Friday, October 15, 2021
skeptical about publicly listing valuable contacts
Tuesday, May 18, 2021
Bose, Heart Study, China-Taiwan study, Change or die, lifestyle
Bose, Heart Study, China-Taiwan study, Change or die, lifestyle
Amar Bose, MIT professor & co-founder of Bose Laboratory:
Research by definition if it's research, you don't know whether it works or not; if you know the idea [is] going to work, its engineering, develope it; research is at the heart of what bring out better products; fear, fear of the unknown; without probing the unknown, there is no possibility for progress; the unknown could be better (benefit); could be worse (down side); if we know it could be better, there would be no fear.
To make some thing better => it must be different
to be different => courage (require) (to be different)
courage => fear (acknowledge the fears and, the other side of fear)
([ imagine - what if you have no fear and you have no limit - infinite ])
([ what would you do with your life ])
([ or what would you do with the time that you have left on Earth ])
([ okay, now work backward, and start placing limiting parameters on The Plan ])
([ one-by-one ])
Amar Bose of Bose Lab: Bose speakers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bose_Corporation
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Bose to close all North American, European retail stores - Boston Business Journal
By Catherine Carlock – Real Estate Editor, Boston Business Journal
Jan 15, 2020 Updated Jan 15, 2020, 3:31pm EST
Bose Corp. will close all of its 119 retail stores in North America, Europe, Japan and Australia “over the next several months” as the Framingham-based consumer electronics company handles “the dramatic shift to online shopping in specific markets,” the company announced Wednesday.
Bose corporation - Jan 15, 2020, 3:31pm EST
Catherine Carlock – Real Estate Editor, Boston Business Journal
retail operation (closed)
North America
Europe
Japan
Australia
Bose has retail locations at the Burlington Mall and Colonie Center in Albany, New York, as well as factory stores in Wrentham, Merrimack, New Hampshire and Central Valley, New York.
The company will keep open its retail locations in India, Southeast Asia, South Korea, Greater China and the United Arab Emirates.
Bose corporation - Jan 15, 2020, 3:31pm EST
Catherine Carlock – Real Estate Editor, Boston Business Journal
retail locations (keep open)
India
Southeast Asia
South Korea
Greater China
United Arab Emirates
The company declined to specify how many employees will be affected in the closures, but did say that the employees would be offered outplacement assistance and severance.
Bose opened its first store in 1993 as a way to give consumers a way to test CD and DVD-based home entertainment systems, said Colette Burke, vice president of global sales for Bose, in a statement.
“At the time, it was a radical idea, but we focused on what our customers needed, and where they needed it – and we’re doing the same thing now. It’s still difficult, because the decision impacts some of our amazing store teams who make us proud every day,” Burke’s statement continued. “They take care of every person who walks through our doors – whether that’s helping with a problem, giving expert advice, or just letting someone take a break and listen to great music. Over the years, they’ve set the standard for customer service. And everyone at Bose is grateful.”
Bose has its headquarters in Framingham.
source:
► https://www.bizjournals.com/boston/news/2020/01/15/bose-to-close-all-north-american-european-retail.html
► https://www.bizjournals.com/boston/news/2020/01/15/bose-to-close-all-north-american-european-retail.html
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The Framingham Heart Study is a long-term, ongoing cardiovascular cohort study of residents of the city of Framingham, Massachusetts. The study began in 1948 with 5,209 adult subjects from Framingham, and is now on its third generation of participants.[1] Prior to the study almost nothing was known about the epidemiology of hypertensive or arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease.[2] Much of the now-common knowledge concerning heart disease, such as the effects of diet, exercise, and common medications such as aspirin, is based on this longitudinal study. It is a project of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, in collaboration with (since 1971) Boston University.[1] Various health professionals from the hospitals and universities of Greater Boston staff the project.
source:
► https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Framingham_Heart_Study
► https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/science/framingham-heart-study-fhs
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Framingham Study
framingham-research-team
Framingham Study is a population-based, observational cohort study that was initiated by the United States Public Health Service in 1948 to prospectively investigate the epidemiology and risk factors for cardiovascular disease. It has grown into an ongoing, longitudinal study gathering prospective data on a wide variety of biological and lifestyle risk factors and on cardiovascular, neurological and other types of disease outcomes across 3 generations of participants. While initially focused on the clinical assessment of risk factors and disease, the study has evolved, incorporating advances in medical science (newer diagnostic criteria, biomarker assays and imaging technologies) as these became available. Extensive genotyping data is available on over 60% of all participants (including over 90% of persons attending examinations after 1990) and samples of sera and plasma from successive exams have been stored for future studies.
The Study began in 1948-50 with the recruitment of the Original cohort (5209 participants; 2,873 women, 2,336 men; age 28-62 years, mean age 45 years) comprising two-thirds of the adult population then residing in the town of Framingham, MA. These persons have been evaluated biennially and are currently undergoing the 29th biennial examination. In 1971, children of the Original cohort members and their spouses were assembled into the Offspring cohort (5124 persons, 2,641 women, 2,483 men; age 5-70 years, mean age 37 years; 3514 biological offspring). Members of this cohort have been reassessed 7 times. Starting In 002, a third generation has been recruited and this Gen 3 cohort comprises 4095 individuals (2183 women, 1912 men; mean age 40 years) who have undergone an initial examination. At each study examination participants are evaluated with medical histories, physician examinations, laboratory tests for vascular risk factors, and at some examinations with cognitive test batteries and brain imaging.
Major findings
Major findings from the Framingham Heart Study, according to the researchers themselves:[16]
1960s
Cigarette smoking increases risk of heart disease. Increased cholesterol and elevated blood pressure increase risk of heart disease. Exercise decreases risk of heart disease, and obesity increases it.
1970s
Elevated blood pressure increases risk of stroke. In women who are postmenopausal, risk of heart disease is increased, compared with women who are premenopausal. Psychosocial factors affect risk of heart disease.
1980s
High levels of HDL cholesterol reduce risk of heart disease. No empirical evidence found to confirm the rumor that filtered cigarettes lower risk of heart disease as opposed to non-filters.
1990s
Having an enlarged left ventricle of the heart (left ventricular hypertrophy) increases risk of stroke. Elevated blood pressure can progress to heart failure. Framingham Risk Score is published, and correctly predicts 10-year risk of future coronary heart disease (CHD) events. At 40 years of age, the lifetime risk for CHD is 50% for men and 33% for women.
2000s
So called "high normal blood pressure" increases risk of cardiovascular disease (high normal blood pressure is called prehypertension in medicine; it is defined as a systolic pressure of 120–139 mm Hg and/or a diastolic pressure of 80–89 mm Hg). Lifetime risk of developing elevated blood pressure is 90%. Obesity is a risk factor for heart failure. Serum aldosterone levels predict risk of elevated blood pressure. Lifetime risk for obesity is approximately 50%. The "SHARe" project is announced, a genome wide association study within the Framingham Heart Study. Social contacts of individuals are relevant to whether a person is obese, and whether cigarette smokers decide to quit smoking. By providing contact information, the Framingham Heart Study establishes a network of personal relationships, connecting participants through their relationships—friends, colleagues, relatives and neighbors.[17] Four risk factors for a precursor of heart failure are discovered. 30-year risk for serious cardiac events can be calculated. American Heart Association considers certain genomic findings of the Framingham Heart Study one of the top research achievements in cardiology. Some genes increase risk of atrial fibrillation. Risk of poor memory is increased in middle aged men and women if the parents had suffered from dementia.
Similar studies
The China-Cornell-Oxford Project, also known as the "China-Oxford-Cornell Study on dietary, lifestyle and disease mortality characteristics in 65 rural Chinese counties". This study was later referred to as "China Study I". The successor study is named "China Study II".[32]
source:
► https://www.bmc.org/stroke-and-cerebrovascular-center/research/framingham-study
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news.cornell.edu
Asians' switch to Western diet might bring Western-type diseases, new China-Taiwan study suggests | Cornell Chronicle
By Roger Segelken |
ITHACA, N.Y. -- The long-term health benefits to Chinese and other Asian people who have traditionally existed on a primarily plant-based diet might be lost as more people in Asia switch to a Western-style diet that is rich in animal-based foods.
