Far Places
Monday, April 01, 2013
Sunday, September 18, 2011
The Universal Character Strengths
A group of scholars went through the published works of the various major cultures and identified a set of universally recognized character strengths.
Wisdom and Knowledge
Courage
Humanity
Justice
Temperance
Transcendence
Wisdom and Knowledge
- Creativity: originality, ingenuity
- Curiosity: interest, novelty-seeking, openness to experience
- Open mindedness: judgment, critical thinking
- Love of learning
- Perspective: wisdom
Courage
- Bravery: valor
- Persistence: perseverance, industriousness
- Integrity: authenticity, honesty
- Vitality: zest, enthusiasm, vigor, energy
Humanity
- Love
- Kindness: generosity, nurturance, care, compassion, altruistic love, "niceness"
- Social Intelligence: emotional intelligence, personal intelligence
Justice
- Citizenship: social responsibility, loyalty, teamwork
- Fairness
- Leadership
Temperance
- Forgiveness and Mercy
- Humility and Modesty
- Prudence
- Self-Regulation: self-control
Transcendence
- Appreciation of Beauty and Excellence: awe, wonder, elevation
- Gratitude
- Hope: optimism, future-mindedness, future orientation
- Humor: playfulness
- Spirituality: religiousness, faith, purpose
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Outstanding article on education
Walter Russel Mead has written an excellent article called Back to School about higher education. It talks about the likely future and how to deal with it.
An engineering professor said to me years ago, "No one is going to pay you to find V, given I and R." which is a reference to the important relationship between electrical voltage, current, and resistance, V=I*R. A similar thing could be said about other topics of college education (like statistics).
I've had discussions with one of my successful colleagues about this and the conclusion was that: if you can sit down with a book and learn it, you'll never get paid a lot to do it (at least not for long when people in India or China also sit down with that same book and work very hard to earn a lot less money).
Writing embedded software for special-purpose digital signal processors requires enormous skill and cleverness. When you learn it and apply it, you'll feel like the master-of-the-universe. Unfortunately, there are millions of other potential masters-of-the universe out there. In the end, it's essentially mental ditch digging.
There were people I've known professionally who were tremendously valuable, but their knowledge was not found in any book anywhere. And it couldn't be written down. It was accumulated in the messy real-world.
Character is important. As Warren Buffett says, a good reputation takes a lifetime to develop and five minutes to destroy. It's extremely valuable and worth the price of upholding it.
1. The real world does not work like school.
Inmates who spend a long time in prison become institutionalized; they adapt so well to the conditions of prison that they can no longer function in the free world. Something similar can happen to students.
An engineering professor said to me years ago, "No one is going to pay you to find V, given I and R." which is a reference to the important relationship between electrical voltage, current, and resistance, V=I*R. A similar thing could be said about other topics of college education (like statistics).
I've had discussions with one of my successful colleagues about this and the conclusion was that: if you can sit down with a book and learn it, you'll never get paid a lot to do it (at least not for long when people in India or China also sit down with that same book and work very hard to earn a lot less money).
Writing embedded software for special-purpose digital signal processors requires enormous skill and cleverness. When you learn it and apply it, you'll feel like the master-of-the-universe. Unfortunately, there are millions of other potential masters-of-the universe out there. In the end, it's essentially mental ditch digging.
There were people I've known professionally who were tremendously valuable, but their knowledge was not found in any book anywhere. And it couldn't be written down. It was accumulated in the messy real-world.
2. Most of your elders know very little about the world into which you are headed.Even if you go into the ‘learned professions’ you are going to have to be entrepreneurial and flexible. Technology is going to rock your world and economic changes and upheavals are going to change the rules on you over and over.The workplace I entered a quarter-century ago was tame and simple. Today it's like white water rafting in a dangerous river. There are so many things that can go wrong, and so very fast.
....At times, your career is going to feel like Eliza’s run for freedom across the half-frozen Ohio river — jumping from ice floe to ice floe with the hounds of hell behind you. It won’t be all bad; there are rewards to this kind of life as well as risks, but you are going to need a different outlook on life and a different set of skills to cope.
3. You are going to have to work much, much harder than you probably expect.I've done a lot of work at outsourcing and I can say that there are certainly truths to this, but it's not as bad as it may seem. While there is downward pressure on wages in the US, there is also upward pressure on wages in places where lots of people are successfully being productive. In the long run, the "threat" from India, China, etc. will turn into enormous opportunity for all of us.
Your competition isn’t sitting in the next library carrel. Your competition is in China and India.... Your competition isn’t taking courses on gender studies; it isn’t majoring in ethnic studies, or the history of film. Your competition is working hard, damned hard, and is deadly serious about learning.
4. Choosing the right courses is more important than choosing the right college.I would really emphasize this. All the specific technologies you learn in college will be useless before long. If you can get a quick education on a specific technology that gets you in the door, then that's a good idea. Otherwise, learn the basics!
5. Get a traditional liberal education; it is the only thing that will do you any good.
You can be almost 100% sure that the hot theories making waves in academia today will be forgotten or superseded in twenty years — but fifty years from now people will still be reading and thinking about the classic texts that have shaped our world.
Fourth, study at least one language and at least one culture that is alien to you. Pick a language that opens the door to a big world: Mandarin, Hindi, Arabic, GermanHaving studied Japanese, I can definitely see the advantage to this. It gets you fully outside the box. It is mind-expanding in unexpected ways.
Fifth, learn to write well.Absolutely! Being able to communicate is something that's difficult to teach and very valuable.
