CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Newt Gingrich is a Moron
CMartucci's comments
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Newt Gingrich is a Moron
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: An Elephant Burial
At any rate, I'm sure we all understand that guilt by association is a gross logical fallacy, and that I in no way endorse the killing of elephants. This must be what it feels like to be a politician...
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Achilles and the Tortoise – Solving Zeno’s Paradox with Quantum Physics
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Life After Death: A Case for Extinction
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Introspection: Libertarianism
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Indifference Toward "If This Then That" (ifttt)
I can understand why it seems pointless, and I suppose HN was not the best venue.
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Indifference Toward "If This Then That" (ifttt)
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Indifference Toward "If This Then That" (ifttt)
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Indifference Toward "If This Then That" (ifttt)
"Don’t get me wrong, ifttt sounds like an excellent service for those who require it. For what it’s worth, I am not one of those people. At least not at the moment."
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Tips for designing your personal site
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Why keeping up with RSS is poisonous to productivity, sanity
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: The Sugary Secret of Self-Control
http://www.epjournal.net/blog/2011/08/willpower-is-not-a-res... http://www.epjournal.net/blog/2011/08/glucose-is-not-willpow... http://www.epjournal.net/blog/2011/09/willpower-meets-the-co... http://whatblag.com/2011/08/04/poverty-and-willpower-as-reso...
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Ten Things Everyone Should Know About Time
Also, just because we don't know exactly where the photon will land doesn't mean photons break the laws of physics. Quantum mechanics are difficult to observe by nature -- that's what the uncertainty principle states: there is no way to observe quantum particles without moving them in hard-to-detect ways. I don't think the uncertainty principle states that quantum particles randomly defy the laws of physics in indeterministic fashion.
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Ten Things Everyone Should Know About Time
"People commonly misreport their own experiences. We don’t even have good insight into how much fun we are having or even whether an experience we are having at a particular moment in time is pleasant or unpleasant. Some examples (among many): being paid a paltry sum to tell another person that the boring and repetitive task in which we have just engaged is fun leads us to think we enjoyed it (Festinger & Carlsmith 1959); observing that we have chosen one item from a range that seems identical leads us to conclude that we have detected differences between them (Nisbett & Wilson 1977). Subjects who experienced arousal caused by an injection of norepinepherine reporting being happy or angry, depending on what cues they’re given (Schachter and Singer 1962), while subjects who exercise prior to encountering an opposite sex confederate of the experimenters rated the confederate more attractive (Allen 1989). We are systematically bad at assessing the causes and the precise character of our experiences. Moreover, there is evidence that our intuitive physics is unreliable. Naïve subjects assume, falsely, that an object that is travelling through a curved tube will continue to follow a curved trajectory when it leaves the tube (McCloskey et al. 1980)." [Source: http://agencyandresponsibility.typepad.com/flickers-of-freed...]
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Ten Things Everyone Should Know About Time
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Can Glucose Replenish Willpower?
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: Can Glucose Replenish Willpower?
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: In Defense of Call Of Duty
I agree that video games MAY not be good for kids because they may socialize less as a result. However, video games can have positive benefits. Steven Johnson argues that the complexity of modern video games induces a beneficial cognitive workout that's worth paying attention to. Check out his book: http://www.amazon.com/Everything-Bad-Good-You-Actually/dp/15...
CMartucci | 14 years ago | on: In Defense of Call Of Duty
The culprit is more likely a child's upbringing, which may have been negatively affected due to television, but not directly caused by television itself.
Don't vote it up if you don't like it.