Thursday, December 31, 2009

How to Make Mistakes

How Things Are, J. Brockman and K. Matson, eds., William Morrow and Company, New York, 1995. pp. 137-144.
Daniel C. Dennett
Making mistakes is the key to making progress. There are times, of course, when it is important not to make any mistakes--ask any surgeon or airline pilot. But it is less widely appreciated that there are also times when making mistakes is the secret of success. What I have in mind is not just the familiar wisdom of nothing ventured, nothing gained. While that maxim encourages a healthy attitude towards risk, it doesn't point to the positive benefits of not just risking mistakes, but actually of making them. Instead of shunning mistakes, I claim, you should cultivate the habit of making them. Instead of turning away in denial when you make a mistake, you should become a connoisseur of your own mistakes, turning them over in your mind as if they were works of art, which in a way they are. You should seek out opportunities to make grand mistakes, just so you can then recover from them.
First the theory, and then the practice. Mistakes are not just golden opportunities for learning; they are, in an important sense, the only opportunity for learning something truly new. Before there can be learning, there must be learners. These learners must either have evolved themselves or have been designed and built by learners that evolved. Biological evolution proceeds by a grand, inexorable process of trial and error--and without the errors the trials wouldn't accomplish anything. This is true wherever there is a design process, no matter how clever or stupid the designer. Whatever the question or design problem is, if you don't already know the answer (because someone else figured it out already and you peeked, or because God told you), the only way to come up with the answer is to take some creative leaps in the dark and be informed by the results. You, who know a lot--but just not the answer to the question at hand--can take leaps somewhat guided from the outset by what you already know; you may not be just guessing at random.
For evolution, which knows nothing, the leaps into novelty are blindly taken by mutations, which are copying "errors" in the DNA. Most of these are fatal errors, in fact. Since the vast majority of mutations are harmful, the process of natural selection actually works to keep the mutation rate very low. Fortunately for us, it does not achieve perfect success, for if it did, evolution would eventually grind to a halt, its sources of novelty dried up. That tiny blemish, that "imperfection" in the process, is the source of all the wonderful design and complexity in the living world.
The fundamental reaction to any mistake ought to be this: "Well, I won't do that again!" Natural selection takes care of this "thought" by just wiping out the goofers before they can reproduce. Something with a similar selective force--the behaviorists called it "negative reinforcement"--must operate in the brain of any animal that can learn not to make that noise, touch that wire, or eat that food. We human beings carry matters to a much more swift and efficient level. We can actually think the thought, reflecting on what we have just done. And when we reflect, we confront directly the problem that must be solved by any mistake-maker: what, exactly, is that? What was it about what I just did that got me into all this trouble? The trick is to take advantage of the particular details of the mess you've made, so that your next attempt will be informed by it, and not be just another blind stab in the dark. In which direction should the next attempt be launched, given that this attempt failed?
At its simplest, this is a technique we learned in grade school. Recall how strange and forbidding long division seemed at first: you were confronted by two imponderably large numbers, and you had to figure out how to start. Does the divisor go into the dividend six or seven or eight times? Who knew? You didn't have to know; you just had to take a stab at it, whichever number you liked, and check the result. I remember being almost shocked when I was told I should start by just "making a guess". Wasn't this mathematics? You weren't supposed to play guessing games in such a serious business, were you? But eventually I came to appreciate the beauty of the tactic. If the chosen number turned out to be too small, you increased it and started over; if too large, you decreased it. The good thing about long division was that it always worked, even if you were maximally stupid in making your first choice, in which case it just took a little longer.
This general technique of making a more-or-less educated guess, working out its implications, and using the result to make a correction for the next phase has found many applications. Navigators, for instance, determine their position at sea by first making a guess about where they are. They make a guess about exactly--to the nearest mile--what their latitude and longitude are, and then work out how high in the sky the sun would appear to be if that were (by an incredible coincidence) their actual position. Then they measure the actual elevation angle of the sun, and compare the two values. With a little more trivial calculation, this tells them how big a correction, and in what direction, to make to their initial guess. It is useful to make a good guess the first time, but it doesn't matter that it is bound to be mistaken; the important thing is to make the mistake, in glorious detail, so you have something serious to correct.
The more complex the problem, of course, the more difficult the analysis is. This is known to researchers in Artificial Intelligence as the problem of "credit assignment" (it could as well be called blame assignment). Many AI programs are designed to "learn," to adjust themselves when they detect that their performance has gone awry, but figuring out which features of the program to credit and which to blame is one of the knottiest problems in AI. It is also a major problem--or at least a source of doubt and confusion--in evolutionary theory. Every organism on earth dies sooner or later after one complicated life story or another. How on earth could natural selection see through the fog of all these details in order to discern the huge complex of positive and negative factors and "reward" the good and "punish" the bad? Can it really be that some of our ancestors' siblings died childless because their eyelids were the wrong shape? If not, how could the process of natural selection explain why our eyelids came to have the nifty shape that they do?
