.

And by a prudent flight and cunning save A life which valour could not, from the grave. A better buckler I can soon regain, But who can get another life again? Archilochus

Monday, March 23, 2026

On Probing, then Rushing, the GIN Gatekeepers and Crashing the Gates!

Before the Truth....
...but more often like Thieves Picking at and Robbing the Corpses Abandoned in a Kurosawa Film at the Upper Levels of the Gate
Which 'Conspiracy Theory' Will the Various Conservative Movement Self and Financially Interested and Anointed Gatekeepers Permit the Audience to Hear, Let Alone Believe?

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Gatekeeping the 'Woke' Institutional Narrative (Woke GIN)...

A Kayfabed Moral Identity Performance by an Elite Vanguard Member of an Institutionally Gatekept Ideology for the General Peer Meant to Establish One's Own-Self as a 'Good' Person AND to Prevent the Listener from Considering Contradictory Messages that Might Lead Him to a Different Conclusion by Defaming Contradictory Speakers as Immoral/ "Bad People" (racist/ fascist/ authoritarian) whose views, a priori,  are Unworthy of Consideration.  Welcome to the Distributed Idea Suppression Complex (DISC)
James & Jordan Projecting Nefarious Moral Motives onto Their In-Group Rivals

"I Want to be 'Uniquely' Authentic
... Just Like Everyone Else... but We All Need to be Authentic in the Same Way, MY Way!" @@

"Woke Right" - A Term of Art used by Certain Political Gatekeepers to Scandalize Conservatives Who Disagree with them and Paint them with the Colours of their "Progressive" Political Opponents.

Online Life: The Source of Our Hyper-Reality

 "You get your information on the facts merely by looking at what others have to say about it."

- Niklas Luhmann, "Introduction to Systems Theory"

from Google AI:

This quote from Niklas Luhmann (often rendered within the context of "second-order observation") describes how modern society handles knowledge and reality, as discussed in his work Introduction to Systems Theory (specifically regarding observations and the "observation of observers"). 

Context of the Quote

Luhmann argues that modern society has shifted from directly observing reality to "second-order observation"—the observation of observers. 

Descriptions of Descriptions: Instead of looking at "facts" directly, we look at reports, news, scientific papers, and opinions about those facts.

Advanced Mode of Perception: This is not seen as a failing, but as the "advanced mode" of perceiving the world in functional domains like academia, economy, art, and politics.

Examples: We know about global warming, economic trends, or current events not by direct observation, but by "looking at what others have to say about it". 

Meaning in Systems Theory

Observation of Observers: In a complex, functionally differentiated society, we cannot experience everything. Instead, we observe how others (scientists, journalists, politicians) observe the world.

Structural Complexity: Because function systems (like law, science, or media) are "operatively closed," they only observe their own operations and create their own version of reality.

Reducing Complexity: We "get our information on the facts" by selecting from the massive amount of communication produced by these systems. 

This approach highlights that in the modern world, knowledge is essentially social, mediated, and constructed, rather than a direct perception of objective reality. 

"Where is the Life we have lost in living? Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?"
T. S. Eliot

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

New Particle Re-Combinatorics... A Heavy (x4) Proton?

Scientists discover heavier version of proton with upgraded detector

Snappily named Xi-cc-plus, Cern physicists spotted the particle in shower of debris that lit up Large Hadron Collider

Scientists at the Cern nuclear physics laboratory near Geneva have discovered a heavier version of the proton, the subatomic particle that sits at the heart of every known atom in the universe.

They spotted the particle in a shower of debris that lit up a detector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), located deep beneath the ground at Cern, which smashes protons together at close to the speed of light. The collisions recreate in microcosm conditions that prevailed just after the big bang, with the energy converting to particles that spray in all directions.

The newfound particle, which is four times heavier than the regular proton, should help physicists refine their understanding of the strong nuclear force that glues together the innards of all atomic nuclei. The force is unusual because it behaves like a rubber band, getting stronger as the distance between subatomic particles increases.

Physicists working on the LHCb experiment found the heavy proton after the detector was upgraded to make it more powerful.

“This is just the first of many expected insights that can be gained with the new LHCb detector,” said Prof Tim Gershon at the University of Warwick, who takes over as the LHCb international lead in July. “The improved detection capability allowed us to find the particle after only one year, while we could not see it in a decade of data collected with the original LHCb.”

Atoms of hydrogen, the simplest and most abundant element in the observable universe, contain only a proton and an electron. Protons, along with neutrons in heavier atoms, consist of elementary subatomic particles called quarks. A proton contains two up quarks and one down quark, but there are heavier, unstable versions of quarks known as charm, strange, top and bottom.

In the heavy proton detected at Cern, both up quarks are replaced with charm quarks. The particle, snappily named Xi-cc-plus, was revealed by its signature decay into other particles. After popping into existence, it does not hang around: scientists suspect it survives for less than a millionth of a millionth of a second before breaking down.

