Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Holy ground

In Exodus 3 God told Moses to take off his sandals because he was standing on holy ground. The dirty and artificial wasn't to touch the holy ground. But Moses was required to.

Over in Ezekiel we read of the care required to keep the holy separate from the people -- and in Leviticus rules about how even the priests have to take care. But the original call was to come and stand on the holy ground; I suppose in order to be part of the holy, the set-apart.

That isn't just a New Testament thing. Even in Leviticus: "Be holy, for I am holy." Cast off the dirt and come to the holy ground to become holy.

Of course it isn't always easy, and we need Someone to clean us and bring us there.

Sunday, January 04, 2026

Motse

We've all heard of Confucius. One of his competitors was Motse. Legend has it that many of the books from his school were burned, and a bunch of the scholars too.

I'm not sure I'll finish the work linked above. His style is maddening; repetitious and forever citing dubious details of the putative wonderful reigns of the first emperors. The first thing that looked different from the rest was this--but (spoiler) it isn't.

Motse said: The interest of the wise (ruler) lies in carrying out what makes for order among the people and avoiding what makes for confusion.

But what is it that makes for order among the people?

When the administration of the ruler answers to the desires of the people there will be order, otherwise there will be confusion.

How do we know it is so?

When the administration of the ruler answers to the desires of the subjects, it manifests an understanding of the approvals and disapprovals of the people. When there is such an understanding, the good will be discovered and rewarded and the bad will be discovered and punished, and the country will surely have order. When the administration of the ruler does not answer to the desires of the subjects, it shows a lack of understanding of the approvals and disapprovals of the subjects. When there is no such understanding then the good will not be discovered and rewarded and the bad will not be discovered and punished, such a government will surely put the country into disorder. Therefore when rewards and punishments do not answer to the desires of the people, the matter has to be carefully looked into.

But how can the desires of the people (being so many and various) be met?

Therefore Motse said: It can only be done only by adopting the principle of Identification with the Superior in government.

Nope. We don't have an ancient Chinese democrat here. "Identification with the Superior" means that the hierarchy takes its standards from the top. The desires of the people should be shaped into conformity with the rules of clan patriarch, with the feudal lords, and so on up the chain.

Whoever discovers a benefactor of the clan shall report it; whoever discovers a malefactor to the clan shall report it. Whoever reports the benefactor of the clan upon seeing one is equivalent to benefiting the clan himself. Knowing him the superior will reward him, hearing of him the group will praise him.

And then the feudal lord says the same about the state, and the emperor about the empire. "Now that the empire is orderly, the emperor will further organize the purposes in the empire and identify them with the Will of Heaven."

Quite a bit of the advice so far boils down to "You're supposed to be keeping the state orderly and prosperous for everybody." and "Don't appoint your relatives and sycophants; appoint the capable and honest." and "Make sure everybody knows to do what their superiors tell them to." and "Don't go in for excessive luxury."

I haven't gotten to the parts about designing fortifications yet. Apparently the Motse school was famously good at that.

Saturday, January 03, 2026

Venezuela ignorance

I don't think I know yet what's going on with Maduro. The reason I've heard for the strike is that Maduro is simultaneously head of an organized crime syndicate and illegitimate dictator of Venezuela, and that in his capacity as the former we've captured him and removed his from the latter position.

The attacks on the drug boats (is anybody still thinking they're fishing boats?) were, in this view, attacks on a non-state hostile actor. I gather that there's actually a fair bit of analysis on the subject of war against non-state actors, but I'm nowhere near expert enough to comment on that aspect.

An alternative interpretation, not based on official pronouncement ("Believe nothing until it has been officially denied"), is that Venezuela's ties with Iran are the key. I've run across rumors that Venezuela has been transporting people and munitions into the US on Iran's behalf. The "transport" part of that is plausible whether Maduro is a drug lord or an Iran ally; the "on Iran's behalf" isn't proven.

