​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​
Stowe Boyd

Stowe Boyd

Insatiably curious.

My vocation is work futures. This is everything else.


Where to find me
Bio
  • Archive
  • Ask me a question
    Tweets by stoweboyd
    ​ ​ ​
    ​

    Likes

    ​ ​
    • Post via guerrillatech
      image
      Post via guerrillatech
    • Post via rejectingrepublicans
      image
      Post via rejectingrepublicans
    • Post via trixclibrarian

      weantuniverse:

      image
      Post via trixclibrarian
    • Video via weil-weil-lautre
      Video

      Willie Nelson - Night Life with BB King

      Video via weil-weil-lautre
    • Photo via huariqueje

      Mediterraneo II - Antonio Barahona , 2021.

      Spanish,b.1984 -

      Oil on panel, 54 x 65 cm.

      Photo via huariqueje
    • Post via qhio

      gacougnol:

      image

      Eric Drigny

      Post via qhio
    • Photo via huariqueje

      Horizon II - Xavier Rodés , 2022.

      Catalan, b.1971 -

      Oil on wood , 46 × 55 cm.

      Photo via huariqueje
    • Photoset via macrolit

      macrolit:

      The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafon

      Photoset via macrolit
    • Photo via grungeouttakesabstracts

      Bus stop in shadows

      Madrid, Spain - 7/2/11

      Photo via grungeouttakesabstracts
    • Quote via probablyasocialecologist
      “Starmer, for instance (the leader of the British Labour Party), has expressed a vague commitment to change (when asked what he intended to...”
      Quote via probablyasocialecologist
    ​ ​ ​ ​
    ​ Mute Theme by Safe As Milk ​
    ​ ​
    ​

    Olga Tuleninova 🦋 on Twitter

    twitter.com

    “Charles Sheeler (American, 1883-1965) Clapboards, 1936 Oil on canvas 21 1/8 x 19 1/4 in. (53.7 x 48.9 cm.) Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts”

    (Source: twitter.com)

    • #charles sheeler
    • #paintings
    • #landscape
    2022-08-28
    Just a presentation I am working on, for October.
All created in Obsidian using Advanced Slides plugin.

    Just a presentation I am working on, for October.

    All created in Obsidian using Advanced Slides plugin.

    • #presentations
    • #obsidian
    • #advanced slides
    2022-08-27

    Theology being the work of males, original sin was traced to the female.

    | Barbara Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century
    • #barbara tuchman
    • #a distant mirror
    • #original sin
    • #quotations
    2022-08-25

    Sierra Hull covers Mad World by Tears for Fears

    • #sierra hull
    • #music
    • #video
    • #mad world
    2022-08-25

    Dissensus, not consensus, is the shorter but steeper path

    [Originally written in 2013, but still topical]

    A week ago, I read a Adam Bryant interview with Bob Pittman of Clear Channel, the radio network, in which Pittman makes a case for a role for dissent as a triangulation tool. He was talking about his early days as a new manager, and how he countered the natural suspicions of those older than him by actively encouraging people to present opposing views, and how that shaped his current approach:

    Often in meetings, I will ask people when we’re discussing an idea, “What did the dissenter say?” The first time you do that, somebody might say, “Well, everybody’s on board.” Then I’ll say, “Well, you guys aren’t listening very well, because there’s always another point of view somewhere and you need to go back and find out what the dissenting point of view is.” I don’t want to hear someone say after we do something, “Oh, we should have done this.”

    I want us to listen to these dissenters because they may intend to tell you why we can’t do something, but if you listen hard, what they’re really telling you is what you must do to get something done. It gets you out of your framework of the conventions of what you can and can’t do.

    Pittman’s grass roots embrace of dissent is only the starting point of its utility, and its central role in the evolving laissez-faire management thinking behind the third way of work.


    I want us to listen to these dissenters because they may intend to tell you why we can’t do something, but if you listen hard, what they’re really telling you is what you must do to get something done. – Bob Pittman


    Note that the heading ‘the shorter path’ is based on one of the paradoxes of computing, that algorithms that do more work at the outset generally wind-up being more efficient. Dissent is like that. Avoiding the comfortable traps of groupthink and the cognitive biases that herd us into consensus too quickly is hard work, but leads to better results, we will see.

    Ulrich Klocke researched causes of poor group decision making in How to Improve Decision Making in Small Groups: Effects of Dissent and Training Interventions. First, groups may fail to process information effectively:  for example, not sharing information that may be relevant for various reasons, or giving some information only a cursory examination. Secondly, certain well-known cognitive biases can lead groups to poor results, particularly bias in favor of shared information (information known to many in the group), and a bias in favor of initial preferences (people get stuck on what initially occurs to them, and are hard to unstick).

    As Klocke wrote about the sharedness bias —

    Groups communicate predominantly about information, which all or most group members share before entering the discussion, and neglect unshared information, which only one or few members have initially.

