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2016-08-12 02:06 pm
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Presentations, Social Events, CensusFail

It has been a very busy week and a sense of general tiredness is pervasive. Last Sunday I gave a presentation at The Philosophy Forum on Race Conditions for the Human Species: A Global Perspective (there are a few and our actions are piecemeal and responsive). Two days later on Tuesday night, I presented Is Pantheism an Atheism? to the Melbourne Atheist Society (it depends on experience). On Wednesday ran the Introduction to HPC course which received extremely good feedback from attendees. Classes will of course continue on their regular, weekly basis. Next Philosophy Forum presentation I'm giving is in December, The Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics, following an encounter with a lunatic who believes that their consciousness creates reality. Seriously, there is a special circle of hell for people who misrepresent the Copenhagen Interpretation in such a populist, ignorant, and ill-considered manner.

It has not been all work and now play however. Sunday night was an enjoyable gathering for [livejournal.com profile] sebastianne's "thirtieth" birthday gathering at The Drunken Poet (related to such establishment, I have been interested in the series No Béarla - a first-language Irish speaker attempts to tour Ireland without using English). Last night went to see a gothic superhero double at The Astor; Batman (1989) and The Crow, with [livejournal.com profile] thefon, who is visiting us from Perth. Gaming-wise we had a session of Eclipse Phase on Sunday which was something like a cross between Avatar and Aliens, a first session of Delta Green Countdown, which has started quiet enough.

Much has been made this week of the almighty collection of failures surrounding the Australian Census. Apart from legitimate concerns on privacy, with various legal discussions, there was the miserable failure on the night it was supposed to be taken. I described it as: "The Census is a self-advertised Distributed Denial of Service attack". It didn't take the long before official claims that it was an actual overseas DDoS attack - to be honest I didn't think they would be so stupid to make such a claim. Still, on the positive side the recommendations that I initially made to the ABS in 2012 and were part of the formal review in 2013 have been accepted. To express simply, Unitarians were previously listed as a sub-group of Christians. Now they are Unitarian-Universalists and are counted under "Secular Beliefs and Other Spiritual Beliefs and No Religious Affiliation".
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2013-11-13 07:59 pm

The Fourth Degree, Crankiness, Atheism

Yesterday completed the exam for EDU4441 Tertiary and Adult Education Policy, which means (assuming that I've pased), that I now have my fourth degree, a Graduate Certificate in Tertiary and Adult Education. Now I just have to see how my application at the University of Otago for a Master of Education. With regards to the Grad Cert, a previous post indicated that I'd appealed the grade I'd received for the research project from both the tutor and the unit coordinator; the academic chair has reviewed my case and agrees that I have been assessed unfairly and that I should engage in self-assessment of my project in accordance to the information to the marking criteria and the previously submitted research proposal.

Which all has been a surprisingly successful run of removing the issue of my previous cranky post; the Australian Tax Office acknowledged a problem after I had submitted a complaint, Net Registry has a small mountain of problems with their hosting service (including regular core dumps, but I'm working my away around those. Even Ebay has recognised the need to be more attentive of misallocated items that they have for sale and the limits on their blocked sellers option. Now admittedly, all of this has taken far more effort that should have been necessary, but that's most certainly the cause of prior crankiness.

On a much less cranky matter, presented at the Atheist Society last night with the controversial title The Pragmatic Limits of Scientism in New Atheism, where I essentially drew a lineage from logical positivism to new atheism, and constrasted it with both Gould's non-overlapping magisteria and universal pragmatics. A good turnout (especially given the weather!), good quality discussion afterwards and was both pleased an impressed to have Graeme and Jonathan Rutherford in attendance.
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2013-05-11 10:37 am
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Various Linux News; Japanese Socialism, Religious Fascism, West Papua

Last Tuesday night was the Linux Users of Victoria meeting which looked at two ends of development; Martin Paulo gave another excellent talk on the OpenStack free software cloud project, this time in a more tutorial framework, followed by Aryan Ameri (G+) on Ubuntu phones - more on how they don't quite work yet, but do show a roadmap of where they're going. The meeting also formally announed our Librarything, for our Library of LUV (LoL). Next Saturday I'll be presenting at the Beginners Workshop, An Introduction to Supercomputing. Further, as I've been working on another training manual I've had the opportunity to develop a few interesting scripts and posts over the past week; Backups and Synchronisations, Deleting Many Files, and Searching for Emails.