That conclusion is being drawn by some scientists after reviewing results from the latest survey of diets, lifestyles and disease mortality among Chinese populations -- this one comparing current dietary habits in Taiwan and mainland China -- and measuring them against a time when fewer meat and dairy products were available in rural China.
Preliminary results of "China Study II," the follow-up to the China-Oxford-Cornell Study on Dietary, Lifestyle and Disease Mortality Characteristics in 65 Rural Chinese Counties, or "China Study I," were discussed on June 16 at the Congress of Epidemiology 2001 in Toronto by T. Colin Campbell of Cornell, Sir Richard Peto of the University of Oxford, Dr. Junshi Chen of the Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine and Dr. Wen-Harn Pan of Academia Sinica in Taiwan.
The Jacob Gould Schurman Professor Emeritus of Nutritional Biochemistry, Campbell also discussed China Study II today (June 25) at a press briefing on the Cornell campus.
"With the new data from mainland China, along with the fascinating new data from Taiwan now in hand, we will have the opportunity to explore dietary and disease mortality trends," Campbell says. "We will see how fast dietary changes in rural China -- preceded by earlier changes in Taiwan -- result in the development of Western diseases."
Some analyses of data from China Study I, which was conducted among thousands of rural families in mainland China, linked that population's low incidence of such Western health problems as cardiovascular disease, some cancers, obesity and diabetes to plant-based diets that were low in animal products. China Study I is now regarded as the most comprehensive study of diet, lifestyle and disease ever completed. Data from the study was first published in an 896-page monograph (1990) and resulted in more than 50 scientific publications.
Planned since 1987, China Study II was designed to re-survey the same mainland Chinese population as China Study I, in addition to a few new sites in mainland China and a new population of 16 counties in Taiwan. China Study II was directed by the three collaborators in the first study and by Dr. Win-harn Pan. When it started in 1987-88, it was the first collaborative research study between mainland China and Taiwan. Data from China Study II are now freely available at an Oxford
University web site: http://www.ctsu.ox.ac.uk/projects/cecology1989/ .
Both surveys afford an opportunity to investigate the effect of dietary change from the typical plant-based diet of rural China to a Western-style diet that includes more animal-based foods, as consumed in urban China and in Taiwan. "Even small increases in the consumption of animal-based foods was associated with increased disease risk," Campbell told a symposium at the epidemiology congress, pointing to several statistically significant correlations from the China studies:
• Plasma cholesterol in the 90-170 milligrams per deciliter range is positively associated with most cancer mortality rates. Plasma cholesterol is positively associated with animal protein intake and inversely associated with plant protein intake.
• Breast cancer is associated with dietary fat (which is associated with animal protein intake) and inversely with age at menarche (women who reach puberty at younger ages have a greater risk of breast cancer).
• For those at risk for liver cancer (for example, because of chronic infection with hepatitis B virus) increasing intakes of animal-based foods and/or increasing concentrations of plasma cholesterol are associated with a higher disease risk.
• Cardiovascular diseases are associated with lower intakes of green vegetables and higher concentrations of apo-B (a form of so-called bad blood cholesterol) which is associated with increasing intakes of animal protein and decreasing intakes of plant protein.
• Colorectal cancers are consistently inversely associated with intakes of 14 different dietary fiber fractions (although only one is statistically significant). Stomach cancer is inversely associated with green vegetable intake and plasma concentrations of beta-carotene and vitamin C obtained only from plant-based foods.
• Western-type diseases, in the aggregate, are highly significantly correlated with increasing concentrations of plasma cholesterol, which are associated in turn with increasing intakes of animal-based foods.
Analyses of data from the China studies by his collaborators and others, Campbell told the epidemiology symposium, is leading to policy recommendations. He mentioned three:
• The greater the variety of plant-based foods in the diet, the greater the benefit. Variety insures broader coverage of known and unknown nutrient needs.
• Provided there is plant food variety, quality and quantity, a healthful and nutritionally complete diet can be attained without animal-based food.
• The closer the food is to its native state -- with minimal heating, salting and processing -- the greater will be the benefit.
source:
► https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2001/06/china-study-ii-western-diet-might-bring-western-disease
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https://www.fastcompany.com/75905/three-keys-change
01.02.07
The Three Keys to Change
In this excerpt from the introduction to his new book, Change or Die: The Three Keys to Change at Work and in Life, Alan Deutschman discusses the framework to successfully change yourself.
BY ALAN DEUTSCHMAN
LONG READ
Change or die.
What if you were given that choice? For real. What if it weren’t just the hyperbolic rhetoric that conflates corporate performance with life or death? Not the overblown exhortations of a rabid boss, or a maniacal coach, or a slick motivational speaker, or a self-dramatizing chief executive officer or political leader. We’re talking actual life and death now. Your own life and death. What if a well-informed, trusted authority figure said you had to make difficult and enduring changes in the way you think, feel, and act? If you didn’t, your time would end soon–a lot sooner than it had to. Could you change when change really mattered? When it mattered most?
Yes, you say?
Try again.
Yes?
You’re probably deluding yourself.
That’s what the experts say.
They say that you wouldn’t change.
Don’t believe it? You want odds? Here are the odds that the experts are laying down, their scientifically studied odds: nine to one. That’s nine to one against you. How do you like those odds?
This revelation unnerved me when I heard it in November 2004 at a private conference at Rockefeller University, an elite medical research center in New York City. The event was hosted by the top executives at IBM, who invited the most brilliant thinkers they knew from around the world to come together for a day and propose solutions to some of the world’s biggest problems. Their first topic was the crisis in health care, an industry that consumes an astonishing $2.1 trillion a year in the United States alone–more than one seventh of the entire economy. Despite all that spending, we’re not feeling healthier, and we aren’t making enough progress toward preventing the illnesses that kill us, such as heart disease, stroke, and cancer.
... ... ...
Speaking to the small group of insiders, they were unsparingly candid. They said that the cause of the health care crisis hadn’t changed for decades, and the medical establishment still couldn’t figure out what to do about it.
Dr. Raphael “Ray” Levey, founder of the Global Medical Forum, an annual summit meeting of leaders from every part of the health care system, told the audience: “A relatively small percentage of the population consumes the vast majority of the health care budget for diseases that are very well known and by and large behavioral.” That is, they’re sick because of how they choose to lead their lives, not because of factors beyond their control, such as the genes they were born with. Levey continued: “Even as far back as when I was in medical school”–he enrolled at Harvard in 1955–“many articles demonstrated that eighty percent of the health care budget was consumed by five behavioral issues.” He didn’t bother to name them, but you don’t need an MD to guess what he was talking about: Too much smoking, drinking, and eating. Too much stress. Not enough exercise.
... ... ...
CHANGE OR DIE. Copyright © 2007 by Alan Deutschman.
source:
► https://www.fastcompany.com/75905/three-keys-change
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Ornish is known for his lifestyle-driven approach to the control of coronary artery disease (CAD) and other chronic diseases. He promotes lifestyle changes including a quasi whole foods, plant-based diet,[6] smoking cessation, moderate exercise, stress management techniques including yoga and meditation, and psychosocial support.[4][1] Ornish does not follow a strict vegetarian diet and recommends fish oil supplements; the program additionally allows for the occasional consumption of other animal products.[7]
From the 1970s through the 1990s, Ornish and others researched the impact of diet and stress levels on people with heart disease. The research, published in peer-reviewed journals, became the basis of his "Program for Reversing Heart Disease." It combined diet, meditation, exercise and support groups, and in 1993 became the first non-surgical, non-pharmaceutical therapy for heart disease to qualify for insurance reimbursement.[8] With the exception of chiropractic care, it was the first alternative medical technique, not taught in traditional medical-school curricula, to gain approval by a major insurance carrier.[3][9]
Ornish worked with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for 16 years to create a new coverage category called intensive cardiac rehabilitation (ICR), which focuses on comprehensive lifestyle changes. In 2010, Medicare began to reimburse costs for Ornish's Program for Reversing Heart Disease, a 72-hour ICR for people who have had heart attacks, chest pain, heart valve repair, coronary artery bypass, heart or lung bypass, or coronary angioplasty or stenting. In addition to the Ornish program, Medicare and Medicaid pay for ICR programs created by the Pritikin Longevity Center and by the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital.[1][10]
Ornish has been a physician consultant to former President Bill Clinton since 1993, when Ornish was first asked by Hillary Clinton to consult with the chefs at The White House, Camp David, and Air Force One. In 2010, after the former President's cardiac bypass grafts became clogged, Clinton, encouraged by Ornish, followed a mostly plant-based diet.[11]
source:
► https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_Ornish
► https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/nca-decision-memo.aspx?NCAId=240&ver=7&NcaName=Intensive+Cardiac+Rehabilitation+(ICR)+Program+-+Dr.+Ornish%2527s+Program+for+Reversing+Heart+Disease&bc=ACAAAAAAIAAA&siteTool=Medic
► https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/23/opinion/the-myth-of-high-protein-diets.html
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Opinion | The Myth of High-Protein Diets (Published 2015)
By Dean Ornish
March 23, 2015
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/23/opinion/the-myth-of-high-protein-diets.html
Op-Ed Contributor
MANY people have been making the case that Americans have grown fat because they eat too much starch and sugar, and not enough meat, fat and eggs. Recently, the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee lifted recommendations that consumption of dietary cholesterol should be restricted, citing research that dietary cholesterol does not have a major effect on blood cholesterol levels. The predictable headlines followed: “Back to Eggs and Bacon?”
