Saturday, 13 April 2024

Lauren Slater - "Opening Skinner's Box"

 The book has many interesting anecdotes about some of the most infamous psychological tests, but its tone, attempting an almost poetic one, was not to my liking.



[B. F. Skinner's] vision was to build a worldwide community where the government would consist of behavioral psychologists who could condition, or train, its citizens into phalanxes of benevolent robots. Of all the twentieth century's psychologists, his experiments and the conclusions he drew about the mechanistic nature of men and women may be the the most reviled, yet continuously relevant to our increasingly technological age.


Skinner found that irregularly rewarded behaviour was the hardest to eradicate. [...] Why your best friend hangs on the phone, waiting for that mean boyfriend with an occasional streak of kindness to call, just call. Oh please call! Why perfectly normal people empty their coffers in smoky casinos and wind up in terrible trouble. [...] It was all about this thing called intermittent reinforcement and he could show it, its mechanisms, the contingencies of compusion.



Jay Kirk - "Bartók's Monster"

https://harpers.org/archive/2013/10/bartoks-monster/


Good read about Béla Bartók's background, teetotaller, going around villages to record the peasant songs on wax cylinders, a machine devised by Edison.

The style of the writer is a bit Hunter S. Thompson, I feel, mixing his own subjective feelings and somewhat pálinka inspired ramblings with what he is witnessing.



I register my rambling in Jake's brow in the rearview mirror. He is listening, murmuring uh-huh, mmm-hmm, but something in the mirror makes me think what I often think, which is that when I fell off that train table as a child I never stopped falling. Somewhere, many miles down, I am still falling through the basement floor.



The guitar is cradled in her lap. Not to mince words, but at the indeterminate, arbitrary moment she takes up strumming the thing, it is horrid. Far more droning and monotonous than the drunken neighbor the night before. She holds the broken neck and bangs away. Just the barest rhythm on three open strings. A chopping thungk thungk thungk thungk thungk. At first it is merely boring, but then it starts to have an untoward effect on my afternoon hangover

Before I say just how untoward, I should take a moment to properly describe the fully heathen condition of the old woman's guitar. It really is the beatest, gonest guitar I ever did see. It looks like something that might have been salvaged from the junk wharf on a river, under a bridge, after a flood. The fretboard is nailed on, and the neck itself is wired onto the body with what I imagine is a busted string, which may say something about the priority accorded the placement of said strings. The body is patched with pieces of bile-green plastic, maybe cannibalized from an old jerrican.

Whereas the guitarist at the pensione had two chords, here there are no chord changes. Just an unsteady wham on three witchy strings. She is the cosmic brute steady. The braying, uncooperative mule of time. Another bestial image comes to my mind, of a very dull-witted rabbit. A rabbit that has been cornered, and in its panic hurls and thuds itself against a wall, and if the guitar is the rabbit, the violin is the old man clumsily trying to get a snare around its neck, and, listening, one can only root for the old man to snare it as quickly as possible, or, failing that, for the rabbit to finally break its neck by hurling itself against the wall, you don't really care which, only that it stops. Needless to say, it does not.




Thursday, 11 April 2024

Dune 2

Great stuff.  As good, maybe better, than the first, less of an open ending

Noah Caldwell-Gervais - "How Many Clicks Does It Take to Get to the Center of Diablo"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3v-7Rndd8M


another magnificent game essay.

3 Body Problem

don't remember the first book at all.  Read it in 2017

Netflix series is very Americanised, and takes place in London. Enjoyable enough though the latter four episodes derail quite a bit.

Started reading the second book (after skimming the first book)

The Picture of Dorian Gray

amazing theatre where Sarah Snook plays a magnificent 10+ roles, with cameras and cleverly placed screens.

Seen at Theatre Royal Haymarket