Thursday, March 30, 2017

The human brain, is a challenge for physics

-  1962  -  The human brain, is a challenge for physics to explain down to the level of quantum mechanics.  At the same time into meta physics and deep into philosophy.  (Metaphysics = abstract theory with no basis in reality.)  We are navigating the narrow path between solid ground and the edge of a swamp
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----------------  -  1962  -  The human brain
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-  Science is supposed be the tool that describes our natural world.  Things are not all black and white, not all 1’s and 0’s.  The natural world lies between the digital and the analogue. We are just  learning that even our brains have figured this out.  Whether we realize it or not.
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-  Your brain was thought to work like a digital computer with the neurons being a network of switches snapping on or off.  Science knew that these dendrites were long branch-like structures attached to a roundish-body called a “ soma”.  Together they formed the neurons which made up the switching network.
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-  the dendrites were thought to be the conduits that carried a spike of electrical activity sent to the other soma of other neurons.  What we are now just beginning to realize is that the dendrites are “ active”, not just conduits.  They are generating their  own spikes of electrical activity.
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-  Dendrites make up over 90% of all the neural tissue.  They are 10 times more active than we thought.  This discovery changes the whole nature of our understanding of how the brain computes information.  It is operating as both a digital and an analog computer.
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-  Dendrites can put our longer lasting voltages that in their sum total actually are more powerful than the spikes of the somas.  The brain just does not work with all or nothing signals. It also processes analog flows that affect computing.
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-  Dendrites are hybrid cells doing both digital and analog computing at the same time.  The are generating digital pulses and large analogue fluctuations at the same time.    They are 100 times larger in volume than the somas.  Does that mean that our brains are 100 times more powerful than we thought.  ( It is ironic to me that we are here thinking about thinking.  It is a strange closed loop to be in.  Like staring at our navel and thinking where did that come from?)
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-  A study made on lab rats found that dendrites were 5 times more active when the rats were sleeping .  And, 10 times more active when the rats were awake and moving.
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-  This all tells us that learning takes place with much more “ flexibility” than we thought ( thinking about thinking again).  This whole revelation is changing our understanding of how the brain’s neurons actually work.
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-  This science gets us closer to how the brain works philosophically.  It gets into the question of how does the brain have a conscience?  What is conscientiousness?  What creates it?
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-  Materialism is the idea that all phenomena  is reducible to the behavior of matter, to physics.  The mind is simply  computing using meat.
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-  Ontological is the branch of the metaphysics that studies the nature of existence.
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-  Epistemological is the branch of philosophy that investigates the origin, nature, methods, and limits of human knowledge.
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-  We now are dealing with the intersection between science and philosophy.
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-  The brain might possibly be explained in terms of matter down go the weirdness of quantum mechanics.  Or, it might it might explained by Newtonian physics operating in a complex information operating system.  Could the mind be simply biological?
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-  The relationship between the mind and matter?  It is difficult to convince us that the mind is purely a biological phenomena.  Maybe quantum phenomena occurring in the brain are the root of our conscious experiences?
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-  Maybe only God can fill in the gaps in our argument between science and philosophy.  We still like to believe that the design would not have required any supernatural intervention.
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-  Our job of thinking about what science has learned about the world and what meta physical theories are telling us will wander from solid ground into the swamp.
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-  Mans conscience is the oracle of God.  An oracle is a person considered to provide wise and insightful counsel, and prophetic predictions
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-  It is far more important to preserve an unblemished conscience than to gloat in accomplishments.
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-  There is no dungeon so dark as one’s own heart.  Conscience is the voice of your soul.
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-  There is not witness so terrible, no accuser so powerful, as the conscience that dwells within us.  Conscience warns us as a friend, before it punishes us as a judge.
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-  Note :  Request any of the Reviews by number to learn more……………
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-  #1610  -  be thankful for your brain,  cooking made us human.
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-  #1403  -  How to become an athlete?
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-  #1405  -   What makes your brain conscious
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-  #1024  -  Brainology mindset.
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-  #1014  -  The brain works.
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-  #922  -  Understanding yourself.
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-  #868  -  Seeing with ½ your brain.
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-  #801  -  The brain.  What was your memory just before you became conscious of it?
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----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
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 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Thursday, March 30, 2017  -----
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Monday, March 27, 2017

Russian Space Station - MIR 1986 to 1999

-  1961  -  Russian Space Station - MIR   1986 to 1999 this space station was home for Russian and US astronauts.  What was it like.  You may be surprised.  It took bravery beyond belief.
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----------------  -  1961  -  Russian Space Station - MIR  
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-  So you want to be an astronaut?  Are you smart enough?  Are you physically buffed?  Most important , are you brave enough?
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-  20 years ago the Russian Space Station, MIR, was orbiting the Earth. After this story that follows in 2001 the MIR was sent into lower elevation to burn up in the atmosphere and the cinder to splash into the Pacific Ocean.
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-  To test your mettle for this assignment.  Would you put your self into a Mercury capsule.  It was the size of a phone booth.  You sit on top of an exploding rocket that launches you into orbit to circle the Earth in zero gravity.  Would you be brave enough?  Trusting enough to put your faith in the engineers, designers, and visionaries back on mother Earth?  Would you survive the splash landing?
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-  Best read this story about life on the MIR before responding to these questions.
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-  U.S. astronauts spent 6 months on the MIR.  They tell  of their strained relationship with the commander, Valeri Korzun, and his demanding leadership style.
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-  Here is what our astronauts reported after their return in 1997.   MIR space capsule was cramped and cluttered with equipment and cables spilling out everywhere.  Corroded pipes leaked cooling antifreeze.  There was debris in the air floating around.  Sleeping was hindered by the junk floating around , including propylene glycol aerosol requiring the astronauts to where masks.
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-  The oxygen system was taxed to its limits.  Astronauts could not exercise for fear of using it up.  Weeks went by with the temperature remaining at 90F because the climate control system was not working.
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-  Humidity was excessive causing mold and bacteria to grow with abandon.  When passengers returned on their bodies were 140 different species of microorganisms.
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-  On February 23, 1997, an oxygen generating canister exploded, blasting a 3 foot geyser of flame.  The astronauts used 3 out of the 10 fire extinguishers  with no success.  The intense flame blocked them from reaching the Soyuz escape craft.  They also could not reach the stations computer.  After 1 ½ minutes the fire burned itself out.  The toxic, smoky air filled the cabin.
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-  June 25, 1997, the crew was supposed to dock the Progress 234 cargo ship.  They could not use the radar because that interfered with the other electronics that they needed. Instead they tried to dock the cargo ship with a blurry TV screen.   They were judging the speed by the changing angular size on the monitor.  When it became apparent the closing speed was too fast full braking was unable to avoid the collision.  The cargo ship plowed into the solar arrays at 10 feet per second.  The air pressure dropped.  Air was hissing into the vacuum of space.  Alarms were set off.
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-  The crew heroically tried to seal off the science module but hoses and cables snaked through the door  preventing it to seal.  They used knives to sever the wires creating electrical sparks.  The pressure dropped so low they almost abandoned the station.  But, they didn’t  because the hatch was hinged in the wrong direction.
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-  The station began tumbling through space end over end.  The solar panels no longer could point toward the Sun so the electrical power was waning.
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-  Somehow the struggling astronauts survived and were able to right the ship after this treacherous event.  They lived to tell about.  You just read it.  In 2001 they celebrated in their backyard BBQs as the MIR burned up in the atmosphere and the cinder that was their home landed in the Pacific Ocean.  Amazing!!!!!!
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-  Note (1):  Request any of the Reviews by number to learn more.
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-  #1679  -  Space dust, what does it tell us?
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-  #1263  -  Can we replace the space shuttle with a kite on a string?
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-  #1277  -  Mishaps in space exploration.  Several other mishaps not including the Russian ones.
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---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
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 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Monday, March 27, 2017  -----
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Sunday, March 26, 2017

