#sociology

rhysy@diaspora.glasswings.com

A nice, broad-ranging history-summary, with some passing comments about how we decide what's scientific and what's not.

The story in the East Oregonian, a small paper, ran with the words ‘saucer-like aircraft’. But, when the Associated Press picked up the story, the description got even more garbled. What Arnold said he’d seen were flying craft shaped like a crescent with ‘wings’ that swept back in an arc. Somehow the AP wire story misinterpreted Arnold’s description, leading The Chicago Sun to run a story with a spectacular frontpage headline: ‘Supersonic Flying Saucers Sighted By Idaho Pilot.’ The Chicago Sun piece triggered an avalanche. Within six months, the flying saucer story ran in more than 140 newspapers across the US. Even more remarkable, an epidemic of flying-saucer sightings began to sweep the nation. By the end of summer in 1947, ‘flying saucers’ were officially a thing.

A classic case of going viral and nobody bothered to check. An entire psychological phenomenon spawned by a misquote.

One of the most important lessons I learned from the Arnold affair is the power of a story. Arnold saw the first flying saucer, and his sighting begins a critical thread in the public’s willingness to go along on evidence-free rides of thinking about aliens and UFOs. It was where the idea of technologically advanced, interstellar life here on Earth right now enters the public consciousness as a major phenomenon. But almost as quickly as UFOs appear, so does a UFO culture that tilts towards the incredulous and the paranoid, marked by a willingness to take anything as evidence. Of course, one could find many individuals taking an interest in UFOs while keeping their sceptical sensibilities, who just genuinely wanted to know what was going on. But, as a cultural phenomenon, public discussion of UFOs would come to be dominated by questionable evidence, conspiracy theories and outright hoaxes... What’s important about the Roswell story is how loose even the idea of evidence becomes.

For a time, I’d become enamoured of von Däniken’s book Chariots of the Gods (1968) and its claims that many archaeological mysteries could best be explained by ancient aliens who had once come to visit Earth. That time ended when, one evening, I chanced upon a PBS documentary called The Case of the Ancient Astronauts (1977). It presented interviews with scientists who had actually spent their lives studying the subjects of von Däniken’s ancient alien speculations. The simplicity with which hard-won archaeological evidence trumped von Däniken’s claims left me both angry (I felt duped by his book) and exhilarated. The establishment of proper standards for what counts as evidence is what set the archaeologists apart from von Däniken’s wishful fantasies. The experience of that stark difference ended my own interest in UFOs and visiting aliens of any historical epoch.

Yeah, likewise pretty much. I wouldn't discourage any younger readers from the pseudoscience stuff because it's definitely got an interesting, inspirational edge to it... I'd just point them in the direction of the proper science as well.

With the giggle factor receding for the scientific search for life, where does that leave UFOs and UAPs? There, the waters remain muddied. It is a good thing that pilots feel they can report sightings without fear of reprisal as a matter of air safety and national defence. And an open, transparent and agnostic investigation of UAPs could offer a masterclass in how science goes about its business of knowing rather than just believing.

#UFOs
#Space
#Sociology
#Psychology
#Politics

https://aeon.co/essays/how-ufos-almost-killed-the-search-for-life-in-the-universe

rhysy@diaspora.glasswings.com

This is something I've been trying to get around to for several monthsbut just haven't had the time : reviewing Rutger Bregman's truly dire "Human Kind". Bregman claims that human beings are innately lovely and that only civilisation, with its whole notion of "private property" leads us astray. His ideal lifestyle choice appear to be to live in the jungle in the lifestyle of an anarcho-communist-hippie-monkey, preferably ones that happen to be caught in a war zone. Yes, really.

A totally mad twat, this one. My review ended up being overly-long because his previous book was very good. I feel the guy does have some good critical thinking skills (he certainly has some good journalistic ones, digging deep beyond the popular reports to figure out what really happened) but he's completely enthralled to his own ideology.

#History
#Sociology

https://decoherency.blogspot.com/2024/05/review-human-kind.html

rhysy@diaspora.glasswings.com

Doesn't actually contain anything much relating to the title, but interesting (if a bit on the short side) nonetheless.

I'm happy to offload navigational skills to my phone, but I hate it when my phone starts auto-suggesting answers to people's messages. I don't really want to offload my social cognition to a computer – I'd rather engage in real communication from my mind to another person's.

The question is, what tasks are so dangerous, dull, demeaning or repetitive that we're delighted to outsource them, and what do we feel are important to be done ourselves or by other humans? If I was going to be judged in a trial, I don't necessarily want an algorithm to pass a verdict on me, even if the algorithm is demonstrably very fair, because there's something about the human solidarity of people in society standing in judgement of other people. At work, I might prefer to have a relationship with human colleagues – to talk to and explain myself to other people – rather than just getting the work done more efficiently.