One technique for easing the credit assignment problem is to build mistake-opportunities into a "hierarchy"--a sort of pyramid of levels, with a safety net at each step. By and large, don't mess with the parts that are already working well, and take your risks opportunistically. That is, plan your project so that at each step you can check for error and take a remedial path. Then you can be bold in execution, ready to take advantage of unlikely success and ready to cope gracefully with likely failure. This is a technique that stage magicians--at least the best of them--exploit with amazing results. (I don't expect to incur the wrath of the magicians for revealing this trick to you, since this is not a particular trick but a deep general principle.) A good card magician knows many tricks that depend on luck--they don't always work, or even often work. There are some effects--they can hardly be called tricks--that might work only once in a thousand times! But here is what you do. You start by telling the audience you are going to perform a trick, and without telling them what trick you are doing, you go for the one-in-a-thousand effect. It almost never works, of course, so you glide seamlessly into a second try, for an effect that works about one time in a hundred, perhaps. When it too fails (as it almost always will) you slide into effect #3, which only works about one time in ten, so you'd better be ready with effect #4 which works half the time (let's say), and if all else fails (and by this time, usually one of the earlier safety nets will have kept you out of this worst case), you have a failsafe effect, which won't impress the crowd very much but at least it's a surefire trick. In the course of a whole performance, you will be very unlucky indeed if you always have to rely on your final safety net, and whenever you achieve one of the higher-flying effects, the audience will be stupefied. "Impossible! How on earth could you have known that was my card?" Aha! You didn't know, but you had a cute way of taking a hopeful stab in the dark that paid off. By hiding the "error" cases from view, you create a "miracle".
Evolution works the same way: all the dumb mistakes tend to be invisible, so all we see is a stupendous string of triumphs. For instance, over 90% of all the creatures that have ever lived died childless, but not a single one of your ancestors suffered that fate. Talk about a line of charmed lives!
The main difference between science and stage magic is that in science you make your mistakes in public. You show them off, so that everybody can learn from them--not just yourself. This way, you get the benefit of everybody else's experience, and not just your own idiosyncratic path through the space of mistakes. This, by the way, is what makes us so much smarter than every other species. It is not so much that our brains are bigger or more powerful, but that we share the benefits that our individual brains have won by their individual histories of trial and error.
The secret is knowing when and how to make mistakes, so that nobody gets hurt and everybody can learn from the experience. It is amazing to me how many really smart people don't understand this. I know distinguished researchers who will go to preposterous lengths to avoid having to acknowledge that they were wrong about something--even something quite trivial. What they have never noticed, apparently, is that the earth does not swallow people up when they say, "Oops, you're right. I guess I made a mistake." You will find that people love pointing out your mistakes. If they are generous-spirited, they will appreciate you more for giving them the opportunity to help, and acknowledging it when they succeed, and if they are mean-spirited they will enjoy showing you up. Either way, you--and we all--win.
Of course people do not enjoy correcting the stupid mistakes of others. You have to have something bold and interesting to say, something original to be right or wrong about, and that requires building the sort of pyramid of risky thinking we saw in the card magician's tricks. And then there's a surprise bonus: if you are one of the big risk-takers, people will even get a kick out of correcting your stupid mistakes, which show that you're not so special, you're a regular bungler like the rest of us. I know philosophers who have never--apparently--made a mistake in their work. Their specialty is pointing out the mistakes of others, and this can be a valuable service, but nobody excuses theirerrors with a friendly chuckle.
We don't usually have to risk life and limb in order to learn from our mistakes, but we do have to keep track, and actually attend to them. The key to that is first, not to try to hide your mistakes. If you hide them, you may, like the magician, enhance your reputation, but this is a short-range solution that will come to haunt you in the long run. Second, you must learn not to deny to yourself that you have made them or try to forget them. That is not easy. The natural human reaction to mistake is embarrassment and anger, and you have to work hard to overcome these emotional reactions. Try to acquire the weird practice of savoring your mistakes, delighting in uncovering the strange quirks that led you astray. Then, once you have sucked out all the goodness to be gained from having made them, you can cheerfully forget them, and go on to the next big opportunity.
You are going to make lots of mistakes in your life, and some of them, unless you truly do lead a charmed life, will really hurt--yourself and others. Here are some ways of making the best of it, since the more you learn from the relatively painless mistakes, the less likely you are to commit the awful variety.