    […] group members individually judge shared information as more important, relevant, accurate, and influential than unshared information. This bias seems to have two reasons: First, shared information can be confirmed by more than one group member. Second, individuals evaluate their own information as more valid than information from other members. Thus, unshared information, even if mentioned in the discussion, is not seriously considered by other group members and therefore has less impact on the final decision than shared information.

    — and later, about the preference bias —

    Even when all information necessary to identify the correct solution is exchanged during discussion, individual group members often stick to their initially preferred wrong solution. People bias their information processing to favor an initially preferred alternative. Other studies show the same phenomenon at the group level: Group decisions can often be predicted by the initial preferences of its members. If a majority favors a certain alternative before the discussion, the group seldom decides to chose another alternative. Thus, frequently, group discussions are superfluous, and groups would be better off using a decision shortcut like an immediate vote or an averaging procedure.

    Klocke has catalogued a litany of cognitive barriers to effective group decision making, and — spoiler alert — the research he conducted supported these biases as being present in his experimental groups, as well as those he cites from the literature. [Note: All citations left out of these quotes.]


    Frequently, group discussions are superfluous, and groups would be better off using a decision shortcut like an immediate vote or an averaging procedure. – Ulrich Klocke


    Perhaps the worst news is that simply letting people know about these biases is not enough to counter their impact on group behavior. One thing, however, can positively change decision making: dissent.

    The impacts of dissent are positive both at the group and individual level. As Klocke outlined,

    […] early field studies analyzed the effects of groupthink, a tendency for concurrence seeking that effectively suppresses the expression of dissent. They found evidence that groupthink can have detrimental effects on group decisions. […] These experiments showed that dissent (compared to consent) enhances decision-making quality, even when no group member favors the correct solution before the discussion. This effect was mediated predominantly by more systematic processing of information but also by less biased processing of information. Specifically, dissent led to the introduction and repetition of more information and to a more balanced discussion of shared and unshared and preference-consistent and inconsistent information.

    With regard to individual behavior in the context of dissent:

    There is evidence for more systematic processing by individuals after being exposed to divergent opinions. One factor that mobilizes systematic processing is surprise or a deviation from expectancy. Usually, divergent opinions are unexpected and therefore cause surprise and mobilize cognitive resources to explain the unexpected event. In addition, it has been demonstrated that dissent, especially when articulated by a consistent minority, promotes divergent thinking, a variable related to unbiased processing.

    Klocke went on to test whether interventions in group activities — telling them groups about the various biases, but not actually introducing systematic efforts toward dissent — and discovered they don’t have much of an effect. Simply knowing that bias is likely does not counter bias.

    On the other hand, the findings regarding dissent are powerful and demonstrate a maxim: the more important a decision, the broader the diversity of opinions that should be sought to apply to the decision, and the greater the attention to active and comprehensive dissent.


    A premortem in a business setting comes at the beginning of a project rather than the end, so that the project can be improved rather than autopsied. – Gary Klein


    Bob Pittman’s real-world experience is borne out by the experimental evidence. I think one of the best approaches to inserting dissent is to use project premortems which extends Pittman’s search for dissent at the outset. As described by Gary Klein, a premortem

    is the hypothetical opposite of a postmortem. A postmortem in a medical setting allows health professionals and the family to learn what caused a patient’s death. Everyone benefits except, of course, the patient. A premortem in a business setting comes at the beginning of a project rather than the end, so that the project can be improved rather than autopsied. Unlike a typical critiquing session, in which project team members are asked what might go wrong, the premortem operates on the assumption that the “patient” has died, and so asks what did go wrong. The team members’ task is to generate plausible reasons for the project’s failure.

    Klein seems to have grasped the biases that tend to push people toward groupthink, and his approach counters them. Sometime after everyone has been brought up to speed on the plan, a premortem is held.

    1. The facilitator starts by saying the project has failed ‘spectacularly’.
    2. Each person writes down — privately — every reason they can think of for that failure, and as Klein says, ‘especially the kinds of things they ordinarily wouldn’t mention as potential problems, for fear of being impolitic’.
    3. In a round robin, the facilitator gets one reason from each team member, who reads it aloud, and it is recorded, until all reasons are covered.
    4. Discussion can be as deep or as shallow as the facilitator needs.
    5. After the meeting, the facilitator and team leader can refine the list, and respond with an action plan to resolve issues, and then reconvene the team to make decisions on ways to revise the project plan or approach.

    This intentionally sidesteps the sharedness and preference biases to at least a reasonable degree, and also can increase the deviation from the expected, given that a diverse set of viewpoints are brought into the premortem.

    The biggest takeaways are these. We have deep cognitive biases that negatively impact group decision making, especially when group decision-making is not structured to counter those biases, and does not exploit the value of dissent and diversity. Techniques like premortems are one tool to help increase the leverage that dissent offers, and avoid the soft pitfalls of groupthink and unwarranted consensus.

    • #dissent
    • #consent
    • #ulrich klocke
    • #bob pittman
    • #decision-making
    2022-08-22

    Selected excerpts from a compelling argument to eleiminate the US Constitution: The Constitution Is Broken and Should Not Be Reclaimed | Ryan D. Doerfler, Samuel Moyn

    Aug. 19, 2022

    Dr. Doerfler and Dr. Moyn teach law at Harvard and Yale.