But, alas, bacon and egg yolks are not health foods.
Although people have been told for decades to eat less meat and fat, Americans actually consumed 67 percent more added fat, 39 percent more sugar, and 41 percent more meat in 2000 than they had in 1950 and 24.5 percent more calories than they had in 1970, according to the Agriculture Department. Not surprisingly, we are fatter and unhealthier.
The debate is not as simple as low-fat versus low-carb. Research shows that animal protein may significantly increase the risk of premature mortality from all causes, among them cardiovascular disease, cancer and Type 2 diabetes. Heavy consumption of saturated fat and trans fats may double the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.
premature mortality from all causes
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Pan+A%2C+red+meat+consumption+and+mortality
cardiovascular disease
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=J.+Intern.+Med.+261%2C+366%E2%80%93374
cancer
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Ann+Intern+Med.+2010+September+7%3B+153%285%29%3A+289%E2%80%93298
Type 2 diabetes
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23779232
A study published last March found a 75 percent increase in premature deaths from all causes, and a 400 percent increase in deaths from cancer and Type 2 diabetes, among heavy consumers of animal protein under the age of 65 — those who got 20 percent or more of their calories from animal protein.
75 percent increase in premature deaths from all causes
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24606898
Low-carb, high-animal-protein diets promote heart disease via mechanisms other than just their effects on cholesterol levels. Arterial blockages may be caused by animal-protein-induced elevations in free fatty acids and insulin levels and decreased production of endothelial progenitor cells (which help keep arteries clean). Egg yolks and red meat appear to significantly increase the risk of coronary heart disease and cancer due to increased production of trimethylamine N-oxide, or TMAO, a metabolite of meat and egg yolks linked to the clogging of arteries. (Egg whites have neither cholesterol nor TMAO.)
via mechanisms other than just their effects on cholesterol levels
► http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmcibr0908756
A Look at the Low-Carbohydrate Diet
Steven R. Smith, M.D.
December 3, 2009
Mice that were fed a high-fat, high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet were found to have atherosclerosis that was not associated with traditional cardiovascular risk factors.
and cancer
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22952174
Animal protein increases IGF-1, an insulin-like growth hormone, and chronic inflammation, an underlying factor in many chronic diseases. Also, red meat is high in Neu5Gc, a tumor-forming sugar that is linked to chronic inflammation and an increased risk of cancer. A plant-based diet may prolong life by blocking the mTOR protein, which is linked to aging. When fat calories were carefully controlled, patients lost 67 percent more body fat than when carbohydrates were controlled. An optimal diet for preventing disease is a whole-foods, plant-based diet that is naturally low in animal protein, harmful fats and refined carbohydrates. What that means in practice is little or no red meat; mostly vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes and soy products in their natural forms; very few simple and refined carbohydrates such as sugar and white flour; and sufficient “good fats” such as fish oil or flax oil, seeds and nuts. A healthful diet should be low in “bad fats,” meaning trans fats, saturated fats and hydrogenated fats. Finally, we need more quality and less quantity.
IGF-1
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24606898
Neu5Gc
► http://www.pnas.org/content/105/48/18936.full.pdf
My colleagues and I at the nonprofit Preventive Medicine Research Institute and the University of California, San Francisco, have conducted clinical research proving the many benefits of a whole-foods, plant-based diet on reversing chronic diseases, not just on reducing risk factors such as cholesterol. Our interventions also included stress management techniques, moderate exercise like walking and social support.
stress management
► http://ornishspectrum.com/proven-program/stress-management/
We showed in randomized, controlled trials that these diet and lifestyle changes can reverse the progression of even severe coronary heart disease. Episodes of chest pain decreased by 91 percent after only a few weeks. After five years there were 2.5 times fewer cardiac events. Blood flow to the heart improved by over 300 percent.
reverse the progression
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1973470
Other physicians, including Dr. Kim A. Williams, the president of the American College of Cardiology, are also finding that these diet and lifestyle changes can reduce the need for a lifetime of medications and transform people’s lives. These changes may also slow, stop or even reverse the progression of early-stage prostate cancer, judging from results in a randomized controlled trial.
Dr. Kim A. Williams
► http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/Prevention/46860
These changes may also alter your genes [expression], turning on genes that keep you healthy, and turning off genes that promote disease. They may even lengthen telomeres, the ends of our chromosomes that control aging.
your genes [expression]
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Ornish+D%2C+PNAS
lengthen telomeres
► http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24051140
The more people adhered to these recommendations (including reducing the amount of fat and cholesterol they consumed), the more improvement we measured — at any age. But for reversing disease, a whole-foods, plant-based diet seems to be necessary.
In addition, what’s good for you is good for our planet. Livestock production causes more disruption of the climate than all forms of transportation combined. And because it takes as much as 10 times more grain to produce the same amount of calories through livestock as through direct grain consumption, eating a plant-based diet could free up resources for the hungry.
What you gain is so much more than what you give up.
source:
► https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/23/opinion/the-myth-of-high-protein-diets.html
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In a mythical ideal world, you would match your diet to your age range (not chronological, but biological clock and life stage) to your physical and mental activities (on duty work, off duty family time, off duty leisure, me time) (for some people, work and non-work life simply blend together); it depends on your situation, culture, and environment;
1. diet;
2. biological clock and life stage (stages of life);
3. physical and mental activities;
4. situation (i.e. social: family, tribe, group, team), culture (i.e. Western, East, Middle East, North, South, Lowland, Highland), and environmental factors (i.e. geography & topography & terrain & elevation, relation to the equator, relation to a large body of water, a lake, or, the sea, vegetation, climate, weather, wind chill, snow, heat, cold, dry, wet, rain, shower, shade, daytime, nightime);
5. ‘moderation in all things’ would be the golden guiding thread (also refer to as the silk-like silver spider web, in some circle).
