Alan Sondheim on Fri, 13 Aug 2010 16:14:52 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Forwarded article below on the Mosque controversies (fwd) |
I just have to say I'm ashamed of this country, and scared - too much hatred against illegal immigrants (WHICH WE ALL ARE), and now Islam. Some of the protests are all too familiar Kristallnacht in tone - on Jon Stewart, there was a newsclip of a community going to burn a copy of the Koran on 9/11. I can't argue this with anyone - I'm horrified and brought to tears by it. And we can't sit by and let a rabid racist right grow in this country - the affects have been seen repeatedly worldwide. - Alan ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 12 Aug 2010 15:20:36 From: evolutionary-psychology@yahoogroups.com Reply-To: No Reply <notify-dg-evolutionary-psychology@yahoogroups.com> To: evolutionary-psychology@yahoogroups.com Subject: [evol-psych] Digest Number 7327 There are 6 messages in this issue. Topics in this digest: 1. News: Orangutan pantomime ~ elaborating the message From: Robert Karl Stonjek 2a. Re: Holistic Darwinism: The new evolutionary paradigm and some impli From: Mike Tintner 2b. Re: Holistic Darwinism: The new evolutionary paradigm and some impli From: Steve Moxon 3. Bonobos and chimps From: mark hubey 4. The Rise of America's Idiot Culture From: ED 5. 8 Percent of U.S. Births to Illegal Immigrants From: R A Fonda Messages ________________________________________________________________________ 1. News: Orangutan pantomime ~ elaborating the message Posted by: "Robert Karl Stonjek" stonjek@ozemail.com.au rk_stonjek Date: Thu Aug 12, 2010 3:07 am ((PDT)) Orangutan pantomime: elaborating the message Anne Russon1 and Kristin Andrews2 1Psychology Department, Glendon College, 2275 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4N 3M6 2Philosophy Department, York University, 4700 Keele St Toronto, Ontario, Canada M3J 1P3 *Author for correspondence (arusson@gl.yorku.ca). Abstract We present an exploratory study of forest-living orangutan pantomiming, i.e. gesturing in which they act out their meaning, focusing on its occurrence, communicative functions, and complexities. Studies show that captive great apes may elaborate messages if communication fails, and isolated reports suggest that great apes occasionally pantomime. We predicted forest-living orangutans would pantomime spontaneously to communicate, especially to elaborate after communication failures. Mining existing databases on free-ranging rehabilitant orangutans' behaviour identified 18 salient pantomimes. These pantomimes most often functioned as elaborations of failed requests, but also as deceptions and declaratives. Complexities identified include multimodality, re-enactments of past events and several features of language (productivity, compositionality, systematicity). These findings confirm that free-ranging rehabilitant orangutans pantomime and use pantomime to elaborate on their messages. Further, they use pantomime for multiple functions and create complex pantomimes that can express propositionally structured content. Thus, orangutan pantomime serves as a medium for communication, not a particular function. Mining cases of complex great ape communication originally reported in functional terms may then yield more evidence of pantomime. Source: The Royal Society http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2010/08/05/rsbl.2010.0564.abstract?papetoc Posted by Robert Karl Stonjek Messages in this topic (1) ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 2a. Re: Holistic Darwinism: The new evolutionary paradigm and some impli Posted by: "Mike Tintner" tintner@blueyonder.co.uk andarot Date: Thu Aug 12, 2010 4:28 am ((PDT)) "Steve Moxon" <stevemoxon3@...> wrote: > > There is no new evolutionary paradigm along the lines outlined here. I can't speak to the virtues of this particular approach. But as to the need for, and inevitability of, major paradigm shifts, I have no doubt. What's the difference between saying humans are gene-determined, and - computers are RAM-determined? Well, they are to a considerable extent, but just looking at key parts of a machine will not explain the evolution or design of the machine as a whole. Nor will just in addition looking at the environment of the machine. The study BTW of the evolution of actual machines has just begun. See Brian Arthur's The Nature of Technology, wh. I detect is already having a cross-cultural impact. And, to return to the comparison with computers (& robots), clearly a gene-/part-centered approach will ignore the most central, glaring and indeed gigantic feature of these machines - they are **general-purpose** machines - **creative** machines - designed so as to be capable of an infinite range of physical activities and mental activities, capable of surviving in an infinite range of environments, (wh. makes the idea that they are environment-determined look somewhat bizarre). One way or another, the recognition of humans and animals as creative machines will transform the sciences - you can see one of the first significant moves towards this in S. Kauffman's Reinventing the Sacred, wh. is an attempt at a new creative worldview, to supplant the