log web page visits Blaaarrgh!: 01/01/2004 - 02/01/2004

金曜日, 1月 30, 2004

Thoughts
I've been thinking a bit about my sister these past couple of days. I saw an advertisement for skiing in Nagano with the Sylvanian Families. The Sylvanian Families, are a group of collectible, small, furry animal families dressed up like people. The advertisements had pictures of people in human sized animal costumes skiing with little kids; it made me laugh inside as I wondered if my sister would have wanted to go to this event. Anyway, I'm pretty proud of my sister, she's teaching math in Chicago and for all I can tell she is really enjoying it. I feel bad for her though, as we're not expecting to have children anytime soon, my mother has sort of put pressure onto my sister to get married and have a grandchild. We had a talk about that over Christmas break. I admire my sister for living her own life, I know she won't settle for anything less than what she deserves, whatever that may be. I know she occasionally drops by here. Anyway, Sylvanian Families, bizarre creatures of the forest that made me think of my sister.

Movies
The Wife and I watched "Hero" or "Ying Xiong" last night and I must say I was impressed. I don't know if I liked it as much as Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, but it had the same, large scale cinematography. The director, Yimou Zhang, who directed such films as "The Road Home," and "Raise the Red Lantern," did a great job with the visual imagery, and each section of the story is told with a different color. What I think I liked best about the movie was the use of the narrative form to tell the story. The story that is told is a folkstory and so the use of the supernatural feats achieved by wires accompany the narrative don't really spoil the movie. The movie stars Jet Li, Zhang Ziyi, and Donnie Yen. The marital arts are, for the most part, subdued. There is fighting, but it is more similar to a dance then to actual fighting, but in the sense of the story it makes perfect sense and helps tell the story. I also like the interweaving of the stories shared between Nameless, Jet Li's character, and Qin King. As they share their stories the truth of the plot is made known, along with some interesting philosophy, "The highest achievement of a swordsman is to be without a sword." I would recommend you try to see it, but I know if you are in the states the only way that is going to happen is if you import it, as the American movie studios are planning to either not release it, or release a much butchered version of the movie. The region 2 DVD of the movie does have English subtitles, so understanding is not a problem.

That's about all for now, mostly been doing homework, so nothing really interesting. I did take a hike up to Shiro Yama and took some pictures. I love it up there, it is so silent.

月曜日, 1月 26, 2004

Thoughts
Well, things have been going pretty well. I am, however, confronted by both hope, but paralyzed by my own faults. I just had a brief discussion about this with Aku Ender. I'm competing for a scholarship that would be very nice for the payment of my postgraduate studies, but I fear that past indiscretion will place me out of the running before I even start, so I am mounting my willpower to overcome my inherent apathy so that I can realize some of my goals. I think the thing that I fear the most is constructing my CV or resume, depending on who you ask.

I had a good weekend though. I watched a great Japanese horror movie, but I can't remember the title, but it had a TV movie and a theatre release movie. We, being R from Shigaraki and D from Hikone, agreed that the TV movie was of better scarifying quality, or at least more freaky. Other than that my weekend has been primarily devoted to one of my favorite hobbies, roleplaying. D is preparing a D&D game, and R is currently running a most excellent CoC game that The Wife and I are participating in. I know that makes up infinitely nerdy, but I don't mind being nerdy, I'm quite happy with my nerdiness. I've been working on a character concept for the D&D game and finalized it late yesterday evening in the midst of reading about Set Theory. It will take some doing to actually put it all onto a comprehensive backstory, but that's what I love about creating characters. I've always debated writing. Not writing as for to be published, merely a narcissistic fantasy to see my own words appear on paper, or some other medium. Perhaps that is why I'm doing this blog? I'm really too tired to be putting anything up right now, but I just had the urge to see electrons manifest as symbols which combine to give meaning. I found this interesting interview at the "Harper's Magazine" webpage, it pertains to Japan.

The times alone at night are some of the best I have, but only because they are framed by the most exquisite form and friendship of The Wife. It is a great and wonderful thing to gaze upon the face of your best friend as they sleep and take comfort in the fact that no matter what your vices and failures, your friend's are the same in their own way, and that it doesn't really matter. To The Wife, have a good day at work, because I'm not going to be conscious enough to even remember anything you say on your way out the door, so here is a, I love you, on the last vestige of consciousness. Good Night!