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Then Daniel said to the steward whom the chief official had appointed over Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, 12 “Please test your servants for ten days. Let us be given only vegetables to eat and water to drink. 13Then compare our appearances with those of the young men who are eating the royal food, and deal with your servants according to what you see.”…
source:
► https://biblehub.com/daniel/1-12.htm
In Daniel chapter 1, my namesake and his friends were brought before King Nebuchadnezzar to be trained for royal service. The Bible says, “The king assigned them a daily amount of food and wine from the king’s table” (Daniel 1:5). Bible scholars say the royal food provided to the men was most likely largely meat-based. Daniel was insistent to instead trial a plant-based diet and prove to the king they would all be stronger. “Please test your servants for ten days: Give us nothing but vegetables to eat and water to drink” (verse 12).
source:
► https://record.adventistchurch.com/2020/04/07/dare-to-eat-plants-like-daniel/
Story Overview:
When Judah turned away from God he allowed the enemy nation of Babylon to capture the Jews and take them away to Babylon. The temple and the city walls of Jerusalem were destroyed. King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon commanded that the brightest and most handsome captives be educated and taught to serve in the Babylonian courts. When Daniel and four other young Jews were told to eat the king’s food they refused because it was food that God had forbidden Jews to eat. When the officials saw that these young men were healthier and stronger when they obeyed God’s food laws, they allowed them to continue obeying the Lord. These four young men impressed the king because they were smarter than all the men in the king’s court.
source:
► https://missionbibleclass.org/old-testament/part2/kingdom-ends-captivity-return-prophets/daniel-and-the-kings-food/
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Tuesday, May 11, 2021
Theory and Practice of Education (Peter Senge - keynote speaker)
Peter Senge on the Creation of a Post-Industrial Theory and Practice of Education
March 26, 2019
Posted In: Deming Philosophy, Deming Today, Education, Psychology
Post by Bill Bellows, Deputy Director, The Deming Institute
On April 16-18, 1999, The Deming Institute hosted its annual spring conference in Tacoma, Washington, featuring keynotes from Russell Ackoff, Jamshid Gharajedaghi, and Tom Johnson. I attended at the end of a family vacation, a mini-van roadtrip from our home in southern California, with earlier stops at Yosemite, the redwoods in northern California, and Portland. From Tacoma, we headed to our last stop, San Francisco, where the timing worked well for me to attend a second conference, “Teaching for Intelligence,” with Peter Senge, author of The Fifth Discipline, as the opening keynote speaker. The conference drew an audience of at least 500 in the auditorium with Peter, with several hundred more, including me, in an overflow room.
In this 80-minute lecture, which has recently been posted on YouTube, with Peter’s approval, by the Academy for Systems Change, he shared his reflections on ongoing efforts to transform education systems across the United States, offering an extensive series of parallels with his wide-ranging personal experiences with the visible and invisible obstacles facing business transformations.
Peter Senge
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fln7GnBNWmo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fln7GnBNWmo
80 minute
academy for systems change
youtube.com
Peter Senge, The Fifth Discipline
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fln7GnBNWmo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fln7GnBNWmo
academy for systems change
Mar 7, 2019
1:17:49
1999 teaching for intelligence conference
Having attended the lecture and then re-experience it countless times since then, here are highlights of a most remarkable and timeless session which ends with Peter offering a tribute to Dr. Deming:
• Peter spends most of his time working in businesses……trying to foster a degree of collaboration….trying to sustain deep and profound change….
• Carl Rogers, “that which is most personal is most universal”
• The system is out there….
• What can we do…working against this massive thing called the system?
• No one can ever show you the system…can you show it to me?
• Feel the enormous forces pulling things back to where they used to be
• There is a real simple notion of system which is kind of the cornerstone of what I’ve learned about the subject of systemic change…and that is when we say the word the system, what we really are talking about, although we usually do not know how to talk about it very rigorously, is a pattern of interdependency that we enact. There is no system. It’s purely an abstraction. But, there are patterns of interdependency and they are created every day, every hour, every minute, through our thinking and through our actions.
• Reflections on my experiences in the past 25 years, primarily in the world of business
• Perhaps there some interesting implications
• Creation of a post-industrial theory and practice of education
• 20 to 25 years of efforts to transform the systemic nature of business operations…
• Organizing around a few simple ideas…the world is a fragmented set of pieces…the drive to reinforce individualism…the “you” is an isolated individual.
• Comments from Joseph, a South African worker, “they do not make me a person”
• A human being, a “you,” only exists in relationships
• The Zulu greeting, “hello,” meaning, “I see you”
• Hard to know what fish talk about, but you can be damn sure it isn’t water. It’s the water we live in.
• Edgar Schein, “Culture are the assumptions we cannot see”
• Three legs of the stool – reflectiveness, aspiration, and understanding complexity
• Dr. Deming used to have a very simple way of saying this…our prevailing system of management has destroyed our people
• Dr. Deming, on “Quality Management” practices in education… “You have no idea that you are attempting to apply for the revitalization of America’s education system, the system of management which has destroyed American enterprise”
• Quote from Dr. Deming on the back jacket of first printing of The Fifth Discipline; “Our prevailing system of management has destroyed our people. The destruction starts with toddlers. Gold stars. Grades in school. A prize for the best Halloween costume. The destruction continues on up through universities and into work, where people are ranked. Rewards for the one at the top, punishment for one at the bottom. Management by Objective, incentive pay, business plans cause further loss, unknown and unknowable.
• Learned from Dr. Deming; school and work are the same institution
• We have no clue about what it actually means to try to bring about truly systemic or deep or profound change
• All of our efforts are on the surface
• It’s a common experience, we all went to the same school
• Did you know about learning before you went to school?
• Dr. Deming, “human beings are born with intrinsic motivation and joy in learning”
• The drive to learn, the most fundamental drive in the human species is the drive to learn
• We come into the world engaged in learning
• What did we learn about learning in school?
• School is about performing for someone else’s approval
• What did we learn as kids in school about answers?
• How do we actually learn? By making mistakes.
• We learn that learning is about getting right answers
• Per Dr. Deming; the relationship between the student and the teacher is identically the same relationship as between the subordinate and the boss
• Per Dr. Deming; nobody motivates anyone, except through fear
• The prevailing system of management is not about learning, it’s about control; an industrial age notion of control; someone has to be in control
• Most business corporations are basically pouring all the energy they can into sustaining, strengthening, tightening up, becoming yet more able to operate in the industrial mode…..and there are exceptions (VISA, Toyota, and Interface (Carpets) will be highlighted)
• Within Toyota there are no standardized measures for cost control
• Dr. Deming’s photo hangs in the lobby of Toyota’s corporate headquarters in Japan,
• Dr. Deming “Our system of organizing and managing in the industrial age has destroyed our people”
• It has nothing to do with school. It has nothing to do with business. It has to do with a common set of assumptions and practices which are everywhere.
• Why do companies reorganize so much?
• Learners want to learn
• No assessing, no learning
• A tough challenge we face, but there’s some interesting stuff going on
• The traditional system is us, it’s not them, it’s all the assumptions we’ve never examined
• Why is it that industrial age systems have so much in common? Is it a big organized effort?
• The machine age and the aspiration for uniformity
• Schools patterned after an assembly line
• People do not learn at the same speed
• We substitute speed of reasoning for understanding
• Might it not be that we are caught up in a myth, a kind of set of assumptions, a way of seeing the world, which has given great coherence and has been very successful? It’s only small problem is that it’s destroying our people and destroying our environment.
• The measure is secondary to the learning
• Creating measures and the phenomenon itself are two different features
• David Bohm, “thought shapes reality”
• The whole morning is a tribute to Deming
Enjoy it, again and again!
I have shared this video with countless seminar and workshop audiences, most often associated with introducing the Deming Philosophy. Once, with Tom Johnson in the room, with fellow seminar attendees only knowing him as Tom Johnson, not “the” Tom Johnson as highly regarded by Peter in the video. According to one fellow co-worker, the ensuing remarks from Tom, author of Profit Beyond Measure, were “cosmic.” In other settings, I have also shared it with neighbors. For those who are aware of Dr. Deming’s Philosophy, this video can be immensely inspiring. I have seen it grab the attention of wide-ranging audiences, from individual contributors to senior executives, as the message is so powerful, including filled with hope. Don’t be surprised to witness the ending leaving a few in tears. Be prepared! However, as a note of caution, I have shared it with groups who are unaware of the Deming Philosophy, without offering any initial explanation of the Deming Philosophy. In such a setting, the message can be depressing, as it opens viewers to the prevailing system of management as it operates in schools. For such audiences, being exposed to the prospects of harshness within this system, as Peter does so well, this video may trigger a feeling of helplessness. Be prepared to share that there is great hope when leaders offer their guidance. Read about the efforts of educators in our blogs and podcasts to learn how they are working to transform education systems through the Deming Philosophy.
source:
https://deming.org/peter-senge-on-the-creation-of-a-post-industrial-theory-and-practice-of-education/ <----------------------------------------------------------------------------> <---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Monday, May 10, 2021
before you know it • John Bargh • talk @ google
youtube.com
before you know it: the unconscious reasons we do what we do | John Bargh | talk at Google
53:38
Jan 2, 2018
<< if you have time, 60 minute, good stuff >>
<< he talks fast, like faster than average >>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWdDRVhhx8A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWdDRVhhx8A
source:
https://go.forrester.com/blogs/the-forrester-summer-book-club/
blog
May 22 2018 <---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
This book summarized Bargh’s life work on the subconscious. I learnt a great deal from it.
