Posts tagged "books"

Note:

At present, I write here infrequently. You can find my current, regular blogging over at The Deliberate Owl.

_several large rocks modified to look like faces_

Rock on

Are you familiar with perceptual control theory? If you aren't, the basic idea is this: People are not rocks. As Philip Runkel puts it,

"Living creatures behave very differently from lifeless things. Unlike a rock, a human does not just sit until something bumps it."

-- Philip Runkel, “Casting Nets and Testing Specimens,” pg 75

The idea is, organisms and agents and people get a bunch of different sensory inputs. They have some internal standards for what they want that set of sensory inputs to be like -- some desired state of the world. The difference between how they want the world to be and what the world is actually like drives what they do -- what we see as behavior. The reason this is appealing to me? Perceptual control theory (PCT) says we're not just input-output machines. Behavior is goal-directed and purposeful. It's a useful theory if you want to figure out why people are doing what they do and how to avoid or mediate conflict. Everyone has internal standards that they're trying to control. As Runkel says,

"[M]ost of us very often act as if we expect other people to behave like rocks. And when we act toward other people as if they were rocks or blankets or typewriters or teacups, we make unending trouble for ourselves. It is true that people do have some features in common with rocks and typewriters. There are, however, important differences between living and nonliving things that most of us overlook time and time again, and to our sorrow." -- Philip Runkel, "People as Living Things; The Psychology of Perceptual Control," pg 14

If you want to learn more, I've found you a nice list of articles, an informative Less Wrong post a friend linked me to, a comprehensive website, and Google. And yes, talking about PCT really just was my excuse to share those lovely quotes from Runkel.


2 comments

_rain splattering on the pavement in front of a green bushy area_

Your expectations define your perceptions

It's raining.

Fat, corpulent water globules cascade from the sky. Plop, plop. A drop, and a few of its compatriots, dribble down the inside of your collar. They're cold. Wet, and unpleasant. The drops slither down your neck.

"Take my cloak," he [Lord Golden] suggested. "It would only get as wet as the rest of me. I'll change into dry things when I get back." [Fitz] He didn't tell me to be careful, but it was in his look. I nodded to it, steeled myself, and walked out into the pouring rain. It was every bit as cold and unpleasant as I expected it to be. I stood, eyes squinted and shoulders hunched to it, peering out through the gray downpour. Then I took a breath and resolutely changed my expectations. As Black Rolf had once shown me, much discomfort was based on human expectations. As a man, I expected to be warm and dry when I chose to be. Animals did not harbor any such beliefs. So it was raining. That part of me that was wolf could accept that. Rain meant being cold and wet. Once I acknowledged that and stopped comparing it to what I wished it to be, the conditions were far more tolerable. I set out.

--- Fool's Errand, Robin Hobb

Keep it in perspective

Keep what in perspective? Well, everything, but particularly the bad things, the frustrating things, and the irritating things. So it's raining. So you cut your finger slicing potatoes. So it's ninety-nine degrees Fahrenheit and humid. You are in some set of circumstances and you wish to be in some other set of circumstances. You wish to be dry. You wish your finger didn't hurt. You wish to be cool and comfortable without drops of sweat sliding down your neck.

Unfortunately, we don't live in a world where wishes change the world's physical properties. We have limited control over our environments. We have slightly more control over our reactions to our environments.

"Since we cannot change reality, let us change the eyes that see reality." ---Nikos Kazantzakis

What you expect significantly influences how you will perceive your circumstances. The thing is, a lot of times, we don't explicitly set out our expectations. You leave the air-conditioned building with the continued implicit expectation that you'll be cool and comfortable, and when that blast of muggy, sticky air hits you, it hits you twice as hard because you're expecting something else.

What can you do about this? Try explicitly setting up your expectations. It may help prevent the disappointment of being wrong (and feeling unpleasant). Instead of thinking "Aaugh, I'm getting wet and the rain is cold, why can't I be warm and dry?" try thinking "Okay, I'm going out in the rain so I'll be wet and cold. That's just how rain is." Keep in mind that this works both ways--sure, you can set yourself up to expect to feel better about your circumstances, but you can also easily set yourself up to expect to feel worse.

As a final note, I'm sharing to a quote I occasionally turn to as a reminder to keep things in perspective, from Nick Hornby's High Fidelity (on the subject of pop music):

"Did I listen to music because I was miserable? Or was I miserable because I listened to music?"

Are you miserable because of your circumstances, or are your circumstances miserable because of your misery?


1 comments

_the novel perdido street station held open in the middle, viewed from the side, undoubtedly being consumed by a voracious reader_

Words are still great.

Having devoured the remainder of China Miéville's Perdido Street Station and started on The Scar, I thought I ought to share my continued collection of wordly wonders. (Don't forget to check out the first half of the list!) Some novel, some familiar but infrequently encountered and marvelous, and all commendable to have in one's vernacular.

  • palimpsest
  • bonhomie
  • jurisprudence
  • desquamate
  • abbatoir
  • ululate
  • prurient
  • efflorescence
  • phalanx
  • salvo
  • etiolate
  • scurrilous
  • conniption
  • rictus
  • ordure
  • priapic
  • agglutination
  • ossified
  • puissance
  • stygian
  • protuberant
  • obstreperously
  • pudenda
  • phlogistic
  • opprobrium
  • aggrandizement
  • tinnitus

Oh, and I have to ask: Do you have any favored words—unusual, rare, or just plain fun to say? I'd like to discover more!


0 comments

_the novel perdido street station held open in the middle, viewed from the side, undoubtedly being consumed by a voracious reader_

Words are great.