Surviving Fake News

-  1960  -  Surviving Fake News,  How to survive the storm of daily fake news, political hacking, fraudulent elections, internet and newspaper, TV bias.  Critical Thinking is the best think you can bring to the game and to the ballot box.
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----------------  -  1960  -  Surviving Fake News and saving Democracy
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-  Pope Francis shocks the world and endorses Donald Trump for President.  This is just one of hundreds of fake news you have been given in recent months.  It is rampant.  What to believe?  Where to find the truth?  The answer lies between your ears.
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-  A recent study found the 20 fake news stories on the internet actually triggered  more clicks than the top 20 real news stories.  44% of U.S. adults get their news from “ facebook”, including me.
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-  Identifying the truth is complicated.  Why do you think we have a jury of 12 of your peers, two lawyers, and a judge to direct your thinking to get there.
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-  Actually, it is extremely unlikely that fake news, hoaxes, actually changed the outcome of the 2016 election.  But, I am sure it changed some votes.  They probably averaged out to a net little effect.
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-  Even today we are receiving “ custom news pages” on the internet with stories sorted to the ones you may “like“.  You are missing the ones that get sorted out.  Same happens with newspapers or  TV that you prefer.  Which channel do you watch?
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-  Facebook has “ friends”, Twitter has “ followers”.  You are the one selecting like-minded people.  You are building your own “ echo chamber’.
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-  There is a parallel universe you are missing.  There are two sides to the hyper-partisan divide.  CNN and FOX for example.
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-  The answer is for you to be more critical.  Become a critical thinker.  I have a “ how to become a critical thinker’ Review.  It was the best course I took in college by far.  The Review is available upon request.  I enjoy using it myself to make decisions.  It is a 10 step process that can surprise you how often it changes your thinking.  Or, it re-confirms your thinking with added conviction.
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-  We live in a highly polarized political arena.  You can get labeled a conservative or a liberal, a Democrat or a Republican.  I refuse, call myself an Independent and I am not allowed to vote in the California Primaries.  If you are a conservative, you get labeled as a climate change skeptic.  Global warming becomes part of God, guns, gays, abortion, and taxes ideology.  Liberals get labeled the opposite.
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-  To change their ideology thinking you need to approach it as a “ marketing problem”.    Both groups need to stay above the political quagmire.  No riots, no confrontations where people get hurt.  Let’s make the Earth great again.  And, let’s make political discourse great again at the same time.  Start with what you agree on, debate what you don’t.
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-  Are our elections secure?  Are the peoples’ votes really something we can count on?  The FBI, NSA,  and CIA say that the Russians tried to influence the 2016 election results.  The Russians hacked into candidates, election headquarters files, they leaked documents, they may even got into some computerized voting machines.  And, it was not just the Russians, it was teenagers.
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-  How do we know if election results are true when they defy the majority of pre-election polling?  Jill Stein, the Green Party, secured a recount in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania , and Michigan with just such suspicions.   Donald Trump was not expected to win those states.  Half the country, 55%, still has a problem with electoral versus populous results.
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-  If elections lose credibility democracy will suffer disintegration.
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-  Simple technology can help solve this problem of guaranteeing election results.  Audit computers can randomly select paper ballots and compare statistically with machine results.  Use only voter-verified paper ballots and do a recount if results are not confirmed.
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-  Get your representative in government to insist on these simple paper ballot audit procedures.  Citizens need confidence in election results.  Citizens will  not support something they think is election fraud.  There is no reason these simple corrections could not be implemented in the next election.  This is not rocket science.  It is simple procedural discipline.  Get this done before the hackers with keyboards take over our democracy.
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-  Fake news, internet bias, fraudulent elections, just a few challenges to keep you on your toes.  Critical thinking happens between your ears.  Don’t trust government, don’t trust news.  This is why our money says in God we Trust.  Nobody else.  He designed you to know better.  Yesterday did not work, we will not repeat it.
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-  Note :  Request any of the Reviews by number to learn more.
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-  #1951  -  Critical thinking about US Intelligence.
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-  #1945  -  Encryption is for everyone.
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-  #1943  -  Supercomputers in the hands of engineers.
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-  #1655  -  Government the way it was intended.
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-  # 1468  -  The decline of moral management.
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-  #1640  -  The state of the state of California.  None of these democrats took math in college.
-  #1639  -  We are growing too complicated too fast.
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-  #1564  -  The big fat liar, which president do you think that was?  Fiscal Insanity.
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-  #1730  -  Collaborative government.
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-  #1541  -  Saving the American dream.
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-  #1539  -  The fiscal cliff.
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-  #1530  -  How our divided government works.
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-  #1520  -  Teaching the government the powers of ten.
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-  #1440  The top government priorities and how they are funded.
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-  #1408  -  California debt.
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-  #1101  -  Your representative is wasting your money.  Sunshine is the best disinfectant.
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-  #1034  -  Wikileak the economy
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-  #970  -  What voters need to do
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-  #889  -  Follow the government money.
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-  #760  -  Where taxes go.
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----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
-  https://plus.google.com/u/0/  -- www.facebook.com  -- www.twitter.com
 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Sunday, March 26, 2017  -----
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Saturday, March 25, 2017

Weights and measures and Metric Standards.

-  1959  -  Weights and measures and Metric Standards.  We need standards to measure against.  Keeping up with technology is a challenge in physics.  A pints a pound the world around.  But, you need a  kilogram measured to a few parts per billion to be certain that is true.
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----------------  -  1959  -  Weights and measures and Metric Standards
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-  We need to measure the kilogram standards to a few parts per billion.  These standards all started in Paris in 1889 the year the Eiffel Tower opened.  The mass of a platinum-iridium cylinder, half the size of a can of tuna, yet with $40,000 invested to keep it under 3 nested glass bell jars, is the world’s standard.
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-  In 2018 we hope to have a new standard not tied to a physical object, but, tied directly to Planck’s Constant.  Tied to a photon, the amount of energy carried by a single particle of light.
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-  In 1983 the meter was defined as the distance between two etched lines on a platinum-iridium bar.  Today we use the standard as the distance light travels in 1 / 299,792,458th  of a second.  In 1791 this distance was defined as one the-millionth of one forth of the Earth’s circumference, the meridian.
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-  In 1967 the second was defined as 9,192,631,770 wavelengths of a cesium -133 atom.    Originally the second was 1 / 86,400th of a mean solar day.
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-  Planck’s constant is the relation of “ quantized” light and matter.  It is a sub-atomic scale constant.  For example:  Green light has a wavelength of 555 nanometers with a frequency of 540*10^12 hertz ( wavelengths per second).  Each photon (quantum of light)  =  h  *  f  =  3.58 * 10^-19 Joules.
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---------------------  h  =  Planck’s Constant
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--------------------  E  =  h  *  f
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--------------------  Energy  =  Planck’s Constant * frequency
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--------------------- E  =  h * c  / w
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---------------------  c  =  speed of light
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----------------------  w   =  wavelength of light.
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-  Planck’s Constant  =  6.625 *10^-34  kilogram * (meters)^2  per second
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-  “h”  also equals 4.136*10^-15 electron volts * seconds / 2*pi cycles.
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-  The “Kibble-Balance” is designed to measure a mass of 1 kilogram.  It tests the downward gravitational force to exactly match the magnetic field from running current through a coil.  Current and voltage and electric resistance are then used to determine Planck’s Constant.  The Kibble-Balance can measure mass to 100 parts per billion error.  The Kibble- Balance can also be used to precisely measure electric current, the ampere.  The magnetic force between two coils of wire is measured by the amount of weight of the other arm of the balance to achieve equilibrium.
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-  The idea is to eventually get the kilogram defined in terms of Planck’s Constant within an uncertainty of less than 20 parts per billion.
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-  The candela is a measure of luminosity.  In 1979 it was defined as monochromatic radiation of frequency 540*10^12 hertz having radiant intensity of 1/ 683 watts per steradin ( a solid angle).  The earliest definition was simply the luminosity of a carbon-filament lamp.  A computer liquid crystal display is 250 candela / meters^2.  A high definition TV ranges from 450 to 1500 candela / m^2
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-  The ampere is one Coulomb per second , or, 6.242*10^18 electrons per second.  The ampere is a unit of current, the coulomb is a unit of charge.  A 12 volt headlight is 5 amperes.  The starter motor is 80 to 160 amperes.  A 60 watt light bulb is 500 milliamperes.
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-  In 1946 two straight parallel conductors of infinite length one meter apart in a vacuum have a force of 2*10^-7 Newtons per meter of length.  A new definition to be developed would use the charge carried by a single proton.
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- The Kelvin is a measure of temperature.  In 1967 the Kelvin was set at 1 / 273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of triple point of water.  Triple Point is the temperature and pressure where water exists as a liquid, a gas, and a solid ice, all at once.
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-  A mole is a small furry animal that burrows under ground.  He has inconspicuous eyes and ears and is adept at underground breathing with little oxygen.  His main diet is earthworms.  A mole is also a unit of measure, the amount of a substance,  It is the number of atoms of a substance compared to 12 grams of carbon-12.  Expressed as Avogadro’s Constant there are 6.022*10^23 particles per mole.
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-  These standards above are the seven base units that are the Standards for the Metric System.
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----------------------  meter, second, candela, kilogram, ampere, Kelvin, mole.
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-  Another 22 standards are built from these seven.  Achieving and maintaining these standards is among the 5 toughest undertakings in physics.  Right up there with detecting the Higgs Boson and detecting gravitational waves.
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- To make a measurement is must be versus something, that something is a standard that everyone can agree on.  It has progressed technology through the ages.  Stay tuned , there is still more to learn.
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-  Note (1):  Request any of the Reviews by number to learn more.
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-  Review #1116 for standard candles for particular stars.
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-  Complete index of all reviews is available upon request.
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----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
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 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Saturday, March 25, 2017  -----
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Thursday, March 23, 2017

