Grand Sichuan, redux
Undercover Economist
- It is all well and good to say that externality pricing reduces the effects of the externality, but how politically easy is it to impose such prices? As we've seen in NY, it is extremely difficult.
- The book claims that as the standard of living in China has increase, that large-particle pollution has gone down. That may be true, but when I was just in China I felt like the pollution was stifling.
- The book claims that there is correlation/causation between protectionist policies and intensive farming. I'm not sure I believe that, and the book did not provide a compelling argument as to why that might be the case.
Liars and crooks
49 Up
Purity of Blood
I did enjoy the depth of portrayal of 17th-century Spain, although I am not in a position the historical accuracy of the extended ruminations on Spain's downfall. However, for fiction I tend to prefer books with more interesting plots or with better character development. Well, I guess you can't expect everything from a novel.
Inside China
John Singer Sargent
Met talk: Italian Renaissance and the Kremlin
The West invades China
What could be less Western than Ikea?
And look at this: the shopping channel in China, which is selling toy pigs (2007 is the Year of the Pig)!
Veronica
Terra cotta soldiers
While in Xi'an, we visited the famous terra-cotta soldiers that were created for the Qin emperor's tomb. Amazing! It was a little disappointing when we learned that all of the items had been reassembled and refired; for some reason I thought that they had been carefully dug out of the ground.
Lucky numbers
Beijing/Los Angeles
After spending some time in Beijing, I decided that LA and BJ should be sister cities. They share many important characteristics of modern cities: traffic, sprawl, and smog. The first two are linked, of course, and contribute significantly to the third.
One noticeable change in China since the first time I went (in 2001) is that the number of cars has increased dramatically. In 2001, bicycles still outnumbered cars in Beijing. In 2007, cars vastly outnumber bicycles.
How different is China?
This shot was taken out of a window in the same building as the Red Gate Gallery. Can you tell that it is in China? I can't.
Red Gate Gallery
I visited a modern art gallery called the Red Gate Gallery. It is next to the Ming City Wall Site Park, inside the building shown in the picture. My favorite painting in the gallery was the one below, Silk Road by Zheng Xuewu.
Chairman Mao
Ming City Wall Site Park
This photo is of a pretty little city park that contains the last remnants of the Beijing city wall. Chairman Mao ordered the entire wall torn down, and this is the last remaining piece, unfortunately; otherwise, it would be a wonderful tourist attraction today! Note the Marriott's odd architecture in the background.
Turing
Vere Chocolate
Captain Alatriste
Highly recommended light reading!
Animal Liberation
Emotional Intelligence
Wikipedia has an interesting discussion about this topic. Overall, it talks about a lot of commonsense stuff, but maybe that's easy to see in hindsight. Some of the claims in the book about how society was deteriorating seem completely overblown: the book implies that a lack of emotional intelligence was responsible for many societal ills.
Company
Nutrition information
Pan's Labyrinth
Personality strengths
- Learner
- Deliberative
- Responsibility
- Restorative
- Activator
I'm still mulling this over to see if this classification describes me well.
Climate
The suggestion that Lake Chad has been destroyed because of global warming seems to be untrue, based on some of the reading that I have done.
Gore should have suggested that we eat less meat, buy fewer processed foods, and buy less stuff. The former consumes a great deal of energy (unless it is grass-fed), and I bet food processing does too. Finally, capitalism itself (more accurately, consumption for the sake of consumption) is responsible for a lot of the energy we consume, because all of the environmental damage is externalized. My conclusion is:
Consume less stuff. Consume less food. Consume less energy.
24
Pesticides
Another game
Recycling
Amusing game
Michael Pollan article
in this week's NY Times magazine. Well worth reading, even though its recommendations overlap with almost all of the other reading I've been doing about food. I love the opening sentences:
Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.
Silly food labels
Vitamins
What To Eat
Serenity
The Met
| From Around NY |
Busy museum day. We went to the Met and saw two exhibits:
- Louis Comfort Tiffany and Laurelton Hall . Tiffany was a brilliant artist who worked in many different media, which I didn't know.
Glitter and Doom was an exhibit of German portraiture during the Weimar Republic. There were some really incisive portraits. My favorite was Max Beckmann's The Old Actress, which seemed extremely familiar.
Both of them were amazing!
Cooper-Hewitt
More garbage
Garbage
She gave an interesting interview that is worth reading.
al-Qaeda
Lawrence Wright wrote a New Yorker article this is worth a read.
MOMA
Seafood
Match Point
My first reaction after seeing this film: is Woody Allen working on some guilt because he killed someone? Why has he made two films about murder and guilt?
The Voysey Inheritance
Electronics recycling
Lower East Side Ecology Center and Con Edison sponsor a recycling event every year in Union Square. Time to finally get rid of that old computer!
Money mistakes
- We tend to keep separate mental accounts for our money; don't let these mental accounts affect your spending patterns.
- Losses affect us more than gains hurt us, so we get more reckless in trying to avoid losses.
- Sunk costs do not matter.
- We are affected by how issues are framed: reframe issues so that you see them both as gains and losses.
- Don't ignore small numbers, such as mutual-fund fees.
- We tend to anchor on irrelevant information, and we treat events that are likely to be the result of change as non-random; don't pay attention to such irrelevant information.
- Don't be overconfident about your abilities if you have little training.
- Avoid "confirmation bias", which is our tendency to treat information as though it confirms our decisions.
- Don't follow the herd.
- Avoid too much information. Information can cause us to act emotionally.
Little Miss Sunshine
Happy New Year
My Chemical Romance
Rules of the Game
Ardneh's Sword
Empire of the East. I loved the latter when I read it as a teenager, but Ardneh's Sword was really bad. As far as I could tell, the only reason for its existence is to tie the Empire of the East universe to the universe of the Twelve Swords. I'm glad I took this book out of the library, and didn't actually buy it.
