Vice President of Newfangled.com, Writer for PRINT and F+W Media, blogger, infrequent designer, reader, science fiction enthusiast...

This is depressing. From GOOD:

Does money buy you happiness? Maybe not, but looking at this map, you might think it buys you health. This is the 2010 version of the Gapminder World Map. On the horizontal axis you have the wealth of all the world’s countries in GDP. On the vertical axis you have the life expectancy in those countries. And it’s pretty clear: Richer countries tend to have higher life expectancies on average. As Cliff Kuang notes: “there are almost no outliers from the general trend.”

Posted at 9:22am and tagged with: health, economics,.

This is depressing. From GOOD:

Does money buy you happiness? Maybe not, but looking at this map, you might think it buys you health. This is the 2010 version of the Gapminder World Map. On the horizontal axis you have the wealth of all the world’s countries in GDP. On the vertical axis you have the life expectancy in those countries. And it’s pretty clear: Richer countries tend to have higher life expectancies on average. As Cliff Kuang notes: “there are almost no outliers from the general trend.”

Posted at 2:53pm and tagged with: science, economics,.

Today, the phenomenology of the mind is stepping indignantly aside for a host of hyphenated disciplines such as neuro-anthropology, neuro-pedagogy, neuro-theology, neuro-aesthetics and neuro-economics. Their self-assurance reveals the neurosciences’ usurpatory tendency to become not only the humanities of science, but the leading science of the twenty-first century. The legitimacy, impetus and promise of this claim derive from the maxim that all human behaviour is determined by the laws governing neuronal activity and the way it is organised in the brain.

Whether or not one accepts the universal validity of this maxim, it is fair to assume that a science that aggressively seeks to establish hermeneutic supremacy will change everyday capitalist reality via its discoveries and products. Or, to put it more cautiously, that its triumph is legitimated, if not enabled, by a significant shift in the capitalist world order.

December 16th 2009

Reblogged from bmdesign| |#

…still space related :)

Zerohedge (via kottke.org)

(via bmdesign)

Posted at 8:47am and tagged with: quote, economics,.

The cumulative devaluation of the Zimbabwe dollar was such that a stack of 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (26 zeros) two dollar bills (if they were printed) in the peak hyperinflation would have be needed to equal in value what a single original Zimbabwe two-dollar bill of 1978 had been worth. Such a pile of bills literally would be light years high, stretching from the Earth to the Andromeda Galaxy.