Earlier this week started writing about the decline of the socialist left in Japan. I am hoping that knowledgable people (e.g., [livejournal.com profile] aske) might suggest a few reasons. A pleasant surprise was the discovery that Matt Bush and I had been published in the latest issue of The Freethinker for our article on Islamofascism: A Real Term for A Real Problem, which argues that Islamic fascism really does exist and that the principles of secularism must be universalised. Finally, next Saturday the Isocracy Network is hosting a meeting (FB events) with Louis Byrne from West Papua Melbourne speaking. It remains an interesting question why West Papuan solidarity has never reached the mass appeal to that of East Timor, when both are of equal importance.
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2009-10-18 09:38 am

Animals, Atheism, Gaming, Dali

Yesterday [livejournal.com profile] caseopaya, Chris Samuel and I spent the day at Healesville Animal Sanctuary. Full of iconic Australian animals (kangaroos, wallabies, emus, koalas, wombats, echidnas, platypuses, tasmanian devils, possums, quolls, numerous birds - including some very rare, various snakes, lizards and bats), it is certainly a thoroughly pleasant and well-maintained place for said critters. No drop bears tho'.

Gave a presentation at the Melbourne Atheist Society on Tuesday night on "Atheist Support for Religious Freedom?". It was well-attended and well-received, with some excellent questions and statements, mostly around the tax-exempt status of religious organisations, although there was couple of people in the peanut gallery who were paddling in the shallows (e.g., "Where do atheists get their ethics from?").

The latest issue of RPG Review has received some coverage in the comic scene, courtesy of Bleeding Cool and the good folk at Orang Utan comics. In other gaming-related news for two oddities, I ran Lords of Creation on Thursday (it's crazier than Rifts and not as broken) and today it'll be a grand Napoleanic agenda with Avalon Hill's historical War and Peace.

Like most of Melbourne (and I completed forgot to 'blog), we did go to the Salvador Dali exhibition a couple of weeks back. Not desiring to stand in the incredibly long queue took the opportunity to sign up as NGV members, thus applying the other 'rationing' mechanism. I was particularly thrilled to see the film Destino which I had quite an interest in about fifteen years ago (if you must know through a game of Mage: The Ascension) and the collaborations with Phillipe Halsman.
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2009-10-12 04:47 pm

Stems and Creepers, RPG Review #5, Atheist Discussions

Last Friday night [livejournal.com profile] caseopaya and I ventured to the Corner Hotel to see the last ever show of The Stems, a 60s revivalist garage band who had some significant success in the 1980s and reformed in 2007 (following that?). They were aptly supported by the Huxton Creepers, along with The Dolly Rocker Movement and Even. It was an excellent show for aging alternative rocker types like ourselves, competently and energetically performed, although the couple standing behind us probably could have done with a hotel room.

The latest issue of RPG Review has been released which starts with a fascinating legal debate over our use of 'Young Gods' as the title of an article in the last issue (I'm sure some readers will love to get their teeth into this one), industry news from Mingshi, an interview and artworks by Dan 'Smif' Smith, a review of the New Worlds of Darkness series plus a scenario for the same, a retrospective review of Swordbearer and Heroes of Olympus plus a scenario for both game systems based on the Odyssey, a GURPS Transhumanists plus Time Travellers campaign, languages in GURPS, travel and transport in Paranoia, reliance on NPCs, Metagaming, Anachronisms and Diegesis, a review of Fallout 3, a review of the movie District 9, and, of course, advice and help from Lord Orcus himself!