currently crumbling, reductionist, parts-centered worldview. Neither Kauffman nor, I wouldn't be surprised, Corning, has a fully crystallised new paradigm. But you can be sure, one is coming. The gene-centered POV is breathtakingly narrow in its powers of explanation - and cannot begin to explain the *design* of the "organismic machine" as a whole. Messages in this topic (2) ________________________________________________________________________ 2b. Re: Holistic Darwinism: The new evolutionary paradigm and some impli Posted by: "Steve Moxon" stevemoxon3@talktalk.net spmox Date: Thu Aug 12, 2010 4:55 am ((PDT)) A 'creative machine' is exactly what we're not. The more complex the organism then the more faithful it is to its genes -- as I explain in my paper. We never go off at some new trajectory. As for computer models: they are hopeless analogies of organisms. Systems-biology is the antithesis of a 'parts view' and this is fully here without any 'paradigm shift' A paradigm shift is necessary when it's neceseray; not when it's not. As ever, failure of philosophical understanding destroys scientific understanding. Steve Moxon [author of the book, The Woman Racket: The new science explaining how the sexes relate at work, at play and in society, 2008 Imprint Academic; and the papers: 'Dominance as adaptive stressing and ranking of males, serving to allocate reproduction by self-suppressed fertility: Towards a fully biological understanding of social system', 2009 Medical Hypotheses; 'Culture is biology: Why we cannot 'transcend' our genes', 2010 Politics & Culture; and 'Beyond Staged Retreat Behind Gender Paradigm Barricades: The rise and fall of the misrepresentation of partner violence and it's eclipse by an understanding of mate-guarding', in press The Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Studies]. ----- Original Message ----- From: Mike Tintner To: evolutionary-psychology@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2010 12:18 PM Subject: [evol-psych] Re: Holistic Darwinism: The new evolutionary paradigm and some impli "Steve Moxon" <stevemoxon3@...> wrote: > > There is no new evolutionary paradigm along the lines outlined here. I can't speak to the virtues of this particular approach. But as to the need for, and inevitability of, major paradigm shifts, I have no doubt. What's the difference between saying humans are gene-determined, and - computers are RAM-determined? Well, they are to a considerable extent, but just looking at key parts of a machine will not explain the evolution or design of the machine as a whole. Nor will just in addition looking at the environment of the machine. The study BTW of the evolution of actual machines has just begun. See Brian Arthur's The Nature of Technology, wh. I detect is already having a cross-cultural impact. And, to return to the comparison with computers (& robots), clearly a gene-/part-centered approach will ignore the most central, glaring and indeed gigantic feature of these machines - they are **general-purpose** machines - **creative** machines - designed so as to be capable of an infinite range of physical activities and mental activities, capable of surviving in an infinite range of environments, (wh. makes the idea that they are environment-determined look somewhat bizarre). One way or another, the recognition of humans and animals as creative machines will transform the sciences - you can see one of the first significant moves towards this in S. Kauffman's Reinventing the Sacred, wh. is an attempt at a new creative worldview, to supplant the currently crumbling, reductionist, parts-centered worldview. Neither Kauffman nor, I wouldn't be surprised, Corning, has a fully crystallised new paradigm. But you can be sure, one is coming. The gene-centered POV is breathtakingly narrow in its powers of explanation - and cannot begin to explain the *design* of the "organismic machine" as a whole. Messages in this topic (2) ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 3. Bonobos and chimps Posted by: "mark hubey" hubeev@gmail.com hubeyh Date: Thu Aug 12, 2010 6:53 am ((PDT)) Can bonobos and chimps interbreed? Messages in this topic (1) ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 4. The Rise of America's Idiot Culture Posted by: "ED" seacrofter001@yahoo.com seacrofter001 Date: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:59 am ((PDT)) August 12, 2010 The Rise of America's Idiot Culture The Muslim Community Center at Ground Zero: a Manufactured Controversy By ANTHONY DiMAGGIO A substantial racist uproar is taking place in conservative America, particularly in right-wing radio and television. Reactionary pundits are drawing increased attention to plans to build an Islamic community center in downtown Manhattan, near Ground Zero. Republicans and conservatives have long been known to harbor racist views of Islam, although they're hardly alone in this. Many on the right frame the entire religion as radical, fundamentalist, and a threat to national security. In light of this pattern, there's little surprising about the right's most recent attack on Muslim Americans as a secret, under the radar threat. Islam has at times been portrayed on the right as the bedrock threat to