greed

This 3-minute film, 'Black Hole,' is a powerful, award-winning look at the terrifying emptiness of human greed.

https://www.threads.com/@katortarkaa/post/DOTjiM2jP4k?xmt=AQF0FFflb2CDNs7-rr-YF-d0FxtwSK7WGdNpV2wFS4kwKg&slof=1

Saturday, September 6, 2025

The church of baseball

 My colleague repeated again an old profession of faith I've heard him attest before, and as before he met the predictable chuckles in the conference room with an emphatic: "I'm serious!" And he was. He insisted that baseball is his religion. Just like it was Morris Cohen's:

When my revered friend and teacher William James wrote an essay on “A Moral Equivalent for War,” I suggested to him that baseball already embodied all the moral value of war, so far as war had any moral value. He listened sympathetically and was amused, but he did not take me seriously enough. All great men have their limitations, and William James’s were due to the fact that he lived in Cambridge, a city which, in spite of the fact that it has a population of 100,000 souls (including the professors), is not represented in any baseball league that can be detected without a microscope. The Dial,Vol. 67, p. 57 (July 26, 1919)

And then there's Professor Ted Cohen...

Interestingly, one of the topics discussed at our staff meeting yesterday was whether to teach a course on Religion and Sport. Well of course we should, right alongside Philosophy and Baseball. 

Sunday, August 24, 2025

How ChatGPT Surprised Me

"…we're already treating it as borderline banal — and so GPT-5 is just another update to a chatbot that has gone, in a few years, from barely speaking English to being able to intelligibly converse in virtually any imaginable voice about virtually anything a human being might want to talk about at a level that already exceeds that of most human beings. In the past few years, A.I. systems have developed the capacity to control computers on their own — using digital tools autonomously and effectively — and the length and complexity of the tasks they can carry out is rising exponentially.

I find myself thinking a lot about the end of the movie "Her," in which the A.I.s decide they're bored of talking to human beings and ascend into a purely digital realm, leaving their onetime masters bereft. It was a neat resolution to the plot, but it dodged the central questions raised by the film — and now in our lives.

What if we come to love and depend on the A.I.s — if we prefer them, in many cases, to our fellow humans — and then they don't leave?


Ezra Klein


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/24/opinion/chat-gpt5-open-ai-future.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Monday, August 18, 2025

Joe

In Praise of Joe

by Marge Piercy

I love you hot
I love you iced and in a pinch
I will even consume you tepid.

Dark brown as wet bark of an apple tree,
dark as the waters flowing out of a spooky swamp
rich with tannin and smelling of thick life—

but you have your own scent that even
rising as steam kicks my brain into gear.
I drink you rancid out of vending machines,

I drink you at coffee bars for $6 a hit,
I drink you dribbling down my chin from a thermos
in cars, in stadiums, on the moonwashed beach.

Mornings you go off in my mouth like an electric
siren, radiating to my fingertips and toes.
You rattle my spine and buzz in my brain.

Whether latte, cappuccino, black or Greek
you keep me cooking, you keep me on line.
Without you, I would never get out of bed

but spend my life pressing the snooze
button. I would creep through wan days
in the form of a large shiny slug.

You waken in me the gift of speech when I 
am dumb as a rock buried in damp earth.
It is you who make me human every dawn.
All my books are written with your ink.

"In Praise of Joe" by Marge Piercy from The Crooked Inheritance. © Alfred A. Knopf, 2006. Reprinted with permission. 

https://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php%3Fdate=2008%252F08%252F18.html

KurzweilAI.net Accelerating Intelligence News