Month: August 2004

  • Really Advanced French --


    In memory of Rick James







    "Three's not a crowd to her.
       She says,
    'Room 714, I'll be waiting.'
    When I get there she's got
       incense, wine and candles.
    It's such a freaky scene."


    -- Rick James, "Super Freak"


    From Google:



    FAZED - Slorum
    ... Date: 5/28/04 @ 11:34 AM, 560. "Room 714, I'll be waiting". does anyone know what the room # signifies? From: tigeropie, Date: 5/28/04 @ 11:42 AM, 561. Bastille Day? ...
    www.fazed.net/forum/?p=slorum&id=12191&page=12 - 51k - Cached - Similar pages


    From Jill O'Hara and Company:



    Dead End


    From Room 714 and Bastille Day:


    "This conference is dedicated to the memory of François Furet....  The conference will take place at Hunter College, City University of New York, Hunter College West, Room 714."

    -- Conference for the Study of Political Thought, 1999 program note


    From The Society for
    French Historical Studies
    : 



    François Furet:
    A Personal Reminiscence


    From Room 714, Hunter College:



    Life and Death in the Brain,
    Jan. 16, 2004


    From Log24, Jan. 16, 2004:



    Forum


    The annual World Social Forum started Jan. 16 in Bombay ("Mumbai"), India.


    From "Dead End":


    Dead end
    No joking
    Dead end
    My friend

    --  Hair - Les chansons

  • Epistle and Hymns


    In the spirit of Dave Barry's Book of Bad Songs, we conclude our Hiroshima Day service with a link to The Epistle of Jeremiah and a deadly trinity of singers:








    A Landmark


    Neil Diamond--
    I Am ... I Said


    Hoyt Axton--
    Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog


    Jill O'Hara--
    It's Not Easy Being Green


  • Sermon for Hiroshima Day


    In a comment, a Xangan recently made a pun on the name "Gennifer" (as in Flowers)... "geno-pher."  I am still not sure what he meant, but I appreciate his prompting me to look up the etymology of gen words, one of which is...



    genesis - O.E., from L. genesis, adopted as title of first book of Old Testament in Vulgate, from Gk. genesis "origin, creation, generation," from gignesthai "to be born," related to genos "race, birth, descent" (see genus). As such, it translated Heb. bereshith, lit. "in the beginning," which was the first word of the text, taken in error as its title. Extended sense of "origin, creation" first recorded in Eng. 1604.


    This ties in with the end of the previous entry, which recommended that the reader consult Log24 entries of Aug. 6, 2002.  Taking my own advice, I did so, and found that the current pope on Aug. 6, 1993, cited Genesis 1:26 --



    And God said, Let us
    make man in our image,
    after our likeness....


    Taking the chapter and verse numbers as also having deep religious significance, let us  consult the Log24 entries for 1/26 2003 and 1/26 2004.


    In Our Image  


    We find that 1/26 2003, and the entries on earlier days that lead up to it, deals with Paul Newman, Our Town, The Hustler, Super Bowl Sunday, and God.


    After Our Likeness


    We find that 1/26 2004 deals with God's self-definition on Mount Sinai.  Lucifer also appears.  Karol Wojtyla would do well to click on the following link for an expert characterization of Lucifer:


    hypocrite lecteur!
    mon semblable, mon frère
    .

  • In the beginning
    was...
    the recursion?


    "Words are events."
    -- The Walter J. Ong Project,
        quoted in Log24 on Aug. 25, 2003 


    "Words are events."
    -- The Walter J. Ong Project,
        quoted in the Heckler & Coch weblog
        on July 17, 2004 as part of a section
        titled "Recursive, Wide, and Loopy"


    Walter J. Ong was a Jesuit.  The Feast of St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order, is celebrated on July 31 each year.


    "Recursive, Wide, and Loopy 2", a Heckler & Coch entry dated July 31, 2004, leads to the following:






    MSNBC, Jan. 15, 2004:


    How humans got
    the gift of gab
    :


    Why do other primates
    lag behind in language?
     


    "New research may help scientists dissect just what it is about the human brain that endows us with language.


    Researchers have found that tamarin monkeys have some distinctly languagelike abilities but that they can’t quite master the more complex rules of human grammar. The findings appear in Friday’s issue of the journal Science, published by AAAS, the non-profit science society.