American cultural values, and Muslims are depicted as uni-dimensionally set on overthrowing Christianity, enslaving the American public, and imposing "Sharia law." The last warning about "Sharia law" ? repeated by pundits like Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh ? among many others ? comes off as extremely ignorant, considering that the term "Sharia" itself means Islamic law. One should take the warnings of those who use the phrase "Sharia law" about as seriously as someone who masquerades as a legal scholar while talking about the importance of "American law law." The American right has also taken to paranoid conspiracy theories charging that Obama is a non-citizen. As the story goes, Obama was really born in Kenya, and his "take over" of the White House represents a secret victory for radical Islam, since, as we all "know," Obama is a closet Muslim terrorist who is allied with Osama bin Laden and other radical Islamists. About half of Republicans believe either that Obama is not a citizen or that they cannot be sure of whether he is really an American citizen or not. These views are shared by nearly 60 percent of self-designated Tea Party supporters. Of course, the nuances of the Islamic faith and the mainstream nature of the American Muslim community - the vast majority who oppose terrorism, fundamentalism, or repression of women - have been completely lost in the smug arrogance and incompetence of racists on the right. The reactionary right has long been opposed to anything related to Arab culture and the Muslim religion in New York and around the country. One infamous example is New York's Khalil Gibran Arabic language academy, the first of its kind for the city. Rabid right-wingers railed against it, especially those in the "stop the Madrassa" campaign (many of whom worried about the dangers of "Madrassa schools," while apparently too ignorant to realize that the word Madrassa itself means school). I argued with one of the leaders of this group on Alan Colmes' radio show a few years ago. She seemed un-phased by the reality that there was never any concrete evidence that the Khalil Gibran academy was teaching Islamic values. As she announced on the show (despite my scorn for her comments), the very fact that there was no visible evidence of an Islamic curriculum was proof of just how good the schools' administrators and teachers were of hiding it. Such paranoia demonstrated how far conservative extremism and racism have come in recent years. This brings us to the most recent "controversy" related to Islam: the Muslim community center planned for Manhattan. Right wingers in radio and at Fox News have gone into overdrive attacking it as a fundamental threat to the American way of life and to American security. Their racist diatribes have been hard for me to listen to, but they remain important to address, if for no other reason than so we can fight the ignorant assumptions behind them head on. Here's a quick review of some of the most outrageous comments made in the American media: - On Fox News, former Congressman Newt Gingrich attacked the community center for its planned location "right at the edge of a place where, let's be clear, thousands of Americans were killed in an attack by radical Islamists." On his website, Gingrich announced that "there should be no mosque near ground zero in New York so long as there are no churches or synagogues in Saudi Arabia." Gingrich's choice to spotlight the radical fundamentalist regime of Saudi Arabia (hypocritically supported by Gingrich himself when he was Speaker of the House in the 1990s) ? while neglecting moderate and secular governments in the Muslim world, speaks volumes about what he considers to be the "essence" of Islam. Gingrich's language is truly abhorrent; he frames those supporting the community center in Manhattan as part of the same "they" as the Islamic fundamentalists who perpetrated the 9-11 attacks. As far as Gingrich is concerned, there are no distinctions to be made in the monolithic "threat" that is the entire U.S. and world Muslim community. - On Fox, Sarah Palin drew attention to "those innocent victims, those families of those who were killed in the 9-11 tragedy, it saddens me to think that people don't understand what building this mosque at such hallowed ground really represents." Inextricably linked to Palin's warnings is the assumption that the community center represents a single, overarching fifth column threat from American Muslims. This much was clear when she characterized its construction as "an unnecessary provocation" against the people of New York and the American people more generally. - Fox News host Sean Hannity claimed that the "Iman" supporting the building of the community center is a figure who "supports what happened on 9/11" and "praises Osama bin Laden." Hannity, of course, failed to present any evidence linking community center supporters to defending the 9/11 attacks, but this hardly seemed to matter to him or his guest, Jay Seculow (of the American Center for Law and Justice), who complained that "you don't get to build a mosque on a site that's part of ground zero" because "that would be like putting at Pearl Harbor a monument of the