Friday, December 25, 2009

New Year Targets -2010

We're coming up on a new year, do you believe it? I remember thinking in March, "Wow we just had Christmas." And July soon followed, and then boom it was fall and the holidays approaching. So given that I realized that time is really flying by I started to ponder on just what did I do this year? That made me realize I learned a lot so here are some of what I learned:
1. Some people really do change, it just takes time, not forcing it, being kind, and praying about it (surrender always works.)
2. I should NEVER drink water out of plastic bottles because they bleed cancer causing chemicals, I can make filtered water really cheaply at home using aPUR water pitcher.
3. It's not a hassle to bring my stainless steel water bottle with me when I go out.
4. My ability to defend against oxidative stress (free radicals) is high, I got it that way with diet not supplements.
5. I CAN raise my glutathione levels with sub-lingual glutathione.
6. I'm less lonely without my toxic friends/relationships.
7. Sadly no matter how much I've suffered in my life some people will still resent me when good things happen to me.
8. It feels really good to give to others and to be kind.
9. The best diet for health (and weight loss, and illness recovery) is the alkaline diet.
10. I can cut my own hair and have it look really nice.
11. Supporting others is the best way to help them get through tough times and get out of depression.
12. It's really not rocket science to make great foods in a dehydrator.
13. No matter how difficult or impossible something seems I can always figure it out (speed learning software, filing a patent or trademark, building a shopping cart, figuring out how to use Photoshop, making online videos).
14. I can read a lot of books just by reading an hour before bed (and I sleep better too!)
15. Homemade almond butter is a lot better than peanut butter, and it's healthier.
16. The best approach in business is to be polite, not react, and interact like human to human (in emails/on the phone etc.).
17. Never get mad, be kind, it gets better results even if it takes a while.
18. Both Sears and Walmart have credit cards where I can buy large items (fridge/flat screen TV) and pay off in a year without any interest, who knew? I didn't!
19. Doing giveaways for other people's blogs and sites doesn't necessarily bring me more business. Word of mouth from satisfied customers works much better.
20. Taking probiotics at night makes my GI tract feel much happier.
21. Quinoa for breakfast is much better than oatmeal, and better for me.
22. If I don't want my friend's husband (who I don't like) or her sister (who I don't know) to know things about me then I shouldn't tell my friend those things. Even saying, "Don't tell anyone," it doesn't work.
23. As to #22, in the long run it pays to keep things to myself.
24. I should always trust my gut instinct. When in doubt don't do it, say it, go there, or commit to something.
25. Tithing doesn't make me poorer, it seems to make my income more secure.
26. Since it really grates on my nerves to hear everyone's opinion on everything all the time, it's best to keep my opinions to myself.
27. Most people who say, "I'm a political junkie," mean that talk radio is telling them what to think, it doesn't mean that they're reading and figuring out what they think themselves.
28. One of the reasons I've had severe eye pain for years is because I have binocular dysfunction.
29. Taking my car to the car wash is better for the environment then washing it at home (that water goes into lakes, streams, and the ocean.)
30. The obesity rate is not the only thing that is rising, poor grammar is a close second as evidenced by the rampant use of double negatives and the omission of vitals parts of sentences like prepositions i.e., "graduated high school." It's graduated FROM high school!
31. I love going to the movies by myself and I prefer clothes shopping alone (easier to focus).
32. Never rip out an email, never send an email that can be forwarded and make me look bad, never talk about anyone or anything in an email that I wouldn't want the entire world to know about, don't use my own name in a forum unless I don't care that the entire world knows what I'm saying.

