The Big Picture |
- Stock Market Crash of October 29, 1929
- How Does the Brain Work?
- 10 Tuesday PM Reads
- Chemicals Behind the Colors of Autumn Leaves
- Bad Maths
- 10 Tuesday AM Reads
| Stock Market Crash of October 29, 1929 Posted: 29 Oct 2014 03:00 AM PDT The crash in 1929 followed a 6 year bull market that saw the Dow gain some 350% in just 6 years. The 89% crash wiped out just about all of it. From History.com:
Black Thursday brings the roaring twenties to a screaming halt, ushering in a world-wide an economic depression. |
| Posted: 28 Oct 2014 04:30 PM PDT Dr. Neal DeGrasse Tyson & NOVA science NOW delve into magic and the brain, artificial intelligence, magnetic mind control, and the work of neuroscientist and synesthesia researcher David Eagleman. Can we really believe our own eyes? Will machines one day think like us? Can magnetic wands effectively control brain functions and treat depression? |
| Posted: 28 Oct 2014 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reads:
What are you reading?
Darker Global Outlook Has Bond Bears Hibernating
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| Chemicals Behind the Colors of Autumn Leaves Posted: 28 Oct 2014 11:30 AM PDT |
| Posted: 28 Oct 2014 08:30 AM PDT We live in an era of technological advancement. Whether it’s genomics, nanotechnology or software algorithms, the world is driven by mathematical solutions to complex problems. Yet at the same time, we are surrounded by what I like to call Bad Math. It seems as if the average person has little familiarity with the fundamental workings of mathematics. Statistical errors are rife. Even the classic error of confusing correlation with causation seems to be impossible to vanquish. Some of the blame for this lays in our education system. We teach by rote, instead of explaining critical reasoning and analysis. Instead of teaching children what to think, we should be teaching them how to think. It is a fundamental failure of our education system. Which brings us to today's subject. As you might imagine from a review of any of our morning reads, I plow through a lot of media, much of it good, some of it excellent. What you don’t see linked are the poorly reasoned, statistically amateurish, logically defective articles that don't make the cut. Too many writers seem to have a dominant right hemisphere. While that may be great for creativity and language skills, it means they are deficient in logic, numbers and analysis. Perhaps a few examples might help to explain my ire.
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| Posted: 28 Oct 2014 05:30 AM PDT Last week’s strong markets seemed to have made everyone forget all the things they should not have been obsessing about in the first place. Guess that means October is almost over. And reads:
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