23 MAR 2013 by ideonexus

 Emotions Happen, But Don't Let Them Cloud Judgement

let’s revisit that initial encounter in The Sign of Four, when Mary Morstan, the mysterious lady caller, first makes her appearance. Do the two men see Mary in the same light? Not at all. The first thing Watson notices is the lady’s appearance. She is, he remarks, a rather attractive woman. Irrelevant, counters Holmes. “It is of the first importance not to allow your judgment to be biased by personal qualities,” he explains. “A client is to me a mere unit, a factor in a problem. The emotional...
Folksonomies: emotion mindfulness
Folksonomies: emotion mindfulness
  1  notes

Another example using Watson and Holmes.

20 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 Max Plank's Inspiration to Go Into Science

My original decision to devote myself to science was a direct result of the discovery which has never ceased to fill me with enthusiasm since my early youth—the comprehension of the far from obvious fact that the laws of human reasoning coincide with the laws governing the sequences of the impressions we receive from the world about us; that, therefore, pure reasoning can enable man to gain an insight into the mechanism of the latter. In this connection, it is of paramount importance that the...
  1  notes

The realization that the world can be understood rationally.

05 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 Rocks Contain Impressions of Irreversible Events

Historical chronology, human or geological, depends... upon comparable impersonal principles. If one scribes with a stylus on a plate of wet clay two marks, the second crossing the first, another person on examining these marks can tell unambiguously which was made first and which second, because the latter event irreversibly disturbs its predecessor. In virtue of the fact that most of the rocks of the earth contain imprints of a succession of such irreversible events, an unambiguous working ...
Folksonomies: metaphor geology
Folksonomies: metaphor geology
  1  notes

Like drawing two strokes on a clay tablet.

05 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 The Growth and Stages of Scientific Knowledge

In its earliest development knowledge is self-sown. Impressions force themselves upon men’s senses whether they will or not, and often against their will. The amount of interest in which these impressions awaken is determined by the coarser pains and pleasures which they carry in their train or by mere curiosity; and reason deals with the materials supplied to it as far as that interest carries it, and no further. Such common knowledge is rather brought than sought; and such ratiocination is ...
Folksonomies: nature education knowledge
Folksonomies: nature education knowledge
  1  notes

Into aesthetic pleasure to recognizing the continuous series of causes in nature.

21 APR 2011 by ideonexus

 Bernie Cosell on Java

Java didn't feel right. My old reflexes hit me. Java struck me as too authoritarian. Thats one of the reasons why I mentioned that Perl felt so good, because it's got the safety and the checks but it is so damn multidimensioned that the artist part of me has a lot of free board to express things early and to think about the right way do things. I have some freedom. When I first messed with Java—^this was /vhen it was little baby language, of course—I said, "Oh, this is just another one of ...
Folksonomies: programming coding
Folksonomies: programming coding
  1  notes

Describing his first impressions of it as authoritarian and designed for not-so-good programmers.