Last week’s New Scientist (20 July 2013, pp.42-5) had an intriguing article on the relationship between demographics and economic health in various countries. It’s not the first time that they’ve featured this little known aspect of political and economic interaction, but this article was better than the previous one, because the interactions they describe are more obviously perceived. Basically, the median age of a country is a determining factor in that country’s economic future.
Economic growth is related to burgeoning population growth, which led to the so-called 'Asian Tigers' in the 1980s and the huge spurt in post-war economic growth in Western countries, as well as Japan. Many of these countries, like Japan and much of Europe, are now economically stagnant due to ageing populations, so you can see the relationship between median age and economic growth. The author, Fred Pearce, claims that even China’s against-the-trend growth will be stymied by their ‘one child’ policy in coming generations.
But stability is also an issue and ageing populations are more politically stable, whereas youthful countries trying to embrace democracy (like Egypt and Afghanistan) are struggling and unlikely to succeed in the near future.
Countries like the US, Canada and Australia depend on immigration to maintain economic growth. In Australia, it is ridiculous that our economic health is always gauged by new home construction, which is obviously dependent on sustained population growth (only yesterday, the flag went up that housing had slumped therefore we were in trouble). It’s ridiculous because ‘sustained population growth’ has limits, and those limits are beginning to be experienced in many Western countries, especially Europe.
The problem, which is readily understood in this context, is that economic growth is married to a youthful burgeoning population without limits, which obviously can’t be sustained indefinitely. Yet all our so-called ‘future’ policies ignore this fact of nature. It’s ironic that conservative politics are determined to keep everything the same, yet it’s these very policies that will create the greatest change the planet has ever seen, and not necessarily for the better.
Philosophy, at its best, challenges our long held views, such that we examine them more deeply than we might otherwise consider.
Paul P. Mealing
- Paul P. Mealing
- Check out my book, ELVENE. Available as e-book and as paperback (print on demand, POD). Also this promotional Q&A on-line.
Monday, 29 July 2013
Friday, 19 July 2013
Writing’s 3 Essential Skills
I’ve written on this topic before and even given classes in it, as well as talks, but this is a slightly different approach. Basically, I’m looking at the fundamental skills one has to acquire or develop in order to write fiction, as opposed to non-fiction. In a nutshell, they are the ability to create character, the ability to create emotions and the ability to create narrative tension. None of these are required for ordinary writing but they are all requisite skills for fiction. I’ll address them in reverse order.
Some people may prefer the term ‘narrative drive’ to ‘narrative tension’ but the word tension is more appropriate in my view. Tension is antithetical to resolution and has a comparable role in music which is less obvious. Narrative tension can be manifest in many forms, but it’s essential to fiction because it’s what motivates the reader to turn the page. A novel without narrative tension won’t be read. You can have tension between characters, in many forms: sexual, familial, or between colleagues or between protagonist and antagonist. Tension can be created by jeopardy, which is suspense, or by anticipation or by knowledge semi-revealed. In a word, this is called drama. And, of course, all these forms can be combined to occur in parallel or in series, and have different spans over the duration of the story. Tension requires resolution and the resolution is no less important a skill than the tension itself. Ideally, you want tension in some form on every page.
Emotion is what art is all about, and the greatest exemplar is music. Music is arguably the purest art form because music is the most emotive of art forms. No where is this more apparent than in cinema, where it is employed so successfully that the audience, for the most part, is unaware of its presence, yet it manipulates you emotionally as much as anything on the screen. In novels, the writer doesn’t have access to this medium, yet he or she is equally adept at manipulating emotions. And, once again, this is an essential skill, otherwise the reader will find the story lifeless. Novels can make you laugh, make you cry, make you horny, make you scared and make you excited, sometimes all in the same book.
Normally, I start any discussion on writing with character, because it is the most essential skill of all. I can’t tell you how to create characters – it’s one of those skills that comes with practice – I only know that I do it without thinking about it too much. For me, when I’m writing, the characters take on a life of their own, and if they don’t, I know I’m wasting my time. But there is one thing I’ll say about characters, based on other reading I’ve done, and that is if I’m not sympathetic to the protagonist(s) I find the story an ordeal. If the protagonist is depressed, I get depressed; if the protagonist is an angry young man, I find myself avoiding his company; if the protagonist is a pretentious prat, I find myself wishing they’d have an accident. It’s a very skilled writer who can engage you with uninviting characters, and I’m not one of them.