6. Character counts; so do good habits.Good habits take advantage of the power of time. Large amounts of time are exremely powerful. It's what caused a little river to carve the Grand Canyon. All it needed was the right geology and geography to allow it to do its work continuously.
Character is important. As Warren Buffett says, a good reputation takes a lifetime to develop and five minutes to destroy. It's extremely valuable and worth the price of upholding it.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Then and Now
Here's an interesting photo essay showing the difference between the America of roughly 50 years ago with the current times.
Very disturbing
What's even more disturbing is that you could create a similar contrast between the US today and places like China today.
Very disturbing
What's even more disturbing is that you could create a similar contrast between the US today and places like China today.
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Kanji
I'm back to studying kanji 漢字, the Chinese symbols that make up the bulk of the Japanese language. The kanji are an amazing combination of art and literature. There are about 200 basic parts that almost all of the kanji are made of. The parts have either a direct meaning (like tree or water) or they have a very subtle meaning (they tend to affect the overall meaning of the kanji in the same sort of way).
Here's how difficult Japanese is: It has two alphabets plus 2,000 standard symbols, but you need to know about 3,000 symbols to really understand the language. Each symbol typically has one Japanese pronunciation (kunyomi) and about 3 or so Chinese pronunciations (onyomi). Some words have a single symbol and typically some alphabet letters after it; typically a lot of verbs and adjectives and some basic nouns. These typically use the Japanese pronunciation. Other words have two or more symbols, sometimes with alphabet letters after them; typically nouns and some verbs and adjectives. These typically use some combination of Chinese pronunciations. Most of the Japanese pronunciations are unique. But the Chinese pronunciations are typically just one syllable and you can have 30 or more symbols that all have the same pronunciation. Some of the symbols follow a system for pronunciation based on their parts. Others have a partial system. Some are totally random.
To really learn the language, you need to know the symbol parts, about 3,000 symbols, multiple pronunciations of each symbol and often multiple meanings. Then combinations of symbols that form words, then sentences that are put together completely differently from English using particles.
Then there's plain language, polite language, humble language, and honorific language. The language spoken by men uses some different words than what women speak.
If I wanted to try to make the most difficult language to learn, without being completely ridiculous, Japanese would be the best I could do.
Here's how difficult Japanese is: It has two alphabets plus 2,000 standard symbols, but you need to know about 3,000 symbols to really understand the language. Each symbol typically has one Japanese pronunciation (kunyomi) and about 3 or so Chinese pronunciations (onyomi). Some words have a single symbol and typically some alphabet letters after it; typically a lot of verbs and adjectives and some basic nouns. These typically use the Japanese pronunciation. Other words have two or more symbols, sometimes with alphabet letters after them; typically nouns and some verbs and adjectives. These typically use some combination of Chinese pronunciations. Most of the Japanese pronunciations are unique. But the Chinese pronunciations are typically just one syllable and you can have 30 or more symbols that all have the same pronunciation. Some of the symbols follow a system for pronunciation based on their parts. Others have a partial system. Some are totally random.
To really learn the language, you need to know the symbol parts, about 3,000 symbols, multiple pronunciations of each symbol and often multiple meanings. Then combinations of symbols that form words, then sentences that are put together completely differently from English using particles.
Then there's plain language, polite language, humble language, and honorific language. The language spoken by men uses some different words than what women speak.
If I wanted to try to make the most difficult language to learn, without being completely ridiculous, Japanese would be the best I could do.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Hit the deck
I had a deck built and I used pressure treated lumber for the railings (I should've stuck with all Pro Cell) and now I've got to make sure the wood is sealed well. After talking to lots of people, I decided to paint them: enamel primer, then waterborne exterior semi-gloss (Benjamin Moore stuff is designed for this combo). Primer is done. Started with the final coat. The color was "Tuscany" but it looks a lot like pink to me. So I had to buy another color: "Acorn". Rain, humidity, dirt+rain, and peeling blue tape are making this take forever. I started painting about 3 weeks ago.
I'm planning to leave the deck frame with just Thompson's water seal, but if it looks bad against the painted railings and risers, then I'll have to do something else with it.
Time to continue painting.
UPDATE: I was only able to paint around most of the masking taped areas, and even then, it's going to need another coat. It's been at least 14 days of having the blue tape and the plastic tarp on the deck and the rain, dirt, and time are destroying it, so I had to remove it today.
The next step should require a lot less masking along with some careful brush touch-up in some places.
It looks like the plastic tarp did something to discolor the Pro Cell decking in one area. It think it was the water under the tarp. Soap and water didn't work, alcohol didn't work, mineral spirits didn't work. The decking is guaranteed and the guy who built the deck will replace anything that's permanently discolored.
I'm planning to leave the deck frame with just Thompson's water seal, but if it looks bad against the painted railings and risers, then I'll have to do something else with it.
Time to continue painting.
UPDATE: I was only able to paint around most of the masking taped areas, and even then, it's going to need another coat. It's been at least 14 days of having the blue tape and the plastic tarp on the deck and the rain, dirt, and time are destroying it, so I had to remove it today.
The next step should require a lot less masking along with some careful brush touch-up in some places.
It looks like the plastic tarp did something to discolor the Pro Cell decking in one area. It think it was the water under the tarp. Soap and water didn't work, alcohol didn't work, mineral spirits didn't work. The decking is guaranteed and the guy who built the deck will replace anything that's permanently discolored.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Back from Montana
The reunion was interesting. It was fun. It was a great experience. There were so many interesting people. I'm very glad I went. I wrote the previous post to provide some background about where I'm coming from. Coming back from Montana, it felt like I gained a lot of family. Not something that happens just every day.
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