There are 2 persons inside each of us: the conscious and the unconscious. The conscious is thoughtful, takes effort and is narrow in scope. It is good for doing maths. The unconscious does not require active thoughts or effort, and is broad in scope. It is good for solving complicated problems with many parameters. Unfortunately, the latter can be quite easily affected by:
1. Culture. Asian female students perform better in maths when reminded of their Asian heritage and worse when reminded of their female gender.
2. Priming. Even looking at certain words can prime us as in point 1. This is also how lots of psychology studies are done.
3. Environment. We are quiet in churches and libraries, mildly noisy in the classroom and office, and very loud in football games. We know how to fit in. Interestingly, the destination can affect people’s behaviour on the way there.
4. Mimicry. The mirror neurons in our brain cause us to mimic what the other person in doing. People like others who have the same posture as them.
5. Our goals. If we are in a rush, we would not stop to help others in distress.
6. Cumulative input. If others keep being rude to us, we would probably flip upon the 3rd or 4th insult, even though each person behaved the same way. So a bad day at work affects how we behave when we reach home when it shouldn’t.
7. Power. Susceptible people deem the opposite sex more attractive when they are in a powerful position.
How to be smarter?
1. Acknowledge the effect of our subconscious mind.
2. Prime ourselves well. For example, we can use tribalism to overcome racism. Just telling people in advance who their team mates are completely remove racism towards others because we are now ‘team’.
3. Remove things that affect our goals. For example, successful dieters do not buy snacks and do not even pass nearby stores that sell unhealthy food. So they do not test their willpower.
4. To solve complex problems, think very hard and narrow down the few critical parameters. Then go do something else, like having a walk or soaking in a tub (how Archimedes discovered his Principle that buoyancy is equal to weight of water displaced). Let our subconscious get to work.
5. Awake at night? The subconscious is bothering you. Resolve to do something about the problem, and you can then probably sleep better.
source:
https://www.textise.net/showText.aspx?strURL=https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35011639-before-you-know-it <---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
By John Weisman
The Mission, the Men, and Me: Lessons from a former Delta Force Commander
By Pete Blaber
Berkley Caliber, $25.95, 324 pages
"You need to understand how the human mind works. The mind has three elementary phases it goes through when it's thinking: saturate, incubate, and illuminate. Although they generally occur in order, all three are continuous processes, so your mind is constantly cycling through all three phases. The saturation phase occurs when the mind if first exposed to something. When you're planning a new mission, you're saturating your mind with facts, assumptions, insights and/or sensory cues - ergo, the saturation phase. the next phase is incubation. This is a critical phase if you ever want to come up with something innovative. The mind needs time to incubate. During this phase the mind subconsciously sorts through all of the inputs and begins to recognize patterns and snap those patterns together to come up with concepts and ideas. This is why you may have heard people say, 'I need to sleep on it' before making a major decision. It's not the sleep per se that they need: it's the time to allow their mind to sort through information and search for patterns. The recognition of patterns that occurs during the incubation phase produces the illumination phase, also known as 'eureka' moments, when your mind begins to translate those patterns and form theÙ¤ into actionable ideas. Saturate, incubate, illuminate - it's how the mind works, and it's probably the main reason why you have lost so much sleep over the years. The best thing you can do is to keep a pen and paper by your bed. Writing down your thoughts while you're incubating and illuminating should help to temporarily get theÙ¤ off your mind and back to sleep." (Page 70)
REVIEWED BY JOHN WEISMAN
• Washington writer John Weisman's most recent books, "SOAR," "Jack in the Box" and "Direct Action" are available as Avon paperbacks. His e-mail address is ﴾blackops@johnweisman.com﴿.
“On any given day how much of what we say, feel and do is under our conscious control? More importantly, how much is not?”
So here is what is going on… you are being persuaded, primed, affected, effected and subjected to a myriad of subconscious influences constantly. Throughout the day, and night, and will continue to be, for the rest of your existence. Whether you pay attention to this is up to you. But you are being influenced by your unconscious mind irregardless. This is something you should know.
Eminent social psychologist John Bargh PhD has woven over twenty years worth of work on the subconscious mind into Before You Know It - The Unconscious Reasons We Do What We Do and you will be entertained and informed as a result. You should also be grateful as this book can change the way you think about and see the world.
“Unconscious effects are the water we swim in and we have little awareness of the effect they have on our ideas, opinions and actions”
Although this book covers a lot, from the lingering subconscious influences of our recent and long-forgotten past, to the evolution of our brain and its effects on our present thinking to an evaluation of instincts and intuition and the impacts of social influence. It explores ways to become more aware of the working mechanisms of the subconscious mind and some ideas about how to take control of it to optimize your mental performances.
What is surprising about Before You Know It is how Dr Bragh takes a rather ‘heady’ and abstract subject and injects in with a sense of personality, purpose and passion that is often overlooked in books this steeped in academic research and experimentation. This book is informative and entertaining. Rich in detail without being dry. Influential without being overbearing.
“We trust our intuition for the same reason we trust our senses, because the information that comes into our mind easily and naturally, without having to try to figure it out, ‘seems’ true”
source:
https://www.textise.net/showText.aspx?strURL=https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35011639-before-you-know-it <---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
44:21 we make every decision based on either fear or love.
44:25 Others say you make your decision based on fear of loss.
44:29 Whichever of those two areas that you fall into,
44:33 the bottom line is fear and fear of loss
44:35 are a big determinant in how people think.
https://youtu.be/guZa7mQV1l0?t=2659
https://youtu.be/guZa7mQV1l0?t=2659
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
https://youtu.be/guZa7mQV1l0?t=2634
43:54 So if I understand that dynamic, if they're
43:57 expressing themselves in any way,
43:59 there are things they want to have happen.
44:00 There are things they don't want to have happen.
44:02 All I've got to do is sort of flip it the other way around
44:05 and make them worried about the things
44:06 that they don't want to have happen.
44:08 And then that changes their behavior.
44:09 Because fear of loss is the number one driving-- myself,
44:14 a lot of psychologists believe the fear of loss
44:16 is the number one thing that drives our decisions.
https://youtu.be/guZa7mQV1l0?t=2659
44:19 Psychologists usually fall into one or two camps--
44:21 we make every decision based on either fear or love.
44:25 Others say you make your decision based on fear of loss.
44:29 Whichever of those two areas that you fall into,
44:33 the bottom line is fear and fear of loss
44:35 are a big determinant in how people think.
44:38 So I just recognize that and then just use the tools
44:42 that I'm given.
source:
50:43
Chris Voss: "Never Split the Difference" | Talks at Google
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guZa7mQV1l0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guZa7mQV1l0
Talks at Google
Published on May 27, 2016
Everything we’ve previously been taught about negotiation is wrong: people are not rational; there is no such thing as ‘fair’; compromise is the worst thing you can do; the real art of negotiation lies in mastering the intricacies of No, not Yes. These surprising tactics—which radically diverge from conventional negotiating strategy—weren’t cooked up in a classroom, but are the field-tested tools FBI agents used to talk criminals and hostage-takers around the world into (or out of) just about any scenario you can imagine.
In NEVER SPLIT THE DIFFERENCE: Negotiating As If Your Life Depended On It, former FBI lead international kidnapping negotiator Chris Voss breaks down these strategies so that anyone can use them in the workplace, in business, or at home.
▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀▄▀
“Everyone believes very easily whatever they fear or desire”
──Jean de La Fontaine’s aphorism
https://web.archive.org/web/20081201191332/http://www.strategy-business.com/press/16635507/08110
Wayback Machine
Thought Leader
Pankaj Ghemawat: The Thought Leader Interview
by Art Kleiner
The seer of “semiglobalization” argues for appreciating regional distinctions.
... [...] ....
In a way, that’s a symptom of the same issue that affects writing about globalization in general. Jean de La Fontaine’s aphorism “Everyone believes very easily whatever they fear or desire” captures much of the utopian/dystopian quality of publications about the flat world, the death of distance, the end of history, and so forth. But a reality-based perspective on global strategy leads to different prescriptions. To which I should add, of course, that realism is not a recommendation to stay at home. Columbus managed to believe that the world was round but still took a pretty interesting trip — and discovered some unexpected things on the way!
