Random Acts of Thought

You have arrived at Jeromes space on the Web Welcome to my rambling ground. I have set up this space for a number of reasons. Firstly I am not good at keeping in touch with people. I KNOW I should write letters, make phone calls and such, but I am plain bad at it.A blog seemed a practical way of letting many people at once know how I am doing and what I am up to. Secondly I enjoy talking and thinking. This seemed like a good place to express my views on whatever came to mind.

Name:

The Thoughtful Ape is a primate who is honestly interested in understanding the world he lives in. He is particularly interested in cognitive biases and the limits of intuition. Like most of his species he is both vain and opinionated but is interested in understanding what is true despite these faults. The Thoughtfuls Ape's opinions change and evolve with time. What is posted here reflects his opinion at the date at which it was written.

Monday, October 17, 2005

Pop culture literacy...

When I was young, old shows and movies on rerun were a staple of TV as they had been for the previous decades. At random and in no chronological order I can recall Tarzan movies, Donald Duck, Tom and Cherry, Tweety and Sylvester, lousy Elvis Presley vehicles, Laurel and Hardy, the three stooges, Abott and Costello. It was pretty much impossible to grow up and not be exposed to Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn James Dean, John Wayne, Cary Grant Erol Flynn and all the other classic hollywood icons because their work was on such heavy rotation. So were TV shows such asSgt Bilko, Jackie Gleason and the Honeymooners, Happy Days, The Twilight Zone.
That was then and this is now... Without anyone really noticing it seems to me that these movies and shows have almost entirely disappeared from the pop culture landscape.

Can a black and white movie even be considered mainstream entertainment anymore these days? I dont know... When I was a kid I watched old movies on their own terms. The oldness was not intrusive and rarely even occured to me. Im not sure if that is still the case for kids today.

My generation may be the last that is reasonably wellversed in the whole panorama of 20th century pop culture.. Why? Old stuff is quietly disappearing from main TV and being confined to media ghettos such as the Classic movie channel. Without anyone really noticing all these things have quietly slinked off TV screens around the western world I guess this really got into high gear in the early 90s. There is something creepy recognising the mortality of these icons.
How and why did it happen? In Hollywood I would have to go back to Jaws, and Star Wars, which pretty much begin the modern era of cinematic storytelling. driven primarily by dynamic visuals and RAPID storytelling. Narrative on steroids.... I think a consequence of this is that pre-star wars movies are left looking as creaky and anachronistic to modern teen audiences as old footage of skinny white basketball players in the 1960s NBA.

It could be argued that the beginning of the blockbuster era in the late 70s marks as abrupt a breaking point in the history of popular movies as the birth of rocknroll was to the music.. and I think that as time progresses what came before it will appear as less and less relevant. If I think of my own knowledge of popular music, I am pretty familiar with famous popular music starting from the 1950s. But If I try to go back further back... boom... Its like I run into a black hole. My mental filing cabinet not only thins out but is almost entirely empty. A famous blues or Jazz musician here and there is probably all that it contains.
With the rise of hip-hop culture eclipsing rocknroll in the mid 90s I wonder if we have come to a smiliar rupture. Will The Beatles, Bob Dylan, and Jim Morrison remain part of our shared tribal vocabulary or will they simply vanish into thin air like the pop icons of the 1930s and 40s?
I guess the thing that has really hit me is that this process is not as organic as I had always assumed. At times the curtain comes swiftly down, and for suceeding generations what existed previously becomes almost completely invisible.

Saturday, October 15, 2005

What I'm reading

Im rereading the Stand at the moment... Ive gone on a binge of Early Steven Kings lately.. Salems Lot, The Shining, Night Shift and now The Stand all in a row...
Id actually forgotten just how amazing this book is. Its huge, over a 1000 pages... but they fly by. I guess Im morbid but I am a sucker for end of the world fiction... King describes the gradual breakdown of order with utter believability...
I know the ending is terrible but the first 500 pages are so awesome that you can almost forgive it. The collapse of a civilisation is absolutely fascinating to me. I guess its morbidity.
A few years ago I stumbled upon a website that had archived all of Josef Goebbels columns for the Nazi periodical "Volkischer Beobachter." He wrote this column throughout the Nazi era kept up with his column to the VERY end. It become more and more surreal and aplocalyptic as the end drew nigh. For a while I was completely hooked. What facinates me is just how long people will keep up the pretense of control even in the face of a complete breakdown... It reminds me of the Iraqi information ministers claim that there were no American tanks in Baghdad even while they were in full view of the assembled media behind him.
One of these days I want to read Gibbons Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire..
It chronicles just the sort of epic collapse that I find so absorbing.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

A curious role reversal

I was thinking yesterday about how ironic it is that conservatives and liberals switch roles on the evolution vs creationism debate.
Conservatives who mostly believe in the creative power of free markets unfettered by topdown government control are often utterly unable to apply this thinking to the evolution vs inteligent design/creationism debate... suddenly structure and order are inconceivable without the existence of a benevolent central planner.

Similarly liberal who snub their noses at anything so crass and unsophisticated as a personal god making design decisions from his government office in the sky, become convinced that just such a figure is necessary to produce a "community" ....

What Ive been thinking about

Well its been over a month since Ive posted anything on here.... I have sort of neglected this blog lately but I am committed to making an effort on it and getting some more material up here.... What have I been thinking about lately......Ive been speculating on the interaction of social networks and business networks with technology. I have started drafting an essay on the greatness of Civilisation.I am also putting together a history of the world in 4000 words.All these projects have a common theme. Efficiency of exhange as the engine of progress.In short I believe that the driver of progress in history is the increasing efficiency of networks of all kinds. This process has been ongoing from the beginning of speech to the development of internet search engine...I believe that the degree to which goods services ideas and people can flow freely and efficiently in markets of exchange correlates pretty exactly to the to rate at which a society moves towards wealth progress and understanding and away from ignorance and barbarism...