This report from the World Economic Forum looks at policy with respect to disruption and innovation. I haven’t read all of it yet but so far I find it clear they way they set about discussing innovation from incremental and transformative perspectives, and are conscientious about the context of the whole ecosystem.
Dealing with Disruption Clearing Pathways for Entrepreneurial Innovation
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Neat thinking here about humor as freedom’s highest expression. Charlie Hebdo to Kant, and then some.
[Readings] | The Joke, by Justin E.H. Smith | Harper’s Magazine
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This is a pretty interesting study on how to make a widespread major change. Rather than trying to go directly and get everyone to change their diets, this group started strategically changing the way food producers, marketers, etc. made and sold food, among many other changes. In the end, all of the peripheral changes added up to an entire overhaul of the population’s eating and living habits, without the pe ... continue reading
Discussions like this, yesterday at supper, make It clear that my son is my son.
Parent: So, you were playing with Juliette at daycare today?
Child: Yeah.
Parent: What were you doing?
Child: We found a dead unicorn. And we put it in a box so that it will never live again.
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How a paywall prevented research from spreading in Liberia that could have helped prevent the outbreak.
Don’t Think Open Access Is Important? It Might Have Prevented Much Of The Ebola Outbreak | Techdirt
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Real, long-term thinking. I especially like the part about jumping into the umbilical cord to a baby universe.
How to save the Universe from certain death –“ Michael Hanlon –“ Aeon
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Google is changing, which isn’t surprising. Fine, but this is a good reminder why it’s a bad idea to think that a corporation, where ultimately the goal is to make an ever increasing profit, shouldn’t be sole or even primary source for ensuring very long term archival and preservation of information. We need other entities that focus on that goal to serve that role.
Never trust a corporation to ... continue reading
My four-year old recently told me that Schubert was just for babies (he also lumped Thelonious Monk into this category). Now at his ripe age, he refuses to listen to anything but Beethoven, Jingle Bells, and Patti Smith. If I thought he’d pay attention, I’d read him this article.
The Magic in Schubert’s Songs by Ian Bostridge
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A detailed look at two very different understandings of the Bhagavad Gita and how those influenced history.
War and Peace in the Bhagavad Gita by Wendy Doniger
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“What’s Happening to Canada?” Ralph Nader asks. His open letter concerns Harper’s hyperbole on terrorism & the bad bill #C51 #cdnpoli
What’s Happening to Canada? Open letter to P.M. | The Nader Page
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