     The grammatical toolkit


    'A relatively open question concerning language evolution is, "What aspects of the language faculty are shared with other animals, and what aspects are unique to humans?" ' said study author Marc Hauser of Harvard University.


    To investigate, Hauser and W. Tecumseh Fitch of the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, devised tests for cotton-top tamarin monkeys and human volunteers. Tamarins have been evolving separately from humans for approximately 40 million years --suggesting that any shared machinery in human and tamarin brains is old enough to be relatively common among primates.


    Instead of trying to teach the monkeys real words, Hauser and Fitch generated strings of one-syllable words that followed various grammatical rules.


    According to linguistics expert Noam Chomsky, the simplest type of grammar is a 'finite state grammar' or 'FSG,' which dictates which types of words go near each other in a sentence. In English, for example, an adjective like 'fast' must go directly in front of 'car,' the noun it's describing.


    Building on previous experiments, Hauser and Fitch recorded word-strings that obeyed a specific FSG, in which any syllable spoken by a female voice was automatically followed by one from a male voice.


    Audio: Listen to an FSG word-string.
    (Requires Windows Media Player.)


    After listening to a series of word-strings, the monkeys were able to distinguish between those that followed this rule and others that didn't. Human test subjects could tell the difference as well, implying that tamarins and humans may share at least some components of what Hauser called 'the universal toolkit underlying all languages.'


    Mastering this type of grammar represents the ability to compute some simple statistics, something human infants accomplish early on as they learn to speak. This ability may not be specific to language, however.


    'Either the same mechanism or some approximation of it is used in mathematics, vision, music and other activities,' Hauser said.


    Upping the Complexity


    The grammatical rules of real languages govern more than just the placement of neighboring words, as anyone who had to diagram sentences in English class may remember all too well.


    One of the more complex types of grammar is known as a 'phrase structure grammar,' or PSG. These grammars involve relationships between words that aren't next to each other in a sentence and thus allow for a more complex range of expression. The 'if ... then' construction is an example of a PSG.


    The researchers generated a second set of word-strings that followed a PSG in which a pairing of syllables spoken by a female and a male could be embedded within another pairing. This grammar produces structures like [female [female, male] male].


    Audio: Listen to a PSG word-string.
    (Requires Windows Media Player)


    After playing these recordings repeatedly to the monkeys, the researchers found that the animals didn't seem to notice the difference between word strings that obeyed the PSG and other strings that did not. In contrast, the human volunteers did notice the difference."


    -- Kathleen Wren


    "The grammar or syntax of human language is certainly unique. Like an onion or Russian doll, it is recursive: One instance of an item is embedded in another instance of the same item. Recursion makes it possible for the words in a sentence to be widely separated and yet dependent on one another. 'If-then' is a classic example.... Are animals capable of such recursion? Fitch and Hauser have reported that tamarin monkeys are not capable of recursion. Although the monkeys learned a nonrecursive grammar, they failed to learn a grammar that is recursive. Humans readily learn both."


    -- David Premack (Science 2004 303:318, quoted in ScienceWeek)


    These citations by Heckler & Coch show that inability to understand complex language is not limited to monkeys.


    The examples given by Wren in the audio samples are of alternating female (Hi) and male (Lo) voices, thus --


    FSG:  Hi Lo Hi Lo Hi Lo


    PSG:  Hi Hi Hi Lo Lo Lo


    As these examples show, neither monkeys nor humans heard the sound of parentheses (or square brackets) as Wren describes them:


    "structures like [female [female, male] male]."


    There of course is, in ordinary language (which does not include the monologues of Victor Borge), no such thing as the sound of parentheses.


    Thus the research of Hauser and Fitch is not only invalid, but ridiculous.


    This point is driven strongly home by the following two articles:


    Greg Kochanski, Research Fellow,
     Oxford University Phonetics Lab
    :


    Is a Phrase Structure Grammar
    the Important Difference
    between Humans and Monkeys?
    ,


    and


    Mark Liberman, Professor,
    University of Pennsylvania

    Departments of Linguistics
    and of Computer Science,
    and co-director of the
    Institute for Research
    in Cognitive Science,
    in his


    Language Log,
    January 17, 2004:


    Hi Lo Hi Lo,
    it's off to
    formal language theory
    we go
    .

  • Summering Forth


    Everything that ever summered forth starts
    in identical springs, or four-note variations
    on that repeated theme: four seasons,
    four winds, four corners, four-chambered heart...


    -- Richard Powers, "The Perpetual Calendar,"
        from The Gold Bug Variations, 1991


  • Shell Beach


    "It was a dark and stormy night...."


    -- Opening of A Wrinkle in Time, a classic novel by Madeleine L'Engle.


    For those who seek religious significance in the name of Hurricane Alex:


    "Alex Proyas directs this futuristic thriller about a man waking up to find he is wanted for brutal murders he doesn't remember. Haunted by mysterious beings who stop time and alter reality, he seeks to unravel the riddle of his identity."


    -- Description of the 1998 film Dark City



    See also ART WARS of June 19, 2002.

  • Science and Fiction:


    Attica to GATTACA


     "There is no gene for fate."
    -- Vincent, a character in
       the 1997 film GATTACA


    The film GATTACA was discussed in a Log24 entry for Saturday, July 31, 2004-- the date of death of Frank Smith, also known as Big Black, a prominent figure in the events at Attica in 1971.  He died in Kinston, North Carolina, a town of about 24,000 about halfway between Raleigh and the Atlantic Ocean.


    See today's 6:01 AM entry for some details of Mr. Smith's life.  In his memory, here are three links.


    The first is to


    Screening DNA:
    Exploring the
    Cinema-Genetics Interface,


    by Stephen Nottingham


    This online book, from which the above GATTACA quote was taken, discusses genetics in film more generally... Specifically, from Part 7 of Screening DNA:


    In Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace--


    "Midi-chlorians are essentially genes for the force, which determine whether one will become either a Jedi or else a dark shadow of one. In particular, they evoke mitochondrian genes, as mitochondria once lived symbiotically in human cells. Mitochondria are a cell's energy-producing 'power plant,' in which a positive mutation could lead to an individual having greater strength and stamina. Mitochondrial genes are also now known to control many critical stages in human development."


    The second link in memory of Mr. Smith, one he would probably prefer, is to another book, less academic in nature, that also deals with mitochondria:






    A Wind in the Door,
    by Madeleine L'Engle.



     Mr. Smith


    From Chapter 3,
      "The Man in the Night"--


    The stranger was dark, dark as night and tall as a tree, and there was something in the repose of his body, the quiet of his voice, which drove away fear.


    Charles Wallace stepped towards him.  "Who are you?"


    "A Teacher."


    Charles Wallace's sigh was longing.  "I wish you were my teacher."


    "I am." The cello-like voice was calm, slightly amused.


    The third link is to the aforementioned


    Wind.

  • Southern Strategy, Da Capo


    From July 31:


    "Why are you based in North Carolina?"


    -- The Footprints of God












    Nell


    "Remembering speechlessly we seek the great forgotten language, the lost lane-end into heaven, a stone, a leaf, an unfound door. Where? When?"


    -- Thomas Wolfe



    At left:


    Southern Strategy Galore. 


    Meanwhile, at the Vatican:


    ROME, July 31 -- The Vatican issued a letter Saturday attacking the "distortions" and "lethal effects" of feminism.


  • Death of Big Black


    (Sequel to yesterday's entry and to
    the entries of Saturday, July 31,
    feast day of St. Ignatius Loyola)










    Current online information from The Free Press of Kinston, North Carolina: 


    Frank Smith


    Frank Smith, 70, of 2609 Brookhaven Drive, died Saturday, July 31, 2004, at Lenoir Memorial Hospital. Arrangements are incomplete at Swinson Funeral Home.


    New York Times today:



    In the Heat
    of the Night


    Frank Smith, who as an inmate leader at Attica prison was tortured by officers in the aftermath of the prisoner uprising of 1971 and then spent a quarter century successfully fighting for legal damages, died Saturday in Kinston, N.C. He was 71.


    Mr. Smith, a huge man with a booming voice who was known as Big Black, figured large in the uprising at the Attica Correctional Facility, 30 miles east of Buffalo, during the second week of September 1971. He was chosen by other inmates to be chief of security with a principal responsibility to protect outsiders brought in to negotiate an end to the crisis. None were hurt.




    (See previous entry.)