Random factoids[1]
[1] My not contain facts.
Current factoids
I have been musing on the idea that histories/biographies are written
more by those that want to write than those who were actually there
and could give an account of the facts. This was first triggered
by my reading a description of the history of date systems
(Julius/Sosigenes, Augustus, Pope Gregory, Scaliger/Julius, computer
Julian, Lilian and ANSI) at the end of which the author cheerfully
admits that the early part of the story may have been made up by
historians who found the explanation cute/convenient. I then came
across an opinion evinced by a character in Kenzaburo Oe's Rouse
Up O Young Men Of The New Age that the current temperament of
the Japanese is a "vector" from the post-war era. I find that
hard to accept as a vector has a specific direction which should thus
mean that the future state should be predictable. The only reason
that my mind dwelt on this particular idea is that I have just been
watching Mike Leigh's thoroughly excellent film,
Topsy-Turvy , set in the classic Victorian era.
When watching the scene
where (supposedly) Gilbert receives the inspiration for The
Mikado I was physically grimacing at the portrayal of the
classic British condescending approach to foreigners. Mike Leigh
knows what he is doing as he points out that Gordon was killed in
Khartoum at that time for doing much the same thing. I am a great
admirer of Leigh's work and know that he has an amazing eye for human
character. This makes me suspect that the historical portrayal of
G&S's lives may have been adjusted to emphasise the sorry states
of their wife and partner, respectively. I agree with Oe that the
state of Britain during my early childhood in the '60s can easily
be traced to Victorian attitudes and that things have progressed
along the same lines since. I still hesitate to describe this as
a vector as it is more like a series of lines, with each point
representing a generation. The '60s are famous for "liberation"
but, as I have pointed out ad nauseam there are films like
Lindsay Anderson's classic If... of 1968 which
reinforce the notion that there was still yet more change to come.
Older factoids
When my neighbour with the kitchen next to my bedroom starts up their
dishwasher it screws up the wireless signal. When the neighbour below me
starts up their air conditioner it gets even worse.
Finished watching Chushingura. I won't give away the ending but
I doubt if there'll be a sequel. Maybe a mad scientist will reattach Lord
Kira's head and he'll rebuild his Death Starfortified
house. Then the TARDIS will appear and the cybermen will fight with the
daleks.
I also watched The Cup on Sunday. Not often do you see the information "Bhutanese with English subtitles". I won't give away the ending but
Glutathione biology is amazingly cool. In my profession, if you are dealing with it then it is bad news for someone but Mother Nature put a lot of thought into it nonetheless. Have you thanked your mother lately?
An office supply company was at the product show at work. I am beginning to think that such companies now see staplers as some sort of macho quasi-weapon thing. You no longer pull the thing open and stick in some staples. You feed it a fresh magazine of ammo, pull back the slide to arm it, release the safety, then squeeze (don't jerk) as you fire your chisel tipped round into that request for more paperclips. I blame Office Space (and Dick Cheney of course).