Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Piano

insight on practicing

Practice is unwanted. But that's what it takes.
It doesn't take long, an hour or even two, before it gets better. Or by then, you will move on to better.
Either way, better!

Completely Unknown (2016) is a good movie ~ motivational for piano

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Classical Ethics


People to people relationships need a Kantian orientation, which has a relational component.  For instance, the Golden Rule and telling the truth and keeping promises.  However, in the context of government and large organizations you need some utilitarian considerations added to the mix.
~ quora.com

"The primary similarity between Kant’s ethics and utilitarianism is that there is an objective Good which can be sought." ~ quora.com







Sunday, February 19, 2017

pabulum0


pabulum defined

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/intellectual+nourishment
Noun1.intellectual nourishment - anything that provides mental stimulus for thinking
cognitive contentmental objectcontent - the sum or range of what has been perceived, discovered, or learned
pabulum - insipid intellectual nourishment

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/pabulum
1. substance that gives nourishment; food.
2. Intellectual material that is bland, trite, or insipid; pablum
http://www.finedictionary.com/intellectual%20nourishment.html


http://wikidiff.com/pabulum/pablum

Correlation

  • How do we know if cause and effect are related? In a classic analysis formalized by the 19th-century philosopher John Stuart Mill, a causal relationship exists if 
    • (1) the cause preceded the effect, 
    • (2) the cause was related to the effect, and 
    • (3) we can find no plausible alternative explanation for the effect other than the cause. 
      • These three characteristics mirror what happens in experiments in which 
        • (1) we manipulate the presumed cause and observe an outcome afterward; 
        • (2) we see whether variation in the cause is related to variation in the effect; and 
        • (3) we use various methods during the experiment to reduce the plausibility of other explanations for the effect, along with ancillary methods to explore the plausibility of those we cannot rule out (most of this book is about methods for doing this).

http://impact.cgiar.org/pdf/147.pdf#page=7