Reprint No. 08110
Author Profile:
Art Kleiner (kleiner_art@ strategy-business.com) is editor-in-chief of strategy+ business and author of Who Really Matters: The Core Group Theory of Power, Privilege, and Success (Doubleday, 2003).
This article is from Spring 2008
strategy+business is published by the global commercial consulting firm Booz & Company.
©2008 Booz & Company. All rights reserved. "booz&co." is a service mark of Booz & Company.
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Amar Bose, MIT professor & co-founder of Bose Laboratory:
to be different => courage (require) (to be different)
courage => fear (acknowledge the fears and, the other side of fear)
([ imagine - what if you have no fear and you have no limit - infinite ])
([ what would you do with your life ])
([ or what would you do with the time that you have left on Earth ])
([ okay, now work backward, and start placing limiting parameters on The Plan ])
([ one-by-one ])
Amar Bose of Bose Lab: Bose speakers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bose_Corporation
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Peter Wright with Paul Greengrass, Spycatcher : the candid autobiography of a senior intelligence officer, 1987
p.263
Looking at MI6 in the early 1960s, I was reminded of Lenin's famous remark to Feliks Dzerzhinsky.
“The West are wishful thinkers, we will give them what they want to think.”
MI6 needed a success, and they needed to believe in a success. In Penkovsky they got it.
p.264
It was split into two types: ARNIKA, which was straight intelligence, and RUPEE, which was counterintelligence.
p.268
The only explanation was that a bias had been introduced into Russian signals, with the intention of misleading American detection systems.
(Peter Wright, Spycatcher, 1987; Peter Wright with Paul Greengrass, Spycatcher : the candid autobiography of a senior intelligence officer, 1987, )
____________________________________
Peter Wright with Paul Greengrass, Spycatcher : the candid autobiography of a senior intelligence officer, 1987
p.244
“There are two factors here”, he said after thinking for a while. “We have to do this investigation, and we have to be seen to do this investigation, and that's almost just as important.”
(Peter Wright, Spycatcher, 1987; Peter Wright with Paul Greengrass, Spycatcher : the candid autobiography of a senior intelligence officer, 1987, )
____________________________________
written by James Bamford (The puzzle palace), 1982
p.35
But to prevent duplication of effort, it was resolved that the Navy would translate all Japanese diplomatic intercepts originated on odd days and the SIS would handle the even days. The Navy would send the results to the President; and the Army would service the State Department.
p.36
The system was designed to ensure a hermetic seal of security, but at the sacrifice of speed and understanding.
The system was a hodgepodge. No one was responsible for a continuous study of all material. Recipients would read their portion of intercepts, and then it would be whisked away, never to be seen again. There was very little that could be done to put together all the pieces in a cohesive form, or to correlate them with information available from other sources. Though the technical side of COMINT, particularly in the breaking of Purple, had been performed with genius, the analytical side had become lost in disorganization.
In the early morning hours of the first Sunday in December 1941, the Navy's listening post at Bainbridge Island in Puget Sound, Washington, intercepted several messages transmitted between Tokyo and Washington, D.C., over the commerical circuits of Mackay Radio & Telegraph Company.
p.37
It had been a busy weekend. Less than twenty-four (24) hours earlier, Bainbridge had snatched from the ether thirteen (13) parts of what appeared to be a fourteen-part (14-part) message from Japan's Foreign Office to its Washington embassy. The long, rambling message, encrypted in Purple, was a reply to a U.S. diplomatic note transmitted eleven (11) days earlier, in which Secretary of State Cordell Hull called on Japan to withdraw all its forces from China and Indochina in return for a U.S. promise to release Japanese funds and resume trade.
p.39
Disorganization and divided responsibility had cost America dearly. It was up to the Secretary of War to turn chaos into order and discord into teamwork.
____________________________________
written by James Bamford (The puzzle palace), 1982
p.43
In the land war, COMINT read Rommel's intentions in Africa so well that the Desert Fox, finding himself often outmaneuvered, guessed the truth. But when he confided his suspicions to Berlin, he was summarily informed by the German High Command that such things were not possible.
pp.43-44
In the land war, COMINT read Rommel's intentions in Africa so well that the Desert Fox, finding himself often outmaneuvered, guessed the truth. But when he confided his suspicions to Berlin, he was summarily informed by the German High Command that such things were not possible. And before D Day in France, COMINT told where Von Rundstedt assumed the main Allied attack would come, as well as some of Berlin's replies brushing off his good advice, presumably in favor of Hitler's intuition.
____________________________________
written by James Bamford (The puzzle palace), 1982
pp.377-378
“HUMINT [Human Intelligence] is subject to all of the mental aberrations of the source as well as the interpreter of the source,” Lieutenant General Marshall S. Carter once explained. “SIGINT isn't. SIGINT has technical aberrations which give it away almost immediately if it does not have bona fides, if it is not legitimate. A good analyst can tell very, very quickly whether this is an attempt at disinformation, at confusion, from SIGINT. You can't do that from HUMINT; you don't have the bona fides ── what are his sources? He may be the source, but what are his sources?”
Having served as deputy director of the CIA and director of the NSA, Carter was one of the very few people to have been intimately associated with both collection systems, and in his opinion SIGINT won by a wavelength. “Photo interpretation,” he explained, “can in some cases be misinterpreted by the reader or intentionally confused by the maker in the first place ── camouflage, this sort of thing. SIGINT is the one that is immediate, right now. Photo interpretation, yes, to some extent, but you still have to say, ‘Is that really a fake, have they confused it?’ It is better than HUMINT, it is more rapid than HUMINT [but] SIGINT is right now; its bona fides are there the minute you get it.”
____________________________________
Jeffrey T. Richelson., The wizards of Langley : inside the CIA's directorate of science and technology, 2001
p.34
Rather than wait for the Soviets to announce their missions, accept whatever information they provided, and trust that it was accurate, the CIA wanted the capability of independently monitoring Soviet space efforts. The agency sought to provide advance warning of missions, to determine whether Soviet claims were accurate, and to identify the failures that the Soviets would surely try to conceal.
Rather than wait for them to announce [their] missions, accept whatever information they provided, and trust that it was accurate, the [intelligence agency] wanted the capability of independently monitoring [their] space efforts. The agency sought to provide advance warning of missions, to determine whether their claims were accurate, and to identify the failures that [they] would surely try to conceal.
(The wizards of Langley : inside the CIA's directorate of science and technology / Jeffrey T. Richelson., 1. united states. central intelligence agency. directorate of science and technology ── history., UB251.U5 R53 2001, )
____________________________________
The Imagineers of War, Sharon Weinberger
The Pentagon's Brain, Annie Jacobsen, 2015
The Technology of Espionage, Lauren Paine
____________________________________
source:
Dan Brown witness statement in Da Vinci Code case
https://www.religionnewsblog.com/13963
https://www.religionnewsblog.com/13962
https://www.religionnewsblog.com/13961
https://www.religionnewsblog.com/13960
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
What Vietnam Taught Us About Breaking Bad Habits
January 2, 201212:01 AM ET
Heard on Morning Edition
Alix Spiegel
8-Minute Listen
U.S. soldiers at Long Binh base, northeast of Saigon, line up to give urine samples at a heroin detection center in June 1971, before departing for the U.S.
AP
It's a tradition as old as New Year's: making resolutions. We will not smoke, or sojourn with the bucket of mint chocolate chip. In fact, we will resist sweets generally, including the bowl of M &Ms that our co-worker has helpfully positioned on the aisle corner of his desk. There will be exercise, and the learning of a new language.
It is resolved.
So what does science know about translating our resolve into actual changes in behavior? The answer to this question brings us — strangely enough — to a story about heroin use in Vietnam.
In May of 1971 two congressmen, Robert Steele from Connecticut and Morgan Murphy of Illinois, went to Vietnam for an official visit and returned with some extremely disturbing news: 15 percent of U.S. servicemen in Vietnam, they said, were actively addicted to heroin.
People, when they perform a behavior a lot, outsource the control of the behavior to the environment.