I'm speaking tomorrow at the Melbourne Atheist Society on "Atheist Support for Religious Freedom?" which promises to discuss the hard issues, not the easy ones. In my absence the Unitarian Philosophy Forum discussed "Death and Existence" which I provided an outline for the discussion. Tickets now available for the 2010 Rise of Atheism convention in Melbourne which features Richard Dawkins, Phillip Adams, Peter Singer and P Z Myers.
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2009-09-14 07:05 am

Atheist and Religous Meetings, Work-Related Activities

Last Tuesday went to the Melbourne Atheist Society to hear Alex McCullie talk on "Progessive Christianity: A Secular Response". Alex claimed the theoretical and practical elements of progressive Christianity is really little different to an active secular humanist with the exception that they have a sense of a personal religious experience; so in other words he didn't have much of a response to offer! This Tuesday the Melbourne University Secular Society is holding an excellent forum on The Problem of Evil, with so absolutely top quality local speakers on the subject. Next month I am presenting at the Melbourne Atheist Society on "Atheist Support for Religious Freedom?" and this Sunday coming I am speaking at the Melbourne Unitarian Church on "The Other Half: The Universalist Tradition" (the Melbourne Church, coming from an English rather than American Unitarian tradition doesn't really have much Universalist influence). Last Sunday week at the same organisation I gave the service for Denis Fitzgerald, executive director of Catholic Social Services; I cited Óscar Romero and Populorum progressio.

Lateline reported last Thursday that Australian scientists are developing a new chemotherapy treatment, using a diamond-encrusted skin patch which slowly releases drugs into the body. Yes, that is me showing Dr. Amanda Barndard from CSIRO around the VPAC machine room. Have almost finished by first MBA assignment; a 3,000 word document on how VPAC is going to provide high-performance computing services in the future (actually, not that easy given item 2 of the organisation's constitutional objectives). Next assignment, due on Wednesday, is a Financial Management analysis. Apropos to this is an excellent article gaining wider circulation on how to manage IT staff; it's all about respect (hat-tip to [livejournal.com profile] certifiedwaif). The analogy with medical staff was particularly well put.
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2009-07-20 01:34 pm

The Aesthetic Dimension, Religious Meanderings, RPG Review

Went to Liquid Architecture last week with [livejournal.com profile] _nightflower_, an interesting combination of video, sound, performance and installation art. On Saturday went with Karl and Liz to the to the Satirical Eye exhibition at the National Gallery (International) on Saturday; was particularly impressed by Rowlandsen's 'The Chamber of Genius', the content of Goya's Los Caprichos and the irony of Honore Daumier's Les Femmes Socialistes (genuinely ironic because Honoré was trying to ridicule socialist women but the arguments and presentation were actually supportive by contemporary standards). On Wednesday evening will be attending the Salvador Dali Liquid Desire at the same location. Also hoping to see the Light Years (photography and space) exhibition. Tonight will be attending The Comics Lounge with [livejournal.com profile] kremmen and [livejournal.com profile] caseopaya.

On Tuesday attended the Melbourne Atheist Society to listen to Silvio Bonazinga question 'scientism' in atheism. Meeting in the same hall on Sunday, Peter Abrehart, chairperson of the Melbourne Unitarian Church spoke pretty much in favour of scientism on a presentation entitled 'The Greatest Dissenters'; I took the service from this address and the reading was from Marx's A Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right, specifically oft-cited (and usually erroneously) comment on religion as the opium of the people.

RPG Review issue four has been released. Dennis Sustare's article on his life in gaming is particularly fascinating reading. Also some twit supposedly representing Barry Windsor-Smith studios is complaining about the article entitled Young Gods supposedly infringing trademark. Fun times ahead if they try to go through with that one.