33. Someone else's definition of being committed to something isn't always the same as mine.
34. Organic apples are so much better than non-organic, they are completely worth the money.
35. I'm going to have a grandchild next year!
36. People that disagree with everything I say really have something wrong with their brains (area called cingulate). The brain is plastic and can heal at any age, so they CAN improve their brain health but trying to tell this to a know it all is really not productive.
37. Giving myself a raise, or raising my prices doesn't mean less business.
38. An external drive is essential.
39. When I feel paralyzed the most productive thing I can do is go walk at the lake.
40. Less is more in an email, very few people read a long email.
41. Staying true to myself isn't difficult, and it always makes things turn out better.
42. Being bitter or negative is a total waste of time and life.
43. Irrigating my sinuses regularly is worth the time it takes.
44. When I have a goal or aspiration one way to make it happen is to talk about it to everyone possible.
45. Vinegar and water is the best thing to wash floors.
46. Life isn't over until I'm dead, hanging out with people who've given up isn't productive or fun.
47. I can get my business off the ground, while staying in the black in a recession.
48. Working on my books once a week isn't as painful as waiting till the end of the month.
49. I don't need people to understand me or get what I'm going through because God knows that better than anyone ever will (He cares too, and very few people are going to make that kind of investment).
50. There are too many people who believe you can't recover from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and I want to continue working on changing that mindset. You can recover people, I did!

Thanks. http://healthosity.blogspot.com

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Do police cameras reduce crime?

















Do you ever get the feeling you're being watched? Walking down the street, do you sense that someone somewhere is keeping an eye on you? These days, chances are, you're right.

A growing number of cities across the United States and abroad have installed networks of closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras. Police monitor the video in an effort to prevent crime and catch lawbreakers in the act. You've probably seen the cameras; they're intentionally made conspicuous. Signs let you know your actions are being recorded.

This law enforcement trend started in the United Kingdom in 1986 with three cameras in a 1-square-mile area in a town called King's Lynn [source: Nieto]. Today, England has more CCTV cameras than any country in the world, with half a million making up its network, nicknamed the "Ring of Steel" [source: Nieto]. Many U.S. cities, including New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, followed suit and began installing the police surveillance cameras in the early 1990s. Even the Jewish Holy Land in Jerusalem is wired with CCTV systems [source: National Institute of Justice].

These systems transmit live signals to television monitors at police stations. The cameras are similar to the ones commonly found in convenience stores and banks, which police and security departments have used for decades to solve crimes. CCTV systems sales jumped by almost 700 percent from 1980 to 2000 [source: National Institute of Justice]. As you can imagine, crime cameras don't come cheap. In fact, Great Britain's Ring of Steel cost more than $330 million from 1999 to 2001 [source: Welsh and Farrington].

With all the money being pumped into these mechanized eyes, you might wonder how well they curb crime. That depends on who you ask. Law enforcement officials generally support them, citing significant drops in violent crime. On the other hand, comprehensive studies by the American and British governments have shown otherwise.

Why do these reports of effectiveness vary so much, and who's right? Read on to find out the answers, along with why some Americans feel the cameras violate the Constitution.

Thanks :http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/police-camera-crime.htm

Friday, December 4, 2009

HAPPY




















Look at the trees, look at the birds,
look at the clouds, look at the stars... and
if you have eyes you will be able to see that the whole existence is joyful. Everything is simply happy.
Trees are happy for no reason;
they are not going to become prime ministers or presidents and
they are not going to become rich and
they will never have any bank balance.
Look at the flowers - for no reason.
It is simply unbelievable how happy flowers are.
(Osho)

