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.

What Happened in 1824?

Here’s our next instalment of things that happened in ..24 years of yore.

Notable Events in 1824

8 January. After much controversy, Michael Faraday (below) is finally elected as a member of the Royal Society.

Michael Faraday

8 January. Birth of Wilkie Collins, British novelist (d.1889)

21 January. Birth of Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson, American Confederate general (d.1863)

10 February. Simón Bolívar is proclaimed dictator of Peru.

4 March. Founding of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI)in Britain.

19 April. Lord Byron, the British poet, dies at the age of 36 in the Greek city of Missolonghi, where he had taken ill while making plans to liberate the Greeks from Ottoman rule.

7 May. Premiere of Beethoven’s Symphony No.9 at the Theater am Kärntnertor in Vienna.

16 June. The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) is established in Great Britain.

4 September. Birth of Anton Bruckner, Austrian composer (d.1896)

10 October. The Edinburgh Town Council founds the Edinburgh Fire Engine Establishment, the first municipal fire brigade in Britain (and probably the world). [Pictured below an 1824 Edinburgh Fire Engine.]

Edinburgh Fire Engine of 1824

21 October. Joseph Aspdin patents Portland cement.

Unknown Date. The Colorado potato beetle is first described, by Thomas Say.

October’s Monthly Quotes

What? We’re into the last quarter of the year! How? Anyway here’s this month’s collection of quotes amusing and thoughtful – with quite a few slightly longer offerings this time around …


The underlying purpose of AI is to allow wealth to access skill while removing from the skilled the ability to access wealth.
[Tony Puryear, https://www.facebook.com/tony.puryear]


This neatly leads us to the Minkowski view of space and time: we live in a four-dimensional space-time, where three of the dimensions are the space we are familiar with, each of which can be measured in metres. The fourth dimension can also be measured in metres, but we are travelling along it at the velocity c, the speed of light, and we interpret that as the world changing, and that gives us the concept of time. Time doesn’t “flow”; it is just us shooting along that fourth-dimensional axis. The section we have just traversed is the past and is fixed, immutable; while the section ahead is the future and is uncertain, described only by a series of probabilities or possibilities, over which we have limited control.
[John Elliott, quoted in https://www.newscientist.com/lastword/mg26335081-200-what-would-happen-if-time-stopped/]


Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.
[Voltaire]


When you recognise that there is a voice in your head that pretends to be you and never stops speaking, you are awakening out of your unconscious identification with the stream of thinking. When you notice that voice, you realise that who you are is not the voice … the thinker … but the one who is aware of it.
[Eckhart Tolle]


Sometimes those who don’t socialize much aren’t antisocial they just have no tolerance for drama, stupidity, and fake people.
[unknown]


“Why do you need a label?” Because there is comfort in knowing that you are a normal zebra, not a strange horse … It is near impossible to be happy and mentally healthy if you’re spending all your life thinking you’re a failed horse, having others tell you you are a failed horse, when all along you could be thriving and understood if everyone, including you, just knew you were a zebra.
[Quoted in https://katywheatley.substack.com/p/this-is-bleak-you-have-been-warned]


If something won’t matter in 5 years, don’t waste more than 5 minutes worrying about it now.
[unknown]


Brains get good at what they do. Negative thoughts create ‘channels’ in your brain. This way of thinking can become your default. If you do a lot of negative thinking, you wire your brain to be good at producing negative thoughts. Your brain also gets good at seeing things to think negatively about. One of the many byproducts of negative thinking is stress, which then leads to more negative thinking.
[unknown]


Royals have always been terrible people who are mostly just good at stealing money.
[Eleanor Janega, https://going-medieval.com/2024/09/27/on-side-hustles/]


Love of liberty means the guarding of every resource that makes freedom possible – from the sanctity of our families and the wealth of our soil to the genius of our scientists.
[Dwight D Eisenhower]


If you are a weatherperson, you’re a target. The same goes for journalists, election workers, scientists, doctors, and first responders. These jobs are different, but the thing they share is that they all must attend to and describe the world as it is. This makes them dangerous to people who cannot abide by the agonizing constraints of reality
[Charlie Warzel at https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/10/hurricane-milton-conspiracies-misinformation/680221/]


When stripped of local symbolism and terminology, all systems [of belief] show a remarkable uniformity of method. This is because all systems ultimately derive from the tradition of Shamanism.
[Peter Carroll, quoted in Wikipedia at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_magic]


Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
[George Carlin]


All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.
[JRR Tolkien]


I think hard times are coming when we will be wanting the voices of writers who can see alternatives to how we live now and can see through our fear-stricken society and its obsessive technologies to other ways of being, and even imagine some real grounds for hope. We will need writers who can remember freedom. Poets, visionaries – the realists of a larger reality.
[Ursula K Le Guin]