There is a link between character and emotion, because the character is the channel through which you feel emotion. A story is told through its characters, including description and exposition. If you want to describe something or explain something do it through the characters' senses and introspection.
Finally, why is crime the most popular form of fiction? Because crime often involves a mystery or a puzzle and invariably involves suspense, which is a guaranteed form of narrative tension. The best crime fiction (for example, Scandinavian) involves psychologically authentic characters, and that will always separate good fiction from mediocre. We like complex drawn characters, because they feel like people we know, and their evolvement is one of the reasons we return to the page.
Some people may prefer the term ‘narrative drive’ to ‘narrative tension’ but the word tension is more appropriate in my view. Tension is antithetical to resolution and has a comparable role in music which is less obvious. Narrative tension can be manifest in many forms, but it’s essential to fiction because it’s what motivates the reader to turn the page. A novel without narrative tension won’t be read. You can have tension between characters, in many forms: sexual, familial, or between colleagues or between protagonist and antagonist. Tension can be created by jeopardy, which is suspense, or by anticipation or by knowledge semi-revealed. In a word, this is called drama. And, of course, all these forms can be combined to occur in parallel or in series, and have different spans over the duration of the story. Tension requires resolution and the resolution is no less important a skill than the tension itself. Ideally, you want tension in some form on every page.
Emotion is what art is all about, and the greatest exemplar is music. Music is arguably the purest art form because music is the most emotive of art forms. No where is this more apparent than in cinema, where it is employed so successfully that the audience, for the most part, is unaware of its presence, yet it manipulates you emotionally as much as anything on the screen. In novels, the writer doesn’t have access to this medium, yet he or she is equally adept at manipulating emotions. And, once again, this is an essential skill, otherwise the reader will find the story lifeless. Novels can make you laugh, make you cry, make you horny, make you scared and make you excited, sometimes all in the same book.
Normally, I start any discussion on writing with character, because it is the most essential skill of all. I can’t tell you how to create characters – it’s one of those skills that comes with practice – I only know that I do it without thinking about it too much. For me, when I’m writing, the characters take on a life of their own, and if they don’t, I know I’m wasting my time. But there is one thing I’ll say about characters, based on other reading I’ve done, and that is if I’m not sympathetic to the protagonist(s) I find the story an ordeal. If the protagonist is depressed, I get depressed; if the protagonist is an angry young man, I find myself avoiding his company; if the protagonist is a pretentious prat, I find myself wishing they’d have an accident. It’s a very skilled writer who can engage you with uninviting characters, and I’m not one of them.
There is a link between character and emotion, because the character is the channel through which you feel emotion. A story is told through its characters, including description and exposition. If you want to describe something or explain something do it through the characters' senses and introspection.
Finally, why is crime the most popular form of fiction? Because crime often involves a mystery or a puzzle and invariably involves suspense, which is a guaranteed form of narrative tension. The best crime fiction (for example, Scandinavian) involves psychologically authentic characters, and that will always separate good fiction from mediocre. We like complex drawn characters, because they feel like people we know, and their evolvement is one of the reasons we return to the page.
Saturday, 13 July 2013
Malala Day
A 16 year old girl, shot by the Taliban for
going to school, stands defiant and delivers an impassioned and inspirational
speech to the United Nations General Assembly. This girl not only represents the face
of feminism in Islam but represents the future of women all over the world.
Education is the key to humanity's future and, as the Dalai Lama once said,
ignorance is one of the major poisons of the mind. Ignorance is the enemy of
the 21st Century. May this day go down in history as the representation of a young girl's courage and determination to forge her own future in a society where the idea is condemned.
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
Fruits of Corporate Greed
A couple of years ago I wrote a post about
global feudalism, but it’s much worse than I thought.
This eye-opening programme is shameful. As
Kerry O’Brien says at the end: out of sight, out of mind. This is the so-called
level playing field in action. Jobs going overseas because the labour is
cheaper. Actually it’s jobs going overseas because it’s virtually slave labour -
I’m talking literally not figuratively.
But more revelatory than anything else is
that there is no code of ethics for these companies unless it is forced upon
them. They really don’t care if the workers, who actually create the products
they sell, die or are injured or are abused. When things go wrong they do their
best to avoid accountability, and, like all criminals, only own up when
incontrovertible evidence is produced.