Wealth
- He advocates index investing for almost all investors.
- He suggests viewing one's career as a form of investment that can be used to balance passive investing.
- He views the government as a "silent partner" in one's investing. The government actually takes more of the burden when one realizes losses, and only shares in gains. This is an interesting view of capital-gains taxes.
He talks about some of the interesting challenges of raising children (especially in the context of a great deal of money). Some of the more generally applicable pieces of wisdom: "fair does not mean equal", and good parents try to help their children realize their own personalities.
The Devil Wears Prada
Fragile Things
Influence
by Robert Cialdini is an interesting book. It talks about how we are all subject to basic human psychological pressures. The wikipedia entry on Cialdini summarizes the result pretty well: here is my one-liner summary:
- Reciprocation. Tactics used: unequal exchanges (free samples), rejection then retreat (propose an extreme position then retreat).
- Commitment and consistency. Tactics used: induce a small commitment to a particular image (ask for help with some trivial task).
- Social proof. Tactics used: create illusory consensus ("man-on-the-street" endosrements).
- Liking. Tactics used: good-looking salespeople, compliments, mirroring, sell through friends (Amway).
- Authority. Tactics used: false titles (ads from authority figures without expertise).
- Scarcity. Tactics used: time pressure, create false competition.
Vegetarian food in Flushing, NY
Mystery Men
I used to think Ben Stiller was funny. Now I'm not so sure. Zoolander was another bad movie that I forced myself (and my wife) to watch a few years ago, and it wasn't particularly good.
Fear: we really need to fear the media and politicians
Water and food
- 25 gallons to produce a portion of rice
- 40 gallons for the bread in a sandwich
- 130 gallons for a two-egg omelet or mixed salad
- 265 gallons for a glass of milk
- 400 gallons for ice cream
- 530 gallons for a pork chop
- 800 gallons for a hamburger
- 320 gallons for a small steak
- 50 cups for a teaspoon of sugar
- 37 gallons for a cup of coffee
- 66 gallons for a glass of wine/beer
- 530 gallons for a brandy
- 1200 gallons (assuming 50 gallons/bathtub) to grow 9 ounces of cotton
Pearce talks about the relative water consumption of various human activities:
- drinking: 265 gallons (1 ton)/year
- home use: 50-100 tons/year
- food and clothing: 1500-2000 tons/year
That makes clear that the bottleneck is clearly food and clothing, and that becoming vegetarian might actually be the best way to conserve water.
While I was walking home last night, I came to the minor realization that if we treat the human-earth relationship as a complex system, then some resource will always be the bottleneck. Pearce's book implies that it as water; the more obvious candidate (from a public perspective) has been energy (oil).
Water conservation
An interview with Fred Pearce, the author, sums up most of the issues discussed in the book.
Jonathan Coulton
William Bernstein
- Diversification
- Regular rebalancing to a fixed allocation
Thesis writing
Mindset
Hoop Dreams
Here is a Washington Post article that talks about the two protagonists in 2004.
Google Analytics
The Iraq Occupation
Too bad the Bush administration didn't understand (and maybe still doesn't understand) that effecting governmental change takes a skilled bureaucracy and not just propaganda.
revolution in string instruments
Fascinating. I wonder what it would be like to play on one of these instruments?
After the Thin Man
Scooby Doo!
| From Around NY |
We went to see the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons the night before the parade. It was quite fun, and there must have been tens of thousands of people there! Scooby Dooby Doo!
The Thin Man
dessert
There is a limit of 500 rice puddings per customer.
Asia Society
The Asia Society Museum also had an exhibit of modern Asian-American artists, which I found to be pretty uninteresting.
One amusing item: there was a piece by a Hong Kong artist named Wilson Shieh!
Little Manhattan
Jonathan Strange
Infernal Affairs
Chamber music
Lily Francis, violin
Miho Saegusa, violin
Eric Nowlin, viola
Katie Kadarauch, viola
Marcy Rosen, cello
Ieva Jokubaviciute, piano
Tamara Mumford, mezzo-soprano
Beethoven—Folk Songs for Voice, Violin, Cello, and Piano
Brahms—Zwei Gesänge, Opus 91 for Mezzosoprano, Viola, and Piano
Bartók—String Quartet No. 4
Mozart—String Quintet in D Major, K. 593
Tamara, Ieva, and Eric performed the Brahms. The rest of concert was quite impressive (the Bartok 4 was sparkling), but the Brahms is the performance that I will remember.
Narnia
Stephen Brust
Vegetarianism
Everything is Illuminated
This movie was pretty good! It had some wonderful moments, although it also felt very slow at points. It was weird to see Frodo, and the moment where he is given his grandfather's first wife's wedding ring was just too funny! I wouldn't have cast him in that role, just to avoid that moment of hilarity.
Fooled by Randomness
I read through this book quickly. Interesting philsophically, but it rambles and doesn't get to any points, other than to attempt to impress the reader with the depth and breadth of the author's reading.
Bouchon Bakery
International Center for Photography
The Kite Runner
I finished this book today while waiting for our car to get repaired. Quite a good read, with some very moving passages; I felt like weeping several times in the book. I recommend the book highly: the only weakness was near the end, when the events of a decade were telescoped down into a few dozen pages, and there was a little too much use of flashback.
The Departed
What an excellent movie! Not sure what else to say: good writing and acting. Leonardo di Caprio was fun to watch, as was the rest of the fine cast.
The City of Falling Angels
Over vacation I listened to this book on tape. Fascinating story about Venice and a lot of fascinating Venetians.