Computer applications in medicine

-  1958  -  Computer design and applications in the medical field.  Where is the limit to smaller, faster, cheaper, more powerful computers?  How will they be used in the field of medicine?
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-------------  -  1958  -  Computer design and applications in the medical field.
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-  In 1965 Gordon Moore wrote a paper claiming that the power of computers would double every 12 months.  I was working at HP, Palo Alto.  I was building my own TV from a kit.  PC boards for the Apple computer were being manufactured in HP’s platting shop.  HP was starting into big business computers and was eager to help the little guy who wanted to build home computers.  HP did not see the money in that market.  I bought serial 200 Apple II computer and a decade later donated it to a school.
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-  Moore’s law also stated that the price for computers would fall 50% as the capability doubled.
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-  Today this geometric growth has flattened out.  Nest generation computers are slower to arrive.  They are needed for advances to occur in virtual reality, artificial intelligence, self-driving cars, medical and genetic engineering, and smart phones.
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-  Computer engineers squeezed better performance from chips by shrinking their size.  Physics says they can not get much smaller, down to the atomic level.  The space between components is nanometers.  The thickness of a piece of paper is 0.1 millimeters, that is 100,000 nanometers Today’s chips have spaces down to 1 / 8,000 of a sheet of paper, about 13 nanometers.
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-  The industry says to get to 7 nanometers it would cost $100 million and there are only 3 companies that could attempt it.  Well, one company is already pledging $9 billion to develop a 7 nanometer processor in 4 years.  Heat and power issues become the biggest design problems.
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-  The design is attempting to stack chips on top of each other, the processor, memory and power source stacked into a cube.  This shortens the distances between components.  To counter balance this effort we need to learn how to remove the heat being generated.  To make the stack successful we need a thermal engineering solution.
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-  The heat solutions being considered include gels, pastes, flexible fibers in place of copper and aluminum plates.
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-  Power density is the amount of power in a set amount of space.  Even the slightest mistakes in balancing greater power with tighter designs can create a bomb, a fire  hazard.
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-  Your cell pone battery drains too quickly.  What will happen with robots, drones, or electric cars?  Storing energy, charging batteries, drawing power all generate “heat”.
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-  Getting the heat and power right is the next big engineering challenge.  Progress is never a linear process.  It goes in spurts and dips.
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-  Looking at the application for these new computers, just in the medical field alone is staggering.  Let’s start with the physics of your own body.  Your body is biology not physics, right?
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-  Well, electric currents play a major role in the nervous system and the heart beat.  Mechanics is involved in muscles and the skeleton.  Fluid dynamics in blood flow and nutrients  passage into and out our cells. Physics is used in the design of X-rays and PET scans and computers create images of the inside of your body..
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-  The heart is particularly amenable to electrical analysis, an EKG.  When the heart beats the cells temporarily lose their electric charge.  Electrocardiography machines measure the voltage that varies with time, recording each beat.
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-  Special cells comprise the pacemaker, that sets the rhythm of the heart beats.  Defibrillators deliver a heavy dose of electric current to restart normal rhythm.
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-  Blood flow is measured in maximum and minimum pressure.  If the pressure in the artery drops it could mean the blood  is flowing faster through narrower channels due to plaque build up.
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-  X-rays penetrate soft tissue but not the bone.  Computerized Axial Tomography, CAT scans, are a series of X-ray images from many points in a circle surrounding the patient.  3-D images are constructed on the computer.
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-  Magnetic Resonance Imaging, MRI, uses nuclear magnetic resonance, NMR, a very strong magnetic field switching the orientation of the hydrogen nuclei in the body tissue.  Radio waves of just the right frequency flip these nuclei.  When the nuclei flip back they emit a radio signal.  Analyzing these signals can determine molecular structure.
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-  Positron Emission Tomography, PET scans, use positrons, (anti-electrons) emitted in the body tissue meeting electrons and they annihilate each other sending out Gamma Rays.  Detectors pick up the Gamma Ray signals and computers process them to create the image.
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-  Lasers are replacing scalpels.  Laser vision correction is now common place. Often a 10 minute operation.  Lasers are also used in angioplasty,  that vaporize plaque.
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-  Strong sound waves are used to break up kidney stones.
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-  High energy radiation is used to treat tumors.  The electromagnetic energy strips electrons off atoms killing the structure of molecules.
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-  Sports medicine relies heavily on Newtonian mechanics.  Holding a bowling ball of 15 pounds puts a force on your biceps muscles of 150 pounds.  A person jumping 18 inches downward lands with a force of 1.5 tons.  Bending the knees and cushioning the landing puts 300 pounds on the feet.  That is 300 pounds is tolerable.
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-  Doctors and Therapists must learn physics to do their best treatments.  Computers are now playing a major role in the diagnostics and treatments.  If you can’t keep up take notes.  Medicine and computers are moving fast.  An announcement will be made shortly , stay tuned.
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-  Note (1):  Request any of the Reviews by number to learn more.
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-  # 1943  -  super computers in the hands of engineers
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-  #1847 -   computer evolution, where will it lead.
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- #1373  -    how computers will get faster compared to the human brain.
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-  #--------- and several more reviews
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----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
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 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Thursday, March 23, 2017  -----
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Monday, March 20, 2017