    When liberals lose in the Supreme Court — as they increasingly have over the past half-century — they usually say that the justices got the Constitution wrong. But struggling over the Constitution has proved a dead end.

    The real need is not to reclaim the Constitution, as many would have it, but instead to reclaim America from constitutionalism.^[ #politics/constitutionalism ]

    The idea of constitutionalism is that there needs to be some higher law that is more difficult to change than the rest of the legal order.

    Having a constitution is about setting more sacrosanct rules than the ones the legislature can pass day to day.

    But constitutions — especially the broken one we have now — inevitably orient us to the past and misdirect the present into a dispute over what people agreed on once upon a time, not on what the present and future demand for and from those who live now.

    Arming for war over the Constitution concedes in advance that the left must translate its politics into something consistent with the past. But liberals have been attempting to reclaim the Constitution for 50 years — with agonizingly little to show for it. It’s time for them to radically alter the basic rules of the game.

    even when progressives concede that the Constitution is at the root of our situation, typically the call is for some new constitutionalism.

    our current Constitution is inadequate, which is why it serves reactionaries so well.

    In a new book, the law professors Joseph Fishkin and William Forbath urge progressives to stop treating constitutional law as an “autonomous” domain, “separate from politics.”

    Why justify our politics by the Constitution or by calls for some renovated constitutional tradition? It has exacted a terrible price in distortion and distraction to transform our national life into a contest over reinterpreting our founding charter consistently with what majorities believe now.

    No matter how openly political it may purport to be, reclaiming the Constitution remains a kind of antipolitics. It requires the substitution of claims about the best reading of some centuries-old text or about promises said to be already in our traditions for direct arguments about what fairness or justice demands.

    It’s difficult to find a constitutional basis for abortion or labor unions in a document written by largely affluent men more than two centuries ago.

    After failing to get the Constitution interpreted in an egalitarian way for so long, the way to seek real freedom will be to use procedures consistent with popular rule.

    In a second stage, though, Americans could learn simply to do politics through ordinary statute rather than staging constant wars over who controls the heavy weaponry of constitutional law from the past.

    If legislatures just passed rules and protected values majorities believe in, the distinction between “higher law” and everyday politics effectively disappears.

    One way to get to this more democratic world is to pack the Union with new states. Doing so would allow Americans to then use the formal amendment process to alter the basic rules of the politics and break the false deadlock that the Constitution imposes through the Electoral College and Senate on the country, in which substantial majorities are foiled on issue after issue.

    More aggressively, Congress could simply pass a Congress Act, reorganizing our legislature in ways that are more fairly representative of where people actually live and vote, and perhaps even reducing the Senate to a mere “council of revision” (a term Jamelle Bouie used to describe the Canadian Senate), without the power to obstruct laws.

    In so doing, Congress would be pretty openly defying the Constitution to get to a more democratic order — and for that reason would need to insulate the law from judicial review.

    Fundamental values like racial equality or environmental justice would be protected not by law that stands apart from politics but — as they typically are — by ordinary expressions of popular will.

    the basic structure of government, like whether to elect the president by majority vote or to limit judges to fixed terms, would be decided by the present electorate, as opposed to one from some foggy past.

    A politics of the American future like this would make clear our ability to engage in the constant reinvention of our society under our own power, without the illusion that the past stands in the way.

    Ryan D. Doerfler of Harvard and Samuel Moyn of Yale are law professors.

    • #constituional law
    • #eliminate the constitution
    • #ryan doerfler
    • #samuel moyn
    2022-08-21

    Word of the Day: Adynaton

    adynaton

    NOUN Rhetoric

    • A figure of speech by which an impossible (or highly unlikely) situation is used for emphasis; an instance of this.

    Pronunciation

    adynaton

    /adɪˈnɑːtɒn/ /adɪˈnɑːt(ə)n/

    Origin

    Mid 17th century (in an earlier sense). From post-classical Latin adynaton impossibility, (in rhetoric) figure of speech by which an impossible situation is used for emphasis and its etymon ancient Greek ἀδύνατον impossibility, use as noun of neuter of ἀδύνατος impossible from ἀ- + δυνατός possible from δύνασθαι to be powerful + -τός, suffix forming verbal adjectives.


    —

    Like the expression ‘Pull yourself up by your bootstraps’, which was originally an adynaton, and only later became used as a expression of grit and hard work to get ahead.

    • #wotd
    • #adynaton
    2022-08-21
    Ann Telnaes

    Ann Telnaes

    • #trump
    • #politics
    • #ann telnaes
    • #i declassified the planted documents anyway
    2022-08-21

    guerrillatech:

    image

    Medieval peasants had it better than us.

    • #vacation
    • #work
    2022-08-21
    From Barry Blitt’s sketchbook

    From Barry Blitt’s sketchbook

    • #barry blitt
    • #political cartoons
    2022-08-20
    More
    Next