Posted by enkerli on October 10, 2006
A surprisingly superficial podcast episode on what could have been a very deep subject.
Open Source » Blog Archive » The End of Free Will?
start a conversation about manipulation, persuasion and freedom from choice
To summarize the main issue of that episode: is marketing and "upselling" by restaurant chains undermining the individual freedom to choose quality food? Apparently simple a question, but billed as much more than that.
Maybe they refrained from delving deeper into any of those issues because philosophical discussions, perhaps aesthetic ones especially, are off limits in "polite company" in U.S. media. Too bad.
Actually, I’m genuinely disappointed. Not necessarily because restaurant chains are very important an issue for me (in Montreal, they don’t seem to have the exact same type of impact and I love to cook). But because the show’s participants all came very close to saying very important things about individualism, food, and freedom. The first two are too rarely discussed, IMHO, and the third could have been the "hook" to discuss the other two.
Ah, well…
If you want to know more about my thoughts on this podcast episode, check out some of the tags below.
Posted in Alcohol, Beer, Chowhounds, Christopher Lydon, Cluetrain Manifesto, Ethnography, Radio Open Source, Starbucks, United States, advocacy, aesthetics, art, artisan beer, beer diversity, beer in media, beer politics, binge drinking, cluetrain, commodities, community-building, consumerism, consumption, craft, craft beer, craft beer culture, creation, creativity, cuisine, cultural capital, cultural diversity, development strategies, economics, ethnocentrism, experience, expertise, food and society, foodies, globalization, glocal, grassroots, groupthink, hegemony, individualism, joie de vivre, location-specific, market economy, marketing, mass media, moral enterpreneurs, musings, nationalism, nostalgie, playfulness, pleasure, podcasts, product and process, productivity, rants, responsible drinking, social capital, social change, social dynamics, social networks, standardization, statistics, success in life, taste, tasting, trusting people, writing, États-Unis | 5 Comments »
Posted by enkerli on September 24, 2006
Been quite taken by the last episode of Les années lumière, Radio-Canada’s scientific radio show. Made me think about scientists as human beings. Of course, there are several anthropologists working with scientists as groups, including Cultural Critique Michael M.J. Fischer and Maggie Paxson. My goal here is quite limited.
It’s fascinating to hear Ethiopian-born paleoanthropologist and MPI Professor Zeresenay (Zeray) Alemseged discuss his discovery of Selam, in French, for a Canadian national radio, directly from Ethiopia. People like him show the importance of the global network of scientists.
Hervé Fischer’s section on Internet penetration in Chile made clear the association between increased communication, computer literacy, knowledge management, and local empowerment. What MIT Media Lab director Nicolas Negroponte and numerous others have called the “leapfrog effect.” More than mere techno-enthusiasm, it’s a testament to knowledge’s power to cross all borders.
The feature interview of this episode was with Camille Limoges, a major figure in Quebec’s science politics. During that interview, Limoges stressed the importance of training creative people to process the growing wealth of knowledge representative of today’s world.
Altogether, a fascinating show, as is often the case.
Posted in Années Lumière, Radio-Canada, knowledge people | No Comments »
Posted by enkerli on August 30, 2006
Posted in Cluetrain Manifesto, Communities, Creative Commons, Empowerment, YouTube, activism, advocacy, alimentation, amateurs, cluetrain, community-building, consumption, craft, creation, creativity, cultural capital, digital lifestyle, food and society, friendship, geek crowd, globalization, groupthink, hegemony, humanism, information, innovation, intellectual property, knowledge, metaphors, mindshare, moral enterpreneurs, movies, music distribution, music industry, music scenes, musicking, online privacy, online publishing, open-source, openness, optimism, participatory culture, popular culture, product and process, recording industry, social dynamics, social network, social networks, social publishing, specialists, stereotypes, tasting, technology, trusting people | No Comments »
Posted by enkerli on June 20, 2006
First encountered the notion of the Medici effect through this interview with Frans Johansson in Ubiquity, a journal frequently mentioned on the Humanist Discussion Group.
A recent article about important changes coming from simple ideas made me post a short blog entry about changes from simple ideas. Interestingly enough, Johansson himself posted a comment to that entry.
This is in fact a frequent stream of thought, for me. In both business and academia, we tend to live through ideas. Specific ideas. Especially those which can generate money or research projects. An important dimension of the “Medici Effect” seems to be that simple ideas can lead to great accomplishments. Another important dimension is that ideas are both generated in and implemented by groups. Some social contexts seem especially conducive to new ideas. This perspective is well-known enough that even Denys Arcand’s Invasions Barbares had something to say about it.
There’s a lot of directions one could take to talk about innovation from that point. Among the possible threads: artistic creativity, personal innovation, sense of discovery, the economies of ideas, ideas come from the people, “intellectual property,” fluid/organic innovation, boundless ideas, innovation through links between ideas, Lavoisier on ideas (nothing is created or lost, everything is transformed, including ideas), and so on and so forth.
My personal feeling is that the very concept of innovation has become something of a “core value” for a number of people, especially in industrialized society. The type of “newer is better” view of “progress” in both society and technology.
In my mind, the best thing to do is simply to bring ideas together, a “shock of ideas” («le choc des idées»). Hence the long list of tags… 
Posted in Academia, Communities, Creative Commons, Empowerment, Learning, aesthetics, alter-globalization, amateurs, art, college life, commodities, consumerism, creation, creativity, cultural capital, development, development strategies, economics, experimentation, globalization, grassroots, humanism, hype, individualism, innovation, intellectual property, interdisciplinarity, ivory tower, knowledge, knowledge management, knowledge people, market economy, memes, mindshare, naïve, politics, popular culture, prestige, product and process, productivity, professionals, ramblings, research, science, social capital, social change, social networks, specialists, success in life, technology, writing | No Comments »