Weird Science - Quantum Entanglement

-  1957  -  Weird Science  -  Quantum Entanglement is just one of several new discoveries  weird science.  And, what is causing space to expand?  What is it expanding into. Read this Review to find out, you will be expanding the space between your ears.
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----------------  -  1957  -  Weird Science  -  Quantum Entanglement
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-  How many atoms are in the Observable Universe.  Break it down further into fundamental particles and how many particles are in the Universe?
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-  The answer:  10^80.   That is a 1 followed by 80 zeros.  Don’t ask me to name it, many mega trillions.  Huge!
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-  Using another estimate , Quantum Mechanics math, we get energy density of 10^113  Joules per cubic meter of vacuum.  Remember energy and particles are two forms of the same thing , E=mc^2
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-  Another estimate using General Relativity math we get 10^-9  Joules per cubic meter.
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-  Well there you go, science is a little bit in disagreement, 10^120 between the two answers.
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-  The vacuum is not nothing.  It has a very large energy density.  And, energy density in a vacuum varies from point to point creating density fluctuations.  Even the rate of time may vary.  Time is not a constant either.  When you get down to the  minimum size particles who have fluctuating “quantum foam“.  The degree of fluctuation is controlled by the Heisenberg Uncertainty principle.
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-  Here are some of the “ quanta” that make up the quantum foam:
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-------------------------------  Planck Time           =  10^-43 seconds
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--------------------------------  Planck Mass           =   2.2083  8 10^-8  kilograms
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--------------------------------  Planck Length         =   10^-35 meters
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--------------------------------  Planck Momentum  =    4.136*10^-15  per wavelength
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--------------------------------  Planck Frequency    =  1.85*10^43  wavelength per second
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-  It is space-time curvature that gives rise to gravity.
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-  The critical density when the Universe turns in to a Blackhole when the density is within 1% of the observed 10^-9  Joules per cubic meter.
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-  Over the age of the universe there has been no change in the total energy density.  The Energy Density at Planck space-tine    =     energy density of the Observable Universe plus the energy density of the vacuum.
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-  A perfect vacuum is a place entirely devoid of matter.  How can a friction can possibly exist, it’s empty space.  But, physicists are seeing that a decaying atom traveling through a vacuum experiences a friction-like force.  There is a strange energy filling the virtual particle -anti-particle pairs that pop in to and out of existence in a perfect vacuum
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-  These quantum shifts produce randomly fluctuating electric fields.  When a photon is emitted while the atom is moving in the opposite direction there appears a friction-like force that results in a loss of velocity
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-  The atom actually loses momentum not velocity, it loses a tiny amount of energy which corresponds to a tiny amount of mass.
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-  Since 1982 scientists have been trying to prove the quantum theory of “ entanglement”.  Produce twin photons by heating calcium atoms with a laser.  The photons travel in opposite directions to two polarization analyzers.
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-  Each photon always would correlate the angle of polarization with that of its twin.  The two photos are somehow ‘non- locally” connected.  This suggests that “all” particles are somehow inter - connected regardless of “ space, , “ distance” in between them.
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-  Here is a scenario to try and wrap your mind around this:
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-  You have a fish tank which contains one fish.  The video cameras are  placed on the outside.  One looking at the broadside of the tank and the other looking in on the narrow side.  A person who had never seen an aquarium or a fish, looking at the monitors would apparently see two fish.  However, when one fish moved the other would make a different , yet corresponding move.  It might appear to this observer that the two fish are communicating instantaneously.  However, after a while you will see a pattern and realize the deeper reality involved and that the two fish are actually the same fish viewed from two different angles.
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-  In the same way the photons that we observe in the non-locally experiment are actually one and the same.  Like a hologram all the information possessed by every part is possessed by the whole.  -  the information is distributed non-locally.
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-  Talk about weird science.
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-  It gets worse.
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-  The laws of physics are supposed to be symmetrical in time and space.  However, magnets break space symmetry.  The magnetic spin of atoms spread in all direction, not aligned in one direction or another.  The same is true in crystals .  Atoms in a crystal have preferred positions which makes them appear different based on what angle you observe them.
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-  That is space symmetry.  It can be broken.  Then there is time symmetry that never breaks.
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-  Quantum computers require atoms to exist in entangles states.  When one changes states it automatically causes the other to change states, instantaneously.
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-  An even bigger mystery is what is causing space to expand.  Distant galaxies recede from each other because the fabric of space itself is being stretched.  This means the mass and energy density of the Universe is dropping.  Somehow the fabric of space is being curved, distorted, and forced to evolve over time by the presence of matter and energy.  The warping of space-time by gravitational masses.
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-  In Einstein’s Theory of Relativity equations there is a term called the “Cosmological Constant”.  This is somehow extra energy permeating “empty” space.  The further away a galaxy is from us, the more space there is between us, on average, the faster the galaxy appears to recede from out perspective.  The more space the more there is to stretch.
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-  But, the Universe is not perfectly uniform.   There are over- dense regions and under-dense regions.  There are dense planets, and stars,   And, then there are cosmic voids.
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-  A large collection of many thousands of galaxies makes up our neighborhood, 100,000,000 light years on a side.  If some gravitational or electromagnetic force can hold things together, then even an expanding space cannot affect a change.  The more powerful forces dominate but it becomes less with distance.
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-  There is a certain speed that space will expand between any two objects, but, if the speed is less than the escape velocity between the two objects then there is a binding force that will not increase the distance between them.  Bound objects can survive unchanged for eternity in an expanding Universe.
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-  The fabric of space may be expanding everywhere but it doesn’t have a measurable effect on every object.  Only on the larger scales where the binding force is too weak is when the Hubble rate of expansions occurs.  For astronomers  “H”  is equal to 74.2 kilometers per second per mega parsec.
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-   I guess the space between your ears is safe.  The Hubble rate translates to 49,306 miles per hour per second per million lightyears of space.  When you come right down to it everything is in motion, regardless.   But, where is all this going?  An announcement will be made shortly, stay tuned.
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-  Note (1):  Request any of the Reviews by number to learn more.
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-  --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
-  https://plus.google.com/u/0/  -- www.facebook.com  -- www.twitter.com
 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Monday, March 20, 2017  -----
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Saturday, March 18, 2017

The complete problem solver.

-  1956  -  The complete problem solver.  If you cannot solve your problem with this Review, then booze is the only answer.  Then if you can’t keep up , take notes.
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----------------  -  1956  -  The complete problem solver. Worth what you paid for it.
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-  A total system for competitive decision making.  The framework for the complete thought process in problem solving.
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-----------------------  Root Cause Analysis
-----------------------  Option  Analysis
-----------------------  Risk Analysis
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-  Think to win.  If everybody is thinking the same, someone is not thinking.
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------------------------  ROOT  CAUSE  ANALYSIS
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-  WHY:  Understanding of why things happen is a fundamental step in solving any problem and making the right decision.
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-  Root cause analysis is used whenever things have gone worse than expected  -  a problem  -  or better than expected  -  an opportunity.
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-  Anytime there is a gap between the facts and what is expected effective action needs a “true cause”.
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-  Thinking in terms of deviations is important because it will ultimately allow you to arrive at the probable cause.  It will help you to ask the right questions and collect the right data.
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-  “Scanning” provides  an early warning and opportunity detection.
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-  Time is the enemy of the problem solver  …………….  Data gets distorted, issues get lost, problems transform, feelings, opinions, emotions infuse the problem.
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-  There are 7 steps, 1 “P”  and 6 “D”s.
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-  (1)  Prioritize  -  list issues or problems in order of importance.
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-  (2)  Define  -  the problem ( opportunity) in general , observable, factual terms.
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-  (3)  Describe  -  the problem in terms of identity, location,  timing.
   Repeat this description as to what the problem is NOT.
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-  (4)  Distinguish  -  what is distinctive in each of the dimensions of the terms above.
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-  (5)  Diagnose  -  develop a hypothesis   -  based on the distinctions.
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-  (6)  Destroy  -  the hypothesis.    Rigorously test the hypothesis to shoot it down.
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-  (7)  Decide  -  what to do next .
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-----------------------------  Prioritize
-----------------------------  Define problem,   -  observable , factual
-----------------------------  Describe terms,   -  identity, location, timing
-----------------------------  Distinguish each term
-----------------------------  Diagnose  -  develop hypothesis
-----------------------------  Destroy  -  the hypothesis
-----------------------------  Decide the next step
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-  Validate the cause at lower levels.
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-  Too much management time is invested in looking at what’s wrong.  Too much problem analysis.  The real payoff lies in being pro-active , by scanning what is going especially well, then analyzing for the root cause of the positive deviations.
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-  Root cause is a tool for focusing our experience, technical knowledge, intuition , judgment, in pursuit of identifying ad testing distinctions that reveal the true underlying cause.
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----------------------------------------------  OPTION  ANALYSIS
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-  (1)  Smoke out the issues
-  (2)  State your purpose
-  (3)  Set Criteria
-  (4)  Set Priorities
-  (5)  Identify options
-  (6)  Test your options against your criteria.
-  (7)  Troubleshoot and refine your choice
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--  (1)  Smoke out the issues.  The first thing to do when making a decision is to decide whether the decision is even necessary.  Is it important.
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-  (2)  State your purpose.  Phrasing the decision purpose statement should broaden, not restrict, the relevant kinds of opportunities available.
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-  (3)  Set Criteria.  What to achieve, preserve, or avoid through your decision.  Separate the “ whats” and the “hows”.  What to achieve versus how to achieve it.  “ Whats” describe.  “Hows” are ways or means.
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-  (4)  Set Priorities.  To separate the absolute requirements, MUSTS,  from the desirable objectives,  WANTS.  Rank the objectives on a scale of 1 to 10.
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-  (5)  Identify options.  List ALL the ways you might meet your decision criteria.
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-  (6)  Test your options against your criteria.  Rank all options that meet your MUSTS on how well they meet your WANTS.  Multiply option rank times your wants rank.
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-  (7)  Troubleshoot and refine your choice.  What could go wrong with the communication and implementation of your choice?
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-  It is important to balance process and content.  A meeting facilitator is often needed to just focus on process and stay out of the content.
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---------------------------------------------  RISK  ANALYSIS
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-  (1)  Scan for and specify potential risks created by your decision and actions.
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-  (2)  Prioritize by two factors.  Impact or severity of each risk.  Chance or probability of each occurrence.
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-  (3)  Determine why each risk would occur.  Pinpoint the most probable causes.
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-  (4)  Is there anything that can be done to prevent each risk?
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-  (5)  Specify protective actions that minimize the seriousness of potential risks.  Preventative actions reduce the likelihood that a cause will happen in the first place  -  the real payoff.
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-  (6)  Develop communications plans , and
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-  (7)  Implementation plans for our decision
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-  The whole process can be done in 10 minutes  or 10 days.
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-------------------------  Scan Risks
-------------------------  Prioritize impact, probability
------------------------  Why each risk could occur
------------------------  Prevent each risk?
------------------------  Specify the preventative action
------------------------  Communications plan
-------------------------  Implementation plan.
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-  The real benefit is in having a process.  Having a communication tool to keep a team together and moving one step at a time.  Any process would probably work.  But, we tend to free lance with no process visible.  We loose the effectiveness and productivity of the team.  GETTER DONE!
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-  In the end, thinking rules the world.  There are times when impulses and passions are more powerful, but, they soon expend themselves.
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-  Thinking is the talking of the soul with itself.
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-  In matters of conscience first thoughts are best.  In matters of prudence last thoughts are best.
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-  The happiness of your life depends on the quality of your thoughts.  You gradually become as your thoughts.
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-  All truly wise thoughts have been thought already thousands of times.  To make them truly yours you  must think them over again honestly, till they make a root in our personal experience.
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-  The silent thought is the mightiest agent in human affairs.
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-  --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
-  https://plus.google.com/u/0/  -- www.facebook.com  -- www.twitter.com
 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Saturday, March 18, 2017  -----
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Friday, March 17, 2017

Decisions - How to make better decisions and better choices.

-  1955 -  Decisions  -  How to make better decisions and better choices.  -  We all jealously guard our right to choose.  But, how can we make better choices?   Choices are central to the individual and the essence of freedom.  Good decision require the right balance between emotions and rationality.  Either one alone will get you in trouble.
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 ---------------------------- 1955 -  Decisions -  How to make good decisions
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 -  You must learn to predict the future.  You must accurately perceive the present situation.  You must deal with uncertainty.  You need to develop insight into the minds of others.  Wow, no wonder many decisions go awry.
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-  Here are their scientific steps to making good choices:
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---------------  (1)  Don’t fear the consequences
---------------  (2)  Go with your gut instincts
---------------  (3)  Consider your emotions
---------------  (4)  Play the devil’s advocate
---------------  (5)  Keep your eye on the ball
---------------  (6)  Don’t cry over spilt milk
---------------  (7)  Look at it another way
---------------  (8)  Beware of social pressure
---------------  (9)  Limit your options
---------------  (10)  Have someone else do the choosing
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---------------  (1)  Don’t fear the consequences
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Whatever the future holds it will hurt you less or please you less than you imagine.  Rather than looking inwards  and imagining how a given outcome might make you feel, try to find someone else who has made the same decision and see how they felt.  You tend to think that winning the lottery will make you happier than it actually will.  You tend to play it safe, but, when you do lose you’ll find it less painful than you anticipated.
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---------------  (2)  Go with your gut instincts
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We tend to think that weighing the pros and cons of various alternatives is needed to make good decisions.  That is good to do but often an instinctive choice is just as good.  Science says we make instinctive choices about a persons trustworthiness, competence, aggressiveness, likeability and attractiveness in the first 100 milliseconds.  Too much information can overload your ability to make the best choice.
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---------------  (3)  Consider your emotions
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If the choice you face is highly emotive, your instincts may not serve you well.  Better pull out your list of pros and cons and try to think rationally.  When facing an emotional response it is better to factor in empirical evidence.  Emotions are not the enemy of good decision-making but are a crucial component to the neurobiology of choice.  Never make decision when you are angry. Anger makes you impetuous, selfish, and risk- prone.  Words like crime, or terrorism, are emotive.  See the data.

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---------------  (4)  Play the devil’s advocate
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Some people will only draw on evidence that supports their conclusion  Some people simply have a favored opinion they want to justify.  Actively searching for evidence that you will be prove you wrong is a painful process, requiring loads of self-discipline.  Choose  a bit more humility with your decisions, if possible.
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---------------  (5)  Keep your eye on the ball
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When making decisions based on limited information we tend to latch on to the irrelevant to sway our judgment.
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---------------  (6)  Don’t cry over spilt milk
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The more we invest in something the more commitment we feel towards it.  It is the sunk cost fallacy.  Never weigh “sunk costs” into you decisions.
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---------------  (7)  Look at it another way
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The choices you make are irrationally colored by the way the alternatives are presented.  This always comes out in survey questions.  Snacks are always presented 90% fat free rather than 10% fat.  Try to look at you options from more than one angle of presentation.
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---------------  (8)  Beware of social pressure
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People are swayed by figures of authority and their peers.  Groups of like minded individuals tend to talk themselves into extreme positions and behaviors.  Never just assume that the group knows best.  Remember, if everyone is thinking alike, someone is not thinking.
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---------------  (9)  Limit your options
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Too many alternatives are not helpful.  Narrow down your list.
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---------------  (10)  Have someone else do the choosing
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Let someone else choose the wine, or pick the numbers on your lottery ticket.  Choice itself does not always bring happiness.  Sometimes it is better to let go and let someone else choose.
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Happy choices an may the best decision be always on your path.
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-  Don’t do things in halves.  If it be right, do it boldly.  If it be wrong leave it undone.
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-  The souls of men of undecided and feeble purpose are the graveyards of good intentions.
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-  --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
-  https://plus.google.com/u/0/  -- www.facebook.com  -- www.twitter.com
 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Friday, March 17, 2017  -----
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Critical Thinking. How to have it?


-  1954  -  Critical Thinking.  How to have it?  This was s Stanford University course.  It is an organized way of thinking about a problem and making a decision.  Follow these rules.  Think before you act.  You always have 2 decisions to make “ what” to do, then “how” best to do it.
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----------------------------  1954  -  How can you learn critical thinking?
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-  Here is a review to teach you the rules for “ Critical Thinking”:  It was a Stanford University course and the best college course I ever attended.
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---------------------  Reporter's method of classifying questions:
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 -----------------  who  ?
 ------------------what  ?
 -----------------  where  ?
 -------------------when  ?
 -----------------   why  ?
 -----------------   how  ?
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---------------------  Critical Thinking's seven basic questions:
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(1)  -----------------  Is it important?
(2)  ----------------  Does the question need clarification?\
(3)  ----------------  What are the assumptions?
(4)  ----------------  Is this true?  What is the evidence?
(5)  ----------------  Why?
(6)  ---------------  What are the consequences?
(7)  ----------------  What action should I take?
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  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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    (1)  Go/No Go:  Is this important?
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 ---------------   Is this interesting?
 ---------------  Why think about this?
--------------- Why consume time or neurons on this?
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 -     (2)  Questions of CLARIFICATION
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---------------- What do you mean?
---------------  Do I understand fully the question or the problem?
---------------  Do I really understand the issue?
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-     (3)  Questions of ASSUMPTION
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      ---------------   What is being assumed?
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-      (4)  BASIC CRITICAL QUESTIONS
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---------------    Is this true?
---------------  What's the EVIDENCE?
---------------   What's your source?
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-      (5)  BASIC SCIENTIFIC QUESTIONS
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---------------   Why?
---------------    What caused this?
---------------    What's the EXPLANATION?
----------------  How is this supposed to work?
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 -    (6)  IMPLICATIONS
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---------------  What will be the effect?
---------------  What are the possible consequences?
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-      (7)  ACTIONS
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---------------   What should be done?
--------------     What should I DO?
----------------  Remember, doing nothing is a decision of no action.
----------------  There are always 2 questions you have to answer, what to do, then, how to do it.  Most people take action before considering how best to answer the second part of the question.
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-    Learning starts when driven by the student's thoughts:  
Follow the student's agenda, not yours.  Confucius said:  First become a student then a teacher will come.  In other words you first have to want to learn.
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-  Questions are the tools for learning.
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-    Think critically about BOTH sides of an argument.
-  Begin with the hypothesis, the thesis.
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-    DEBATE is when the purpose is to persuade the other party.
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-  DIALOGUE is when the purpose is to help one another think more clearly,
               more personally, more critically.
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-   The more education you have, the more you are able to overcome your fear
      of asking embarrassing questions.  Or, giving I don’t know answers
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 -     Questions of clarification:
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-               Definitions,  do we need to define any terms or hypotheses
 -             Classifications,  do we need to categorize things
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-    “Meaning building” questions:  examples:   word etymology, what do the words mean?     Comparisons,  what are some similarities, or analogies?
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-    Questions about ASSUMPTIONS:  If the assumption is false would it make
      the entire sentence be inaccurate?

-  UNDERSTAND FIRST, THEN EVALUATE
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-              Sources - is it clean?
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-              Does it have credibility?
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-              Is it a rationalization?
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 -    Being objective - if you're working hard to understand both sides
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 -    We use "stereotypes" all the time.
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 -    Learn to live with questions.  You don't always have to have answers.
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 -    "I don't know",
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 -    "I'm of two minds,"
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-    "I can see both sides of the issue, and haven't made up my mind", is
      fine.
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-   RATIONALIZATION - does not express a true or a real reason.
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-                      Test:  apply double negatives and see if the argument is still true.
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-  Real thinking, true dialogue is inarticulate honest, hesitation way of thinking.
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-    You must feel safe to open up and have a true dialogue.
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-    However, people find credibility in people who talk with confidence,
     convincing, well dressed, good looking, good personality, earthy, the
      most credible person in the US is...........Johnny Carson. Or, is it Barack Obama?

-     People are sheep.
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-    People who are really trying to learn find credibility with knowledge,
      experience, honesty, true dialogue, asking critical questions.
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-    Being objective - means weighing everything by the same standard.
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-    Humans have a problem using a tool and studying a tool at the same time.
      Doing a task and thinking how to do the task.  Using a computer and
      learning how a computer works.
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-    Collaborative learning = is dialogue, teamwork, working together to learn
      together.
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-    These ideas about learning are in the cutting-edge of today's academic
      and "the cutting-edge is the booting-edge."
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-     Critical thinking is a skill that will transcend all of your careers.  Other attributes for success will be flexibility, ability to learn new things, teamwork with cultural diversity ,      communications skills, enthusiasm for "change."
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                            "The Question Book"
                           Tools for Critical Thinking
                                Efficient Thinking
                              Collaborative Thinking
                          By Dennis Matthies  (6-26-91)
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-  --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ---- 
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----  
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews 
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
-  https://plus.google.com/u/0/  -- www.facebook.com  -- www.twitter.com
 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Friday, March 17, 2017  -----
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Math was Invented to Solve Problems? Includes INDEX

-  1953  -  -  This review discusses the short hand languages of math and how they were invented to solve problems.  Then, there is an index of other math Reviews that are available upon request.
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---------  #1953  -  Math was Invented to Solve Problems?

-  Mathematics is a language.  It can be used to explain observations, to solve problems, to find results and to predict results coming in the future.  Its effectiveness in explaining nature is totally unreasonable.  Why does it work so well?  It is a wonderful gift that we neither fully understand nor deserve.

-  Isaac Newton invented Calculus to explain “motion” and to explain things that “change“.  He breaks change down into infinitesimally small frame by frame sequences in order to solve problems.  Lots of things change so Calculus has wide application in today’s world.  Calculus is used to calculate the change in the value of money with time, for example.

-  When Calculus is the rate of change of quantities it is interpreted as the slope of curves.
Example:  velocity is the slope of distance versus time.  This is called Differential Calculus.  When the math is used for lengths, areas, and volumes of objects it is called Integral Calculus.  Example:  Calculus can add up the areas of circles and get the volume of a sphere.

-  Quantum Electrodynamics is a more recent math invention that explains how light and matter interact.  Scientists used this math to calculate the magnetic moment of an electron.  Their answer agrees with experiment to an accuracy of a few parts per trillion.

-----------  electron’s magnetic moment  =  1.0011565218073

-  Quantum Mechanics is a math concept that assumes matter and energy behave as particles as well as waves.  It states that measurements at the atomic level are always uncertain.  Position and velocity, time and energy are pairs that can not both  be known with precision.  There is always a trade-off in play between these pairs.

-  Group Theory was a math invented in 1800 to solve polynomial equations .  Groups are algebraic structures made up of sets of objects, say a set of integers, united under a specific operation, say addition, that obeys a specific set of rules, say adding zero to any number does  not change the number.  Now, in the 21st century this same Group Theory is used to develop the Standard Model in Particle Physics.  It models the building blocks of matter.  The fundamental particles of matter are given a specific group called SU(3)  that can be used to describe how atomic nuclei are held together.  Example:  SU(3) math predicts that there is a Higgs Boson, a force carrier particle that gives matter its mass.  The Large Hadron Collider in CERN, Switzerland, is a particle accelerator smashing protons and anti-protons together with 14 trillion watts of energy.  Physicists hope to discover the Higgs Boson in the debris.  And, I think they have just recently discovered the Higgs Particle.

-  Group Theory becomes a way to represent symmetry in nature.  Lie Groups represent symmetries of solutions to differential equations that are infinite.  There is a Monster Group the defines the structure of the Universe at the subatomic level.

-  Then, there is Knot Theory that studies knots, closed curves in 3 dimensions.  The math was born out of attempts to model the atom.  Today it is used in String Theory, Topology, DNA research and molecular biology.

- Topology is the math that describes objects that remain unaffected by smooth deformations, such as stretching or squeezing, but do not involve tearing or cutting. Example:  a doughnut is the same Topology as a coffee cup.

-  Number Theory is the math used in cryptography .Quantum Entanglement has recently been added to make cryptography messages unhackable and uncrackable.

-  The General Theory of Relativity uses the math of non-Euclidian geometry.  Non-Euclidian are spaces where parallel lines converge and diverge.

-  String Theory is math that describes fundamental particles as musical notes of vibrating strings.  The strings are very tiny , 10^-33 centimeters in length, but, they have no thickness.  The strings are 1 dimensional, yet the math needed to describe their behavior must use  10 dimensions.  Space-time has 4 dimensions, the other 6 dimensions are called Calabi-Yau spaces.  All the properties of elementary particles such as mass, spin , charge can be mathematically described in vibrating strings.  The faster the vibration the greater the energy.  Since matter and energy are the same thing,  the faster the vibrations the greater the mass.

-  Loop Quantum Gravity is Knot Theory math that is trying to reconcile space -time relativity with quantum mechanics  The math for one describes the Universe of big things.  The math for the  other describes small things, things at the sub-atomic level.  But, the two math’s are not compatible.  Neither one will work in the other’s domain.

-  Chaos Theory uses math whereby the tiniest change in the initial conditions can produce entirely different end results.  Example:   A butterfly wing flap in the Amazon can cause a tornado in Kansas.

-  Math is a language that just works.  We can not really explain why.  We just use it because it is reliable in learning stuff about our Observable Universe.  There appears to be fundamental symmetries that Nature uses in her own math.  There appears to be a grand design that we are discovering, not inventing.  An announcement will be made shortly, stay tuned.
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-  To learn more math, request these reviews:
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-  #1952  -  Transcendental numbers “ e” and “pi”.  This Review covers imaginary numbers.  “Pi” is an irrational number.  Compound interest uses “e”.  e^i *pi +1  = 0 is world’s most amazing equation.
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-  #1935  -  How fast is the satellite?  How to calculate the speed to be 18,557 miles per hour
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-  #1865  -  Equations are just another language.  Thee are a least 6 differed proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem.  Logarithms are designed to make the math simpler.  Calculus ws invented to calculate rates of change.  Fourier transforms describe time as a function of frequency.  Chaos Theory models copulation growth.
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-  #1844  -  Pascal’s Wager on climate change.  Decision Theory - what is the best and the worst with any two alternatives.
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-  #1780  -  How fast to orbit?  The same math as Review #1935.
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-  #1750  -  Math for fun.  Short cuts you can do in your head for math calculations.  How to add up all the numbers in a multiplication tale up to 100?  The answer  =  3,025.  Pick any 4-digit number, scramble the order of the digits, subtract, add, the answer you get is always “9”.
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-  #1661  -  Math is food for the brain.  The sum of he cubes of aa series of numbers is equal to the square of the sum of those numbers.  How to win at craps and roulette tables, Blackjack and Poker.  What is your probabilities when gambling?
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-  #1649  -  The power of combinations.  Factorials is multiplication is a descending sequence of numbers down to the number one.  When you get 23 people in a room the probability is 49% that none have the same birthday, 51% that 2 of them do have the same birthday.
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-  #1565  -  How fast is that satellite?
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-  #1521  -  Math’s most powerful equations.  E=mc^2.  and  FV=PV( 1+i )^t
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-  #1493  -  Puzzles in astronomy
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-  #1467  -  The growth and decay of money .  Interest is really the price of money. Put one penny in a kitchen jar on December 1st and double it every day..  How much will you have by Christmas?  $117,772 and you could buy an airplane.
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-  #1324  -  How politicians use math.  They tend to use math to get the numbers they want.  2008 financial crisis at Lehman Brothers and AIG
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-  #          -  Presidential poles.  I don’t believe the poles but the math is fun.

-  #1235  Equations are sentences in short hand.  Frequency times wavelength equals a constant =  300,000,000 .  Energy divided by frequency equals a constant  =  6.6*10^-34.  The force of gravity times distance squared equals a constant  =  79*10^43.

-  #1213  How to calculate odds for poker hands.  The logic for these calculations is “ combinations.  There is a “rule of sums”  and  “ rule of products”.  The odds of a Flush are 0.198%.

-  #1086  Formulas for space time, velocity, galaxies, solar systems, light , atoms, Quantum Mechanics, Energy, Action, Work, Momentum, Geometry, and more.
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-  #1095  Math is a learned discipline.
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-  # 1042  Calculate areas by connecting the dots, Pick’s Theorem
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-  #  1041  The star with the golden ratio.   (a /b )  =  (a + b) /  a        1/1.618  =  1.618
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-  #853  Math, the golden ratio
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-  #805  Gambling, math for craps, roulette, blackjack.
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-   #803  Transcendental numbers, “e” and “pi”.
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-  #796  Science and Math, Part I

- #798  Science and Math, Part II.

-  #799  Science and Math, Part III.
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-  # 745  The calculus of a circle.
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-  #649  The Greeks invented numbers.
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-  Transcendental  -  is a function that is not an algebraic function.  It is a number that is real but not an algebraic with rational roots.
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-  Irrational  -  not expressible as a ratio of two integers having an infinite and nonrecurring expansion when expressed as a decimal.
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-  Rational  - number expressed as a quotient, a fraction, a ratio.
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Thursday, March 16, 2017

Transcendental Numbers : “e” and “pi”

-  1952  -  Equations are just another language to learn.  Math is just too amazing for words, that is the reason we use numbers.  But numbers can be strange.  Especially Transcendental and Irrational numbers.  Try to wrap your mind around it, on circumference divide by  the diameter and you get “ pi”
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------------------  1952  -    Transcendental Numbers :  “e” and “pi”

-  Transcendental means “beyond human experience“; but, not beyond human knowledge.  Supernatural, but still natural numbers.   Numbers are just inventions man created for counting.  0, 1,2,3,4,5, …..      How could numbers be supernatural?  We started by simply counting our fingers.  We started with positive numbers and  it took a while for man to accept negative numbers.  For several centuries man could not believe that there could be something less than nothing.  Now we have the government to thank for that.

-   Finally, a number line was invented that extended positive numbers to the right all the way to infinity, and  to the left all the way to negative infinity.  Later, man ran into the problem of taking the square root of a negative number.  The only way that was possible was to invent “i” the imaginary number that was the square root of negative one, ( i = -1^½), and i^2 = -1.  

-  Now, we have real numbers and imaginary numbers together.  We make the number line the real axis , or x axis, and the imaginary line the vertical, or y axis, and that plane can define all real and imaginary numbers that exist.  4 + 3i is an imaginary number, a point 4 counts to the right and 3 counts up on the imaginary axis is a unique point for this number on the plane.

-  If we plot all the points of radius one on the graph where x^2 + y^2 = 1 then we define the equation of a unit circle, of radius one.  This is simply the Pythagorean Theorem where any right triangle inside the circle has three sides r^2 = x^2 + y^2.  But, in this case the hypotenuse is the radius, “r”.  Remember, the sum of the squares of two sides of a right triangle are equal to the hypotenuse squared.  All points on a unit circle can be defined by the equation x^2 + y^2 = 1.

-Now, put 2 radii at right angles and the hypotenuse is a cord across the circle.  The cord  according to the Pythagorean Theorem is equal to the square root of 2.  If we do this 4 times around the unit circle we create a square.  The area of the square is simply 2 square units.  The sides are each the square root of 2 which is an “irrational number“.  A decimal number 1.414.….. that goes to infinity never repeating itself.  Two infinite series decimal numbers multiplied together equal the simple number 2.

-  Now, we can define the number “pi” which is the ratio of the perimeter, or circumference, of a circle divided by the diameter.  “pi” = c / d.  or,  c = 2*pi*r.  “pi” is one of those Transcendental numbers.  It is “supernatural“.  It appears to not be an invention of man but an invention of nature.  The area of the unit circle is “pi”  =  3.14.….. to infinity.  The circumference of the unit circle is 2*pi  =  6.28.…….  to infinity.  A circle with a simple radius 1 has an area and a circumference that are irrational numbers whose decimal numbers go on to infinity.

-  “pi” in addition to being a  Transcendental number is an Irrational number.  Irrational numbers are real numbers that can not be written as a fraction of two integers.  A Rational number can be written as a fraction, like 1/3 = 0.33333333  ……..   Its decimal expansion goes on to infinity.  But, for Rational numbers the pattern always repeats itself.  For Irrational numbers the pattern goes to infinity and NEVER repeats itself.  The square root of 2 is an Irrational number just like “pi”.

-------  2^½  = 1.414213562 ……..  goes to infinity but the pattern never repeats itself.

-------  “pi” = 3.141592654 ……..  goes to infinity but the pattern never repeats itself, it is Irrational.  Is it not amazing that “pi” is defined as a fraction of circumference/diameter of a circle but it can not be defined as a fraction of any two integer numbers?

-  Another way to say this is that Irrational numbers can not be written as a termination or a recurring decimal.  But, “pi” is also a Transcendental number because it also can not be written as a polynomial equation with rational coefficients of which “pi” is a root.  This statement is abstract and Transcendental in math takes a little getting used to.  Both “pi” and “e” are Transcendental numbers that fit this definition.  A little later we will create “e” using polynomials but never with the root “e”.

-   “pi” defines circles.  “e” defines everything that grows.  Let’s use $1,000 to illustrate.  Suppose you put a  thousand dollars in the bank and the bank gave you a 100% annual  interest rate.  At the end of a year you would have $2,000 with interest.  That is $1,000 *( 1+1.00) = $2,000  (If it were 6% interest it would be $1,000*1.06  =  $1,060.)    If we kept our money in the bank for another year the total would be $1,000*2*2 = $4,000.  The third year we would have $1,000*2*2*2 = $8,000.  The equation is $1,000 * (1+1.00)^n, where “n” is the number of years.  But, what if the bank compounded the interest monthly, instead of annually.  Then the equation becomes $1,000 *(1 + 1.00/12)^12 = $1,000 *(1.0833)^12 = $2,613.  You made $613 more by compounding interest monthly instead of yearly.

-   Compounding grows things faster.

-   How about if the bank compounded interest daily?$1,000 *(1+1.00/365)^365  =  $1,000*(1.1.0027397)^365  =  $2,715.  You made $715 more by compounding daily.  Not that much more.  What would happen if the bank simply compounded continuously?   Notice we are doing two things at once.  We are making the base in the equation a smaller and smaller number by compounding more often.  And, at the same time, we are making the exponent larger and larger.  Whenever you grow anything like this in the limit you approach the magical, transcendental number “e” .  The limit of (1+1/n)^n always equals 2.718281828459045 …….  We define this number as “e”.  Therefore , the maximum we can earn compounding 100% interest continuously for a year  is $2,718.

-  We can generalize this equation mathematically to become:  e^x = (1+x/n)^n
We can generalize the financial equation starting with a principle “p”, with an interest rate, “r” and “t” years with interest compounding continuously to:

------------Principle with Interest = p*e^r * t = $1,000*e^1.00 * 1  =  $1,000 * 2.1718 = $2,718 at the end of the first year.  After 10 years you would have: $1,000*e^1.00*10 = $1,000 * 22,026 = $22,026,466.  You would be a millionaire 22 times over in just 10 years if you could get a 100% compounded interest rate.

-  Another way to create “e” is with polynomials.  A polynomial is a math expression of 2 numbers added together and raised to some power.  For example: ( x+2)^2 = (x+2)(x+2).  If we continuously make the base smaller and the exponent larger we eventually get to “e” using this polynomial series:   (1+1/10)^10 = 2.59374246 …..      (1+1/100)^100 =  2.704813829 ……    (1+1/1000)^1000 =    2.716923932 ….   As the base gets closer to 1 and the exponent gets larger and larger we approach “e” = 2.718281828 ……..
 “e”  surfaces as a tug of war between 1 and infinity.

-  “e” and “pi” are Transcendental numbers that are found everywhere in nature. “e” is linked to calculus both integration and differentiation.  Integration is the summation of tiny rectangles to calculate the area under a curve.  If you have a curve where x*y = 1, or, y = 1/x then the area under that curve from 1 to “e” is 1.

-  In differentiation, calculus is the calculation of a rate of change of one variable versus another.  Velocity is miles / hour, the rate of change of distance with time, or the differential of distance versus time.  It is the slope of the curve.  A slope is a rate of change.  Velocity is the slope of the curve of distance versus time.  The slope of another curve y = e^x  is  e^x = dy/dx, at every point along the curve.  e^x is its own differential, e^x.  A curve y = e^x always has a slope of e^x.

-  “e” = an infinite series of factorials.  A factorial is the multiplication of a series of numbers 1 less than the last number.  4 factorial = 4! = 4*3*2*1  =  24.

--------------  “e”  =  1  +  1/1!  +  1/2!  +  1/3!  +  1/ 4!  +  1/5!  + ……

--------------  “pi” is also related to an infinite series:

“pi“^2/6” = 1/1^2  +  1/ 2^2  +  1/ 3^2  +  1/ 4^2  + ………………………….

“pi”/ 4, which is 45 degrees, = 1 - 1/3  +  1/5  -  1/7  +  1/9  -  1/11  +  1/13  -  1/15  + ………………………………

-  But, the most intriguing equation of all relates “e” and “pi” together:

---------  e^i * pi +1 = 0    ……  TAKE SOME TIMJE TO STUDY THIS EQUATION.

“e” raised to an imaginary “pi” is equal to -1.

“e” raised to (-1)½ * pi = -1.

This the most amazing equation in all mathematics, bar none.  A transcendental number raised to the power of an imaginary number +1 becomes nothing.  REPEAT FOUR TIMES….. Just so it sinks in a little.

-  It is easy to memorize “pi” out to 15 places:

 -------------  “How I want a drink, alcoholic of course, after the heavy lectures involving quantum mechanics.”

------------  “How(3) I (1) want(4)  a (1) drink(5) , alcoholic(9)  of(2)  course(6) , after(5)  the(3)  heavy(5)  lectures(8)  involving(9)  quantum(7)  mechanics(9) .”

-------------  3.14159265358979.…….   The sequence goes on forever and never repeats itself.  Pi shows up in many equations in physics.

 Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle in Quantum Mechanics states that you can not determine with certainty the position and the momentum ( mass*velocity) of an atomic particle.  The better you know one the less you can know the other.  Mathematically, (delta x)(delta p) = h / 4*”pi”.   Where, the delta is either a certainty of position ( x) or a certainty in momentum (p) equal or greater than Planck’s constant (h) / 4*”pi”.  There is always a trade-off knowing one or the other, and “pi” is in there.

-  Einstein’s general Theory of General Relativity is:

----------------  R ik - ½ gik*R + lamda gik = 8*pi*G / c^4*Tik
----------------  I will not try to explain this equation, but there is “pi” again.

-  Everybody that remembers school remembers the “Bell Curve”.  This is the curve of a random distribution.  And, it was used to grade the class for A’s, B’s, C’s, D’s, and F’s. The equation for the Bell Curve is f(x) = 1/pi^½* e^-x^2.  A rather imposing equation that represents a Normal distribution, or a Random distribution of unrelated events.  Note that both “e” and “pi” are in the picture.

-  The mean of the Bell Curve is “mu” and the variance is “sigma” , one standard deviation from the mean.  If you calculate one sigma on either side of the mean you include 68% of the distribution.  Those were the C students.    If you go 2 sigma you encompass 95% of the distribution.  Those were the B or D students depending on which side of the “mu” you were on.   And, +or- 3 sigma includes 99 % of the Bell Curve distribution.  Those were the A and F students.  Under a normal distribution just as many students should flunk as get A’s.  Many teachers did not like to grade on the curve.  They prefer to give A’s.

-  “e” and “pi” are Transcendental numbers and they exist in their own right as part of the natural world.  Other illustrations are in the math that describes population growth.  Or, in the math for radioactive decay.  These two numbers are even finding their way into Quantum Mechanics.  The more we study “e” the more important it reveals itself to be.

-  Google  in 2004 announced that its revenue target was $2,718,281,828.   When Google went recruiting it used as its hiring scheme, the first 10-digit prime number found in the consecutive digits of e.com.  Google wanted only math savvy applicants to apply for the jobs.

-  We have introduced only “e” and “pi” as two Transcendental numbers, but, would you believe there are  actually infinitely more Transcendental numbers then there are integers and fractions.  That happens to be a conjecture that I take on faith and will not attempt to  prove.  Math is just too amazing for words, that is the reason we use numbers.
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----  Comments appreciated and Pass it on to whomever is interested. ----
---   Some reviews are at:  --------------     http://jdetrick.blogspot.com -----
--  email feedback, corrections, request for copies or Index of all reviews
-  to:   -------    jamesdetrick@comcast.net  ------  “Jim Detrick”  -----------
-  https://plus.google.com/u/0/  -- www.facebook.com  -- www.twitter.com
 -----   707-536-3272    ----------------   Thursday, March 16, 2017  -----
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