Kamikaze pilots who tried to destroy U.S. troops, you just don't do that." In this case, Muslim Americans who had nothing to do with 9/11 are apparently the equivalent of Japanese soldiers who killed Americans during World War II. - Right wing radio icon Rush Limbaugh, not to be outdone, warned that "the terrorists win" if the community center successfully moves forward. Limbaugh continued, posing a hypothetical comparing Muslim Americans to those who lynched blacks in the post Civil War era: "Let me ask you: What would happen, do you think, if the Ku Klux Klan wanted to establish a memorial at Gettysburg?" Limbaugh also employed a World War II analogy, likening the dangers of the community center to the destruction brought upon Japan by U.S. nuclear weapons: "Let's go to Hiroshima and Nagasaki and let's build giant monuments in the shape of nuclear bombs and call it the Manhattan Project. I mean you'd have Americans objecting to that, wouldn't you?" What is most disturbing about the manufactured controversy involving the community center is the blatant arrogance and stupidity of the right in its warnings of an imminent "threat." Anyone who spends thirty seconds researching the Cordoba Group, the organization responsible for promoting the community center, would know that the group's representative, Feisal Abdul Rauf (targeted in Hannity attacks as pro-bin Laden and pro-9/11) is actually a public critic of Osama bin Laden and the 9/11 attacks, and a vocal supporter of improving relations between the U.S. and the Muslim world. None of this is conveyed in any of the right-wing slander above, however, as these pundits are content to showcase their ignorance regarding the basic facts surrounding the community center fiasco they "authoritatively" "report" on. I should note that all of the pundits above premise their attacks on the Manhattan community center with statements that promotion of religious tolerance and cultural diversity are important and necessary. These claims, however, mean nothing when they are followed by fear mongering and attacks on Muslims as part of an all-encompassing threat that derives from some sort of uniform "Muslim culture" ? one that is seen as constituting a danger to U.S. security and the American way of life. These pundits refuse to distinguish between the tiny minority of those throughout the world who support terrorism in the name of Islam and the vast majority of Muslims who reject those beliefs. Their reluctance to take a reasonable, level-headed approach to the study of the Muslim faith is an indicator of their fanaticism, religious bigotry, and racism. Rather than asking whether the Manhattan community center represents a threat, we should be asking ourselves what happened to our country when national discourse is hijacked by those who not only have no interest in facts, but see them as an active roadblock to advancing their racist agendas. The blatant racism and incompetence of those attacking the Manhattan community center should be obvious enough to those who pride themselves in promoting multi-culturalism, racial diversity, and respect for religious freedom. That the racist right remains so prominent in national television and radio is a sign, more than anything else, of the steep deterioration of American political discourse. Anthony DiMaggio is the editor of media-ocracy (www.media-ocracy.com <http://www.media-ocracy.com/> ), a daily online magazine devoted to the study of media, public opinion, and current events. He has taught U.S. and Global Politics at Illinois State University and North Central College, and is the author of When Media Goes to War <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1583671994/counterpunchmaga> (2010) and Mass Media, Mass Propaganda <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0739119036/counterpunchmaga> (2008). He can be reached at: mediaocracy@gmail.com <mailto:mediaocracy@gmail.com> http://www.counterpunch.org/dimaggio08122010.html <http://www.counterpunch.org/dimaggio08122010.html> Messages in this topic (1) ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 5. 8 Percent of U.S. Births to Illegal Immigrants Posted by: "R A Fonda" rafonda@verizon.net rafonda2000 Date: Thu Aug 12, 2010 8:01 am ((PDT)) Study: 8 Percent of U.S. Births to Illegal Immigrants Pew Hispanic Center Report Sheds Light on Americans at Center of Birthright Citizenship Debate By DEVIN DWYER *WASHINGTON, August 11, 2010---* Eight percent of all babies born in the U.S. in 2008 belonged to illegal immigrant <http://newspreview.corp.dig.com/Politics/illegal-immigration-america-shadows-abc-news-special-series/story?id=11099873> parents, according to a groundbreaking analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data by the Pew Hispanic Center. Under the 14th amendment to the Constitution, each child obtained U.S. citizenship at birth while one or both of the parents remained undocumented. The study <http://pewhispanic.org/reports/report.php?ReportID=125> sheds new light on a group of Americans at the center of a hot political debate <http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/birthright-citizenship-14th-amendment-republican-senators-explore-change/story?id=11313973> in recent weeks. Some Republican lawmakers have proposed revising birthright citizenship to bar U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants from obtaining legal status. Pew estimates 340,000 of the 4.3 million newborns in U.S. hospitals in 2008 belonged to illegal immigrant parents. In total, 4 million U.S.