木曜日, 1月 22, 2004

Thoughts
As I mentioned, I'm reading a book entitled, Dogs and Demons, by Alex Kerr, and it is a very interesting look into the modern societial problems facing Japan. I'm not going to put anymore large quotes from the book, but I thought a listing of the chapters and the little bylines that accompany each one, as a subtle indicator of what the book actually talks about.

  • The Land: The Construction State

    Our country, as a special mark of favor from the heavenly gods, was begotten by them, and there is thus so immense a difference between Japan and all the other countries of the world as to defy comparison. Ours is a spelndid and blessed country, the Land of the Gods beyond any doubt.
    --Hirata Atsutane(1776-1843)

  • Environment: Cedar Plantations and Orage Ooze

    The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.
    --Omar Khayyam, The Rubaiyat

  • The Bubble: Looking Back

    Naturam expelles furca, tamen usque recurret.

    If you drive nature out with a pitchfork, she will soon find a way back.
    --Horace

  • Information: A Different View of Reality

    Men take their misfortunes to heart, and keep them there. A gambler does not talk about his losses; the frequenter of brothels, who find his favorite engaged by another, pretends to be just as well off without her; the professional streetbrawler is quiet about the fights he has lost; and a merchant who speculates on goods will conceal the losses he may suffer. All act as one who steps on dog dung in the dark.
    --Ihara Saikaku, "What the Seasons Brought to the Almanac Maker" (1686)

  • Bureaucracy: Power and Privilege

    Therefore a wise prince must devise ways by which his citizens are always and in all circumstances dependent on him and on his authority; and then they will always be faithful to him.
    --Machiavelli, The Prince (1513)

  • Monuments: Airports for Radishes

    Aujourd'hui rien.

    Today, nothing.
    --Louis XVI, writing in his diary on the day the Bastille fell (1789)

  • Old Cities: Kyoto and Tourism

    To be happy at home is the ultimate result of all ambition.
    --Dr. Samuel Johnson, The Rambler (1750)

  • New Cities: Electric Wires and Roof Boxes

    Stricken on a journey
    My dreams go wandering round
    Withered fields.
    --Matsuo Basho (1694)

  • Demons: The Philosophy of Monuments

    "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
    Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
    --Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Ozymandias" (1817)

  • Manga and Massive: The Business of Monuments

    Society is like sex in that no one knows what perversions it can develop once aesthetic considerations are allowed to dictate its choices.
    --Marcel Proust

  • National Wealth: Debt, Public and Private

    These days people borrow without the slightest thought, and from the very start they have no notion of ever settling their debts. Since in their own extravagance they borrowed the money just to squander it in the licensed quarters, there is no way for the money to generate enough new money to settle the loan. Consequently they bring hardship to their creditors and invent every manner of falsehood....No matter what excuse some malevolent scheme of yours prompts you to invent, nothing can save you from the obligation of returning an item you have borrowed.
    --Ihara Saikaku, Some Final Words of Advice (1689)

  • Education: Following the Rules

    In governing the people the sage empties their minds but fills their bellies, weakenss their wills but strengthens their bones. He always keeps them innocent of knowledge and free from desire, and ensures that the clever never dare to act.
    --Lao-Tzu, Tao-te Ching

  • After School: Flowers and Cinema

    Tell me, gentle flowers, teardrops of the stars, standing in the garden, nodding your heads to the bees as they sing of the dews and the sunbeams, are you aware of the fearful doom that awaits you?
    --Okakura Kakuzo, The Book of Tea

  • Internationalization: Refugees and Expats

    When the inside had become so solidly inside that all the outside could be outside and the inside inside.
    --Gertrude Stein

  • To Change or Not to Change: Boiled Frog

    If I don't drive around the park,
    i'm pretty sure to make my mark.
    If I'm in bed each night by ten,
    I may get back my looks again.
    If I abstain from fun and such,
    I'll probably amount to much;
    But I shall stay the way I am,
    Because I do not give a damn.
    --Dorothy Parker, "Observation"

  • Conclusion

    E pur si muove.

    But it does move.
    --Galileo Galilei, said under his breath after he was forced to recant his belief that the earth moved around the sun (1632)


Well there you have it, that's the book I'm currently reading for fun. I'm almost done, and I must say he does hit the situation right on the head, but he avoids suggesting action as a foreigner, which is admirable. More later.