“The more we learn about these particles, the more we can learn about the strong force, and that is the same strong force that binds our protons and neutrons together,” said Prof Chris Parkes, a physicist at the University of Manchester.

The discovery comes as UK Research and Innovation(UKRI), the nation’s science funder, faces fierce criticism for its plans to pull £50m funding for the LHCb’s final upgrade in the 2030s. The revamp would ensure the detector made the most of a major transformation to the LHC that could substantially improve its discovery potential.

UK scientists working in particle physics, astronomy and nuclear physics have been told their grants will be slashed following cost overruns at major science facilities. Projects have also been hit, including the next LHCb upgrade and an electron-ion collider under development with researchers in the US.

Last week, Chi Onwurah, chair of the Commons science committee, sent a scathing letter to Prof Ian Chapman, chief executive of the UKRI, and Patrick Vallance, the science minister, calling the cuts “wholly unacceptable” and “a failure” by UKRI, the Science and Technology Facilities Council and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology.

The letter demands “swift and decisive action” and asks whether the decision on the LHCb upgrade is final.

“It is so important that we can overcome the problems caused by the UKRI decision to deprioritise the funding for this project,” Gershon said. “No other experiment either running or planned will be able to do this physics.”

John Wheeler's Participatory Universe

"It from Bit!"

Exploring the Future of Quantum Technologies

...and the Quantum Information Exchanges in Biology?
Topics discussed in the interview:
0:00 Intro 
4:43 What causes our very first heartbeat? 
6:36 Noble’s 1958 research on the first heart model 
8:40 On self-excitation in cells (and what “self” means) 
9:24 The central dogma in biology 
11:17 Schrödinger’s view of life as a crystal 
13:43 To what degree DNA replicates like a crystal 
15:16 The amazing error correction in our genome 
16:59 How enzymes know when they encounter an error 
19:19 “Genes look like a code of life…” 
22:05 The merits and limitations of the Human Genome Project 
23:39 Can we really say “the cell wants” something? 
24:51 Understanding the scales and extraordinary mechanisms in a cell 
27:18 What we do and don't understand 
29:16 On Michael Levin’s work 
31:23 On cancer 
35:41 Neo-Darwinism vs true Darwinism 
38:19 Something must have sped evolution up 
41:22 The cell controls the genome 
44:19 On the metaphysics of chemistry leading to life 
46:42 Biological relativity 
51:08 The universe as a self-excited circuit 
52:18 On Richard Dawkins 
54:27 On the difference between causation and association 
56:48 The limitations on the predictive power of genomics 
58:46 The false hopes around the Human Genome Project 
1:00:20 The central dogma in biology has the wrong metaphysics 
1:07:03 Noble on Spinoza 
1:11:08 How dualistic thinking still limits us 
1:13:40 On the nature of the self 
1:17:06 How life lives on the boundary between order and chaos 
1:18:32 How errors become solutions 
1:19:51 A love story between a human and an AI 
1:23:58 On quantum biology 
1:26:27 On the importance of humility in science 
1:28:16 How we crave meaning (and reductionist science has deprived us of it) 
1:29:07 Denis Noble singing troubadour poetry 
1:30:27 Science must lay down its weapons 
1:32:18 What dancing to the tune of life means on a personal level

Causation and Association/Correlation Multiplicities = Intelligence (@ 52:00-56.48)?  Why when one approach fails multiple others react and attempt to compensate for the failed mechanism?  Mutliple "agents" applying (at a multiplicity of biological levels) a "use it or lose it" philosophy?

...Between Inter-Dependent 'Intelligent" Agents
OUTLINE
0:00 - Introduction 
0:44 - Biological intelligence 
9:17 - Living vs non-living organisms 
14:30 - Origin of life 
18:15 - The search for alien life (on Earth) 
51:19 - Creating life in the lab - Xenobots and Anthrobots 
1:04:21 - Memories and ideas are living organisms 
1:18:02 - Reality is an illusion: The brain is an interface to a hidden reality 
2:03:48 - Unexpected intelligence of sorting algorithms 
2:29:26 - Can aging be reversed? 
2:33:17 - Mind uploading 
2:51:57 - Alien intelligence 
3:06:52 - Advice for young people 
3:13:21 - Questions for AGI

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Pericalypses: A (Q)want'lem Life in a Perfect Vacuum

Response to a Grub Street Tale from Joachim Fersengeld:

Advice to the Grub Street Verse-writers by
 Jonathan Swift

Ye poets ragged and forlorn,
Down from your garrets haste;
Ye rhymers, dead as soon as born,
Not yet consign'd to paste;

I know a trick to make you thrive;
O, 'tis a quaint device:
Your still-born poems shall revive,
And scorn to wrap up spice.

Get all your verses printed fair,
Then let them well be dried;
And Curll must have a special care
To leave the margin wide.

Lend these to paper-sparing Pope;
And when he sets to write,
No letter with an envelope
Could give him more delight.

When Pope has fill'd the margins round,
Why then recall your loan;
Sell them to Curll for fifty pound,
And swear they are your own.