All posts by Keith

I’m a controversialist and catalyst, quietly enabling others to develop by providing different ideas and views of the world. Born in London in the early 1950s and initially trained as a research chemist I retired as a senior project manager after 35 years in the IT industry. Retirement is about community give-back and finding some equilibrium. Founder and Honorary Secretary of the Anthony Powell Society. Chairman of my GP's patient group.

Advent Calendar 1


An Advent Calendar of Notable Scientists

Galen of Pergamon


Image from Wikipedia

Possibly the most accomplished of all medical researchers of antiquity, Galen influenced the development of various scientific disciplines, including anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology, and neurology, as well as philosophy and logic.

Monthly Links

Once more, dear friends, unto our monthly collection of links to items you may have missed the first time. And we have a well stuffed list this month.


Science, Technology, Natural World

First off something to worry you (well maybe) … Scientific American looks at how easy it is to hack GPS, and the USA’s lack of a backup. [£££]

I’ve never liked the way we change the clocks twice a year, and it seems there is evidence that daylight saving time does affect our health.

Another of my bêtes noir is the way wasps get such a bad press and abuse. We need to learn to love them as they’re amazing pest-killers and useful pollinators. [£££]

Many more birds migrate than we realise. Now a Robin has been recorded doing 140 mile crossing of trhe North Sea in just four hours

And now for some good news … a mouse deer thought to be extinct (it’s not been seen for nearly 30 years) has been found alive in Vietnam.

Now you now we had to get to cats eventually! It seems that our cats are more attached to us than we thought. [£££]

A mysterious 300 million-year-old fossil known as the Tully Monster could be a vertebrate or an invertebrate: scientists are still trying to decide and the oddities keep multiplying.

Do animals speak to us? Dutch philosopher Eva Meijer says that they do but we don’t (know how to) listen to them.

Finally in this section, one not for the squeamish. A look at how forensic scientists are studying the microbiological decay of corpses using human bodies. [LONG READ]


Health, Medicine

In the 1950s, photojournalist Lennart Nilsson set out to capture photographs of foetuses, and his Foetus 18 Weeks may be the greatest photograph of the 20th century.

Why is measles such a dangerous illness, even after recovery? Because it appears to make the body forget how to fight infection.

Now here’s something very odd: apparently some left-handed women can smell normally despite having olfactory bulbs in their brain. And this is only left-handed women!

So are women’s experiences of menopause psychosomatic? It seems they may be (at least in part) as women’s experience of menopause appears to be related her family’s experiences.


Sexuality

So here are seven myths about fertility.

New in London: the world’s only Vagina Museum. Needless to say it’s dedicated to female genitalia. [LONG READ]


Environment

We aren’t nearly good enough at recycling, so here are 15 ways to reduce your plastic footprint.

The National Trust is set to release families of beavers at sites in Somerset and Sussex as part of plans to ease flooding and improve biodiversity.


Art, Literature, Language

Italian police have arrested over 20 people in connection with the trafficking of archaeological artefacts.

Now here’s another oddity. It appears that our (western) perception of musical octaves is learned and not hard-wired in the brain.

Art can be cathartic, as Laura Dodsworth discovers when talking to high security prisoners about her work.


History, Archaeology, Anthropology

Should the Iron Age really be called the Flax Age? [LONG READ]

The Ancient Egyptians mummified millions of sacred birds, but were they wild caught or captive bred?

So just why was the year 536 AD the worst year to be alive?

Researchers are linking the Catholic Church’s ban on cousins marrying (well, incest in general) to the emergence of western individualism. [£££]

We all know that inflation happens, but how much has the value of money changed over the centuries? It seems it depends on how you measure it, and that isn’t easy.

It is a wise child who knows its father. New research shows this is truer in cities than rural areas.


London

The Museum of London is planning to move into part of the old Smithfield Market. IanVisits looks inside the space before construction work begins.

Meanwhile London blogger Diamond Geezer gives us an A to Z of Kew Gardens.


Food, Drink

Ten of the world’s most environmentally controversial foods.

Zoe Williams in the Guardian contends that there’s a generation gap in food.


Lifestyle, Personal Development

Collective worship in schools must be provided for all pupils in an appropriate way for their beliefs, and not be single religion.