A few conclusions become clear when we understand this: that our most cruel failure in how we treat the sick and the aged is the failure to recognize that they have priorities beyond merely being safe and living longer; that the chance to shape one’s story is essential to sustaining meaning in life; that we have the opportunity to refashion our institutions, our culture, and our conversations in ways that transform the possibilities for the last chapters of everyone’s lives.
[Atul Gawande; Being Mortal]


Empathy requires being attuned to the patient’s perspective and understanding how the illness is woven into this particular persons’ life. Last – and this is where doctors often stumble – empathy requires being able to communicate all of this to the patient.
[Danielle Ofri; What Doctors Feel: How Emotions Affect the Practice of Medicine]


Patients were real, often passionate individuals with real problems – and sometimes choices – of an often agonizing sort. It was not just a question of diagnosis and treatment; much graver questions could present themselves – questions about the quality of life and whether life was even worth living in some circumstances.
[Oliver Sacks; On the Move]


Be kind to yourself in the year ahead … Try to make your time matter: minutes and hours and days and weeks can blow away like dead leaves, with nothing to show but time you spent not quite ever doing things, or time you spent waiting to begin.
[Neil Gaiman; Neil Gaiman’s Journal]


Worming into Fame?

Well now here’s a turn up for the books. I’m in this week’s New Scientist. Each week in the Back Pages, they print a couple of questions sent in by (named) readers, and answers (or at least ideas of answers) from other readers to earlier questions. And this week they’ve printed a question I sent in a while ago.

The question is printed as:

Some worms regenerate when cut in half laterally, but what would happen if they were cut in half longitudinally?
Keith Marshall, London, UK

Hmmm … I’m not sure this is quite what I meant because “worms” is going to get interpreted as “earthworms” by too many people, especially as the online version has an image of earthworms. Maybe the question is appropriate for “earthworms” and not just the “flatworms” I had intended – I don’t know.

…

But space is limited, so the question as printed is a cut down version of the question I submitted:

There’s a recent report in Scientific American, https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/regenerating-deep-sea-worms-harness-live-in-algae-as-they-split-into-three/, of acoel flatworms regenerating when cut in half laterally. The head grows a new tail, but the tail grows two heads and then divides. But what would happen if the worm was cut longitudinally, with each half containing some head and some tail? Would this be viable, or is the presence of (say) a brain a binary requirement?

Nonetheless I shall be very interested to see what the readers come up with over the next few weeks. I’ll try to remember to report back.

Culinary Adventure #114: Black Pepper

This episode of Culinary Adventures isn’t so much an adventure as an observation and question to which I cannot find an easy answer.

I’ve been using freshly ground black pepper since I was a student – so some 50 years or more. And until a year or so ago, had you asked me, I would have said that I hardly noticed it imparting a great deal of flavour.

black peppercorns

But this last year or two I’ve noticed that freshly ground black pepper is much stronger, really peppery, and really fragrant. It’s a different hotness to chilli, which I like. And it doesn’t seem to matter how finely or coarsely it is ground.

So why am I suddenly noticing the change?

Sure, we could have unwittingly recently brought a different, better, brand – but it must have happened several times over the last couple of years. Or are the peppercorns we’re getting now from a new/different cultivar? Or from a totally different growing region? Does the terroir affect the potency, in the way it affects wine? Are the peppercorns being processed differently?

Or is it that my ageing taste buds and olfactory sensors have suddenly changed? (And no, it isn’t down to Covid affecting smell & taste.)

I don’t know the answer. Has anyone else noticed this? Or does anyone have good knowledge of peppercorn production?

October Quiz Answers

Here are the answers to this month’s five quiz questions. If in doubt, all should be able to be easily verified online.

Classical & Ancient World

  1. What is the 4th letter of the Greek alphabet?  Delta
  2. Which English city was once known as Duroliponte?  Cambridge
  3. What prized object comprises the coat of the winged ram that flew Phrixus to safety?  Golden Fleece
  4. Name the Sun-god of Ancient Egypt?  Ra
  5. In Greek mythology the Little Owl traditionally represents which goddess?  Athena

Answers were correct when questions were compiled in late 2023.

October Quiz Questions

Each month we’re posing five pub quiz style questions, with a different subject each month. As before, they’re not difficult, but it is unlikely everyone will know all the answers – so hopefully you’ll learn something new, as well as having a bit of fun.

Classical & Ancient World

  1. What is the 4th letter of the Greek alphabet?
  2. Which English city was once known as Duroliponte?
  3. What prized object comprises the coat of the winged ram that flew Phrixus to safety?
  4. Name the Sun-god of Ancient Egypt?
  5. In Greek mythology the Little Owl traditionally represents which goddess?

Answers will be posted in 2 weeks time.

October 1924

Our look at some of the significant happenings 100 years ago this month.


1. Born. Jimmy Carter, 39th President of the United States, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. Yes, he’s 100 today!


12-15. Zeppelin LZ-126 makes a transatlantic delivery flight from Friedrichshafen, Germany, to Lakehurst, New Jersey


29. Died. Frances Hodgson Burnett, Anglo-American writer (b. 1849)