But if that was the reason, why not say so? The usual claim is "that compromises sources," but unless the sources were very high up in Iran I'd think this and the nuke facility strikes would be enough for them to try to clean house anyway.

I don't understand what the indictment is for. If Maduro is subject to US laws (e.g. possession of machine guns), then by symmetry I am subject to British law regarding what type of knife I'm allowed to have and to Saudi law for expressing my judgment that Muhammad was a false prophet.

Just no. Let's not admit that kind of precedent.

I really really do not want us to be responsible for running Venezuela. Probably a fair bit of house-cleaning is going to be required to get the presumed gangsters/Iranian partisans out of the positions they've been stuffed in--but I don't think we're the best people to winkle them out.

I wonder how brittle our PowersThatBe think the regime is?

Thursday, January 01, 2026

Vanya Da Dua

One of my sisters gave me this memoir for Christmas. Erik d'Azevedo was abouit 6 years old when his family went to Liberia in the late 50's for his father's anthropological research. It is profusely illustrated with black and white photos, mostly of places and people I never saw, but looking very familiar.

His family lived up-country in a village in a compound owned by the Chief. I lived (at first) in a school campus (500 students) about 30 minutes from the capitol (not that far, but the roads were poor). He made friends easiy, and remembers details to a degree I can't come close to.

There are a few glitches: termite queens are 3-4 inches long, not 3-4 feet. But you won't care.

The title was a name given to Erik after the people heard his stories about America. It was the name of a folk hero of the Gola, who was as famous for his tall tales as his deeds. Bridges that can stand the weight of many cars? You're joking with us.

He started as an object of fear, and then of fascination. The friend he called Bobby suffered injustices Erik couldn't do anything about, and many of their friends were thieves. His sister was almost of marriagable age by village standards. Her story would have been an interesting addition.

The obligations of the children impressed him--they had roles from young ages. Some of the tribal rules seemed reasonable, and some crazy.

The supernatural played (and still does) a huge role in village life, and he had some close calls when his curiosity about the secret societies' doings got him in trouble.

Read it. Yes, the formatting is sub-par and an editor should have caught a duplicate story. Don't worry.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

What should a student learn to become a gentleman?

We have the ancient classical Western liberal arts: 3 language (trivium) and 4 mathematical (quadrivium).
  • Rhetoric
  • Grammar
  • Logic
  • Astronomy
  • Arithmetic
  • Geometry
  • Music

For an alternative take, consider the Chinese 6 arts

  • Archery
  • Chariot
  • Music of China
  • Li (Confucianism)
  • Chinese calligraphy
  • Chinese mathematics
Note that the linked Wikipedia entry for Chinese mathematics is sloppy and tenditious.

Alternatively: 1) Propriety, 2) Music, 3) Archery, 4) Driving, 5) Composition, 6) Mathematics

Among the Persians the virtues were: "Ride, shoot straight, and speak truth"

Hmm. It looks like the trivium/quadrivium has some implicit assumptions about what else the student has learned, easy to spot by comparison with the others. Plato wanted lots of PE, and careful attention to the poetry and music taught to make sure the proper virtues were promoted. Plato's not our best guide, though -- some of his suggestions have been tried and found wanting.

If you replace mere astronomy with introductions to science/technology, and round out the Western liberal arts with the missing Propriety/Philosophy, Driving, and Shooting you get a better base. Add on history and you get someone less easily led astray by fashionable nonsense: more of the ideal gentleman.

How do I do as a gentleman? I like to think that I do fine in "propriety/speaking truth", and in writing and math and science/technology. Music -- not so well, but I do sing in choir sometimes (they're desperate). My driving is still a bit better than average (they taught us courteous driving) but not superb, my shooting is mediocre, and I'm downright lousy in gymnastics or racing.