Algebra - the language of mathematics
I know I’m doing things back-to-front –
arse-about - as we say in Oz (and possibly elsewhere) but, considering all the
esoteric mathematics I produce on this blog, I thought I should try and explain
some basics.
As I mentioned earlier this year in a post on
‘analogy’, mathematics is a cumulative endeavour and you can’t understand
calculus, for example, if you don’t know algebra. I’ve come across more than a
few highly intelligent people, of both sexes, who struggle with maths (or math as
Americans call it) and the sight of an equation stops them in their tracks.
Mathematics is one of those topics where
the gap, between what you are expected to know and what you actually learn, can
grow as you progress through school, mainly because you were stumped by
algebra. You know: the day you were suddenly faced with numbers being replaced
by letters; and things like counting, adding, subtracting, dividing,
multiplying, fractions and even decimals suddenly seemed irrelevant. In other
words, everything you’d learned about mathematics, which was firmly grounded in
numbers – something you’d learned almost as soon as you could talk – suddenly seemed
useless. Even Carl Jung, according to his autobiography, stopped understanding
maths the day he had to deal with ‘x’. In fact, his wife, Emma, had a better
understanding of physics than Jung did.
But for those who jump this hurdle,
seemingly effortlessly, ‘x’ is a liberator in the same way that the imaginary
number i is perceived by those who
appreciate its multi-purposefulness. In both cases, we can do a lot more than
we could before, and that is why algebra is a stepping-stone to higher
mathematics.
Fundamentally, mathematics is not so much
about numbers as the relationship between numbers, and algebra allows us to see
the relationships without the numbers, and that’s the conceptual hurdle one has
to overcome.
I’ll give a very simple example that
everyone should know: Pythagoras’s triangle.
I don’t even have to draw it, I only have
to state it: a2 + b2 = c2; and you should know
what I’m talking about. But a picture is worth innumerable words.
The point is that we can use actual integers, called Pythagorean triples, that obey this relationship; the smallest
being 52 = 42 + 32. Do the math as you
Americans like to say.
But the truth is that this relationship
applies to all Pythagorean triangles, irrespective of their size, length of
sides and units of measurement. The only criteria being that the triangle is
‘flat’, or Euclidean (is not on a curved surface) and contains one right angle
(90o).
By using letters, we have stated a
mathematical truth, a universal law that applies right across the universe.
Pythagoras’s triangle was discovered well before Pythagoras (circa 500BC) by
the Egyptians, Babylonians and the Chinese, and possibly other cultures as
well.
Most of the mathematics, that I do,
involves the manipulation of algebraic equations, including a lot of the stuff
I describe on this blog. If you know how to manipulate equations, you can do a
lot of mathematics, but if you don’t, you can’t do any.
A lot of people are taught BIDMAS, which
gives the priority of working out an equation: Brackets, Indices, Division,
Multiplication, Addition and Subtraction. To be honest, I’ve never come across
a mathematician who uses it.
On the other hand, a lot of maths books
talk about the commutative law, the associative law and the distributive law as
the fundaments of algebra.
There is a commutative law for addition and
a commutative law for multiplication, which are both simple and basic.
A + B = B + A and A x B = B x
A (that’s it)
Obviously there is no commutative law for
subtraction or division.
A – B ≠ B – A and A/B ≠ B/A (pretty obvious)
There are some areas of mathematics where
this rule doesn’t apply, like matrices, but we won’t go there.
The associative law also applies to
addition and multiplication.
So A + (B + C) = (A + B) + C and A x (B x C) = (A x B) x C
It effectively says that it doesn’t matter
what order you perform these operations you’ll get the same result, and,
obviously, you can extend this to any length of numbers, because any addition
or multiplication creates a new number that can then be added or multiplied to
any other number or string of numbers.
But the most important rule to understand
is the distributive law because it combines addition and multiplication and can
be extended to include subtraction and division (if you know what you're doing). The distributive law lies at
the heart of algebra.
A(B + C) = AB + AC and A(B + C) ≠ AB + C (where AB = A x B)
And this is where brackets come in under
BIDMAS. In other words, if you do what’s in the brackets first you’ll be okay.
But you can also eliminate the brackets and get the same answer if you follow
the distributive rule.
