Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts

18 May 2008

The West and Asia - where is the moral vacuum?

Conversations With History: The Rise of Asia and the Decline of the West (57min, YouTube) This one is very good. Kishore Mahmubani's book 'The New Asian Hemisphere' is consciously "painful reading" for Westerners. (Gotta love Harry Kreisler:)

Daniel Bell on "China's New Confucianism" (44min, search iTunes for the Big Ideas Audio Podcast, Bell's is the 12 April 2008 lecture). This is a pretty fascinating introduction to the contemporary revival of confucianism in Chinese culture.

02 April 2008

Not bad, not great

Chomsky on himself and his political mindset (59 min, YouTube).

William Overholt on Asia and Asia-US relations (1h6min, FORA.tv).

Stanford Computer Science Department Faculty: Future Challenges in CS (1h31min, iTunes).

Finally, the flying spagetti deity gets a statue:



20 February 2008

Insignificant?

Male chimps do not know or care for their offspring. Females cooperate in caring for their children, and young chimps are therefore acutely aware of the rise and fall of alliances between females.

Far as I understand. How do the bonobos do it I wonder.

Semi-decent 34 min lecture on clinical trials. Alternatively there's 'An Introduction to the Methods and Ethics of Clinical Trials' on iTunes (54min) that's a bit less formal.

Nicholas Hope talks about the awakening of Asia, prospects for 2008 and the future (1hr13min). A lot of the economics is over my head but it's a very good lecture, particularly the Q&A session starting at about 50min, which focuses on corruption in China. Hope also makes the interesting observation that India, unlike China, does not have a large aging population for the younger generation to take care of.

Daniel Ellsberg, who made the Pentagon Papers public during the Vietnam War, draws paralells between Big Brother government during that and the current war (UChannel, 67min). Excellent talk. Great voice.

Pretty interesting article on why it's ok to be sad (hat-tip Laura).

Finally, WikiLeaks survives thanks to a Swedish server that specializes in websites hunted by the establishment (e.g. The Pirate Bay). Whooooo!

29 January 2008

Intel and Jimbo

Highly recomended interview with Paul Otellini, CEO of Intel and on the board of directors of Google, on the progress of Intel, with particular focus on it's investments in Asia. Includes some very tangible observations on the structure and causes of the current shift in power towards Asia.

Interview with Wikipedia and Wikia founder Jimmy Wales. Re China: Wikipedia is completely blocked in China......