Great books

The "Great Books" set opens with a volume titled "The Great Conversation", and that's not a bad way to think about such a collection. Recently they've added some non-Western tradition books to the set, but those probably should be their own series: Great Books of China, or Great Books of ... well, maybe not India exactly, since that's more a modern construct, but you get the idea. Until recently each different culture family's conversations have been more internal.

I don't think you'd get quite the same kind of collection from Africa, or the Americas. Africa has oral traditions--a variety of them, not all in communication/conversation with each other. A problem with oral traditions is that if an idea goes out of fashion for a couple of generations, it's lost. Books, though still fragile, are a bit more permanent, and a tradition may be only temporarily lost.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

A star

I don't recall ever having seen any movies with Brigitte Bardot, though somehow she has always been on the radar. I gather from Althouse's post that the New York Times didn't like her much ("crazy cat lady"?). She had a great deal of happy sex appeal, but from the summary of her personal life I gather that some of that was based on illusion.

She quit the movie business and devoted her life to animal welfare, which was probably far more satisfying. (We would not have seen eye to eye, I'm afraid.) She had the wealth and fame to be able to get up the Enarques' noses about immigration and get away with only fines she could easily pay. I'd bet that increased her popularity.

I read a few years ago in National Geographic (so take it for what it is worth) that an Inuit boy's great accomplishment would be to kill a polar bear by himself, but that some of those who succeeded committed suicide not long after--perhaps there were no obvious challenges left in life. If your great accomplishment was to be a sex-kitten for a few years, the rest of life would seem pretty empty -- unless you found a new career that didn't demand youth and classic beauty. But when, whenever you put out a press release, the media kept using your old sex-kitten pictures, would it feel like they were trying to push you out of your new career and into your lost old one?

Yes, there were some pictures of her from later in life. The ones that weren't might get to be exasperating.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Expediting your way through government

Golden Touch is a new service in Liberia, advertising "One Stop Compliance": "established to help clients navigate Liberia’s often complex administrative and regulatory landscape. ... created in response to persistent challenges faced by entrepreneurs and individuals dealing with delays, red tape, and unclear procedures."
“This institution stands between you and unnecessary headaches,” Ross said, noting that the center will eliminate informal middlemen, excessive fees, and uncertainty. He assured clients that official costs would be clearly stated, with only minimal processing fees added, and that applicants would be updated throughout the process.

I think I'll just leave this here. I don't think it needs much commentary about the situation in Liberia, and the likely trajectory of the agency.

Pillars

Revelation 3:12 starts "He who overcomes, I will make him a pillar in the temple of My God."

In modern archetecture that doesn't sound very exciting, but when I look at the ancient temples, pillars are pretty impressive -- even in ruins.

The roof gets to see the sky, but the pillars hold it up. Simeon got to see baby Jesus, but who taught him to be patient and faithful? You don't know his parents' names either, do you? We recall Francis of Assisi, but who taught him to listen to God?

We don't notice those "who only stand and wait," but perhaps in heaven we'll be amazed at those pillars that seem unspectacular right now.

Friday, December 26, 2025

That would be a challenge

When I unpacked the electric blanket I spent the time to read the instructions. One section ended with the protocols for returning the product, suggesting that one should use the original packaging if possible.

It was vacuum packed. I could sit on the folded blanket to try to squeeze it down to fit in the box again, but I estimate it would take 5 times my weight to match the air pressure differential it was packed with.

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

"Heaven sounds boring"

Missing out: thanks to a lack of imagination or to a hyperactive one that mistakes illusion and the temporary for something real?

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Vanity

I have neglected some classical literature. The Vanity of Human Wishes by Samuel Johnson was suggeted to me. I'd not read anything by him that I can recall; I needed to remedy that.

But some great lines: "How Nations sink, by darling Schemes oppres’d," sounds very timely. Or "When Statutes glean the Refuse of the Sword" In context I don't believe Johnson was right. He thought the poor were less likely targets, but as Sowell quoted a sixteenth century German bishop as saying "The poor are a gold mine." Those statutes Johnson mentions don't glean much from any one of the poor, but there are so many that the income is large.

