Saturday, September 2, 2023

AI

        The recent calls for alarm by some tech workers about the threat of artificial intelligence are 100% correct. Even those who 'program'  AI and set it in motion do not understand how it works and arrives at some of the conclusions it does. When that capability outpaces human intelligence at a pace of 'thought' and 'innovation' well beyond human capabilities...it is reasonable to question what Pandora box we have opened and whether there is any way to control  it.  Like every other scientific advance, technology can be used for either 'good' or 'evil', but as  history has shown with previous human inventions,  AI too is being weaponized by human beings; those threats are frightening to any sane person. On just a common laptop AI can devise thousands of new toxic molecules that could poison humanity.  AI flying a simulation jet can outperform any experienced, top ace human pilot. In time, maybe artificial intelligence will suggest solutions to the very problems it creates, and help us solve the problems we have created. Maybe it's lack of 'feelings' for self preservation will be more ruthless and it will destroy itself, or us, or both. Those are some of


the unknowns the tech people are concerned about. 

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Buzzard Revisited

    A four mile out and back sauntering walk along a two lane gravel road ends at the pond in the picture. The trail continues into the woods beyond the pond to form a loop back to the parking lot, but it had not been mowed recently so I opted to retrace my route. The 'propagation area'  consists of woods and open fields and numerous ponds. Some of the fields are mowed to discourage brush and to provide areas for grazing deer and field mice and voles- food for the many coyotes in the area that defecate on the road. Other fields, along with milkweed, are left to grow naturally. In order the insects are a Monarch butterfly, an endangered species which unfortunately has decreased in numbers by 90% in the last 20 years. A Red Spotted Purple and a White Admiral, which some scientists consider to be sub species of one another, and a Satyr butterfly-the exact species I do not know-there are several similar looking forms. This particular individual is weather-worn and has a piece of its wing missing. Old age had it flying in less energetic, fluttering motions rather than the direct, speedy flight of a younger one. The dragonfly is one of the Common Skimmers-this particular species having a white abdomen.
The short winged green grasshopper is a female that is laying eggs; look closely at her bent abdomen that she has thrust below ground to deposit them.   I frequent this area at different times of the year to see what changes in the landscape and animal life, and noticed that the beavers I have mentioned in other posts were missing. Their dams were destroyed and the lodges were on dry ground. I suspect that the DCNR dissembled them-perhaps after the beavers were trapped? The preservation area and the surrounding game lands border one another, so the animals can move back and forth and hunters just wait. (...click on pics to enlarge)









 

Monday, July 31, 2023

The Probable Future

   The Republicans have a plan to accelerate the decimation of the planet which they seriously hope to execute if re-elected to power.   Below is an excerpt from a POLITICO article about pivoting away from renewables and back to fossil fuels and also a projection of what North America will look like if, or, as I believe, when all the ice melts.  In the United States I do not see widespread adoption of renewable energy on the scales needed to halt global warming, and the world population continues to grow, so I predict the worst case scenarios which scientists have been warning us about for decades will materialize. We have entered what is called the Anthropocene extinction era where species are dying off and oceans are warming along with other serious planetary changes. Critics will dismiss this or say the Earth has warmed and cooled before so humanity will adapt. Perhaps, but not without tremendous social instability as countries and coastlines are inundated and crops fail and conflicts over resources increase-all because we lack the wisdom to proactively plan for what our intelligence has created.  (...click on photos to enlarge)


 


Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Bathroom Humor


    I passed a few days watching my granddaughter Renley last week, who will turn seven in August. The thing I remember most fondly was hearing her laughing while I made silly voices with her stuffed animals as we read books at night. She even was able to read my favorite book from childhood called  "Theodore Turtle" which, although tattered and torn, has been passed down to her. I can still recall my own mother reading it to me and being amused by how absentminded the turtle was. That is the privilege of reliving ones childhood as a grandparent, when generally one has less stress and more patience than the first time around-not working full time and doing all the other things parents have to do. 
    While in the east I saw this changing table in the bath house at French Creek State Park and had to laugh...Anyone who has ever had children understands the exasperation one sometimes feels at 3:30 in the morning when the baby won't stop crying...Patience is one of the primary qualities one learns from children...    

Friday, June 9, 2023

Death


       Threw my brother Pete's ashes into the ocean at Kennebunkport  Beach, Maine, off the same rocks from which my father and mothers ashes were dispersed after their deaths in 1993 and 2012 respectively. I also spread some of them over a ball field in Ormrod, PA, where he both played baseball and was an umpire. The home field in Schnecksville, PA where he played as a catcher under the coaching of our father no longer exists. It was plowed under for renovations to the elementary school which we both attended. My parents moved to Sanford, Maine in 1977, where my maternal grandmother lived and which was the New England of their birth-she from Massachusetts and he from Rhode Island. Pete and his wife Linda and son Tim lived in Medford, Massachusetts for many years, and as families we all vacationed in Maine for many summers. Kennybunkport Beach was my mothers favorite, probably because it was less crowded and she could swim undisturbed by tourists. 
         Peter was a lifelong smoker so eventually succumbed to COPD, but he was able to see his beloved Phillies play in the 2022 World Series before he died, and he had a wonderful, joyous visit with his son and wife two days before passing in hospice. His somewhat autistic savant brain could recall baseball facts with remarkable detail, so that for instance, if you asked him who played shortstop in the 1969 world series he could tell you who and for what team and may even have remembered the scores and other trivia. I was not close to Pete in his later years, although when we did see one another we could pick up as though no time had passed. The unpredictable winter weather delayed the throwing of his ashes until May, and the mud like cloud in the picture is the slow return of a man's physical essence to the sea from whence we all have come. 

