Mark Chu-Carroll is a Computer Scientist working as a researcher in a corporate lab. My professional interests run towards how to build programming languages and tools that allow groups of people to work together to build large software systems.
In the history of this blog, I've gone after lots of religious folks. I've mocked
lots and lots of christians, a few muslims, some Jews, some newagers, and even one
stupid Hindu.
Today, I'm doing something that's probably going to get me into trouble
with a lot of readers. I'm going to mock a…
If you regularly follow comments on this blog, you'll know that I've been
having a back-and-forth with a guy who doesn't know much about information
theory, and who's been using his ignorance to try to assemble arguments against the
Kolmogorov-Chaitin information-theoretic measure of information…
I'm currently away on a family vacation, and as soon as vacation is over, I'm off on a business trip for a week. And along the way, I've got some deadlines for my book. So to fill in, I'm recycling some old posts. I decided that it's been entirely too long since there was any pathological…
I'm currently away on a family vacation, and as soon as vacation is
over, I'm off on a business trip for a week. And along the way, I've got some
deadlines for my book. So to fill in, I'm recycling some old posts. I decided
that it's been entirely too long since there was any pathological…
Via Tor.com, a meme that I thought looked really interesting.
What were the last three genre books that you purchased? Why did you purchase them?
And do they feel comfortable together?
Daniel Abraham,The Price of Spring (The Long Price Quartet): This is the conclusion to
Abraham's Long Price…
I'm currently away on a family vacation, and as soon as vacation is over, I'm off on a business trip for a week. And along the way, I've got some deadlines for my book. So to fill in, I'm recycling some old posts. I decided that it's been entirely too long since there was any pathological…
I'm currently away on a family vacation, and as soon as vacation is over,
I'm off on a business trip for a week. And along the way, I've got some deadlines
for my book. So to fill in, I'm recycling some old posts. I decided that it's been
entirely too long since there was any pathological…
A brief disclaimer before I start. I do not read Uncommon Descent. I didn't check
it before writing my post yesterday. So I didn't know about the content of Dembski's
post there that I'm about to write about, until I saw Bob O'H's comment on my post this morning.
Yesterday, I explained how he…
As lots of you have heard, William Dembski and Robert Marks just had
href="http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/tocresult.jsp?isYear=2009&isnumber=5208652&Submit32=View+Contents">a
paper published in an IEEE journal. In the last couple of days, I've received about 30
copies of the paper in…
Peter Hamill, "The Unconscious Life": A track from an amazing live
performance. In general, I'm not a big fan of live recordings - you really need
to be there for a live performance. There's a dynamic between the performer
and the audience in live music, and in a recording, you're listening…
It sometimes seems like every day, some "intelligent design" bozo comes out with
another book rehashing the same-old crap. I usually ignore it. But this time, I felt
like the promotional materials for one of the new books really stepped right into my
part of the world, rhetorically speaking, and…
Here's a quick bit of obnoxious bad math. I saw this myself in a link to an AP article via Salon.com, and a reader sent me a link
to the same story via CNN. It's yet another example of what I call a metric error: that is, the use of a measurement in a way that makes it appear to mean something…
I normally try to ignore things like this, but this is just too funny.
In general, I find arguments like this to be extremely silly. This is, basically, like
playing with gematria - only instead of doing real gematria (which can be quite silly enough),
it's like our friend "Gotcha" - mixing…
As long-time readers know, I'm an amateur musician, from a very musical family. My sister is a music teacher, and my brother used to be a professional french horn player and composer. I personally play classical clarinet, a very wide range of folk-flutes, and some bluegrass banjo.
As long as I've…
Russian Circles, "Youngblood": post rock, in the Mogwai style. Very nice stuff. Not the
most exciting PR band around, but good.
The Flower Kings, "World Without a Heart": typical FK. Since I pretty much worship the ground
that Roine Stolte walks on, you can guess what I think of this.
Darcy…
An alert reader just sent me, via "Media Matters", the single dumbest real-life
video clip that I have ever seen. In case you've been living under a rock, Bill O'Reilly is
a conservative radio and TV talk-show host. He's known for doing a lot of really obnoxious
things, ranging from sexually…
My wife is chinese. So in our house, comfort food is often something chinese. For
her, one of her very favorite things is dumplings, also known as pot-stickers. They're
time consuming to make, but not difficult. They're really delicious, well worth the effort.
They're best with a homemade…
This morning, my good friend Orac sent me a link to an interesting piece
of bad math. Orac is the guy who really motivated me to start blogging; I
jokingly call him my blogfather. He's also a really smart guy, not to mention
a genuinely nice one (at least for a transparent box of blinking lights…
We've been having some load trouble with the ScienceBlogs server, and the
400+ comment over on the high school reunion thread seem to be resulting in a lot of timeouts. In an attempt to reduce the number of errors, I'm closing the thread on that post, and asking folks to post any new comments here.
John Corigliano, "Fantasia on an Ostinato": Corigliano is absolutely my
favorite modern composer. He writes stunningly beautiful music. This is a wonderfully
subtle piece: unaccompanied solo piano. Just incredible.
Isis, "Not in Rivers, But in Drops": The transition between the last one
and…
One of the things that confused my when I started reading about chaos is easy to
explain using what we've covered about attractors. (The image to the side was created by Jean-Francois Colonna, and is part of his slide-show here)
Here's the problem: We know that things like N-body gravitational…
This comment thread has gotten long enough to start causing some server
load problems. As a result, I'm closing the comments here, and I've added a new
post where discussions of this past can continue.
If you're not interested in completely off-topic personal rambling, stop reading now. This is…
Sorry for the slowness of the blog; I fell behind in writing my book, which is on a rather strict schedule, and until I got close to catching up, I didn't have time to do the research
necessary to write the next chaos article. (And no one has sent me any particularly
interesting bad math, so I…
One of my pet peeves about people and math is that most
people don't really have a clue of what math is. I've been writing
this blog for something over three years, and by the standards of
a lot of people, I've almost never written about math.
Yesterday, my son's kindergarten class had a picnic.…
This is an edited repost of something I wrote nearly three years ago. You can
see the original post and comments here.
Over at Dr. Isis's blog, there's a post answering a reader's question about whether to tell her
postdoc advisor about her troubles with clinical depression. I agree with Isis's…
About a month ago, I decided to make a nice special meal for my wife for mothers' day. I asked
her what she wanted, and she said duck. This made me happy, since I consider duck to be one
of the most wonderful foods in the entire universe.
I decided that instead of making one of my regular duck…
I do all of the cooking in my house; my wife amazing at baking, but she's just totally lost when it comes to cooking. But given my commute, it's hard to start making a nice dinner when I get home, and have it done in time to be able to eat, and have some time with my kids before they go to bed. So…
In my first chaos post, I kept talking about dynamical systems without bothering to define them. Most people who read this blog probably have at least an informal idea of what a dynamical system is. But today I'm going to do a quick walkthrough of what a dynamical system is, and what the basic…
One mathematical topic that I find fascinating, but which I've never had
a chance to study formally is chaos. I've been sort of non-motivated about
blog-writing lately due to so many demands on my time, which has left me feeling somewhat guilty towards those of you who follow this blog. So I…
The Flower Kings, "The Truth Will Set you Free": One of the superlong Flower Kings opuses - in fact, the first thing by the Flower Kings that I ever heard.
Solas, "Pastures of Plenty": a stunning version of the old Guthrie song, played by one of my favorite Irish bands. It's a brilliant cover -…