月曜日, 1月 19, 2004

Thoughts
It has been almost a week since I posted last, but I finally feel like I have some things to relate. I've been doing a fair amount of reading, both for school, but also for my own enjoyment. I finished Underground by Murakami Haruki, which if you are able to, read it. It is Murakami's attempt to identify the Japanese social pysche within the tragedy of the Sarin gas attacks perpetrated by the religious group Aum. In the first section of the book he interviews 34 victims of the attack. Keep in mind that there were over 5,000 victims over all, but Murakami was only able to get 34 of them to speak to him, for various reasons. They paint a very interesting picture of the attacks. One of the quotes that sticks out in my head,

there were people foaming at the mouth where we were, in front of the Ministry of Trade and Industry. That half of the roadway was absolute hell. But on the other side, people were walking to work as usual. I'd be tending to someone and look up to see passersby glance my way with a "what-on-earth's -happened her?" expression, but not one came over. It was as if we were a world apart. Nobody stopped. They all thought: 'Nothing to do with me.' Some guards were standing right before our eyes at the ministry gate. Here we had three people laid out on the ground, waiting desperately for an ambulance that didn't arrive for a long, long time. Yet nobody at the ministry called for help. They didn't even call us a taxi."

There was another quote from one of the doctors involved, "The paramedics...deserve praise. As one American expert said, to have had five thousand sarin gas victims and only twelve dead is close to a miracle. All thans to the extraordinary efforts of the local units, because the overall emergency network was useless... I called the tokyo Health Bureau, but nobody answered. It was after 8:30 by the time I got through. The person who came on the line said something like, 'Well, we all have our jobs to do.'"

And a final quote from a doctor from the Toho University Omori Hospital Emergency Care Center, "Around 11:00 the police department confirmed it was sarin. Again I found this out on TV. Did anyone think to contact us? Not a word. All our information came from TV."

I find it hard to fully describe the ideas that are running through my head about the first section, the whole situation seemed completely otherworldy, not only in the attacks, but the responses. Most of the victims report trying to get to work normally and just assuming that they caught a really bad cold, even though everyone on the train was coughing, some foaming at the mouth, some just collapsing on the ground. The second part of the book entitled, The Place That Was Promised, was even more interesting in that Murakami spent time trying to interview members of Aum. In the preface to the second part Murakami quotes,

The system reorganizes itself so as to put pressure on those who do not fit in. those who do not fit into the system are "sick"; to make them fit in is to "cure." Thus, the power process aimed at attaining autonomy is broken and the individual is subsumed into the other-dependent power process enforced by the system. to pursue autonomy is seen as "disease."

If you can guess where the quote come for you get 10 points, though Aku Ender is excluded from the guessing process as I've already told him the answer. Regardless, I can see any number of my friends maintaining the same sentiments. What makes it interesting is that in America there is the belief that one should strive towards autonomy. One of Murakami's more interesting points is the focus of media on "Us" vs. "Them" mentality, which allows people to divorce themselves from questioning themselves or even trying to understand "Them," which is why Murakami undertook the second part of the book. Murakami poses the question, despite the "utter nonsense" offered by "their" side, is normal society able to offer "them" a more viable narrative? That, I think, is the crux. Murakami goes on to say, "Haven't we entrusted some part of our personality to some greater System or Order? And if so, has not that System at some stage demanded of us some kind of "insanity"? Is the narrative you now possess really and truly your own? Are your dreams really your own dreams? Might no they be someone else's visions that could sooner or later turn into nightmares?" Thinking once again in terms of culture, society, and pull, I think it is very possibly. Over break I talked with a person whom, initially I had very little contact, but after they left Grand Rapids, felt I could converse with in a much deeper manner, Hobbes. We discussed the "American Dream," that is the dream that you will aquire wealth. It seems now that the dream has become a prison and if someone does not follow that dream they become one of "them." Of course, there are many healthy ways to be "them," but there are numerous instances where the less healthy way has been taken, but the question still remains, does "our" society offer a narrative that is viable. More later.

In regards to other reading, I've also been reading a book called Z (Zed, not Zee): An Introduction to Formal Methods, and I've really been enjoying it. It is one of the first mathematical texts that isn't afraid to deal with things outside of itself. It discusses the semantic arguments of various logic schools as well as the philosophical and linguistic debates surrounding certain areas of formal logic. It has been really great to actually have those things laid bare within the text itself, and while the authore, Antoni Diller, doesn't go into these areas in great detail, he does a good job directing the reader to resources that he has discussed. It is far too easy, in my opinion, to focus a lens overly much to miss the understandings of a field by people in other areas of study, and I think this book does a good job of addressing it. I doubt many of my readers will actually pick the book, but I'm enjoying it.

