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  1. Link to Post #21
    United States Avalon Member edina's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    I recently came upon this article by Philip Ball. He's an almost prolific science writer out of the UK. Here's he's talking about a new project from Marginalia Review of Books (MRB) called The New Biology Project, and mentions Nick Lane will participate as well. Nick Lane's work has been of keen interest to me for many years, now. I think, Wade Frazier has mentioned his work in his thread on the forum, as well.

    MRB's banner says, "deep learning for the digital age" which seems to fit this concept of long form... when I perused the site I thought of this thread. The whole site seems to be a good source of long form content.

    (This article is a little over 1500 words. I remember when long-form was considered about 10,000 words, and 1500 was short-form, so maybe this isn't quite long-form but in context of the site and project may fit the idea of long-form)

    Both of MBR's projects are interesting to me and I plan to revisit the site often.

    In this article, Philip Ball slips a little bit in 'science-speak' but is mostly readable. (I've added emphasis of interest to me and links.) Hope you enjoy.

    After the Genetic Paradigm: Why We Need a New Biology

    Quote The New Biology project is seeking to establish new narratives for biology that recognize the advances in understanding that have happened over the past several decades. I have attempted to describe some of the most important of these advances in my book How Life Works and to weave them into an integrated picture of how lifeless molecular components collaborate to generate agential organisms. I argue that recent research in molecular, cell, and developmental biology has made it no longer tenable to suggest—as has typically been the case during the ascendancy of the gene-centred view of biology—that organisms are simply “readouts” of the information or the blueprint encoded in the DNA of the genome. I argue too that, while some of this new understanding has depended, and must continue to depend, on what is commonly called a reductionistic view that looks at processes at the molecular level, this does not mean that cells or organisms should be understood through a machine metaphor. Considering organisms as machines made by genes—and indeed for genes—does not do justice to the marvelous way nature works, and risks devaluing life itself.

    This new perspective fits in many ways with what cell, developmental and organismal biologists, and even some evolutionary biologists, are increasingly saying. The “genetic blueprint” picture implicit in the Modern Synthesis of Darwinian theory and genetics has long been at odds with the developmental
    view: the idea that there is some kind of plan in the genome that is simply enacted during development does not sit easily with the evident fact that the developmental process accommodates contingency and accident, and is often able to respond to perturbations in an “intelligent” manner that looks purposive. As our understanding of developmental processes has increased, these tensions have become ever more apparent. As evolutionary biologist Andreas Wagner has put it,

    Quote The architects of the modern synthesis focused on the genotype at the expense of the organism and its phenotype. They neglected the marvelous complexity of organisms with their trillions of cells, each inhabited by billions of molecules whose functions are themselves incredibly complex. And they neglected how all this complexity unfolds from a single fertilised cell, and how genes contribute to this unfolding. By neglecting this complexity, the architects of the modern synthesis effectively ignored its product: the organism itself.


    In an article in the journal Development, biologist Duygu Özpolat and colleagues say that

    Quote Although many types of explanations are possible for understanding how a biological phenomenon works (e.g. on a molecular, genetic, cellular, organismal, biophysical or systems level), molecular/genetic mechanisms are widely perceived to be the gold standard for a mechanistic explanation of development.

    They caution against “seeking simple genetic explanations” and say we need to “reduce our reliance on reductionism and allow for conceptual advances at any level to be recognized based on their contribution to the field.” According to developmental biologist Alfonso Arias Martinez, “Cells, and not DNA, are the master builders of life.

    And in an article in Cells and Development, biologists Alan Rodrigues and Amy Shyer say that “viewing life as if it emanated from a set of molecular machines is the main bottleneck in addressing key questions in biology.” Citing How Life Works, they add that “the need for deep conceptual thinking has never been more pressing, despite the fact that many key figures in biology have taken a technocratic focus that has downplayed the role of conceptual thinking.”

    These are just a few examples of what seems now to be a sea change in the way many biologists regard their subject. I argue that one sign of this shift is that biology is becoming more ready to accept and to speak of concepts long considered taboo: in particular, agency, purpose, and meaning. To some, these notions are suspiciously mystical or teleological, seeming to suggest some hidden design or motive force behind the way organisms work. That, however, is to misunderstand what the words connote in this context. There should be no question that living organisms do exhibit goals and behave purposefully: a suggestion unproblematic to most organismal biologists, at least. The traditional view that such behavior is merely “as if”—a kind of automated, mindless activity impelled by genes—was always questionable, for it shifts all agency to mere inert pieces of DNA and then demands that this “merely metaphorical” way of speaking performs real action in the world. That picture is all the more untenable now that we better understand the processes once vaguely designated as “gene action” and recognize that they involve multidirectional information flow to and from all levels of the organizational hierarchy of living things. It is this openness of organisms as living systems that enables them to exhibit genuine agency at the level of the whole: to develop goals and to select actions and make decisions that help them to be achieved.

