View Article  Personality, Intuition & Blink

Jung's pyschological types + Myer-Briggs personality test

Click to view my Personality Profile page

I have just finished Blink. Probably that explains the high marks on "Intuitive".

Malcom Gladwell helped to demystify intuition. I mean, he did not claim to take away the mystery, the ability of the brain to make intuitive decision is still well "behind lock doors", but Gladwell has shown with real life examples and labratory experiments that we can observe, quantify, analyze and ultimately try to understand the operation of intuitive thinking, or rapid cognition, the power of the brain to make good sense of its surrounding in split seconds.

When we say, don't judge a book by its cover, we typically mean that our early and quick judgement of something cannot be accurate given the unfamiliarity with the thing. But Blink has shown that to be untrue. Too much information may be harmful to our decision making because we may take "unnecessary information" into account.

Galdwell gave the example of how art experts failed to recognized a fake ancient greek male sculpture even after a thorough investigation, more than one year of handling by various experts and with sophiscated equipments.

Instead, it took an art historian a single look at the fingers of the statue to sense a foul play. Another expert of Greek art took a glance at the statue when the clothes covering it was lifted up and knew instintively something was amiss.

Thin-slicing, the brain taking up the smallest amount of data and make good and often accurate sense of its environment. This is what Blink was about.

Other than the example of the ancient statue hoax, some of my favourite illustrations and experiments which Gladwell described in Blink are the card game experiment and the mysteries of mind reading. The latter was really the part which I was utterly fascinated with. Ekman's book is now on my treasure hunting list. He had managed to profile a taxonomy of every possible facial expressions. By just looking at their faces, Ekman can know what is in the mind, the socio-pyschological background and the profile of a person. Mind reading, but not magic, just the labourious work of understanding and profilling the human facial muscles of a human being, their movements and their relation to the human mind.

Again, little information and slight movements in a few seconds producing impressive analytical result.

Speed dating anyone? Gladwell wrote about this in Blink too...why go through lenghty get-to-know dates; 5 minutes of interactions would probably be enough to tell a life partner from a fling.

Of course, there are downsides to judging too quickly. It all depends on our pre-programmed biases, those information which stayed with us deep inside which affects our data processings. Misjudgements, people say. We've got to get the info into the right channel to make rapid cognition work. At the end of the Blink, Gladwell gave example of how an art lover/expert simulate a surprise situation everytime he examines an art piece - e.g. his assistance suddenly lifting up a piece of clothe covering an art. Get as little critical information as possible without reasoning out too much?

Interestingly, I was reading Marva Dawn's Unfettered Hope recently and she wrote about how we who are living in the Information Age absorb so much information daily without knowing what to do with them. In another word, we took in useless information. She even recommended reading weekly digest instead of daily newspaper.

This is all too new and counter-intuitive to me. Hmm... is that a sign that I am sensing something fishy? Or it's just my bias because of how we were all thought to think that knowledge is power and more knowledge means more power?

My job requires a lot decision making at various level and I'd always thought that such tasks require data, as much data as possible. Now, how I can translate the strange concepts of thin-slicing into my job? Will let you know if I finally work out something...for now,

go check out the chapter excerpts which Gladwell put on his web.

and someone from the New York Review begged to differ here 

 

View Article  Calvinism's Noetic Effect != Subjectivism
Some of us have big dreams and ideas. Of course, there are among us sayings that great things began with wild thoughts in the head of visionaries. Almost but not quiet. Some wild thoughts only make men wild, nothing more. Josh once again seemed to attempt the pompous act of creative scholarship. Firstly on his highly imaginative audacity of the worthiness of his own ideas; He began with a strong and unmistakeble assertion "Calvinism's Noetic Effect = Subjectivism" and went on in an almost-Jesus parable to depict a fictional conversation between a so-called Subjectivist and a Calvinist (again, so-called).   more »
View Article  Eid Fitr Al-Mubarak, 1428 A.H

Raya Pertama

JR and I decided to balance things up after the magnificient (could be better without the ridiculous censors) Lust & Caution the night before, so we went to Gurney on Raya Pertama to watch Chuck & Larry. We had a light dinner at Foodloft - mango dessert, fatt choi soup, lasagne rolls, coffee; all shared together (even the coffee!). The place was nicely done, they even had little canals flowing around the dining area, great ambiance and the food was good with menus from chinese, japanese, local and western. They had WiFi, so I managed to send an email about work from my phone.

Chuck & Larry was okie, I had a few laugh, but I was still overwhelmed by Ang Lee's baby.

mango | soup | coffee | foodloft | date 

Raya Kedua

I brought JR and my sis, EV to Ramadan's house. This year, instead of the usual lecturers' housing facilities at MPPP, the family decided to host their open house in Kulim. Not too difficult to find, although finally, Ramadan had to drive around his taman to look for us.