But we can extend this: 1/A(B - C) = B/A -
C/A (where B/A = B ÷ A)
And
-A(B – C) = CA – BA because
(-1)2 = 1, so a minus times a minus equals a plus.
If 1/A(B + C) = B/A + C/A then (B + C)/A =
B/A + C/A
And
A/C + B/D = (DA + BC)/DC
To appreciate this do the converse:
(DA + BC)/DC = DA/DC + BC/DC
= A/C + B/D
But the most important technique one can
learn is how to change the subject of an equation. If we go back to
Pythagoras’s equation:
a2 + b2 = c2 what’s b = ?
The very simple rule is that whatever you
do to one side of an equation you must do to the other side. So if you take
something away from one side you must take it away from the other side and if
you multiply or divide one side by something you must do the same on the other
side.
So, given the above example, the first
thing we want to do is isolate b2. Which means we take a2
from the LHS and also the RHS (left hand side and right hand side).
So b2 = c2 – a2
And to get b from b2 we take the
square root of b2, which means we take the square root of the RHS.
So b = √(c2 – a2)
Note b ≠ c – a because √(c2
– a2) ≠ √c2 - √a2
In the same way that (a + b)2 ≠ a2 + b2
In fact (a + b)2 = (a + b)(a +
b)
And applying the distributive law: (a +
b)(a + b) = a(a + b) + b(a + b)
Which expands to a2 + ab + ba +
b2 = a2 + 2ab + b2
But (a + b)(a – b) = a2 – b2 (work it out for yourself)
An equation by definition (and by name)
means that something equals something. To maintain the equality whatever you do on one side must be done on the other
side, and that’s basically the most important rule of all. So if you take the
square root or a logarithm or whatever of a single quantity on one side you
must take the square root or logarithm or whatever of everything on the other
side. Which means you put brackets around everything first and apply the
distributive law if possible, and, if not, leave it in brackets like I did with
the example of Pythagoras’s equation.
Final Example: A/B = C + D What’s B = ?
Invert both sides: B/A = 1/(C + D)
Multiply both sides by A: B = A/(C + D) (Easy)
Note: A/(C + D) ≠ A/C + A/D
Sunday, 23 June 2013
Time again to talk about time
Last week’s New Scientist’s cover declared SPACE
versus TIME; one has to go. But which? (15 June 2013). This served as a
rhetorical introduction to physics' most famous conundrum: the irreconcilability
of its 2 most successful theories - quantum mechanics and Einstein’s theory of
general relativity - both conceived at the dawn of the so-called golden age of
physics in the early 20th Century.
The feature article (pp. 35-7) cites a
number of theoretical physicists including Joe Polchinski (University of
California, Santa Barbara), Sean Carroll (California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena), Nathan Seiberg (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton), Abhay
Ashtekar (Pennsylvania University), Juan Malcadena (no institute cited) and
Steve Giddings (also University of California).
Most scientists and science commentators
seem to be banking on String Theory to resolve the problem, though both its
proponents and critics acknowledge there’s no evidence to separate it from
alternative theories like loop quantum gravity (LQG), plus it predicts 10
spatial dimensions and 10500 universes. However, physicists are used
to theories not gelling with common sense and it’s possible that both the extra
dimensions and the multiverse could exist without us knowing about them.
Personally, I was intrigued by Ashtekar’s
collaboration with Lee Smolin (a strong proponent of LQG) and Carlo Rovelli
where ‘Chunks of space [at the Planck scale] appear first in the theory, while
time pops up only later…’ In a much earlier publication of New Scientist on ‘Time’ Rovelli is quoted as claiming that time
disappears mathematically: “For me, the solution to the problem is that at the
fundamental level of nature, there is no time at all.” Which I discussed in a
post on this very subject in Oct. 2011.
In a more recent post (May 2013) I quoted
Paul Davies from The Goldilocks Enigma:
‘[The] vanishing of time for the entire universe becomes very explicit in
quantum cosmology, where the time variable simply drops out of the quantum
description.’ And in the very article I’m discussing now, the author, Anil
Ananthaswamy, explains how the wave function of Schrodinger’s equation, whilst
it evolves in time, ‘…time is itself not part of the Hilbert space where
everything else physical sits, but somehow exists outside of it.’ (Hilbert
space is the ‘abstract’ space that Schrodinger’s wave function inhabits.) ‘When
we measure the evolution of a quantum state, it is to the beat of an external
timepiece of unknown provenance.’
