Tuesday, December 07, 2021

The Real Anthony Fauci by Robert Kennedy Jr.

 Kennedy gives a devastating portrayal of Fauci's years in government health. The lapses during the Covid-19 pandemic including not considering inexpensive effective treatments and promulgating vaccines with inadequate testing and many side-effects are completely understandable in the light of his handling of AIDS getting approval of the drug AZT for which participants had to be given blood transfusions to keep them alive during the trial. This book is a must read and a sad commentary on the state of our health system. This book is currently available for $2.99 on Kindle.

Monday, November 22, 2021

Here on Earth: A Natural History of the Planet by Tim Flannery

 This book has some fascinating parts. For example in the chapter on superorganisms the author shows that ants create a civilization analogous to ours. They have millions of individuals and learned to herd bugs and have agriculture. They have specialized types, short-lives workers analogous to some of our cells, and forceful drones, analogous to our immune system. He considers whether humans are part of Gaia and can cooperate to solve our problems or are like Medea and destructive of our environment.

Monday, November 15, 2021

The Clot Thickens by Malcolm Kendrick

 Amazingly cholesterol is not implicated in heart disease. In fact death rates are higher for those with low cholesterol, especially women. This information has been known for years but kept quiet once statins were invented.  Blot clots cause heart disease. Dr. Kendrick gives all the details in an excellent book.

In Search of History by Theodore H. White

 White began his career as a reporter in China during the 1930s. He dealt with Nationalists and Communists. The US wanted to support China against Japan. Madame Chaing Kai-Shek was Christian education in the US and many US missionaries were in China. According to White, Roosevelt wanted a Japanese attack in 1941 to give us an excuse the support the Chinese. Later he gave up on Chaing and appointed General Stillwell to lead the war effort but Chiang objected and Stillwell was removed.

Sunday, October 10, 2021

What is Relativity by Jeffrey Bennett

 This is an excellent intuitive treatment.  The speed of light is constant. So if Al, moving with respect to you, shines a light up to a mirror in his spaceship the distance the light travels for him is just up and down. Because Al is moving away, you see the light following a longer path. Since the speed of light in constant Al's clock must record a smaller time that your clock where light travels a greater distance to make distance /time constant.

Simultaneity is relative for events that do not occur in the same place. If you are equidistant from two lights and they flash you will see each light at the same time but someone who is moving toward one of the lights will see it first.

Spacetime, with three space and one time dimension provides an accurate representation. By analogy we can measure dimensions of a three-dimensional book using different two-dimensional views from photos that give different lengths and widths. Your frame of reference is different. There is an invariant spacetime distance.

Wednesday, October 06, 2021

Gods of Money -- Wall Street and the Death of the American Century by F. William Engdahl

      This book is "a history of power, more precisely, of the colossal abuse of power in the hands of a tiny elite who have constituted themselves as the 'Gods of Money'". Slavery requires the care of the laborers while capitalists control labor . The Federal Reserve Act allows private banks to control the issuance of money.. The dollar is the reserve currency and the US military has been dominant.

      Lincoln wanted money to be issued solely by the government. With his greenback he avoided paying high interest to London or New York bankers. John Wilkes Booth was a mercenary working for British bankers. J.P. Morgan and John D. Rockefeller concentrated the wealth and control of American industry into their own hands. After the Civil War both silver and gold backed money but the New York bankers wanted no competition from silver. Around 1900 about 60 ultra-rich families controlled American industry and banking. They put up a third-party candidate in the 1912 presidential election so Woodrow Wilson would win and approve the Federal Reserve Bank.

      Britain need World War I to challenge the growing German strength. The Germans were building a railroad to Mesopotamia and building up their navy to challenge Britain's dominance. Britain was declining and the US power elite felt they could dominate. The US entered the war to protect the bankers' financial interests. They made a lot of money. The cause of the great depression was "the misconceived attempt by the House of Morgan and the Wall Street banking establishment to replace the city of London with New York as the heart of world finance."