-born, citizen children of illegal immigrants <http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/birth-tourism-industry-markets-us-citizenship-abroad/story?id=10359956> currently live in the country, according to the study. The study is the most comprehensive, non-partisan research to date on children of illegal immigrants living in the U.S. and adds important context, and frames the ongoing debate. Previously there have been few reliable estimates of annual U.S. births to illegal immigrants. Critics of birthright citizenship <http://abcnews.go.com/WN/debate-birthright-citizenship-aims-baby-tourism/story?id=11322850&page=1> have expressed concern over the burgeoning size of America's illegal immigrant <http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/illegal-immigration-america-shadows-abc-news-special-series/story?id=11099873> population, estimated at 10.8 million and whose offspring in the U.S. would be able to sponsor their parents and relatives for legal residency. The children are sometimes referred to as anchor babies. "Birthright citizenship I think is a mistake," said Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. "We should change our Constitution and say if you come here illegally and you have a child, that child's automatically not a citizen." Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and other leading Republicans, including Arizona senators Jon Kyl and John McCain, have indicated an openness to exploring the 14th Amendment issue raised by Sen. Graham. But some harbor deep reservations about changing the Constitution. "It's a rather unseemly business and I think we ought to have some hearings about it," McConnell said of the practice of illegal immigrant mothers giving birth in the U.S. "Congressional hearings are always warranted when members of Congress raise the issue of amending our Constitution," said McCain in a statement. "I believe that the Constitution is a strong, complete and carefully crafted document that has successfully governed our nation for centuries and any proposal to amend the Constitution should receive extensive and thoughtful consideration." Birthright Citizenship Debate: Election Year Politics? But some lawmakers are calling the push to revise the 14th Amendment nothing but a political stunt. "I think it's good to take a look at all of our constitutional amendments. But I'll tell you something: if you think it's a coincidence that this sudden discussion begins three months before an election, you'd be very, very mistaken," said Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders on ABC's "Top Line" <http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/video/sanders-14th-amendment-100-percent-political-11314073>. Pennsylvannia Democratic Sen. Arlen Specter, whose parents were immigrants to the U.S., has called U.S. citizenship by birth a fundamental right. "The political pandering on the immigration issue has reached the hysterical level," Specter told ABC News. "To try to direct the effort at the children born in this country is just preposterous... How can newborn children protect themselves if politicians want to gain political gain... I would be shocked if this idea would gain political traction, but I'm being shocked on a daily basis by the United States Senate." History of Birthright and the 14th Amendment The 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which was enacted after the Civil War to grant citizenship to descendants of slaves, reads: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside." "The drafter of the 14th Amendment provision on citizenship did make a statement that it would not include foreigners or aliens," said George Washington University constitutional law professor Jonathan Turley. "However, other senators made it clear that they believed that this provision guaranteed birthright citizenship." The courts have repeatedly ruled that people who are born in the U.S. are American citizens and if Congress passed a law changing that, it would likely be repealed, experts say. The Supreme Court <http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Supreme_Court/> has only addressed the issue once, clarifying in 1898 that citizenship does apply to U.S.-born children of legal immigrants who have yet to become citizens. "The legislative history may be a little mixed, but the language of the amendment seems to speak clearly in favor of birthright citizenship, regardless of what the intent may have been," Turley said. The United States is one of the few remaining countries to grant citizenship to all children born on its soil. The United Kingdom, Ireland, India and Australia, among others, have since revised their birthright laws, no longer allowing every child born on their soil to get citizenship. Messages in this topic (1) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Yahoo! 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