Category Archives: Linking Thinking

Link­ing to what oth­ers are think­ing about learn­ing as a way to explore how we learn online.

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How a UNICEF Photo Makes the West’s Heart Ache

This photo of 11-year old child bride sit­ting next to her 40-year old fiance cap­tures a small, every­day moment that wouldn’t sur­prise any­one in the Tal­iban. But to West­ern eyes it is quite a dif­fer­ent mat­ter. Dutch writer Leon de Win­ter: Our eyes behold an abom­i­na­tion. Our eyes have learned to see the world from the per­spec­tive of a slowly acquired sense for human­ity. And although more and more voices tell us that we — the for­mer colo­nial­ists and impe­ri­al­ists — have lost the right to judge other cul­tures, we know just as well as this girl that this mar­riage is wrong.

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David Byrne’s Survival Strategies for Emerging Artists and Megastars

David Byrne’s describes 6 music dis­tri­b­u­tion mod­els, each offer­ing var­i­ous lev­els of artis­tic con­trol. The totally DIY model is cer­tainly not for every­one — but that’s the point. Now there’s choice. What I like about this piece is how David Byrnes defines music, and that by doing so expands the idea that it is just a piece of plas­tic meant to be bought, sold, traded and replayed end­lessly in any con­text. We’ll always want to use music as part of our social fab­ric: to con­gre­gate at con­certs and in bars, even if the sound sucks; to pass music from hand to hand (or via the Inter­net) as a form of social cur­rency; to build tem­ples where only “our kind of peo­ple” can hear music (opera houses and sym­phony halls); to want to know more about our favorite bards — their love lives, their clothes, their polit­i­cal beliefs.

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Twilight of the Books

We are read­ing less as we age, and we are read­ing less than peo­ple who were our age ten or twenty years ago. Caleb Crain reacts to The National Endow­ment of the Arts (N.E.A.) recent report on Amer­i­can read­ing pat­terns that con­nects declines in read­ing with civic, social, and eco­nomic impli­ca­tions and asks what soci­ety might be like if only a few elite peo­ple read lit­er­ary texts as a hobby.

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Medical Myths

Heard the one about using only 10% of our brains? Not true. Doc­tors pour cold water on this and 6 other med­ical myths in the British Med­ical Jour­nal. These myths were based on ideas the authors had heard endorsed on sev­eral occa­sions, and which many physi­cians thought were true. But after we care­fully lay out med­ical evi­dence, they are very will­ing to accept that these beliefs are actu­ally false.

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The Polarization of Extremes

Cass Sun­stein argues that the abil­ity to fil­ter infor­ma­tion on the inter­net is going to lead to a world of frac­tured com­mu­ni­ca­tions, group polar­iza­tions, cas­cades of false infor­ma­tion, finally result­ing in a rise in extrem­ism. It’s a relief to hear argu­ments that do not see the inter­net as an ideal force for democ­racy, but his argu­ment relies on “per­fect fil­ter­ing,” with­out any expla­na­tion for how this is even possible.

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A Hunger For Books

Doris Less­ing has been a life­long advo­cate from free­dom, democ­racy and human decency. So it is a lit­tle dis­heart­en­ing that in her accep­tance speech for the Nobel Prize for Lit­er­a­ture she has not inter­preted some of the big cul­tural changes in the con­text of tech­nol­ogy, such as diver­sity, life­long learn­ing, par­tic­i­pa­tion and citizenship.

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A DNA Driven World

Geneti­cist Craig Ven­ter: the future of life depends not only in our abil­ity to under­stand and use DNA, but also, per­haps in cre­at­ing new syn­thetic life forms, that is, life which is forged not by Dar­win­ian evo­lu­tion but cre­ated by human intel­li­gence. Whether or not designer microbes that replace coal and oil are part of the solu­tion, such dis­rup­tive ideas and tech­nolo­gies that let us adapt to and mit­i­gate cli­mate change are. We need a sci­en­tif­i­cally lit­er­ate soci­ety will­ing to embrace change. But here’s the prob­lem: Sci­ence is a topic which can cause peo­ple to turn off their brains. I con­tend that sci­ence has failed to excite more peo­ple for at least two rea­sons: it is fre­quently taught poorly, often as rote mem­o­riza­tion of com­plex facts and data, and it is anti­thet­i­cal to our visceral-driven way we live and inter­act with our world. Our planet is fac­ing almost insur­mount­able prob­lems, prob­lems that gov­ern­ments on their own clearly can’t fix.

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Why don’t we love science fiction?

Why do so many of us see sci­ence fic­tion as hope­lessly ado­les­cent? The truth is that we are at last liv­ing in an SF sce­nario, Brain Ald­iss has said, imply­ing that makes SF redun­dant. Isn’t this – at the heart of our anx­i­eties – just where this genre excels?

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Is Photography Dead?

A film pho­to­graph was at its core a record of some­thing that hap­pened in front of a cam­era; a dig­i­tal photo, on the other hand, may con­tain only a trace of real­ity. Pho­tog­ra­phers can make pho­tos as well as take them, and every land­scape is now the most beau­ti­ful scenery in the whole his­tory of the uni­verse. The next great photographers—if there are to be any—will have to find a way to reclaim photography’s spe­cial link to real­ity. And they’ll have to do it in a brand-new way.

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The New Psychology of Leadership

Recent lead­er­ship lit­er­a­ture notes that an effec­tive leader is highly depen­dent on fol­low­ers, and fol­low­ers need to see their leader as one of them. For lead­er­ship to func­tion well, lead­ers and fol­low­ers must be bound by a shared iden­tity and by the quest to to use that iden­tify as a blue­print for action. If you con­trol the def­i­n­i­tion of iden­tify, you can change the world.

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