Back in May 2011, I wrote my most popular post ever: an exposition on Schrodinger’s equation, where I deconstructed the
famous time dependent equation with a bit of sleight-of-hand. The
sleight-of-hand was to introduce the quantum expression for momentum (px = -i h d/dx) without explaining where it came from (the truth is
I didn’t know at the time). However, I recently found a YouTube video that
remedies that, because the anonymous author of the video derives Schrodinger’s
equation in 2 stages with the time independent version first (effectively the
RHS of the time dependent equation). The fundamental difference is that he
derives the expression for px = i
h d/dx, which I now demonstrate below.
Basically the wave function, which exploits
Euler’s famous equation, using complex algebra (imaginary numbers) is expressed
thus: Ψ = Ae i(kx−ωt)
If one differentiates this equation wrt x
we get ik(Ae i(kx−ωt)), which is ikΨ. If we differentiate it again we get d2Ψ/dx2
= (ik)2Ψ.
Now k is related to wavelength (λ)
by 2π such that k = 2π/λ.
And from Planck’s equation (E = hf) and the fact that (for
light) c = f λ we can
get a relationship between momentum (p) and λ. If p = mc and E = mc2,
then p = E/c. Therefore p = hf/f λ which
gives p = h/λ effectively the
momentum version of Planck’s equation. Note that p is related to wavelength
(space) and E is related to frequency (time).
This then is the quantum equation for momentum based on h
(Planck’s constant) and λ. And, of course, according to Louis de Broglie,
particles as well as light can have wavelengths.
And if we substitute 2π/k for λ we get p = hk/2π which can be reformulated as
k = p/h where h = h/2Ï€.
And substituting this
in (ik)2 we get –(p/h)2 { i2 = -1}
So Ψ d2/dx2 = -(px/h)2Ψ
Making p the subject of the equation we get px2 = - h2 d2/dx2
(Ψ cancels
out on both sides) and I used this expression in my previous post on this
topic.
And if I take the
square root of px2 I get px = i h d/dx, the quantum term for
momentum.
So the quantum version
of momentum is a consequence of Schrodinger’s equation and not an input as I
previously implied. Note that √-1 can be i or –i so px can be
negative or positive. It makes no difference when it’s used in Schrodinger’s
equation because we use px2.
If you didn’t follow
that, don’t worry, I’m just correcting something I wrote a couple of years ago
that’s always bothered me. It’s probably easier to follow on the video where I found the solution.
But the relevance to
this discussion is that this is probably the way Schrodinger derived it. In
other words, he derived the term for momentum first (RHS), then the time
dependent factor (LHS), which is the version we always see and is the one
inscribed on his grave’s headstone.
This has been a
lengthy and esoteric detour but it highlights the complementary roles of space
and time (implicit in a wave function) that we find in quantum mechanics.
Going back to the New Scientist article, the author also
provides arguments from theorists that support the idea that time is more
fundamental than space and others who believe that neither is more fundamental
than the other.
But reading the
article, I couldn’t help but think that gravity plays a pivotal role regarding
time and we already know that time is affected by gravity. The article keeps
returning to black holes because that’s where the 2 theories (quantum mechanics
and general relativity) collide. From the outside, at the event horizon, time
becomes frozen but from the inside time would become infinite (everything would
happen at once) (refer Addendum below). Few people seem to consider the possibility that going from
quantum mechanics to classical physics is like a phase change in the same way
that we have phase changes from ice to water. And in that phase change time
itself may be altered.
Referring to one of
the quotes I cited earlier, it occurs to me that the ‘external
timepiece of unknown provenance’ could be a direct consequence of gravity, which
determines the rate of time for all objects in free fall.
Addendum: Many accounts of the event horizon, including descriptions in a
recent special issue of Scientific
American; Extreme Physics (Summer 2013), claim that one can cross an event
horizon without even knowing it. However, if time is stopped for 'you'
according to observers outside the event horizon, then their time must surely
appear infinite to ‘you’, to be consistent. Kiwi, Roy Kerr, who solved Einstein's field equations for a rotating black hole (the
most likely scenario), claims that there are 2 event horizons, and after
crossing the first one, time becomes space-like and space becomes time-like.
This infers, to me, that time becomes static and infinite and space becomes
dynamic. Of course, no one really knows, and no one is ever going to cross an
event horizon and come back to tell us.
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