Monday, January 18, 2021

Commitment to Research for Human Flourishing

In March 2011 Japan suffered a catastrophe with a massive earthquake off its East coast. A chain of events led to the Fukushima nuclear power plan disaster with the release of massive amounts of toxic radiation. I visited Tokyo a few months later, in July, when the city's population seemed subdued and fearful in a similar way to how many people have been with the Covid-19 pandemic.

I was hosted by Professor Yukari Shirota at Gakushuin University. In response to what happened, Professor Shirota made an emphatic statement, which I paraphrase: “Japan does not have much in the way of natural resources, only human resources. I therefore commit my life to research.”

Research is fundamental to human resourcefulness and is an activity that I would like to develop more effectively. Whilst research is a natural aptitude and I’ve long nurtured an interdisciplinary approach, I have only a very limited publication record despite having spent decades in academia; to earn a living I have served mainly in a technical support capacity.  I originate ideas quite easily, some expressed on this blog, but I have found it exceedingly difficult to gain traction for them.

Reasoning that I needed to devote more time to my endeavours, in July 2020 I decided not to accept an offer a 12-month contract extension to my post as Digital Projects Officer at the History of Science Museum (HSM).  Instead, I would work full-time on my research activities. However, I shall retain a connection following the award by Museum of the (unpaid) position of Honorary Research Fellow, which was approved by the Board of Visitors at their meeting last November.

There are several strands to my research that might benefit HSM. The most immediate concerns any digital aspects, particularly online communications, an area I have explored for a while and about which I will touch on below. There are other, broader aspects. In 2024 the Museum will be celebrating the centenary of its founding and I’ve already outlined some visionary ideas. I may take the opportunity to expand on them.

A number of my research strands have concerned aspect of science and religion, a broad theme whose historical development took a major turn in the 17th century, the century in which the original Ashmolean Museum was founded. The building now houses HSM, but it is still formally referred to as the ‘Old Ashmolean’. This was a period that saw the rapid rise of rationality; indeed, we denote this period as the Age of Reason. The consequences have been far-reaching, most especially in the increasing emphasis on materiality, which has pervaded notions of science and research in general.

I talk briefly about that development in Buddhism and Computing, the first tangible fruit of my research. A contribution to the ‘Mud Pie Slices’ series, it offers more than a slice of my thoughts from the past decade on critical issues around computer-based technology, particularly as manifest on the Internet. It has been a considerable challenge to squeeze in a wide range of topics without undermining the overall flow, but the issues are urgent and I wish to facilitate better access to them.

Buddhism and Computing summarises and ties together some of the main strands of my ideas in response to challenges facing humanity, concerning the freedom to think and act autonomously, the quality of awareness and so on. I conceived the Sigala project in sustainable online social networking as the primary deliverable in response to these challenges, but until recently I kept my research notes in local documents. I have now set up a website for the main body of research, research.siga.la.

Thus far the part-time efforts of one person, it has large gaps, is rough around the edges, out of date in details, lacks marketing (Why so few images? Where’s the explainer video? Etc.), yet it seeks to offer a coherent and humane vision. I’m hoping that once word gets around, the thesis will gain acceptance and the presentation strengthen, and so on.

For me the process started in November 2007 when I started to reflect on what friendship truly means and how best to support it online. Initially, I conceived this in educational terms, but very quickly saw that its scope was universal.

Having been introduced to the Internet in the early ‘90s in the context of research, I have been strongly averse to the way the Internet, particularly the Web, has been commercialised.  Browsing the Web today with its numerous interruptions, whether for legal consents or advertising, do not make for an aesthetic experience.  Furthermore, changes in search indices and results generation, favours organisations, particularly corporates, and has diminished the voice of individuals; all told, it has generally become harder to find high quality and truly diverse materials.  

Nevertheless, we need viable economic models and I see great potential in applying the work of Avner Offer, who recognised a spectrum from the gift to the market in his theory of the 'economy of regard'.  I’d like to incorporate this in Sigala.

I will elaborate on the substance of the project in future blog posts. For now, I just mention in passing that the website is a kind of knowledge base, whose process is ongoing. As explained, I author and manage the content on my laptop at home using a locally installed WordPress, a web content management system whose popularity is due in no small part to the fact that it is open source software.

Using this setup has yielded the first technical fruit. Running to a few dozen pages, the site is not large or complex, but there is a lot of text, so it may take some while to browse to find something specific. So, as with most websites, a search facility is provided. However, I’ve taken an existing search plugin, WP Static Search, and modified it to work offline, i.e. without an Internet connection or web server. I’m only an occasional coder, but have uploaded my changes to Github and submitted a pull request. This means you can download the entire site onto a memory stick and browse and search it there. (Just one tip: when downloading the zip file from Github, the plugin folder should be renamed back to ‘wp-static-search’ before deployment.)

However the research proceeds, I shall always be looking for opportunities to innovate!


Tuesday, January 12, 2021

To a Clearer, Brighter New Year

I’ve been hearing repeatedly, in reference to the globe's present situation, “the darkest hour of the night comes just before the dawn”, a saying that is centuries old, first printed in a work of Thomas Fuller, A Pisgah Sight Of Palestine And The Confines Thereof (search for 'dawneth').  It is felt especially by those experiencing midwinter in the Northern hemisphere.  Yet, the natural environment always provides illumination – we just have to be sensitive to it.

Over Christmas I had the good fortune to be at the family home in Worcestershire and went for several walks in the local countryside.  The sun came out one day and there was snow the next, which I captured in two pairs of ‘before’ and ‘after’ photos taken in the morning, about 24 hours apart.

The first pair shows a view of Wychbury Hill from Broome.

View of Wychbury from Broome (sunny version)
View of Wychbury from Broome (snowy version)

The second was taken further along the lane, near Red Hall Farmhouse.

Broome, near Red Hall Farm (sunny version)
Broome, near Red Hall Farm (snowy version)

Sometimes daylight hides and snow reveals features of the landscape by what it doesn’t cover.

Trees especially refract light.  On another walk, I wandered to Churchill via Stakenbridge in the mid-afternoon when already the sun was starting to set.

Coming through a small wood, the sun was beckoning ahead, lighting up patches of foliage – reds, yellows and greens.

Woodland, Churchill
Woodland, Churchill

Having lived for two years in Qatar, where natural freshwater resources are very scarce, I find Britain’s landscapes strikingly verdant by comparison with a lot of colour.

Woodland, Churchill

Proceeding on the footpath, another lighting effect was evident – in mist:

IMG_0081
IMG_0083

And finally, the sun set, the last glimmers cast across a pond

IMG_0093

(a temporary view due to a vehicle crashing into a fence).


Yet the weather was set to change again.  Temperatures fell, the clouds cleared, revealing a fairy-tale landscape.  On New Year’s Eve Harvington Hall and its environs were looking splendid.

Harvington Hall

Being closed to the public at this time merely added to the magical atmosphere of this moated Elizabethan manor house.

Harvington Hall

There are, though, some residents happily offering to greet visitors:

Harvington Hall

Perhaps more spectacular than the snow was the hoar frost.

Hoar Frost on a Tree
Hoar Frost on a Tree
Hoar Frost on a Tree

I’m evidently fascinated by trees!  These images link to full-sized versions, where you can zoom in to see the frost more closely.

Just a little way down the slope there is another pond, where I took another snap of a tree with light being refracted.

Harvington

I’ll finish with a framed image; reflections depend on light.

Harvington Hall

Further photos on Flickr.

Wishing everyone a clearer, brighter New Year!