Let’s stay with some more movie music. Here is John Williams conducting his theme to Jurassic Park with the Boston Pops.
Month: January 2016
New Papers
I have been negligent about posting new papers but here is a list. I’ll expound on them in the future.
Lee, J. J., Vattikuti, S. & Chow, C. C. Uncovering the Genetic Architectures of Quantitative Traits. Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal 14, 28–34 (2016).
Lenstra, T. L., Coulon, A., Chow, C. C. & Larson, D. R. Single-Molecule Imaging Reveals a Switch between Spurious and Functional ncRNA Transcription. MOLCEL 60, 597–610 (2015).
Stavreva, D. A. et al. Dynamics of chromatin accessibility and long-range interactions in response to glucocorticoid pulsing. Genome Res 25, 845–857 (2015).
Selection of the week
The first movement of Mozart’s Oboe Concerto in C major, K. 314/271k played by Nicholas Daniel and the BBC Symphony Orchestra in the 2008 BBC Proms.
Selection of the week
Iconic Italian composer Ennio Morricone conducts the main theme of his score to the film The Mission.
In praise of MSG
When I go to a Chinese restaurant, I am always disappointed when the menu says “No MSG.” I used to be on the “MSG is bad” bandwagon too until I learned some neuroscience. Glutamate is the primary excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain and now I’m always hoping to get extra glutamate into my system and brain. I don’t really know if MSG is going to supercharge my brain but hey the placebo effect is real. Research has never found any bad effects of MSG. See this article for details. This is also an interesting case where other people’s beliefs do directly affect me. Because, the public is hugely biased against MSG, I will be deprived of it at my local Chinese take out place. I don’t know why you have a headache after you eat at a Chinese restaurant. It might be from drinking too much tea or the salt but it’s probably not because of the MSG.
The nature of evil
In our current angst over terrorism and extremism, I think it is important to understand the motivation of the agents behind the evil acts if we are ever to remedy the situation. The observable element of evil (actus reus) is the harm done to innocent individuals. However, in order to prevent evil acts, we must understand the motivation behind the evil (mens rea). The Radiolab podcast “The Bad Show” gives an excellent survey of the possible varieties of evil. I will categorize evil into three types, each with increasing global impact. The first is the compulsion or desire within an individual to harm another. This is what motivates serial killers like the one described in the show. Generally, such evilness will be isolated and the impact will be limited albeit grisly. The second is related to what philosopher Hannah Arendt called “The Banality of Evil.” This is an evil where the goal of the agent is not to inflict harm per se as in the first case but in the process of pursuing some other goal, there is no attempt to avoid possible harm to others. This type of sociopathic evil is much more dangerous and widespread as is most recently seen in Volkswagen’s fraudulent attempt to pass emission standards. Although there are sociopathic individuals that really have no concern for others, I think many perpetrators in this category are swayed by cultural norms or pressures to conform. The third type of evil is when the perpetrator believes the act is not evil at all but a means to a just and noble end. This is the most pernicious form of evil because when it is done by “your side” it is not considered evil. For example, the dropping of atomic bombs on Japan was considered to be a necessary sacrifice of a few hundred thousand lives to end WWII and save many more lives.
I think it is important to understand that the current wave of terrorism and unrest in the Middle East is motivated by the third type. Young people are joining ISIS not because they particularly enjoy inflicting harm on others or they don’t care how their actions affect others, but because they are rallying to a cause they believe to be right and important. Many if not most suicide bombers come from middle class families and many are women. They are not merely motivated by a promise of a better afterlife or by a dire economic situation as I once believed. They are doing this because they believe in the cause and the feeling that they are part of something bigger than themselves. The same unwavering belief and hubris that led people to Australia fifty thousand years ago is probably what motivates ISIS today. They are not nihilists as many in the west believe. They have an entirely different value system and they view the west as being as evil as the west sees them. Until we fully acknowledge this we will not be able to end it.
Selection of the week
Here is fourteen year old clarinetist Andrew Moses (now 16 with his own website) accompanied by pianist Martin Leung, known for playing video game music on the piano, performing Brahms Clarinet Sonata No 2 in E-flat Major, Op. 120.