One woman tells the story of how she became an astrologer, what it was like, and why she stopped.

The patriarchy is not the natural human state, after all hunter-gatherer societies remain remarkable for their gender equality. [LONG READ]

Attachment: are you a secure, avoidant or anxious partner?

We all know about green space, but blue space? It appears that time spent near water is the secret of happiness.

So fifty fascinating facts about our friendly felines.


People

And finally … Who would have guessed that Rod Stewart has spent over 20 years building a mega model railway?


Another instalment in the dull days following Christmas! Have a good one.

100 Day Challenge: Words #5

Episode five (for days 16 to 20) of my 100 day challenge to find words I don’t know. I’m scraping words from https://randomword.com/ and each day picking one that I find interesting and which is also in the OED.

Day Date Word Meaning
21 Thursday 21 November pigsconce A foolish or pigheaded person; blockhead
22 Friday 22 November cabasset A light iron helmet
23 Saturday 23 November tephra Dust and rock fragments that have been ejected into the air by a volcanic eruption
24 Sunday 24 November novena A devotion consisting of special prayers or services on nine successive days
25 Monday 25 November chiru ** Tibetan antelope with a thick, reddish-brown woolly coat, and (in the male) very long straight horns

** My favourite of the words presented.

Next episode in a few days!

Buggered Britain #26

It’s a long time (like 4 years!!!) since we had an entry in Buggered Britain – my occasional series documenting some of the underbelly of Britain. Britain which we wouldn’t like visitors to see and which we wish wasn’t there. The trash, abused, decaying, destitute and otherwise buggered parts of our environment. Those parts which symbolise the current economic malaise; parts which, were the country flourishing, wouldn’t be there, would be better cared for, or made less inconvenient; but which seem to have got steadily worse over the last few years.

So here are three offerings, all taken in west London on the same day a couple of months ago.

Click the images for larger views

100 Day Challenge: Words #4

So here’s episode four (for days 16 to 20) of my 100 day challenge to find words I don’t know. I’m scraping words from https://randomword.com/ and each day picking one that I find interesting and which is in the OED.

Day Date Word Meaning
16 Saturday 16 November yeanling A young lamb or kid
17 Sunday 17 November yatzy A dice game popular in Scandinavian countries (h/t Greta Thunberg)
18 Monday 18 November zabernism misuse of military authority; bullying
19 Tuesday 19 November peristeronic of, like, or pertaining to pigeons
20 Wednesday 20 November bloomery ** The first forge in an iron-works through which the metal passes after having been melted from the ore, and in which it is made into blooms

** My favourite of the words presented.

Next episode in a few days!

Monthly Quotes

So here’s this month’s collection of quotes – some interesting, some amusing …


No Park – no Ring – no afternoon gentility –
No company – no nobility –
No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease
No comfortable feel in any member –
No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,
No fruits, no flow’rs, no leaves, no birds,
November!

[Thomas Hood (1799–1845), No!]


Remember, remember the Fifth of November,
The Gunpowder Treason and Plot,
I know of no reason
Why the gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot.
Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes, t’was his intent
To blow up the King and Parli’ment.
Three-score barrels of powder below
To prove old England’s overthrow;
By God’s providence he was catch’d
With a dark lantern and burning match.
Holloa boys, holloa boys, let the bells ring.
Holloa boys, holloa boys, God save the King!

[Alan Moore, V for Vendetta]


Government ministers are like economists – ask two of them this question and you get three different answers.
[Graham Page]


When I ceased to accept the teachings of my youth, it was not so much a process of giving up beliefs, as of discovering that I had never really believed.
[Leslie Stephen]


I tend to become uncomfortable around all ideologies that brand themselves as “the truth” or “the way”. This not only includes most religions, but also atheism, radical bi-partisan politics or any system of thought, including “woke” culture, that finds its energy in self-righteous belief and the suppression of contrary systems of thought. Regardless of the virtuous intentions of many woke issues, it is its lack of humility and the paternalistic and doctrinal sureness of its claims that repel me.
Antifa and the Far Right, for example, with their routine street fights, role-playing and dress-ups are participants in a weirdly erotic, violent and mutually self-sustaining marriage, propped up entirely by the blind, inflexible convictions of each other’s belief systems. It is good for nothing, except inflaming their own self-righteousness.