David Neal, psychologist, Duke University
The idea that so many servicemen were addicted to heroin horrified the public. At that point heroin was the bete noire of American drugs. It was thought to be the most addictive substance ever produced, a narcotic so powerful that once addiction claimed you, it was nearly impossible to escape.
In response to this report, President Richard Nixon took action. In June of 1971 he announced that he was creating a whole new office — The Special Action Office of Drug Abuse Prevention — dedicated to fighting the evil of drugs. He laid out a program of prevention and rehabilitation, but there was something else Nixon wanted: He wanted to research what happened to the addicted servicemen once they returned home.
And so Jerome Jaffe, whom Nixon had appointed to run the new office, contacted a well-respected psychiatric researcher named Lee Robins and asked her to help with the study. He promised her unprecedented access to enlisted men in the Army so that she could get the job done.
Soon a comprehensive system was set up so that every enlisted man was tested for heroin addiction before he was allowed to return home. And in this population, Robins did find high rates of addiction: Around 20 percent of the soldiers self-identified as addicts.
Those who were addicted were kept in Vietnam until they dried out. When these soldiers finally did return to their lives back in the U.S., Robins tracked them, collecting data at regular intervals. And this is where the story takes a curious turn: According to her research, the number of soldiers who continued their heroin addiction once they returned to the U.S. was shockingly low.
A GI lights up a cigarette in Saigon in 1971. He poured grains of heroin into the menthol cigarette, from which he had first removed some of the tobacco.
AP
"I believe the number of people who actually relapsed to heroin use in the first year was about 5 percent," Jaffe said recently from his suburban Maryland home. In other words, 95 percent of the people who were addicted in Vietnam did not become re-addicted when they returned to the United States.
This flew in the face of everything everyone knew both about heroin and drug addiction generally. When addicts were treated in the U.S. and returned to their homes, relapse rates hovered around 90 percent. It didn't make sense.
"Everyone thought there was somehow she was lying, or she did something wrong, or she was politically influenced," Jaffe says. "She spent months, if not years, trying to defend the integrity of the study."
But 40 years later, the findings of this study are widely accepted. To explain why, you need to understand how the science of behavior change has itself changed.
Outsourcing The Control Of Behavior
According to Wendy Wood, a psychologist at University of Southern California who researches behavior change, throughout the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s scientists believed that if you wanted to change behavior, the key was to change people's goals and intentions.
"The research was very much focused on trying to understand how to change people's attitudes," Wood says, "with the assumption that behavior change would just follow."
So researchers studied how to organize public health campaigns, or how to use social pressure to change attitudes. And, says David Neal, another psychologist who looks at behavior change, these strategies did work.
Mostly.
"They do work for a certain subset of behaviors," Neal says. "They work for behaviors that people don't perform too frequently."
If you want, for example, to increase the number of people who donate blood, a public campaign can work well. But if you want them to quit smoking, campaigns intended to change attitudes are often less effective.
"Once a behavior had been repeated a lot, especially if the person does it in the same setting, you can successfully change what people want to do. But if they've done it enough, their behavior doesn't follow their intentions," Neal explains.
Neal says this has to do with the way that over time, our physical environments come to shape our behavior.
"People, when they perform a behavior a lot — especially in the same environment, same sort of physical setting — outsource the control of the behavior to the environment," Neal says.
Outsourcing control over your behavior sounds a little funny. But consider what happens when you perform a very basic everyday behavior like getting into a car.
"Of course on one level, that seems like the simplest task possible," Neal says, "but if you break it down, there's really a myriad set of complex actions that are performed in sequence to do that."
You use a certain motion to put your key in the lock. And then physically manipulate your body to get into the seat. There is another set of motions to insert the key in the ignition.
"All of this is actually very complicated and someone who had never driven a car before would have no ability to do that, but it becomes second nature to us," Neal points out. "[It's] so automatic that we can do it while we are conducting complex other tasks, like having conversations."
Throughout the process, you haven't thought for a second about what you are doing, you are just responding to the different parts of the car in the sequence you've learned. "And very much of our day goes off in this way," Wood says. "About 45 percent of what people do every day is in the same environment and is repeated."
Environment's Key Role In Behavior
In this way, Neal says, our environments come to unconsciously direct our behavior. Even behaviors that we don't want, like smoking.
"For a smoker the view of the entrance to their office building — which is a place that they go to smoke all the time — becomes a powerful mental cue to go and perform that behavior," Neal says.
And over time those cues become so deeply ingrained that they are very hard to resist. And so we smoke at the entrance to work when we don't want to. We sit on the couch and eat ice cream when we don't need to, despite our best intentions, despite our resolutions.
"We don't feel sort of pushed by the environment," Wood says. "But, in fact, we're very integrated with it."
To battle bad behaviors then, one answer, Neal and Wood say, is to disrupt the environment in some way. Even small changes can help — like eating the ice cream with your non-dominant hand. What this does is alter the action sequence and disrupts the learned body sequence that's driving the behavior, which allows your conscious mind to come back online and reassert control.
"It's a brief sort of window of opportunity," Wood says, "to think, 'Is this really what I want to do?' "
Of course, larger disruption can also be helpful, which brings us back to heroin addiction in Vietnam.
It's important not to overstate this, because a variety of factors are probably at play. But one big theory about why the rates of heroin relapse were so low on return to the U.S. has to do with the fact that the soldiers, after being treated for their physical addiction in Vietnam, returned to a place radically different from the environment where their addiction took hold of them.
"I think that most people accept that the change in the environment, and the fact that the addiction occurred in this exotic environment, you know, makes it plausible that the addiction rate would be that much lower," Nixon appointee Jerome Jaffe says.
We think of ourselves as controlling our behavior, willing our actions into being, but it's not that simple.
It's as if over time, we leave parts of ourselves all around us, which in turn, come to shape who we are.
source:
► https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2012/01/02/144431794/what-vietnam-taught-us-about-breaking-bad-habits
8 minute
if you go to this NPR web page, you can listen to the show
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Nils Bejerot
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils_Bejerot
(September 21, 1921 in Stockholm - November 29, 1988)
Nils Bejerot stressed instead five other factors that causes that increase the risk of the individual and to an epidemic drug use
* Availability of the addictive substance
* Money to acquire the substance
* Time to use the substance
* Example of use of the substance in the immediate environment
* A permissive ideology in relation to the use of the substance.[12]
Bejerot advanced the hypothesis that when addiction supervenes it is no longer a symptom but a morbid condition of its own; its development will not be affected by removal of the initiating factors. Addiction has the strength and character of a natural drive: it may be considered as an artificially induced drive developed through chemical stimulation of the pleasure center.
He compared addiction with a very deep love.
Addiction is "an emotional fixation (sentiment) acquired through learning, which intermittently or continually expresses itself in purposeful, stereotyped behavior with the character and force of a natural drive, aiming at a specific pleasure or the avoidance of a specific discomfort"[13]
This would however not be interpreted as drug addiction was impossible to treat. The abuse was learned, it is also possible to relearn, learn how to live without drugs.
" . . . we have a serious problem: America is addicted to oil . . . "
source:
► http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils_Bejerot
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and what we do - to a greater and lesser degree - are influenced by who we repeatedly hang out with (spend time, invest, and nurture by), in other words, our parents and our peers;
and how we - to a greater and lesser extent - even though it is more true or noticeable in some situations than others - are influenced by - what behavior psychologists would call ‘’environment cues‘’ - our surrounding (repeated exposure) and who we associated with.
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Precision especially matters early on, because the first reps establish the pathways for the future. Neurologists call this the “sled on a snowy hill” phenomenon. The first repetitions are like the first sled tracks on fresh snow: On subsequent tries, your sled will tend to follow those grooves. “Our brains are good at building connections,” says Dr. George Bartzokis, a neurologist at UCLA. “They're not so good at unbuilding them.”
When you learn hard skills, be precise and measured. Go slowly. Make one simple move at a time, repeating and perfecting it before you move on. Pay attention to errors, and fix them, particularly at the start. Learning fundamentals only SEEMS boring--in fact, it's the key moment of investment. If you build the right pathway now, you'll save yourself a lot of time and trouble down the line.
