“Heuristic” — an ugly word that everyone should know — is used differently in various contexts. It generally refers to a process of making open-ended, provisional decisions in order to get into a better position — “for now” — from which to act and decide better later: Let’s see how this works out — find [...]
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heuristics,
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Props to TechAlliance and BIOTECanada for booking Adam Bly to speak at the launch of National Biotechnology Week. I’m very grateful to have attended; I came away rejuvenated with energy and ideas… Bly made the case we need to reorient “our collective ideology, our collective imagination,” towards science — towards “Big Science.” Some of his remarks [...]
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seed magazine,
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techalliance,
technology
This is a more positive followup to yesterday’s post, trying to work out what the key idea or shared ethic might be for London’s economy. I’ve already expressed doubts about the “transporation hub” idea here and here. It isn’t a bad idea to beef up London’s transportation capacity as one specific part of a broader plan, but [...]
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capitalism,
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constructive capitalism,
creative capitalism,
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livability,
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substance,
sustainability
The news sure spread fast. It interrupted broadcasts and seemed to consume Twitter — as much as it can be consumed by any single event. Ethan Zuckerman of Global Voices reported, according to his metric, that 15% of all posts on the service mentioned Michael Jackson. By comparison, he never saw Iran or Swine Flu [...]
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change,
cultural evolution,
culture,
demographics,
generations,
history,
imagination,
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narrative,
paradigms,
pop culture,
significance,
twitter
Are conventional ideas about education actually counterproductive? Does advocacy based on those ideas set back the cause in the long run? The Globe and Mail ran an op-ed about education on Monday that got me on the subject. “Creating a culture of learning” addresses the problem of school dropouts, citing the success of Chinese immigrants [...]
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culture,
education,
learning,
learning to learn,
schools,
society,
values
Boston’s case illustrates the difficulty you’d have establishing a new startup hub this late in the game. If you wanted to create a startup hub by reproducing the way existing ones happened, the way to do it would be to establish a first-rate research university in a place so nice that rich people wanted to live there. [...]
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management,
new economy,
organizations,
paul graham,
post-industrialism,
roger martin,
scientific management,
silicon valley,
six sigma,
taylorism
If I wasn’t turning 31 in a few weeks I might be inclined to say, “Don’t trust anyone over 30.” Actually, come to think of it, don’t trust me — don’t trust anyone under 30 either — because everybody is wrong sometimes, and everything is wrong eventually. Fortunately we don’t have to trust people and [...]
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change,
conservatism,
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demography,
generation x,
generation y,
heritage,
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social media,
society,
what would google do?
I highly recommend the current issue of The Atlantic. I went out and bought it yesterday morning. Yes: bought… It has me thinking about magazines, why I like them so much (especially ambitiously intellectual magazines like The Atlantic) and what role publications like this will have in the future — or more specifically, how they will manage to adapt [...]
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change,
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technology,
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the atlantic,
web
One of the insights that drives my thinking-work is that our society has been blessed with far, far more free time than any other society in history (except perhaps for small groups of aristocrats here and there). This might seem intuitively wrong to many people. Without thinking about it, one might assume that people have [...]
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