Monday, September 25, 2006

Book list update

Recently finished reading:

The Oasis by Pauline Gedge - second book of a trilogy about ancient Egypt. Mostly just a compelling page-turner, but the author's descriptions of the sights and sounds of ancient life by the Nile are beautiful and vivid. They have the same sun-drenched quality as some of Maxfield Parrish's paintings.

Heaven in a Chip by Bart Kosko - further musings by Kosko on how fuzzy logic either lies at the heart of everything, or should. This book is much less technical than his Fuzzy Thinking, and covers a wide range of social issues, including war, politics and religion.

The Lost Continent by Bill Bryson - sometimes hilarious, sometimes quite bitter, Bryson recounts a driving drip around the USA (touching 38 states, I think) in search of the perfect small town - a mythical place he calls Amalgam.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

followup

A. C. sent me the following link in response to my musings about flowers. It turns out that I am not the first to ask these questions (now there's a surprise).

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4255479.stm

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Beauty

Here's something I've been wondering about for the past few days: why do we find flowers to be beautiful? They don't address any of our basic needs in life - they are not edible, they don't keep us warm, they are darn near useless in a fight, and they don't contribute to the furtherance of the species (except as part of courting, which role they can only play because we find them pleasing ... a circular argument).

This question came to me when I was looking at a photograph of a cat and a flower. The cat was completely ignoring the flower, and I realised that to the cat, the flower was probably not a thing of beauty at all (assuming cats make aesthetic judgements, which seems plausible if not probable - they certainly form attachments to people and objects). So I started wondering why I thought (as I did) that the flower was a beautiful thing.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Purple People Pictures

The beginning of the Queen's year would not be the same without the Engineers.

Some pictures

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Books

People sometimes ask me what books I have read recently and would recommend to others. Here are some that I have read over the summer and enjoyed:

The Thief - My son and I both enjoyed this immensely. It is classified as suitable for ages 9 - 12, but I found it well-written and engaging for myself as well. The sequels Queen of Attolia and King of Attolia are even better.

Magyk and Flyte - Too easily dismissed as Harry Potter wanna-bes, these two "magician-in-training" novels are set in a much more whimsical and amusing world than Potter's England. These have the joie de vivre that most of the Potter books lack.

Tale of Two Cities - one of Dickens' most accessible novels, with a classic icon of literature: the blood-thirsty Madame Defarge, knitting at the foot of the guillotine.

The Five People You Meet in Heaven - a parable-like musing on the big questions of life. A beautiful book.

Labyrinths of Reason - What is knowledge? What is logic? What is paradox? A lucid and accessible discussion of the question of what it means to know something.

Notes From a Big Country - a collection of hilarious articles in which author Bill Bryson explains life in the USA to British readers.

Tell It To the Hand - a very funny discussion of the erosion of public politeness.

Fuzzy Thinking - Fuzzy logic guru Bart Kosko muses on the past, present and future of his field.

The Alchemist - Reminiscent of some of Kalil Gibran's work. Addresses the opportunities and risks of following your dreams. Big issues, set in a simple story of a young Spaniard who dreams of the pyramids.

The Tipping Point - I actually read this before the summer, but I'm recommending it anyway. Interesting study of the way trends get started.

Excession - grand space-opera science fiction by my favourite SF author, Iain M. Banks. Nobody does it better.

The Intelligencer - In the spirit of Possession, with a bit of Da Vinci Code tossed in. A collection of encoded manuscripts from Elizabethan England is found. Simultaneously with the story of their decoding, the story of their encoding is told.

Turing (A Novel About Computation) - the title pretty much says it all. One of the main characters is an AI named ... you guessed it ... Turing. The author is Christos Papadimitriou, a theoretical computer scientist of great renown, and as it turns out, considerable narrative skill.

Worlds That Weren't - a collection of four novellas of alternate history.

Krakatoa - the history of the island volcano (it's west of Java, despite the title of that movie) that blew up in 1883. Fascinating to read this so soon after the tsunami disaster in the same part of the world. The Krakatoa explosion was the first major event to be known almost immediately around the world, thanks to the newly installed telegraph wires that linked continents.

The Girl Who Played Go - set in Manchuria in the 1930's, dealing with the relationship between a Japanese soldier and a Chinese girl. The chapters alternate back and forth between the two characters' points of view.

Isaac Newton - James Gleick does a great job of introducing the man behind so much of modern mathematics and physics.

Memoirs of a Geisha - the woman on whose life this novel is based has claimed that it contains many falsehoods about geisha life. The author stands by his version.