    I was encouraged that this new picture is being increasingly accepted in biology by a recent conversation with the Nobel laureate Paul Nurse, who has agreed to be involved in this project. Nurse, whose celebrated work on the cell cycle could seem the paradigm of reductionistic molecular biology, readily acknowledged that agency and purpose are central to the living world. He added that some biologists resist that idea through an understandable but mistaken view that such things can only arise through human-level cognition involving conscious deliberation. “The word purpose is really to, in a short form, describe that something is acting as a whole to deliver something for the whole organism”, Nurse said.

    Meaning might seem an even more contentious term in biology, seeming as it might to refer to something existential and perhaps even spiritual. But in biology there is no need to take that view. Meaning refers simply to the sifting of information that an agential entity—a cell or an organism—potentially receives from its environment (and indeed that arises within its internal state), so that some of this information (that which might be useful in achieving a goal) can be integrated into a decision, while some (that which does not improve the effectiveness of such a decision) is ignored. Such attribution of meaning means that organisms are sensitive to context and to their own history—and also, crucially, that they benefit from the evolutionary learning process that really is conveyed in the genes.

    All of this has long been up for discussion within the philosophy of biology. What we are particularly concerned about in The New Biology project is to connect what might seem like somewhat abstract discussions about the nature of life to real laboratory research. In fact it is that research, often into the minutiae of molecular and cell biology, that convinces us that this is the right time to be looking for new narratives. We can now begin to identify the molecular processes that underlie and facilitate the agency, adaptiveness and sensitivity of living organisms and their ability to innovate and improvise in the face of circumstances for which evolution could never have anticipated the “right response.” We see this, for example, in the way that many of the key interactions between molecules in cells do not have a precise on/off digital logic, but rather, operate according to fuzzy principles in which the molecules can cooperate with many different partners in a context- dependent manner. We see it in the way biomolecules tend to act collectively, often in combinatorial ways such that any given molecule can play a role in various different (and sometimes diametrically opposed) decisional outcomes, depending on the company it keeps. All of this makes it clear why, not only are the lines of connection between a gene and a trait (a phenotype) typically complex and convoluted but they are also highly contextual, to the extent that we cannot regard a gene as prescribing (being “for”) the trait but only as a source of resources that partake in such outcomes. As a result, the “causes” of organismal behaviour—including disease outcomes—often cannot be traced back to the genome in any meaningful manner.

    So the question then becomes: what stories should we tell about all this complexity? That is the project’s goal, to which end it will begin with a series of interviews (of which that with Nurse was the first) with leading thinkers and researchers in a range of disciplines, including cell and developmental biology, the origin of life, genetics, and the philosophy of biology. Nick Lane, a biochemist at University College London who has emerged as one of the most inventive thinkers in modern biology, will be a co-leader, and the project will build towards a symposium in which the participants will debate ways to understand and to present the changing picture of how life works.

    The conviction behind the New Biology project is not only that such stories can be found—and that they can not only better inform the public about health and biomedical technologies but also improve professional discourse—but that they will prove to be far richer, more productive, and more satisfying than any reductive picture based on genetic blueprints. Most of all, we hope that these new narratives can help restore a sense of awe and reverence at the fact that life has arisen, at least on this planet, from lifeless matter, and has thereby introduced purpose and meaning to the universe.
    Last edited by edina; 22nd April 2025 at 19:01.
    I happily co-create a balanced world culture harmonized with Infinite Intelligence. ~ edina (Renaissance Humanity)

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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    Sailor James talks about his sailing experiences after taking his 30 foot Triteia from California to Hawaii to ? to New Zealand, Oz, and into plastic-garbage-afflicted Indonesia.

    Feel like this should be cross posted to the RANCH thread. Hi, Bluegreen!

    Boat is now in Indonesia, waited out the bad weather season. James is back on board, about to continue his circumnav voyage. If I understood correctly, he plans to end this next year in/at Brazil. Said that the Indian Ocean is the toughest ocean (above the Southern Ocean), worse than the whole Pacific.

