Worldwide, overweight people now outnumber the undernourished?!
I am not sure what this means, but it means something.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn10036-obesity-epidemic-engulfing-the-entire-world.html
I am not sure what this means, but it means something.
Story in New York Times about Muslim immigration to US rising again after post-9/11 drop
Link to a fascinating article about a new paradigm of adult brain development.
In human evolution, the advantage of having many different languages and dialects was that it enabled each village to tell "ours" from "not ours". The advantage of a uniform language over broader area is that it facilities trade and other positive interaction. (Wow! Those girls from the Furry Squirrel village......)
The problem for knowledge creation/dissemination that copyrights/patents try to solve is freeloading.
Handling copyrights/patents through laws (as opposed to some other mechanism) is advantageous to those with power because they can "lawyer up" more effectively. In marginal cases (which patent/copyright issues often are), the volume of argument/lawyering one can pay for can be decisive.
"Of the trillions and trillions of cells in a typical human body \ at least 10 times as many cells in a single individual as there are stars in the Milky Way \ only about 1 in 10 is human. The other 90 percent are microbial. These microbes \ a term that encompasses all forms of microscopic organisms, including bacteria, fungi, protozoa and a form of life called archaea \ exist everywhere. They are found in the ears, nose, mouth, vagina, anus, as well as every inch of skin, especially the armpits, the groin and between the toes. The vast majority are in the gut, which harbors 10 trillion to 100 trillion of them.
The true cutting edge of the global economy is dulled and fragmented, like an overused razor, due to the lack of the necessary social arrangements. What we have the technical ability to tackle is blocked because we do not know how to handle it socially. A good example would be putting every book ever printed in any language online. A huge project that would have incalculable benefit for productivity and for human culture. (And also spur education world-wide and create a massive new translation industry combining crude but easy machine translation with higher-quality human translation where needed.) Technically, this would now be a laughably easy task. With computer storage costs plummeting, it would not even be particularly expensive. But socially, it is out of the question. The obstacle shows up as a copyright issue, but it actually runs much deeper than that. Another area where the obstacles are clearly social, not technical is online distribution of music, video, and books.