Well I'd certainly want such an algorithm's output to be at least considered in the trial ! Dunno if I'd want it to be the only deciding factor... probably not, but if such a rational truth engine could be devised (it probably can't), I want the jury to know what it came up with. But the point stands - some things we want to offload, some we don't.

There's a double danger to anthropomorphism. The first is that we treat machines like people, and project personalities, intentions and thoughts onto artificial intelligences. Although these systems are extraordinarily sophisticated, they don't possess anything like the human sense. And it's very dangerous to act as though they do. For a start, they don't have a consistent worldview; they are miraculously brilliant forms of autocomplete, working on pattern recognition, working on prediction. This is very powerful, but they tend to hallucinate and make up details that don't exist, and they will often contain various forms of bias or exclusion based upon a particular training set. But an AI can respond fast and plausibly to anything, and as human beings, we are very predisposed to equate speed and plausibility with truth. And that's a very dangerous thing.

The other danger of anthropomorphising technology is that it can lead us to think of and treat ourselves like we're machines. But we are nothing like large language models: we are emotional creatures with minds and bodies who are deeply influenced by our physical environment, by our bodily health and well-being. Perhaps most importantly, we shouldn’t see [a machine’s] efficiency as a model for human thriving. We don't want to optimise ourselves with perfectible components, within some vast consequentialist system. The idea that humans can have dignity and autonomy and potential is very ill-served by the desire to optimise, maximise and perfect ourselves.

#Technology
#AI
#Sociology

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20240404-why-we-have-co-evolved-with-technology-tom-chatfield-wise-animals

waynerad@diasp.org

"Generation Z and the transformation of American adolescence: how How Gen Z's formative experiences shape its politics, priorities, and future."

They don't define "Generation Z", but it's generally taken to mean people born between about the late 1990s and the early 2010s. People who would be children of Gen X.

This article has a compendium of statistics on Gen Z and how Gen Z differers from millennials and older generations: religious service attendance, part time jobs, having a boyfriend/girlfriend as a teen, bullying, drug & alcohol use, time with friends and social media, loneliness, video games, parental influence on education, finding a career, political polarization and gender divide, distrust of political leaders, LGBT identification, gender discrimination.

Generation Z and the transformation of American adolescence: how How Gen Z's formative experiences shape its politics, priorities, and future

#psychology #sociology #generations

digit@iviv.hu
digit@iviv.hu

about 25 years ago, i was iffy on the word "authoritarianism", in seeing how it could be used/interpreted to mean the authority of any who author, and that we each and all could. ... and that of course stands in contrast to the disempowering impositional likely-centralised top-down monstrosity the word may more generally conjure, in corrupted power.
... ... ... ... .. ... ... ... ... ... ... [and maybe i'm due vocabulary improvements here]
... thought occurs after i found myself again fear-quoting "authoritarianism" in this comment: https://iviv.hu/posts/1504955#c4ccea303cef013ccab2723c915ba918
#authoritarianism #etymology #words
#politics #politicialphilosophy #sociology
[ps, also reminds of when sunyata wanted to get an even more pleasant spin word yet than authoritarianism, like they wanted to get a thicker curtain for the man to hide behind. lol, wat.]

tpq1980@iviv.hu

#Trends between total crime rate per 100,000 of population in 287 localities in #England and #Wales and percentage of locality population that is not '#White #British' in those 287 localities, 2023.

This is an #analysis of official #UK #government #ONS #data that shows quite clearly that as the #percentage of population that is not 'White British' goes down, so does the total rate of #crime per 100k of #population.

In other words, as the percentage of 'non-White-British' within the population of a locality goes up, the total crime rate per 100k of population also goes up.

#ethnography #correlation #statistics #un #globalism #immigration #massmigration #criminality #truth #facts #empiricism #usa #anthropology #sociology #ukgovernment #demographics #law #tories

rhysy@diaspora.glasswings.com

Would it make a difference if it was Mrs, Miss or Ms Coronavirus, I wonder...

When it comes to our health, however, anthropomorphism may protect us from risk. In the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, for example, they gave participants one of two messages offering information about ways to avoid infection. The only difference between the messages was the level of anthropomorphism – whether the text referred to "the coronavirus" or "Mr Coronavirus", for example.