Met up with some old friends and made some new ones. Rifaudin is now working as a syariah will-writer. Both of us recalled the times in UM when he and Hanif joined PKV for our Christmas celebration. I still remember one of them saying, we believe in Jesus and therefore celebrates his birth too (in case I get into trouble for saying this, and to be fair to the boys, I am sure they believe in Jesus not exactly the same way as evangelical christians do). He gave me a few pointers on Islamic will and inheritance law. Very informative indeed...expect to hear it from the expert.

Spoke to Zainul (the guy wearing black songkok in white shirt in the first photo below), who is a lecturer at UITM and is now completing his master in Usulludin at UM. Found out that he is interested in history and is doing a paper on religious liberalism and fundamentalism. We talked about historical criticism, authority of the scripture vs. reason and some stuff about the contribution of non-Malays during pre-Merdeka times. It was interesting and i look forward to interacting further with him on his blog.

Ramadan was in his usual self, he has just completed his Masters in Islamic finance/banking and is now working on his PhD thesis. Glad to meet him and talk to him about my plans to continue study in his dad's dept. I am amazed by his clear thinking about how some quarters have muddled religious issues with political interest and he wisely said that he abstained from active discussion due to this. Well, this is coming from an "ulama"! That's what Zainul and their friends call him...hahaha..

In the evening, YB Chong Eng texted me on google chat to invite JR and I to an open house in Taman Sentul, Juru. We were quite tired, but free food is a great temptation, so we drove there with Guna and Chong Eng and their boy Prakash. I had the greatest mutton bryani that night!!! Now I am wishing I have some for breakfast...arrgghhh....

discourse | passion | future | harmony | beauty

Overall a great Raya with JR and my friends. No phone calls from work, I'm like having a "work blackout"...

Got this from Bob's site: An Open letter from Muslim scholars to Christian leaders around the world

 

View Article  Books

Corgito ergo sum

Is the mind really the sum (no pun intended) of objective truth?

I am currently reading


Blink by Malcolm Gladwell

...planning to complete by the end of the Raya holidays.

And


The Two Horizons: New Testament Hermeneutics and Philosophical Description by Anthony Thiselton

... planning to complete by the end of November...

And I am a happy new owner of


The Language Instinct - How the Mind Creates Language by Steven Pinker

... planning to read this after I finish Blink

View Article  Critical

Recently Joshua wrote a blog post here on being sceptical (to use his exact word) towards ancient records because they contained stories which were against the "modern experience".

 

I would like to ...   more »

View Article  He Ain't Heavy, He's My Pastor


(Photo from here)

http://wongfongyang.blogspot.com/

View Article  Untitled

I just had to post this from Discordant Dude's (my hippy friend somewhere in UK, i think):

There is a certain sense of restlessness that impinges upon me lately. After the short conversation with Jacksaid over the phone yesterday, this restlessness is somewhat vindicated, bearing upon the question of how we distribute our scarce resources to achieve the conception of the good as defined around the person of Jesus Christ. I further question if the space to do so is what we traditionally understand to be the institutional church. Vital dimensions seemed to be missing from the construct of our faith, not because we are not forward looking, but because the interpretation of the present arises from, perhaps, a deficient understanding of the past. The historical Jesus is still not meeting the Jesus of faith. Not sufficient to rewrite the rules of the game, to say the least. I do understand, however, that this is no blame-game. I know enough that I do not want to channel my energy in that direction. After all, convictions must be endorsed to be legitimized, not to be imposed upon by coercion or guilt. The realization of the current state of affairs boils down to a personal consideration of efficiency for me. Am I participating efficiently in the construct of a Godly Utopia? In some sense, I still long for unity as much as Leonardo Da Vinci, even when the idea of uncontestable premises is widely rejected in modern liberal society. It is this quest for meaningful participation, to move beyond intellectual masturbation if I may so crudely put it, that is both the source of my restlessness and the telos of my rest.

 

View Article  Let My People Go!

by Jack and JR

what if the sky is red?
from the colours of the sun at dusk
like an artist splattering blood
carelessly across heavenly canvas.

do you feel heaven's anger?
spread by the soft winds of the dimming sky
that sky red, yes, but the earth redder
soaked in the blood of those who died.
 
what if trembling hands
of tortured minds (or what was left),
forgotten they were men
and thirst for fellow men's blood and death?
 
do you feel heaven's pain?
in every bullets sprayed at innocent lives
heaven's tears gushed from the slained
of the government's dirty gunfires.
 
what if the faceless sage
who has face only for the troubled world
for peace amidst that maddening rage
turned his face at the worst evil?
 
do you hear heaven's righteous will
in the silent footsteps on the battered street
the earth is red, the saffron redder still
which cries for the oppressed voiceless meek
 
 
 
(images taken from everywhere on the Internet)
 
On the other hand, our Deputy PM (whom I gladly didn't vote and will never vote for) issued his loving advice:
 
“we would like to remind our citizens in Myanmar not to interfere in the country’s domestic problems,” he said, adding that Malaysians should refrain from participating in any street demonstration for their own good. (here)
 
Looks like many Malaysian didn't quite heed the advice of their ayahanda Dato Seri - check out a troubling but thought provoking reflection by a friend
 
 

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