I also started Dogs and Demons a look at modern Japanese societial problems, written by Alex Kerr. I'm not very far, but it is quite revealing to say the least. In fact, I'm not even done with the first chapter yet, but here is something interesting, in 1998 the construction industry employed 6.9 million people, more than 10 percent of Japan's workforce, and more than double the relative numbers in the United States and Europe. I do want to point out that I think Japan is a cool place, and living here I've experienced a lot of great things, but I also think that finding problems and attempting to fix them is a big part of living and taking part in culture, and so while there is a large number of books on the great history of Japan, the great culture, and the great economy, I think it is necessary to also look at the problems, and I tend to focus on those, not only in Japan, but also America. It is important to realize that no country is doing it right, and it is good to look at both the good and bad aspects of a culture, so, if you find good culture things feel free to put them up in the comments. I know they're out there; I just feel as if the good things can overshadow the faults and let them fester.

And finally some security news...

火曜日, 1月 13, 2004

Thoughts
It has been a while since I've written. I would like to claim being busy as an excuse, but that would be a half-truth as it seems the only thing I have been busy with is laziness. The break was much needed and enjoyed though. The misgivings of moving and changing and returning to a place that doesn't seem to be moving or changing were at the same time less of a problem but impacted me more than I expected them to. Regardless, it was marvelous to see friends again. Unfortunately, with all the fanfare given it, Aku Ender and I were unable to have our sparring match, due in part to my newest weight loss method, the flu. With the flu you can lose up to ten pounds in a day1.

I have been struggling the last couple of days trying to find the words to best describe the return trip. The first thing that comes to mind is the cup-holders on the shopping carts and the hordes of overweight people. It may have seemed there were more because we've been in Japan a full year without being in the States. Also, after going through airport security I just wanted to say, "Remove the stake from your back orifice." It is not that I disagree with security, it is that I do not believe any of the security they are currently enacting actually stops more than the previous security methods. Even the measures to fingerprint do not make much sense to me. The attacks of the eleventh of September were carried out by passengers with legitimate passports and no weapons, even if all current security methods were in place, it is my opinion the attacks would have still occurred. The new security business boom has actually hampered real security and deals in inconvenience and sentimentality; if you feel safer after they have prodded into your private life, then they have done their job. It is not like we actually have a right to privacy, but it would be nice not to have people checking your credit rating and giving it to the FBI without telling you. Seriously, what terrorist is going to be buying things on credit cards? Credit cards are quite traceable, cash is not, so why do we check credit rating on ticket purchases? Sigh, but it is a win-win situation, tell people you are stopping plots and as long as they are not actually occurring, no one can really prove you wrong.

Anyway, besides those security misgivings and the cup-holders on the shopping carts, I really enjoyed being back with family and friends. We had 17 people at The Wife's parents' house, all family. We took several trips up to GR for to see friends as well. The Wife hung out quite a bit with her good friend T, who just had a baby. The first time we saw it, The Wife flipped out. It was amusing, as was watching The Wife work through it. I would have liked to stay and chat with T and her husband L, but they have two cats which disagree with my respiratory system. I had some good talks with some of my exprofessors and asked them for advice. One of them gave me a website that deals in old and out of print books, abebooks. I checked it out, it is pretty nifty. He suggested I look a book entitled The Chinese Black Chamber which is about a US Cryptographer that sets up a cryptoservice for the Chinese pre World War II. It isn't very technical, but he suggested it because I mentioned I was interested in the crossover between cryptography and linguistics.

I'm still trying to sort through everything that happened during our vacation, but I had a fun time just relaxing, but I'm ready to get back into things. Oh, The Wife has a book for teaching oneself Old English, so we'll both be playing around with that I think.

We went to Kyoto, in specific, Gion, on Sunday and wandered through that part of the city. I took some pictures of a Maiko and we stumbled into an independent art musuem and gallery. Next time we are in the area I am going to take a picture of the sign out front which said something to the effect of, The store opens when I open it, and closes when I get tired.

I've got to stop. More later.

1. Some side effects may occur.