The vocabulary I habitually utilize hardly taps the well of words available in the English language. This isn't news: most people fail to employ the full range of lexical jewels stashed in their thesauruses. As such, I'm delighted to announce that the book I'm reading now is full of fantastic words. I'm reading Perdido Street Station. No lie: The man who wrote this book, China Miéville, has a lexicon just as prodigious as the world he paints. Here are a few novel and infrequently seen words I've espied thus far:

  • detumescing
  • veldt
  • sciolist
  • eidolon
  • vertiginous
  • aesthete
  • bombastic
  • moribund
  • inveigled
  • oneiric
  • febrile
  • necrotic
  • pusillanimous
  • bivouac
  • chthonic
  • dissident
  • querulous
  • inchoate
  • paean
  • patina
  • desiccate
  • moniker
  • nacre
  • solipsistic
  • autotelic
  • liminal
  • deracinate
  • sepulchral

Aren't these splendid? I didn't start taking notes on words until a hundred pages in, and I've got several hundred pages to go. Just think what wordly wonders I may encounter next!


2 comments

_a shelf of leatherbound books_

I read a lot (when I have time).

I'm an enthusiastic reader of science fiction and fantasy novels. I pick up non-fiction for fun (or for class), and I periodically read other stuff, too.

For example, just this week, on Monday and Tuesday, I consumed Scott Westerfeld's The Risen Empire and The Killing of Worlds. Yesterday, I started K. J. Parker's Devices and Desires. Tomorrow... well, I keep this lengthy list of books I want to read. I also keep a list of books I've already read (it comes in handy when people ask me for recommendations, or, as was the case nearly four years ago, when a college application asks me to provide a list of all the books I've read in the past year). Add these lists together: The result is a long list of great books.

Next time you're perusing the shelves, stumped on which pages to turn next, perhaps you could pick one of my favorites! (List last updated Oct. 25, 2015.)

COGNITIVE SCIENCE & PHILOSOPHY

consciousness

embodied cognition & related

  • Mark Johnson - The Meaning of the Body
  • Matthew Ratcliffe - Rethinking Commonsense Psychology, Feelings of Being
  • Shigehisa Kuriyama - The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine
  • Richard Nisbett - The Geography of Thought
  • Jeff Hawkins & Sandra Blakeslee - On Intelligence
  • Henry Plotkin - Darwin Machines
  • Alva Noë - Action in Perception
  • Edward Reed - Encountering the World
  • Lawrence Shapiro - The Mind Incarnate

atheism, religion, metaphysics

  • Gordon Stein (Ed.) - An Anthology of Atheism & Rationalism
  • S.T. Joshi (Ed.) - Atheism: A Reader
  • Dale McGovern - In Faith and In Doubt
  • Quentin Smith & Nathan Oaklander -Time, Change, & Freedom: An Introduction to Metaphysics
  • Rita Gross - Soaring and Settling: Buddhist Perspectives on Contemporary Social and Religious Issues

robot ethics

  • David Gunkel - The Machine Question

misc

  • Valentino Braitenberg - Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology
  • Stanislas Dehaene - The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics
  • John Long - Darwin's Devices
  • Eric R. Kandel - In Search of Memory
  • Martin Seligman - Flourish
  • Susan Engel - The Stories Children Tell

OTHER NON-FICTION

women's health

  • Tony Weschler: Taking Charge of Your Fertility
  • Marilyn M Shannon: Fertility, Nutrition, and cycles

misc

  • Scott McCloud - Understanding Comics
  • Mario Livio - The Golden Ratio
  • Jeff Potter - Cooking For Geeks
  • Sun Tzu - The Art of War
  • Vera John-Steiner - Notebooks of the Mind

FANTASY

SCIENCE-FICTION

  • Isaac Asimov - I, Robot
  • Margaret Atwood - The Handmaid's Tale
  • Paolo Bacigalupi - The Windup Girl
  • Alfred Bester - The Stars My Destination
  • Lois McMaster Bujold - Cordelia's Honor, the Vorkosigan Saga
  • Orson Scott Card - Ender's Game, Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, Children of the Mind, Ender's Shadow, Shadow of the Hegemon, Shadow Puppets, Shadow of the Giant
  • Peter Dickinson - Eva
  • Nicola Griffith - Slow River, Ammonite
  • Kameron Hurley - God's War, Infidel, Rapture
  • Lois Lowry - The Giver, Star Split
  • China Miéville - Perdido Street Station, The Scar, The City & The City
  • Richard Powers - Galatea 2.2
  • Ramez Naam - Nexus, Crux, Apex
  • John Scalzi - Old Man's War, The Ghost Brigades, Zoe's Tale, Redshirts
  • Kim Stanley Robinson - Red Mars, Blue Mars, Green Mars
  • Neal Stephenson - Cryptonomicon, Anathem, Diamond Age
  • Vernor Vinge - Fast Times at Fairmont High
  • Scott Westerfeld - The Risen Empire, The Killing of Worlds
  • Robert Charles Wilson - Spin, Axis

GENERAL FICTION

  • Jane Austen - Pride & Prejudice
  • Lewis Caroll - Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass
  • James Clavell - Shogun
  • Arthur Golden - Memoirs of a Geisha
  • Nicole Krauss - The History of Love, Man Walks Into a Room, Great House
  • Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner, A Thousand Splendid Suns
  • Kazuo Ishiguro - Never Let Me Go, The Remains of the Day
  • Chuck Palahniuk - Fight Club, Invisible Monsters, Choke, Haunted
  • Mary Renault - The Persian Boy, The Mask of Apollo
  • Gail Tsukiyama - The Samurai's Garden
  • Anthony Swofford - Jarhead
  • Thorton Wilder - The Bridge of San Luis Rey
  • Virginia Woolf - To the Lighthouse, The Waves

0 comments