(Coyle, Daniel., The little book of talent : 52 tips for improving skills / Daniel Coyle., 1. ability., 2012, BF431.C685 2012, 153.9--dc23, )
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Ambidextrous Thinking
Rolf A. Faste
Stanford University, Stanford CA 94305-4021
September 15, 1994
(selected TEXT)
This philosophy is based on McLuhan's saying, “The medium is the message.” While there is a lot that can be said about this subject, this particular class is essentially about process. Thus, words are less important than doing, and the way in which something is done is as important as what is done.
A related issue is that understanding is less important than getting it. “Getting it” in design can be compared with telling a joke. If people are told a joke and they don't understand it, they will ask to have it explained. After the explanation they will understand it, but they won't laugh. There is nothing funny about the explanation nor the understanding that accompanies it. The point of telling a joke is “getting it”──that is, experiencing the sudden juxtaposition of contradictory concepts and releasing the built-up tension with laughter. It is our intention that students “get it” regarding their ability to draw and to generate creative solutions to problems. For further insight on this issue I highly recommend Zen in the Art of Archery by Eugen Herrigel.
To accomplish this we use a teaching strategy we call “bounce-hit”. In The Inner Game of Tennis, Tim Gallwey [Timothy Gallwey] describes a method for keeping left-side consciousness occupied with a task while letting the right side get on with it. He asks beginning tennis students to say “bounce” when the ball bounces and “hit” when the ball is hit. He says nothing about how to stand, hold the racket or swing. Instead, the students consciousness is focused on a nice easy task while the body gets on with playing tennis. His approach makes it difficult to be thinking critical thoughts like “I swung to late” or, perhaps more importantly, “I screwed up”. We try to incorporate this idea in all our teaching. For example, I no longer lecture on perspective, we simply get on with it. Using this method, drawing correct circles in perspective can be taught in about a half an hour. An observer will hear the students saying a little mantra, “axle, ninety degrees, major axis, ellipse.”
(Rolf A. Faste, Ambidextrous Thinking, 1994, )
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John Hargrave, Mind hacking : how to change your mind for good in 21 days, 2016
p.149
Repetition is key. Also, repetition is key.
One of the best parts about living in Boston, besides the wealth of technology talent, is sledding in the winter, It's a thrill seeker's dream, because you can sled as long as you want, as often as you want, and, unlike roller coasters or hallucinogens, it's totally free.
I live near Wellesley College, the renowed all-women's college that has produced notable alumni like Nora Ephron and Hillary Clinton. Wellesley has a sledding hill that is just phenomenally dangerous. It has (what feels like) an 85-degree incline, where you attain (what feels like) speeds of up to 75 miles per hour. On one side of the hill, a fifteen-foot oak branch spreads out across the snow, like a giant, deadly limbo stick. If you don't press your body flat into the sled, you will be decapitated by the tree. It's insane that they allow sledding on the hill at all, but even more insane is that the women of Wellesley college sled down the hill on plastic trays from the dining hall. (It's funnier if you picture Hillary Clinton on a tray.)
As any sledding enthusiast knows, if you get to the hill after a fresh snow, it's just clean powder. Then, as people sled down the hill, it creates grooves, or tracks, in the snow. After a few days the Wellesley students have built snow ramps and moguls at the bottom, so that the sledding down one of these tracks will launch you into orbit.
A few days after a snow, you'll find one set of snow tracks that take you under the Oak tree of death, and another set that will shoot you off the Ramps into hyperspace. Even if you start your sled on another area of the hill, you end up locking into one of those two tracks.
Our minds are like that hill. The constant repetition of our negative loops cuts deep mental grooves, and it's natural for our minds to “lock into” those grooves, even when the negative loops are self-destructive.
p.150
The good news is, through repetition, you can cut new groove. When I take my kids sledding at the hill, we often have to cut a new track, packing down the snow where we want it to go, when physically slowing and redirecting ourselves to the new tracks. The sled “wants” to lock into the existing groove, but by patiently working the new path we can eventually get the sled to lock into the new one instead.
( Mind hacking : how to change your mind for good in 21 days / Sir John Hargrave., 1. thought and thinking., 2. change (psychology)., BF441.H313 2016
158.1--dc23, 2016, )
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Lessons from Aristotle on the Art of Connection
“Friends hold a mirror up to each other; through that mirror they can see each other in ways that would not otherwise be accessible to them, and it is this mirroring that helps them improve themselves as persons.”
By Maria Popova
In particular, what makes for a good happiness-enhancing friendship is the degree of companionship (when you do things together with your friends) and of self-validation (when your friends reassure you that you are a good, worthy individual).
This is where Aristotle comes in: He recognized three types of love — agape, eros, and philia
Agape is a broad kind of love, the kind that religious people feel that God has for us, or that a secular person may have for humanity at large. Eros, naturally, is more concerned with the type of love we have for sexual partners, though the Greeks meant it more broadly than we do. Philia is the type of love that concerns us here because it includes the sort of feelings we have for friends, family, and even business partners.
Aristotle further classified friendships into three distinct categories: of pleasure, of utility, and of virtue:
In friendships of pleasure, you and another person are friends because of the direct pleasure your friendship brings — for instance, you like and befriend people who are good conversationalists, or with whom you can go to concerts, and so on. Friendships of utility are those in which you gain a tangible benefit, either economic or political, from the relationship. Exploitation of other people is not necessarily implied by the idea of utility friendships — first, because the advantage can be reciprocal, and second, because a business or political relation doesn’t preclude having genuine feelings of affection for each other. For Aristotle, however, the highest kind of friendship was one of virtue: you are friends with someone because of the kind of person he is, that is, because of his virtues (understood in the ancient Greek sense of virtue ethics [and] not in the much more narrow modern sense, which is largely derived from the influence of Christianity.)
Once again, Pigliucci takes us back to Aristotle:
Aristotle’s opinion was that friends hold a mirror up to each other; through that mirror they can see each other in ways that would not otherwise be accessible to them, and it is this (reciprocal) mirroring that helps them improve themselves as persons. Friends, then, share a similar concept of eudaimonia [Greek for “having a good demon”, often translated as “happiness”] and help each other achieve it. So it is not just that friends are instrumentally good because they enrich our lives, but that they are an integral part of what it means to live the good life, according to Aristotle and other ancient Greek philosophers (like Epicurus). Of course, another reason to value the idea of friendship is its social dimension. In the words of philosopher Elizabeth Telfer, friendship provides “a degree and kind of consideration for others’ welfare which cannot exist outside”
source:
https://www.brainpickings.org/2013/09/19/aristotle-friendship/
loving = donating
For 15 years, I have been spending hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars each month to keep Brain Pickings going. It has remained free and ad-free and alive thanks to patronage from readers. I have no staff, no interns, no assistant — a thoroughly one-woman labor of love that is also my life and my livelihood. If this labor makes your life more livable in any way, please consider aiding its sustenance with a donation. Your support makes all the difference.
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Startup Life
Warren Buffett Says 4 Choices in Life Separate the Doers From the Dreamers
By Marcel Schwantes
1. Pick your friends wisely. (choose wisely who you associate with, if you can)
"Of all the things I've learned from Warren," said Gates, "the most important thing might be what friendship is all about. As Warren himself put it a few years ago when we spoke with some college students, 'You will move in the direction of the people that you associate with. So it's important to associate with people that are better than yourself. The friends you have will form you as you go through life. Make some good friends, keep them for the rest of your life, but have them be people that you admire as well as like.'"
2. Go to bed a little smarter each day.
According to Buffett, the key to your success is to go to bed a little smarter each day. Buffett pointed out the strong similarity with investing when he said, "That's how knowledge builds up. Like compound interest."
to read. A lot.
daily routine reading
to make whatever progress you can and improve your life on a daily basis.
3. Improve your communication skills.
"The most important investment you can make is in yourself," said Buffett.
"One easy way to become worth 50 percent more than you are now at least is to hone your communication skills--both written and verbal."
4. Say no.
The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything.
saying no over and over again to the unimportant things flying in our direction every day, and remaining focused on saying yes to the few things that truly matter.
source:
https://www.inc.com/marcel-schwantes/warren-buffett-says-4-choices-in-life-separate-doers-from-dreamers.html
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Peter Senge on Science, Spirituality & Worldviews
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