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

How I lost money in commodity trading


In reaction to our earlier pieces on futures trading and commodities trading, Get Ahead reader Satish Vijaykumar tells us how he lost money when he dabbled in Commodity Futures.
The day the Sensex crossed 9000, I sold all my shares and decided to park my money elsewhere. I was faced with the perennial question that plagues investors: Where must I invest?
Equity mutual funds? They too would be dependent on the stock market performance.
Public Provident Fund? And block my money for 15 years? No way!
LIC [ Get Quote ] policies? Not too happening.
Real estate? Way above my budget.
Commodities trading? Ah ha, that sounded good.
With 80% of the Indian economy being agro-based, commodities trading has a lot of scope (at least, that's what I figured). In commodities trading, you actually trade in commodities (like gold, wheat, crude oil, etc, not stocks).
The success of companies like Financial Technologies (known for its trading software), and the amount of trading done on MCX (the Multi Commodity Exchange of India [ Images ]) and NCDEX (the National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange Ltd), left no doubt in my mind that this was a booming industry.
I wanted to be part of it.
I set the ball rolling
I decided to invest Rs 2,00,000 with a leading commodity trading firm in the hope of achieving returns in the 20% to 30% range by the end of the year.
A friend who works there gave me a tutorial and PDF files so I could learn and understand the business (read How to trade in Futures and How commodity trading works to grasp the basics).
There are two things you must know.

First of all, when you buy a Futures contract, you don't pay the entire value of the contract, just a margin.
Let's say someone is selling a Gold Futures contract of 100 grams of gold that is worth Rs 72,000. If I buy it, I will not have to pay the entire amount. The exchange will set a margin at, say, 3.5%. This means I pay just Rs 2,520 to buy it (3.5% of Rs 72,000).
Secondly, you make and lose money on a daily basis. Here's an example that assumes I have bought that Gold Futures contract:
Let's say the price of gold rises to Rs 73,000 per 100 grams the next day. I make Rs 1,000 (Rs 73,000 – Rs 72,000) and the amount is credited to my account.
The day after, the price of gold dips to Rs 72,500 per 100 gms. I lose Rs 500 (Rs 73,000 – Rs 72,500) and the amount is debited from my account.
I guess you must have got the hang of it by now.
After a week of poring over all the literature, I opened an account with the commodity broking firm. They would invest my money based on the decisions taken by their research team.
My adventure begins
The first few days, life was great. I was making money. I would make a minimum of Rs 500 to a maximum of Rs 2,000 every day. After that, Lady Luck's smile turned into a frown and the firm's research calls no longer hit the target.
My losses began to mount daily: Rs 2,000, Rs 3,000 and even Rs 5,000 in one day!
In 10 days, I had lost Rs 17,000. Can you blame me for getting jittery?
Reality hit me: I was in unchartered territory, clueless about the products I was trading in. I did not understand a thing the dealer said in her daily briefings. She gave me her usual spiel and egged me on, saying there would be losses initially but, in the end, everyone made money.
Momentarily relieved, I breathed a sigh of relief.
I was going by the logic: Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when the rest are fearful.

That's when the bombshell fell. The very next day I had lost another Rs 17,000 by trading in gold.
That did it for me. It was time to get out. Fast!
After adding the brokerage and the taxes, I realised I had managed to lose Rs 47,000 in 15 days flat.
But, since I tend to look at the bright side, I have to admit the last few days were a great learning experience.
Am I feeling cheated or sad that I lost such a huge amount? Not really.
I guess I've reached the stage where feelings or emotions don't last too long. They just vaporise after a while (like the money I made and lost in day trading).

But hey, I am wiser. So let me share some pearls of wisdom with you.
Lessons learnt the hard way
~ Don't run after anything out of sheer greed.
~ Investing without sufficient knowledge or adequate research will hit you hard.
~ Never rely solely on the judgment or research of others. If it is your money, you take the call and do your own research.
~ Don't shy from asking questions and demanding more information. Remember, it is your money at stake.
~ Stick to investments you have some amount of knowledge like shares or real estate.
~ When in doubt, get out!
~ Tough times don't last (and neither do great profits), tough people do.
~ Day Trading (buying and selling in one single day) is a flawed method of trading.
~ Look at technical charts that track commodities over a three to six month period to get a more reliable indication as to where the market is headed.
~ Most important: learn from your mistakes.

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