     The elite US power shared synthetic rubber and gas technology with the Nazis to make sure Britain wouldn't keep thei former dominance. Hitler let the British retreat from Dunkirk to encourage them to settle so they could fight a one-front war with Russia. Churchill didn't support the German anti-Hitler opposition because Britian didn't want a strong Germany sensibly ruled.

     The US encouraged the war in Korea to recover from a recession and build the military-industrial complex. For that they needed a strong German industry so NATO changed its policy toward Germany.

     "Shortly before he was assassinated , JFK issed United States Note, interest free and independent of the Federal Reserve. ... The Notes were immediately recalled by his successor."

     There is much more in this book. With globalization interests of the financial elite no longer align with those of the American people.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Scale by Geoffrey West

 Scale refers to the way quantities scale with size. For example how do calories consumed vary with the size of the animal. One might think if size doubles that calories should double but it doesn't work like that. Calories needed go up by 75%. The reason is that needed energy comes via the bloodstream with networks that split into smaller and smaller tubes to  reach every cell. This geometry allows larger animals to be more efficient. But correspondingly animals can only grow so much. Growing cells does double with a doubling in size so eventually the increase in cells cannot get energy from the network with slower growth. This also limits lifespans.

Interestingly as biological organisms humans need only 90 watts per day of energy, but with our culture and lifestyle we needs cars, roads, TV, etc., etc., which amounts to 11,000 watts, a tremendous increase. Companies also follow this pattern and mostly die out. However cities do grow exponentially. If its size doubles then both the good and the bad features of the city increase by 115%. The good part is that this makes for the innovations that allows humanity to grow exponentially as it has been since the industrial revolution. The catch is that the innovation that makes this possible has to happen faster and faster. Even now we can see that change happens so fast that an innovator with a good idea cannot implement it before it becomes obsolete. 

Scale is a thought-provoking book.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Galileo's Error Foundations for a New Science of Consciousness by Philip Goff

 Galileo's error was to base science on Mathematics considering only what things do and not what they are. Panpsychism is the view that consciousness is a fundamental feature of physical reality. It's not materialism or dualism. Everything has consciousness at its own level.  The problem to solve is how this basic consciousness combines as simpler things combine in larger things. Other books I have reviewed show how trees communicate for example. The What the Bleep do We Know movie show that water responds to messages. It seems like Goff is on the right track.

Thursday, May 27, 2021

The Worm at the Core -- On the role of death in life by Sheldon Solomon et al

 According to the authors the fear of death is one of the driving forces of human action. "Cultural worldviews have offered immense comfort to death-fearing humans.....the second vital resource for managing terror is a feeling of personal significance, commonly known as self-esteem." Sites inhabited 28,000 years ago have burials with bodies elaborately prepared in death which indicates a belief in the afterlife.

The Gobekli monuments in Turkey date from 12,000 years ago. They predate the wheel and agriculture. There are no sign of human habitation or cultivation there. Each pillar weighs over ten tons so at least 500 workers were needed to drag, carve, and erect them. Perhaps first came the temple and then the city. Burying food with the dead may have caused sprouting of grain and led to the understanding of agriculture.

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

The Body by Bill Bryson

  Another informative book by Bill Bryson. 

1. How to Build a Human

     Genes provide instructions for building proteins (2 percent). Enzymes speed up chemical changes. Hormones convey chemical messages. Antibodies attack pathogens. Titin controls muscle elasticity.

3. Microbial You

     The only way to spread cold germs is by touch. Coughing, sneezing, and kissing didn't work well. In the US 80 % of antibiotics are fed to farm animals.

4. The Brain

     It uses 20 % of our energy. The limbic system -- hypothalamus, amygdala, hippocampus, etc., regulate memory, appetite, emotions, alertness, etc. Photons have no color, our brain creates our impression. Same for sound. 

5. The Head

     Six universal expressions, fear, anger, pleasure, surprise, disgust and sorrow.  A true smile requires a contraction that we can't control, so we can't fake it. Flashes of emotion betray our true feelings. We have as many as 33 sensory systems, like balance, acceleration, time, appetite, etc. Color-blind lack one of the three types of cones. We have three types of cones compared to four for birds, reptiles, and fish. Being nocturnal we gave up some cones to get rods. If we could hear quieter sounds we would hear the air all the time. We smell the world differently because only half our receptors are in common.