[Nick Cave at https://reason.com/2019/10/21/nick-cave-slams-woke-culture-as-self-righteous-and-suppresive/]


Some of us … are of the generation that believed that free speech was a clear-cut and uncontested virtue, yet within a generation this concept is seen by many as a dog-whistle to the Far Right, and is rapidly being consigned to the Left’s ever-expanding ideological junk pile.
[Nick Cave at https://reason.com/2019/10/21/nick-cave-slams-woke-culture-as-self-righteous-and-suppresive/]


Cat: a pygmy lion who loves mice, hates dogs and patronizes human beings.
[Oliver Herford (1863-1935)]


Saw someone with a shirt saying:
      Truth + God = Life
I hope they realise that it also follows …
      Truth = Life – God
      God = Life – Truth
Seriously, do the maths people.


Europe is not a market, it is the will to live together. Leaving Europe is not leaving a market, it is leaving shared dreams. We can have a common market, but if we do not have common dreams,
we have nothing. Europe is the peace that came after the disaster of war. Europe is the pardon
between French and Germans. Europe is the return to freedom of Greece, Spain and Portugal. Europe is the fall of the Berlin Wall. Europe is the end of communism. Europe is the welfare state, it is democracy.

[Esteban González Pons on the 60th anniversary of the Treaties of Rome]


When I talk to managers I get the feeling they are important. When I talk to leaders I get the feeling that I am important.


Psychopathic traits such as risk taking, overconfidence and superficial charm can make men more attractive to romantic partners, despite them having little interest in committed relationships, researchers at Canada’s Brock University have found.
[Science Focus magazine, 12/2019]


No drug, not even alcohol, causes the fundamental ills of society. If we’re looking for the source of our troubles, we shouldn’t test people for drugs, we should test them for stupidity, ignorance, greed, and love of power.
[PJ O’Rourke, writer (b.14 Nov 1947)]

100 Day Challenge: Words #3

So here’s episode three (for days 11 to 15) of my 100 day challenge to find words I don’t know.

I’m scraping words from https://randomword.com/ and each day picking one that I find interesting and which is in the OED.

Day Date Word Meaning
11 Monday 11 November xylometer an instrument measuring specific gravity of wood
12 Tuesday 12 November culverin lightweight, portable, long-barrelled cannon
13 Wednesday 13 November discophoran of, like, or pertaining to jellyfishes
14 Thursday 14 November aguardiente Spanish or Portuguese brandy
15 Friday 15 November pegomancy ** divination by the examination of springs or fountains

** My favourite of the words presented.

Next episode in a few days!

100 Day Challenge: Words #2

As promised here’s episode two (covering days 6 to 10) of my latest 100 day challenge to find words I don’t know. I’m scraping words from https://randomword.com/ and each day picking one that I find interesting and which is in the OED.

Day Date Word Meaning
6 Wednesday 6 November leucomelanous having dark hair and eyes but fair skin
7 Thursday 7 November ishan a prehistoric Iraqi mound
8 Friday 8 November traject a place where boats cross a river, strait, or the like; a ferry
9 Saturday 9 November hyetometrograph an automatic instrument for registering the amount of rainfall during successive periods
10 Sunday 10 November hieromonach ** a monk who also serves as a priest

** My favourite of the words presented.

Next episode in a few days!

Ten Things, November

This year our Ten Things series is focusing on each month in turn. The Ten Things may include facts about the month, momentous events that happened, personal things, and any other idiocy I feel like – just because I can. So here are …

Ten Things about November

  1. Novem – ninth month of Roman calendar
  2. All Saints Day and the pagan festival of Samhain both fall on 1st …
  3. … followed by All Souls the following day
  4. St Andrew
  5. Beaujolais Nouveau is released on the third Thursday
  6. The Sunday before the beginning of Advent is the Feast of Christ the King, which is also traditionally also Stir-up Sunday, when one makes Christmas Puddings
  7. Guy Fawkes Day, celebrating the defeat of terrorism
  8. US Thanksgiving is on the fourth Thursday
  9. London Lord Mayor’s Show
  10. Hecate Night