    L = 1:15:37

    Second Live Stream of the day after Audio Issues

    Sailing Triteia

    154K subscribers

    Posted June 8, 2025

    Last edited by Johnnycomelately; 9th June 2025 at 09:07.

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    Argentina Avalon Member Vicus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    MindMatters: Artificial Stone: Has Marcell Foti Cracked the Megalithic Code?

    In this episode of Mind Matters, Marcell Foti shares his groundbreaking Natron Theory, challenging conventional explanations for the construction of ancient megalithic structures. Foti, an IT professional turned independent researcher, proposes that ancient civilizations used a chemical process involving natron — a carbonate mineral used in ancient Egypt for mummification and as a detergent — to etch and dissolve granite into a moldable "waterglass" slurry, which could then be cast into precise stone shapes. Demonstrating with small-scale experiments, he explains how this method accounts for the seamless, complex features of structures like those in Peru and Egypt, offering a compelling alternative to traditional theories of chiseling. Follow Marcel's ongoing experiments and insights on Twitter and check out his book, The Natron Theory, for a deeper dive into this revolutionary idea.

    https://www.sott.net/article/499939-...egalithic-Code




    https://grahamhancock.com/fotim1/
    Last edited by Vicus; 9th June 2025 at 10:30.

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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    Quote Posted by Vicus (here)
    MindMatters: Artificial Stone: Has Marcell Foti Cracked the Megalithic Code?

    In this episode of Mind Matters, Marcell Foti shares his groundbreaking Natron Theory, challenging conventional explanations for the construction of ancient megalithic structures. Foti, an IT professional turned independent researcher, proposes that ancient civilizations used a chemical process involving natron — a carbonate mineral used in ancient Egypt for mummification and as a detergent — to etch and dissolve granite into a moldable "waterglass" slurry, which could then be cast into precise stone shapes. Demonstrating with small-scale experiments, he explains how this method accounts for the seamless, complex features of structures like those in Peru and Egypt, offering a compelling alternative to traditional theories of chiseling. Follow Marcel's ongoing experiments and insights on Twitter and check out his book, The Natron Theory, for a deeper dive into this revolutionary idea.

    https://www.sott.net/article/499939-...egalithic-Code




    https://grahamhancock.com/fotim1/
    Hi Vicus. I got to about 9:15 (of 1:11:30) of this, and am convinced it’s bullsh*t. He talks about rocks like they are all the same, yet we know which quarries most of the megalith stones came from.

    And I don’t like his cocksure attitude.

    Cheers anyways, sir, and thank you for your input.

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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    Putting this away for a rainy day, three friends’ banter, cheer me up.

    Gonky won’t say what his callsign means, inside joke between these guys, apparently NSFW.

    Fighter-jet pilots, all alphas, good talk. L = 2:23:43.

    Season 5 Ep 21: Join Mover, Gonky, and WOMBAT tonight at 8pm ET!

    The Mover and Gonky Show

    69.1K subscribers

    Streamed June 9, 2025

    “Three pilots, one mission: talk aviation/cool stuff, stir the pot, and maybe drop a fact or two in between the jokes.”


    Last edited by Johnnycomelately; 11th June 2025 at 09:52.

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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    Random great talk that belongs nowhere else on Avalon, yet. We should at least have a thread for great random stories.

    Fighter pilot's blindness leads to medical miracle

    Old Fliers

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    Posted June 22, 2025

    “On 15 August 1940, Cleaver was shot down during combat over Winchester.
    He wasn’t wearing goggles.
    The canopy of his Hurricane was hit by cannon shells from a German bomber, causing shrapnel from an exploding cannon shell to infiltrate his cockpit, Perspex fragments shattered into his face and both eyes. What happened next would benefit millions of people world-wide.”


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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    Complete public board meeting of the US NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board).

    Focus is the incident at Austin TX on Feb 4, 2023, where an airliner on close approach called go-around after seeing another airliner starting its takeoff roll.

    Human factors, training, relevant safety equipment both on the two aircraft and at the airport, previous similar incidents and subsequent NTSB recommendations.

    The “questions” portion, as noted in the timestamps in description, are by the 5 board members, of several experts. So that’s the majority (80%) of total meeting time.

    NTSB Chair, Jennifer Homendy, is frustrated that the FAA has not acted to fulfill previous recommendations by NTSB.