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Spring/Aging


    
                  

   Beth and I walked at Chapman Dam state park on the 14th, a beautiful area about 10 miles from here, where the season is beginning to express itself. The spring peepers have deposited their eggs in a few of the more reliable bog puddles, and Spring Beauty flowers are very common in the open woodland. The west branch of the Tionesta Creek forms a large pond where it has been dammed to form the named park, and there is a suspension bridge upstream of the dam.

       The remaining picture is of a red oak tree which we have been nurturing since we found it sprouting from an acorn in our flower garden. This tree has refused to die in its short lifespan, having had its young leaves stripped by deer and caterpillars twice, so we finally decided to plant it permanently in the middle of the yard where hopefully it outlives us.    

          A few days ago I overheard two women talking in a store, when one of them said, " I would like to be 36 again...Those were my best years..I felt good...etc"  That had me reflecting about my own past, and I honestly think that some of my most productive years were between the years of 37 and 40, following a divorce, when I spent thousands of hours walking and writing in solitude. I had the free time and discipline to pursue serious, intense questions about life and the nature of reality, which led me to inner revelations which I still rely upon to the present day. I had been fortunate to have parents who loved me unconditionally, and they gave me  consistent moral guidance along with the freedom to be self reliant.                 My present peace of mind I attribute to those strong foundations, as well as good genes, daily exercise, never smoking and rarely drinking alcohol. Mentally, both Beth and I have noticed a loss of short term memory, which we jokingly call the 'ten second rule'-if more than ten seconds has passed, a subject often slips our mind. Such lapses are humorous rather than disturbing, and laughter seems to be a prerequisite for aging gracefully. No doubt there are people our age whose physical and mental problems are far worse than ours, so a certain humility and gratitude are also necessary. 

   That woman in the store did not wish to be very young, rather she appreciated the hard earned lessons that a few decades of living had offered her, but she also remembered the physical prowess of her thirties that twenty additional years had taken away. Growing old happens slowly enough that physical  changes are subtle at first, and a fading memory makes it difficult to recall exactly what one has lost until one sees a photograph from twenty years earlier; then the wrinkles and gray hairs of the present become obvious. Inwardly, something from ones childhood never changes, and youthful silliness and spontaneous joy emerge if one allows them-at least within those of us fortunate enough to have had good memories to hold onto. How much of human happiness is genetic and how much is nurture I cannot say, but I feel blessed to have had an enduring portion of both to sustain me as the years have passed...As for the 'ultimate' meaning of life, my intuitive impulses since I was a young man have always leaned towards learning of love...what it is, how to give and receive it to ourselves, to other people, to other life forms and to all things under Creation. I have forgiveness for people who have made mistakes along the way so long as they have accepted them as opportunities for growth and redemption towards that ideal of compassion and love that the word 'God' represents. However, when I witness people my age who still harbor prejudices and hate and anger towards other people or life forms, I consider them to have wasted decades of life. If you have been fortunate enough to reach 50 plus years of age without realizing the unity of all of Creation, you have truly squandered all that you have been given.



                

Sunday, April 2, 2023

TwoMonthsTraveling




  I just returned from six weeks meandering around the south and west, then another three weeks with Beth in Texas and Georgia.  Her business  prevents her from accompanying me full time at the present, so I take the van and drive mostly back roads on impulse, sleeping and hiking and golfing where the road takes me. I escape the cold and snow of the north and discover new landscapes, sleeping in National forests and Walmart parking lots and wherever the evening finds me.                                                  To that end, as much as I do not agree with the conservative politicians in Texas, the state is very friendly to spontaneous people like myself, for they allow overnight parking in their roadside rests- which are numerous-and the small towns in the western part of the state have free parking for RV's -including electricity and water if one wants it. People in the south generally are more friendly than northerners , with store clerks saying 'thank you' and other civilities, although the abundance of Baptist churches gives the area a religious overtone that is a little uncomfortable. That is, beneath the pleasantries there is a residue of prejudice that is hard to define, as if some of the whites cannot quite admit that the civil war-which one town in South Carolina calls the "Confederate war"-was fought and lost because of slavery. The focus to them is on their pride for the bravery of the individual soldiers and generals rather than the reasons for the fighting. It is as though it would be acceptable for Germany to display the Nazi flag simply because the German soldiers fought well; the larger moral questions are ignored.  But politics aside the south and west are a wonderful winter escape, and I drift to the rural areas and small towns. Florida is an exception, for the overdeveloped congestion in that state is to be avoided unless one enjoys such things.                                                               The pictures show a Trump store for fanatics in Virginia, an exclusive Victorian era hotel on Jekyll Island, Georgia, a solar array in Texas, a sunset over the Mississippi river at the town of Natchez, and some of the fantastic landscape in east central New Mexico. ( click on the pics to enlarge...)