Descartes’ Error, Part 2

| August 24, 2010

Review of Antonio R. Damasio, Descartes’ Error: Motion, Reason, and the Human Brain, New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1994. Science has devalued emotion because scientists believed emotion clouded reason or played no part in reasoning and was a function of the “lower brain.” Damasio is correcting this view by showing that feelings allow minding of […]

Descartes’ Error, Part 1

| August 21, 2010

Brain science is flourishing, but it is yet in its adolescence, with many researchers offering wildly differing theories of the brain/mind connection. This is understandable because there is no such thing as scientific interpretation. All interpretation comes from existing worldviews projected upon data. As brain studies progress, many theories will be discarded, but at the […]

How they fool you with science, Part 2

| August 4, 2010

Review of Ubiquity: The Science of History, Mark Buchanan, Crown Publishers, New York, 2000. If you were excited by our summary of critical state theory in Part 1, today’s post should sober you up. Everything in critical state theory is a load of bullshit.

How they fool you with science, Part 1

| August 2, 2010

Review of Ubiquity: The Science of History, Mark Buchanan, Crown Publishers, New York, 2000. During the past twenty years scientists have been working to develop a new theory, called critical state theory, from nonequilibrium studies of physics. Critical state theory, which is part of chaos theory, hypothesizes that disasters, upheavals, and other large-scale phenomena arise […]

What are anthropologists good for?

| May 8, 2010

Review of Marvin Harris, Cannibals and Kings, New York: Random House, 1977. Marvin Harris became one of the most influential populizers of anthropology on the basis of his historical analysis in Cultural Materialism and Cannibals and Kings. Harris theorizes about the formation of the strong state systems that dominate history. He believes that agriculture arose […]

The population genocide, Part 2

| March 22, 2010

Review of Matthew Connelly, Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population, Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2008. The UNFPA became the central population control agency, but immediately it was criticized for bypassing national governments and being unaccountable to UN member states. UNFPA was criticized as a “U.S. front organization.” UNFPA had […]

The population genocide, Part 1

| March 20, 2010

Review of Matthew Connelly, Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population, Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2008. Fatal Misconception provides details of population programs that we have found nowhere else. Our brief summary below does not do justice to the wealth of detail in Connelly’s study. We give Fatal Misconception our […]