War and consequences: "And mortgag’d States their Grandsires Wreaths regret From Age to Age in everlasting Debt"

And about beauty: "Ye Nymphs of rosy Lips and radiant Eyes, Whom Pleasure keeps too busy to be wise," ... "What Care, what Rules your heedless Charms shall save, Each Nymph your Rival, and each Youth your Slave? An envious Breast with certain Mischief glows, And Slaves, the Maxim tells, are always Foes."

And I see where Austin got the phrase "Pride and Prejudice."

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Mold and radiation

You probably read about the study cultivating Cladosporium sphaerospermum on the ISS to see how this radiation-hardy--nay, radiation-using--mold would handle radiation in space.

OK, backing up. You probably read the reports that a species of black mold was happily growing in a radiation area in the Chernobyl reactor building. It not only wasn't getting (obviously) killed, it seemed to thrive better. "Melanotic fungi migrate toward radioactive sources, which appear to enhance their growth."

That led to a lot of studies of melanin and radiation. In vitro studies suggest that melanin is capable of harvesting electromagnetic energy similarly to, but less efficiently than, chlorophyll--and apparently at higher energies than chlorophyll (which absobs in red and blue bands: roughly 1.8eV and 2.8eV).

Interesting. So the experimenters put together a sealed pair of test chambers (and a duplicate to run on Earth), with two scintillators, one for each chamber, to detect radiation. (Their sensitivity peaked at about 50KeV energy deposited in some unspecified time.) Above these were petri dishes, one of which had been innoculated with mold spores. They kept them cold so the mold wouldn't start growing until they got into space, and once in space every 35 seconds they measured the temperature and the amount of the surface that turned dark with mold. The mold grew just fine. They looked at the difference between the "counts" (number of scintillator signals) in the control side and the moldy side, and found that the difference started at about 0 and grew as the mold did.

Now the difference isn't huge: about 2.6%, which, since the "shielding" was only one-sided you could double to get what the effect would be if you were surrounded by this in your spacecraft. 5% reduction would be nice, but not really worth the glowing headlines. And you can see the error bars on this. But there does seem to be an effect. The dotted lines at about 20 and 200 hours represent times when they estimated that mold had achieved 50% and 100% surface coverage. They had a camera and an algorithm...

Now even medium energy particles are going to do some damage going through creatures. I don't have any idea how a chemical could harvest medium energy photons and electrons resulting from the initial particle going through at some random angle, and suspect it isn't possible.

Low energy photons and electrons would be another matter. We have, in chlorophyll, a proof of principle that if you go low enough in energy harvesting is quite feasible. Even electrons knocked loose with low energy won't go far. But how do we get from here (e.g. MeV protons) to there (10's to 100's of eV photons)?

Researching that was a bit frustrating. The concepts are easy enough, but illustrating with examples, not so much.

At high energies, a photon interacting with matter loses energy by kicking loose electrons, and pair-producing electrons and positrons. Each of these is typically high enough energy to do the same in turn, and you get an exponentially growing number of particles up until their energies drop below the threshold for such fun and games. (And yes, the positrons eventually annihilate and produce photons.) This is all well understood, and well modeled, and I'd hoped to show the rest of the story. Unfortunately, the old standbys of Geant and EGS don't try to follow the showers all the way down.

Once you get below about 1KeV, molecular differences have a very strong effect on the outcome, and just modeling a shower in a nice uniform material like iron gets very complicated. The difference between interacting with an inner shell and an outer shell electron isn't negligible anymore.

So while I could show the cascades that happen from high or medium energy to fairly low energy, I cannot illustrate how the rest of the shower goes, as a (e.g.) 10KeV photon produces weaker photons and electrons which in turn produce less energetic ones.

