• Polish (and Russian) Film Posters

    Web design blog wellmedicated has uncovered some great Polish film posters.

    These conceptual masterpieces put the original American posters to shame every time; they are truly beautiful works of art.  Trimming this list down to a mere 50 posters that I absolutely love was surprisingly difficult.

    I find it difficult to choose stand-out candidates from this list: they’re all spectacular.

    Jason then pointed me towards this great collection of Russian movie posters. Equally as fascinating they remind me of fairy tale illustrations. I’m enjoying trying to guess what film each poster represents (highlights include The Matrix, War of the Worlds, and Lord of the Rings).

  • Maps of Great Journeys: From Magellan to Kerouac

    Interactive maps of history’s greatest journeys, with details. Some fictional; others not.

    There’s Magellan’s circumnavigation of the globe, Kerouac’s Sal Paradise traversing the US, Livingstone’s explorations in Africa, and many more.

    via Kottke

  • Reminiscence and La Jetée

    • Reminiscence: This piece of ‘total theatre’ is inspired by a famous case study featured in Oliver Sacks’ The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat (which I’ve written about previously) and premiers in London’s Jacksons Lane theatre early next week.
      After the matinée performances on Sunday 14th (the one I’ll be attending) and Wednesday 17th there is a panel discussion on the issues raised by the play – personal, ethical and scientific. On this panel will be the creative team, professionals from Headway and Epilepsy Action, and Dr Vaughan Bell – a writer over at one of my favourite blogs, the excellent Mind Hacks.
  • Children Can’t Differentiate Between Toys and Nutritional Items

    “Children can’t differentiate between toys and nutritional items”

    No, it’s not a classic piece of ‘Onion‘ reportage; it’s a quote from Miriam Gruß, a member of the German parliamentary children’s committee, on why the Germans plan on banning Kinder Eggs (are these available in the US?).

    Charlie Brooker’s characteristically hilarious retort is best placed here.

    What, really? Don’t get me wrong – I think children are idiots. But even I find that statement a tad unfair and sweeping. I used to have a spud gun when I was a kid. In case you’re not familiar with that concept either, it was a small metal pistol that fired chunks of potato. Not once did I aim the potato at anyone. Or try to deep-fry the gun. And I was thick as sh!t. I guess it was luck.

    In fact my run of luck was pretty impressive. Other toys I failed to ingest include a Scalextric, several boxes of space Lego, the board games Operation and Mousetrap, and a complete collection of Paul Daniels’ TV Magic Tricks – even though the latter included an egg-shaped gizmo called The Magic Egg. Somehow, miraculously, my conker-sized kiddywink brain managed to differentiate it from a real egg. Thus my life was saved by a whisker.

    Gruss won’t countenance such a slapdash approach to child safety. Not on her watch. “It’s a sad fact,” she said. “Kinder Surprise eggs have to go.”

  • Harder Choices Matter Less

    Advice on choosing between two difficult choices, from Overcoming Bias.

    Well… if you can’t decide between them, they must be around equally appealing, right? Equally balanced pros and cons? So the choice must matter very little – you may as well flip a coin. The alternative is that the pros and cons aren’t equally balanced, in which case the decision should be simple.

    This is a bit of a tongue-in-cheek suggestion, obviously – more appropriate for choosing from a restaurant menu than choosing a major in college.

    This is the principal quote:

    I do think there’s something to be said for agonizing over important decisions, but only so long as the agonization process is currently going somewhere, not stuck.

  • Classic Books of the Ages

    Ryan Holiday asks, What is the ‘classic’ book of the 80s and 90s? Ryan starts by listing the classics from previous eras and decades…

    The Scarlet Letter (colonial America)
    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (slavery)
    The Red Badge of Courage (sometimes for civil war)
    The Jungle (turn of the century)
    All Quiet on the Western Front (WWI)
    The Great Gatsby (20s)
    Of Mice and Men (30s)
    Catcher in the Rye (50s and 60s)
    Fahrenheit 451 (Cold War)

    …and goes on to suggest that the classic 80s book is American Psycho and Fight Club for the 90s.

    I cannot disagree with American Psycho; the book satires perfectly the 80s yuppie culture which embodies everything the 80s was about. The 90s, however, is a different story: Fight Club is a good and very valid choice, but I would argue that Trainspotting is on par with it for representing 90s UK culture.

    Like My Life in Books, I can only suggest The Corrections for the current decade.

    Other contenders were:

  • The Ambition Defect

    Scott Adams—the author famous for his Dilbert comic—has an interesting take on ambition:

    I think ambition is a genetic defect. You can’t have ambition unless you think there is something wrong with the way you are. Ambition is a state of feeling perpetually flawed.

  • Days with My Father

    Phillip Toledano documents his struggle dealing with his father’s dementia following the death of his mother in his touching and beautifully crafted photo-series, Days with My Father. This quote from Shape and Colour says what I’m thinking more eloquently than I ever could.

    It takes a real artist to know when something is special enough to simply be documented, and not necessarily explored or extrapolated on. To give something room to breathe and hold it’s own based only on the fact that you’ve found the strength to share it. I don’t take it lightly when artists take their most personal moments and reveal them to me, trusting that hopefully the cycle of creator and receiver will nurture us both. There’s something delicate and tenuous in the act of letting your story go in the desire that it will mean as much to a stranger as it does to you.

    via Kottke

  • Top 10 Philosophy Papers of the Year

    Every year The Philosopher’s Annual attempts to pick the ten best philosophy articles of the year. This year’s results are now out and I’ll soon be delving into the archives to peruse the previous 26 volumes.

    via Mind Hacks

  • Top 10 Online Psychology Experiments

    PsychCentral has compiled a list of the top 10 online psychology experiments. Thoughtfully, the list is of the top 10 long term experiments, meaning that they will be online for a long time to come.

    Here’s the list, but check PsychCentral’s original as each experiment is described in some depth:

    1. You Just Get Me
    2. Bad Vibes
    3. The Stroop Test
    4. FaceResearch.org
    5. The Concept of Intentional Action
    6. Project Implicit
    7. Basic Music Intervals
    8. Face Transformer from the Perception Lab
    9. Visual Phenomena and Other Psychological Diversions
    10. Casual Fridays at Cognitive Daily

    via Mind Hacks