Sick day

Although there are no “sick days” on the Internet, we’re going to take the day off as we’re feeling under the weather today …

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Oreo Cameo #14

That is the title of the “cookie art” pictured below. Check out Judith G. Klausner’s entire collection of “Oreo Cameos” here. (Hat tip: Cliff Pickover.)

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Ok, Trump, pay up!

Just kidding! But we love the ingenious idea proposed by Mike Maneth (see above). Yes, President Donald J. Trump promised at a campaign rally to pay $1 million to a charity of Senator Elizabeth Warren’s choice if she could prove her Native American ancestry, but now, based on a recent DNA test, Senator Warren claims to have a remote Indian ancestor dating back many generations ago. (Six to ten generations ago, to be more precise. The full DNA report, via The Boston Globe, is available here.) To put this immense generational range into perspective, one has over 1000 ancestors if one goes back ten generations, or as The Globe itself notes, the Senator is at most between 1/64th and 1/1,024th Native American!

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

Hemingway’s home library

Emily Temple, a writer and senior editor at Lit Hub, describes 20 different rooms where many famous books were written. She includes Ernest Hemingway’s library (pictured below) in Finca Vigía, his home outside Havana, Cuba, where “he wrote seven books, including For whom the bell tolls, A moveable feast, and The old man and the sea, among others.” But Ms Temple mistakenly notes that Hemingway “wrote in the library, which Roxana Robinson describes as ‘a long, pleasant, high-ceilinged room, lined with tall bookcases. In front of the windows is The Desk, huge and magisterial, about ten feet long and three feet wide, and curved like a boomerang. It’s made of dark polished wood, with carved supports at each end. Hemingway sat in the center, the ends curving forward.'” In reality, however, Hemingway did not use “The Desk” to practice his craft. Instead, he wrote in an adjacent room, which was also full of books, and he wrote standing up.

Credit: Jana Crowne

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Digital Swiss Army Knife

Source: humanprogress.org

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

“On nonrecoverable deletion in syntax”

That is the title of the shortest scholarly paper in the annals of academia. The entire paper, which was “published” in 1972, is pictured in the blank space below! (More details here; hat tip: @pickover.)

Say what?

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Ipse dixit podcast update

Update (10/11): We have now joined the illustrious group of scholars on Professor Brian Frye’s Ipse Dixit podcast! You can listen to me talk with Prof Frye about “Goedel’s Loopholehere, where we revisit the story about mathematician Kurt Goedel’s discovery of a logical contradiction in the U.S. Constitution.

F. E. Guerra-Pujol's avatarprior probability

The phrase ipse dixit is Latin for “he said it himself” and refers to an assertion without proof or a dogmatic expression of mere opinion. (Here is the Wikipedia entry for ipse dixit.) This phrase now also refers to a new podcast series hosted by one of our favorite legal scholars Brian O. Frye, who teaches at the University of Kentucky. (FYI: the graceful logo of the podcast is pictured below. We have previously blogged about Professor Frye’s fascinating work on the Zapruder film (see here) and his revisionist history of the facts in Erie v. Tompkins (see here); in addition, here is a master link to his scholarship.) In his podcast Professor Frye interviews sundry legal scholars on a wide variety of topics, so check out the podcast at your leisure. By way of example, Professor Frye has already interviewed Eric Segall on “Originalism…

View original post 48 more words

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Where is Ms Bingbing?

Update (10/10): Fan Bingbing has reappeared! (See our previous post from 9/10 below.) According to The Guardian (UK), “Fan was detained at a ‘holiday resort’ in Wuxi, under a 2013 legal framework known as ‘residential surveillance at a designated location.’ It is essentially a legalistic euphemism for disappearance and forced detention. ‘In practice it often means someone is held in secret and denied all contact with the outside world,’ says Michael Caster, … [who is the] editor of The Peoples Republic of the Disappeared, a collection of first-hand accounts of victims of such forced detentions. ‘Many of them were subject to one form of torture or another, from prolonged sleep deprivation to physical pain, beatings, stress positions, mental abuse and threatening family members.’ In many cases, the outcome is forced confessions.”

F. E. Guerra-Pujol's avatarprior probability

Via Channel NewsAsia: “China’s highest paid movie star Fan Bingbing … has not been seen in public since July …. The 36-year-old actress has been a household name in China for years and tasted Hollywood success with a role in the 2014 blockbuster ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’. *** But she has gone quiet in recent months, following allegations of tax evasion.

“In [a] report by Beijing Normal University published earlier this month, 100 Chinese stars including popular actor Jackie Chan and award-winning actress Zhang Ziyi were ranked according to their professional work, charity work, and personal integrity. But with a pass requiring a score of more than 60 per cent, only nine celebrities made the cut, with Chinese actor Xu Zheng topping the list at 78.

“[Ms Bingbing] had a score of zero.” (Hat tip: Tyler Cowen.)

#DueProcess #FanBingbing (Credit: Fergus Ryan)

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

The geometry of control panels

Check out this blog devoted to control panels. (Hat tip: kottke.)

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Ipse dixit podcast

The phrase ipse dixit is Latin for “he said it himself” and refers to an assertion without proof or a dogmatic expression of mere opinion. (Here is the Wikipedia entry for ipse dixit.) This phrase now also refers to a new podcast series hosted by one of our favorite legal scholars Brian O. Frye, who teaches at the University of Kentucky. (FYI: the graceful logo of the podcast is pictured below. We have previously blogged about Professor Frye’s fascinating work on the Zapruder film (see here) and his revisionist history of the facts in Erie v. Tompkins (see here); in addition, here is a master link to his scholarship.) In his podcast Professor Frye interviews sundry legal scholars on a wide variety of topics, so check out the podcast at your leisure. By way of example, Professor Frye has already interviewed Eric Segall on “Originalism as Faith,” which explores the various shades of originalist constitutional interpretation; Valena Beety on “The Overdose/Homicide Epidemic,” which explores the role of coroners in classifying overdoses as homicides; and Ramsi Woodcock on “Efficient Queues,” which explores the theoretical relationship between queues and prices.

Image result for ipse dixit podcast
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment