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Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Meeting of November 2 and Gender Grammar

For our next meeting, for Fall 2018, we will be at the Eastside Branch of the Lexington Public Library, 9:45am-11:45am, November 2.  The place is on Palumbo.

Our topic this week may be selected from the following (the first item is the planned topic):
-- Gender in Language
-- The Good Place (Moral Relativism)
-- Where is evolution taking us?
-- Political correctness
-- Violence

If you have suggestions, or if you want to add to the list, please write me -- jimmonomoy@gmail.com.

See this SIG web page at https://reasonockhammencken.blogspot.com/










Friday, October 26, 2018

Topic List

Our topics each week may be selected from the following:
-- Gender in Language
-- The Good Place (Moral Relativism)
-- Where is evolution taking us?
-- Political correctness

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Talking Heads

https://youtu.be/O52jAYa4Pm8

Stereotyping II

https://youtu.be/rbe5D3Yh43o

Stereotyping

https://youtu.be/rspZv2a0Pp8

Meeting of October 26

PLEASE NOTE LOCATION CHANGE

For our next meeting, for Fall 2018, we will be at the Eastside Branch of the Lexington Public Library, 9:45am-11:45am, October 26.  The place is on Palumbo near Man-o-War.

Our topic this week may be selected from the following (the first item is the planned topic):
-- Labels
-- Gender in Language
-- The Good Place (Moral Relativism)
-- Where is evolution taking us?

If you have suggestions, or if you want to add to the list, please write me -- jimmonomoy@gmail.com.

See this SIG web page at https://reasonockhammencken.blogspot.com/

Monday, October 22, 2018

The Taylor Series

Nobody asked but ...

Today, we are going to relate some higher mathematics to the real world.  There is a fairly human discussion of the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brook_Taylor">Taylor</a> Series at <a href="https://medium.com/@andrew.chamberlain/an-easy-way-to-remember-the-taylor-series-expansion-a7c3f9101063">this web site</a>.  But even it is a bit math geekish.  Never fear, because I am going to try to reduce the confusion, so we might apply the principle in living a real voluntaryist life.

The concept of a Taylor Series is the idea that no matter how chaotic something, taken as a whole, might be, there are parts of it that are well behaved.  Then taken as a whole again, a collection of well behaved parts, the whole something is well behaved.  A baby can be expected to soil his diapers, but as a thirty year old, he has outgrown the problem, in most cases.  This man's life then may be described as a series of patterns that fit different stages of his life.  Any passage of events can be described in vivid detail by describing its parts -- the only trick is identifying where one smooth pattern ends and another starts.  In effect, describing the past requires an appropriate identification of its parts, their length, and their significance.  This further requires understanding that the future is TBD (to be determined).

The beauty of the Taylor Series is that no part predetermines the shape (character) of the next part, other than its starting point.  As voluntaryists, we might consider shedding the human propensity to predict the future, while misconstruing the past.  We must take the time to examine the present, and the present only, for a proper understanding of that which probably was and that which probably will be.  Accuracy in the present is the only key.

-- Kilgore Forelle

Monday, October 15, 2018

The Quiz from 'Factfulness'

1. In all low-income countries across the world today, how many girls finish primary school?
A: 20 per cent
B: 40 per cent
C: 60 per cent

2. Where does the majority of the world population live?
A: low-income countries
B: middle-income countries
C: high-income countries

3. In the last 20 years, the proportion of the world population living in extreme poverty has:
A: almost doubled
B: remained more or less the same
C: almost halved

4. What is the life expectancy in the world today?
A: 50 years
B: 60 years
C: 70 years

5. There are 2 billion children in the world today, aged 0 to 15 years old. How many children will there be in the year 2100 according to the United Nations?
A: 4 billion
B: 3 billion
C: 2 billion

6. The UN predicts that by 2100 the world population will have increased by another 4 billion people. What is the main reason?
A: there will be more children (aged below 15)
B: there will be more adults (aged 15 to 74)
C: there will be more very old people (aged 75 and older)

7. How did the number of deaths per year from natural disasters change over the last 100 years?
A: more than doubled
B: remained about the same
C: decreased to less than half

9. How many of the world’s one-year-old children today have been vaccinated against some disease?
A. 20 per cent
B: 50 per cent
C: 80 per cent

10. Worldwide, 30-year-old men have spent 10 years in school, on average. How many years have women of the same age spent in school?
A: 9 years
B: 6 years
C: 3 years

11. In 1996, tigers, giant pandas and black rhinos were all listed as endangered. How many of these three species are more critically endangered today?
A: all three
B: one of them
C: none of them

12. How many people in the world have some access to electricity?
A: 20 per cent
B: 50 per cent
C: 80 per cent

13. Global climate experts believe that, over the next 100 years, the average temperature will:
A: get warmer
B: remain the same
C: get colder

Meeting of October 19



PLEASE NOTE LOCATION CHANGE

For our next meeting, for Fall 2018, we will be at the Northside Branch of the Lexington Public Library, 9:45am-11:45am, October 19.  The place is on Russell Cave Pike.

Our topic this week may be selected from the following (the first item is the planned topic):
-- Fact (Factfulness)
-- Gender in Language
-- The Good Place (Moral Relativism)
-- Labels
-- Where is evolution taking us?

If you have suggestions, or if you want to add to the list, please write me -- jimmonomoy@gmail.com.




https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/34890015-factfulness?ac=1&from_search=true







Thursday, October 11, 2018

Once an Engineer

Body language and gender from a dancer's perspective | Natalia Khosla | TEDxYale


Men, women and language -- a story of human speech | Sophie Scott | TEDxUCLWomen


Meeting 10/12/18

For our next meeting, for Fall 2018, we will be at the Eastside Branch of the Lexington Public Library, 9:45am-11:45am, October 12.  The place is near the intersection of Palumbo and Man o' War 

Our topic this week may be selected from the following:
-- Gender in Language
-- Fact (Factfulness)
-- The Good Place (Moral Relativism)
-- Socialism / Capitalism
-- Labels
-- Where is evolution taking us?

If you have suggestions, or if you want to add to the list, please write me -- jimmonomoy@gmail.com.

See this web page at https://reasonockhammencken.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Next Meeting -- October 5

PLEASE NOTE LOCATION CHANGE

For our next meeting, for Fall 2018, we will be at the Northside Branch of the Lexington Public Library, 9:45am-11:45am, October 5.  The place is 1733 Russell Cave Rd, Lexington, KY 40505  

Our topic this week may be selected from the following:
-- Gender in Language
-- Communication and Communication Theory 
-- Fact (Factfulness)
-- The Good Place (Moral Relativism)
-- Socialism / Capitalism
-- Labels
-- Where is evolution taking us?

If you have suggestions, or if you want to add to the list, please write me -- jimmonomoy@gmail.com.

See this web page at https://reasonockhammencken.blogspot.com/