    Homendy has drawn sharp criticism by YouTuber Dan Gryder, who analyses aircraft incidents under the banner DTSB (D for Dan). She had no previous aviation industry experience, not a pilot, is just a professional administrator. In this meeting, she runs the show well, but her lack of familiarity with the nuts and bolts of aviation operations is evident.

    L = 3:32:01

    Southwest 708 & FedEx 1432 Austin NTSB Board Meeting

    AIRBOYD


    506K subscribers
    Posted 6.June 24, 2025

    “ Credit: NTSB https://data.ntsb.gov/Docket?ProjectI...

    Open
    Mike Hauf 12:52
    Brian Soper 28:37
    Dr. Dujuan Sevillian 36:38
    Kyle Garner 46:07
    Questions 52:42
    Close

    The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.”


    Last edited by Johnnycomelately; 25th June 2025 at 08:56.

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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    L= 49:03, am now at 27:++, history nerds might like this. US getting loads/heaps of German airplanes, following the end of WWII.

    The Reaper Was A Carrier Full Of The Luftwaffe's Secret Weapons

    Not A Pound For Air To Ground

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    On July 19th 1945, the escort carrier HMS Reaper departed Cherbourg on her way to New York. On her decks was a treasure trove of German aircraft technology, on its way to the USA for examination and exploitation. This video catalogues the aircraft onboard the Reaper and the US assessment of the different types.


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    Canada Avalon Member Johnnycomelately's Avatar
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    Default Re: Great storytelling, longform, random topics.

    Couldn’t find a thread about Genghis Khan.

    At about a thousand years ago he ruled the largest contiguous land empire ever.

    G K’s story from before birth, by historian Mr. Jack Weatherford. I’m at about a half hour in, of L=4:30:01, and Mr. Khan is just beginning his collaborative rescue of his first wife. Previously, we learned that his mother had been kidnapped out of wedlock, and he was born into captivity and later abandoned with his mother and several older siblings on the harsh Steppe as winter approached.

    James Mitchener’s historical fiction Poland describes GK’s easternmost exploits. Harrowing stuff.

    Another history note, ~1k years ago was when the Vikings were seeding red-headedness into the British Isles. Odd that we don’t have record of those powers facing off or even communicating. At some point, probably after the Mongols withdrew, the Vikings trafficked Europe-region slaves down into the Middle East, by river transport.

    Back to it! 😳


    Jack Weatherford: Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire | Lex Fridman Podcast #476

    Lex Fridman


    4.77M subscribers

    July 31, 2025

    Quote OUTLINE:
    0:00 - Introduction
    0:56 - Origin story of Genghis Khan
    42:42 - Early battles & conquests
    55:23 - Power
    57:45 - Secret History
    1:11:10 - Mongolian steppe
    1:14:27 - Mounted archery and horse-riding
    1:22:48 - Genghis Khan's army
    1:39:00 - Military tactics and strategy
    1:51:24 - Wars of conquest
    1:55:48 - Dan Carlin
    2:05:49 - Religious freedom
    2:21:36 - Trade and the Silk Road
    2:30:21 - Weapons innovation
    2:31:52 - Kublai Khan and conquering China
    3:13:43 - Fall of the Mongol Empire
    3:40:38 - Genetic legacy
    3:50:32 - Lessons from Genghis Khan
    4:00:48 - Human nature
    4:03:58 - Visiting Mongolia
    4:23:27 - Lex: Dan Carlin
    4:26:17 - Lex: Gaza




    Edit, am in the horse timestamp, “1:14:27 - Mounted archery and horse-riding”. Cool stories. Regarding horsemanship training, race riders/jockeys were age-limited to 6 years old, started at about 3 years old. Bareback, and with horses trained to race with 3-6 year olds. Bonkers, and genius lol.


    Edit +, “ 1:22:48 - Genghis Khan's army”. Thoughtful and accommodating boss, consulted with generals who had lost battles/campains, went to the sites with them and learned and advised them, rather than what other rulers did — kill the loser leaders.


    Edit re content #3, 1:39:00 - Military tactics and strategy, plus 1:51:24 - Wars of conquest. Full of nightmares and ~miracles. I was going to call them Fausian, or maybe Friedrich NietzscheIan but not sure. Any philosophy boffins here?

    1:55:48 - Dan Carlin, is starting off darlingly.
    Last edited by Johnnycomelately; 1st August 2025 at 10:49. Reason: Syntax, for form.

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