6> The Mouth

     We produce little saliva while we sleep ao microbes can proliferate and give a foul mouth in the morning. We have pain receptors in the tongue which chili peppers aggravate just like a hot spoon. Odors and flavors are created in our head.

8. The Chemistry Department

     As we age the bladder can't expand as much.

9. The Skeleton

     Cutting the wrist is hard to get to the arteries. When you jump from height the legs crumple making death more difficult. The hands and feet have more than half the bones in the body. Tendons connect muscle to bone. Ligaments connect bone to bone. You need 100 muscles to stand up and 12 to move your eyes. Cartilage cannot repair or replenish itself. Slightly overweight people survive diseases better.

and lots more in 23 chapters



Sunday, April 04, 2021

Algorithms to Live By The Computer Science of Human Decisions by Brian Christian and Tom Griffiths

 Despite its title this book is completely non-technical but the authors brilliantly explain in simple terms how algorithms (basically recipes) apply to human problems such as how many should one meet before choosing a spouse. The part that I wanted to especially remember is the last part about algorithms like the prisoners dilemma problem where the best algorithm for an individual is not the optimum which can only be obtained by cooperation. This reminds of a previous book Biotic Regulation and the Environment which shows that species work together to keep the environment able to support life and that going it alone leads to destruction.

Monday, March 29, 2021

Americana by Bhu Srinivasan

 American history treated from an economic point of view is informative and fascinating. The Pilgrims went from England to Holland for religious freedom but cam to America because of the hard conditions in Holland. They needed funds for the expedition and got them from England who needed settlers. His chapters on cotton, steam, canals, railroads, telegraph, gold, and slavery finish the first part. Each chapter highlights the economic importance signified by its title. Slaves were worth $4 billion dollars and the most valuable part of the US economy were not going to be freed without a fight. Politics is interesting but this well-written book shows that it's economics that makes the difference.

Breath The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor

 Effective breathing is really important for good health and long life. In a study by Buteyko "the healthiest patients breathed alike, too: less. They'd inhale and exhale about ten times a minute..." This book contains many other tips about breathing. Appendices give breathing exercises corresponding to each chapter. It takes more than one reading to distill the wisdom here but it is worth the effort.

With Malice Toward None A Life of Abraham Lincoln by Stephen B. Oates

 This is a well-written coverage of Lincoln's life with insight into his personality and his struggles and achievements. In one volume it gives one a feel for the times with an insight into Lincoln who was against slavery his entire life. He wasn't an abolitionist but felt the the country could not remain divided over slavery. He had hoped that if confined to the southern states it would eventually die out.

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

The Elegant Defense: The Extraordinary New Science if the Immune System by Matt Richtel

 The author presents a really interesting of informative discussion of the immune system including many new developments. He makes it interesting relating it to actual cases. In the end it is a bit depressing to see that the patients suffer and die with medications to treat the immune system and then medicines to treat the side effect. By contrast the previous book I discussed, The Energy Cure, Unraveling the Mysteries of Hands-On Healing, describers a healers who cures cancer with no side effects. Western medicine seems to be going in the wrong direction and not taking into account other wisdom.

Thursday, January 28, 2021

The Energy Cure Unraveling the Mystery of Hands-On Healing by William Bengston

 The author is a Sociology professor who learned to heal as a young man. He is able to cure cancers and some other ailments but not everything. He trained students to become healers and it turns out they could do it too. Since healing can operate over a distance it's hard to know if more than one person is present who actually is responsible for the healing. An appendix details the procedure for becoming a healer which involves creating a sequence of distractions to take your conscious mind off the healing process. The mind interferes and must be distracted. He also tested remote viewing and found that it worked sometimes, even if the viewing times were not synchronized. Asian medicine has a history of working with energy, and we should have an open mind to the possibilities.