Near the end of the low energy shower, an electron or photon of a few eV can excite, or perhaps even ionize, a molecule of the scintillator. When the excited electron returns to its original state the molecule produces a photon in the visible spectrum. It'll go some random direction, but if you have enough excited molecules (meaning more energy dumped into the scintillator by the incoming particles), enough of them will head in the direction of the light-sensing part to produce a signal. In really sensitive systems, all you need is one, but your noise rate goes way up, so typically you'll set your signal threshold a bit higher.

Two or three of these visible-light photons hitting your phototube (or equivalent detector) at about the same time will make a little electrical signal that you can amplify, and count if it is bigger than your threshold setting.

FWIW, layering scintillator and stuff to stimulate showers (like iron, lead, what have you), produces showers that produce amounts of light roughly proportional to the energy of the initial particle--which is very handy. Calorimetry. Anyhow, this experiment was just using scintillator in counting mode.

I'd be interested in seeing what photon energies these molds are capable of harvesting. Experiments like this subject them to a broad spectrum of energies. It's probably pretty hard to do--the tunable x-ray systems I know about are designed for radiation doses that would probably toast the molds (you can give plants too much light too).

More as I learn more...

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Various notes

The study this morning was on Romans 4 and 5, and several rabbits got chased.

How come Adam gets the blame and not Eve? I've heard a several different explanations, which make assumptions about what was going on (Adam forgot to tell Eve the directions, Adam was standing right there, Adam was head-of-household responsible for what Eve did) that resolve into making Adam the main culprit. But if we're making assumptions, why not assume that Paul is rhetorically using the first man as a stand-in for us all, since the Romans passage goes on to say that all sin. That's been the implicit assumption in most discussion of Romans 5, might as well make it explicit.

In Romans 4:11-12 Abraham is described as the father of both the circumcised and uncircumcised believers. In 18-20 he is described as having unwavering faith that God would give him a child. If I read Genesis correctly, he, impatient, got part of that a little confused and tried a shortcut with Hagar (at Sarai's suggestion). So perhaps Abraham is also the father of those of us who believe but get things a bit confused sometimes.

Which, of course, leads into Zacharias vs Mary: "How will I know" vs "How can this be" aka "Can you show me some ID?" vs "What do I need to do?" With answers "OK, you'll be the proof" and "Nothing." Abraham might have done better to ask "How will this be?" and get details clear.

And somehow the question of whether there can be peace without freedom came up at table today. That reminded me of a famous song, which I may not be remembering entirely correctly...

The crown has made it clear
The climate must be perfect all the year

A law was made a distant moon ago here
July and August cannot be too hot
And there's a legal limit to the snow here
In Camazotz
The winter is forbidden till December
And exits March the second on the dot
By order summer lingers through September
In Camazotz

Christmas costume

The worship arts Christmas party invitation wanted us to show up in Christmas-themed, or at least winter-themed outfits. I didn't read it that closely, and wore the same sort of thing I used to wear to work.

I said that I dressed as one of the wise men.

Best choice

A puzzle showed up in my Facebook feed. Two doors. One says you get one billion dollars right now. The other says you get a dollar right now, but it doubles every day. Which do you pick?

Three ways to choose come to mind. The mathematically naive will pick the billion right now, figuring that the other would take too long to do anything useful. Somebody with a little more math, but economically naive, knows that in a month the doubling dollar will grow to be more than a billion dollars (except in Feb, where it's only 268 million or 536 million in leap years).

But the third way notices that in 40 days the value of that dollar becomes over a trillion dollars, and in 50 days each dollar will have started to lose value since there'll now be $1125 trillion to chase only $113 trillion of world GDP. A dollar will then be worth 10 cents, and in another ten days a hundredth of a cent. You can safely assume that panicked hyperinflation would cause everybody to just abandon the dollar entirely.

Or you could decide that neither selection would be good for you and be content with what you have. (Is that playing fair?)