"You can meet Mr Coronavirus through contact with an infected person when they cough or sneeze. You can also run into him when you touch a surface or object that has the virus on it, then touch your eyes, nose, or mouth," they were told. "There's currently no vaccine to keep Mr Coronavirus at bay, but you can protect yourself and others by keeping your hands clean, not touching your face, avoiding close contact with people outside of your household, and taking other common-sense measures to limit your exposure (eg staying home)."

"The idea is to make the disease seem as if it is up to something and in motion," Wang and her colleagues explained to BBC Future in an email. Despite constituting relatively small differences in language, the personification of the virus increased people's intentions to comply with the recommendations.

To replicate the result, the team conducted similar experiments for a variety of other diseases – and found very similar results each time. Whether the participants were examining information about vaccination for yellow fever, screening for breast cancer, sunscreen to avoid skin cancer, or means to reduce high blood pressure, messages that anthropomorphised the relevant illness encouraged greater compliance with the medical advice.

#Sociology

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20230914-why-we-personify-threatening-events

digit@iviv.hu

#teacherandlearner #teacherandlearnerexperiment
as pointed out amidst misinfo flies in the ointment in https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QB5Z-wfPnvY
* "please continue."
* "the experiment requires you to continue."
* "it is absolutely essential that you continue."

* "you have no other choice but to continue."

says the authority, the expert, in that experiment. ... two thirds kept pushing the button, in deference to the expert, even killing the human subject right in front of them screaming in agony.
"ordinary people". weaponised people. obedient people. mass murder complicity compliant people.

#authority #experts

... " #Evil "

"If only it were so simple! If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them.
But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own hear?"
– Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago.

#wecanstillmendthis #facethehorror #wecanstillmendthis
#philosophy #sociology #anthropoogy #psychology #wisdom

digit@iviv.hu

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MY0XGtijebQ
How To Harness The Power Of “Magic” (Scientifically Proven) w/ Dean Radin PhD :: Duration: 01:36:53 :: Views: 22,977 :: Uploader: Aubrey Marcus :: Uploaded: 2023-03-08 :: 1,248 likes
#health #aubreymarcus #deanradin
#placebo #psychicphenomena #science #belief #technologies #tools #dogma #magic #mysticism #mysticexperiences #space #outterspace #innerspace #psychology #sociology #civilisationshift #paradigmshift #nosecrets #radicaltransparency #gnosis #channelling #clairevoyance #telepathy #clairesentience #supression #oppression #parasitism #deception #wisdom #spiritualmonopoly #spiritualdemocracy #spiritualscience #spiritscience #witch #witchcraft #witchhunt #hypocrisy #catholicism #catholicmagic #secondcoming #christinall #socialcontrol #demonic #denomic #domination #denominational #spritualhegemony #spiritualstultification #decievers #agnotology #wilfulignorance #censorship #curiousity #taboo #religioustrappings #separationofchurchandstate #medicalindustrialcomplex #deathcult #murdercult #medicalmadness #churchofmoney #scientism #corruption #theylie #statusquo #confirmationbias #comfortinglies #ifignoranceisblissgivemeagony #oppressive #burnedatthestake #cancelled #falseequivalence #qualitativedifferences #ostricised #suicided #inquisition #hovering #levitation #creation #competition #reverie #prayer #pastlives #thislife #resonance #waterresonance #watercutting #sympatheticresonance #fieldofbelief #collectiveunconscious #morphicresonance #disbelief #possibility #openpotential #humility #miasma #vibe #lifttheworld #sourcery #secrecy #laboratory #experiments #projection #negativity #intentionology #belieffield #miracles #thetruthwellout #entertainment #art #magicisreal #fantasy #myths #modernmyths #theurgy #psychicability #ayahuasca #profound #eukarot #trance #coincidence #justcoincidence #suspensionofbelief #limitingbeliefs #nonbelief #presence #aerokinesis #aerokineticeffect #thewindcame #thebatsswirlled #repeatability #livereality #irreproduceable #biases #cantgettherefromhere #livescience #canneverstepintothesamerivertwice #food #cooking #intention #intentionalcooking #grace #blessed #control #study #clinicaltrial #chocolate #mood #doubleblindcontrolledstudy #confoundingfactors #statisticallysignificant #statisticallysignificantresults #monks #expectations #beleifdrivenoutcome #beliefmodulatedeffects #placeboplus #weallhavethecapability #mendwards #blessedwater #merlinclasswizards #psychoticbreak #meditation #perception #geomagnetism #lunarcycles #moonphases #solarstorms #solarflares #solarweather #weildbelief #discipline #fascinating #intriguing #curious #psychedelics #psychedelia #psychenauts #connection #timeline #betterworld #searching #finding #thepuzzle #thestory #dystopian #existentialrisk #heartsknow #anotherreality #themorebeautifulworld