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Taoism defined

Of course, the Tao that can be named is not the true Tao. But as I often say I am a born-again Taoist (none of that alchemy and immortality stuff), I thought I should jot down my current thinking about what I mean. For me, Taoism is less a religion than a philosophy. Taoism is the cultivation of an attitude. That attitude has at least three facets: * peace - a mind that knows how to be quiet. * potency - the ability to dip into a well of endless possibilities. * appreciation. By focusing the attention -- zooming in to the particular, zooming out to the general field - we can find both balance and beauty.

Second Person Present Tense

If you think, “I breathe,” the “I” is extra. There is no you to say “I.” What we call “I” is just a swinging door which moves when we inhale or when we exhale. —Shun Ryu Suzuki I used to think the brain was the most important organ in the body, until I realized who was telling me that. —Emo Phillips Recently, I read a profoundly insightful science fiction story by Daryl Gregory, "Second Person, Present Tense." Wonderful writing. I recommend it. I won't try to summarize the tale, except to say that it tackles a profound insight into consciousness. Forget id, ego, and superego. Replace them with the Parliament, the Page, and the Queen. The Parliament refers to the idea that your consciousness is not one voice. It is a committee. It is made up of several different physiological or biological systems, all vying for action. At some point, they achieve consensus. This is the moment in which, for instance, fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) reveals that th...

The ee!book is coming!

So I've been thinking about e-books, and the rise of self-publishing. The short version is this: libraries of all types need to have systems enabling them to "publish" and manage content directly. As I've oft-stated, there were 2.7 million self-published titles (mostly electronic) in 2010, about 9 times the output of commercial publishing in the same year. This trend will continue. So now let's say that your library does have such an infrastructure for the management of digital content -- as my library does. I anticipate that there will be at least four kinds of content coming our way: * crap. It takes real effort to become a fine writer. A lot of what will be written won't be very good. But that's always been true. It disappears into the ages -- or at least, it has until now. (Do we need to weed e-books? Or will we finally have the ability to preserve every title forever?) * OK stuff. There will be many works that do a reasonably good job of tellin...

Your brain on fiction

This New York Times piece has some pretty interesting stuff that librarians have said for years. And now, science proves it. For instance, "...individuals who frequently read fiction seem to be better able to understand other people, empathize with them and see the world from their perspective."

The Internet Bubble

So the problem, as detailed in The Filter Bubble - What the Internet is Hiding from You by Eli Pariser, is that Google "personalizes" your search results to the point where you get less and less of the real world, and more of the things you already know, like, and agree with. That's pleasant, of course. An alternative is the intriguing search engine DuckDuckGo . Recently, it teamed up with the Linux Mint distribution to replace Google as the default search engine. You can read about that decision, and about some characteristics of the alternative engine, in this blog post . Some key features: * no tracking, so more privacy * no ads. Your search history isn't feeding sales. * no "bubbling." That is, no matter who you are, or where you search, you get the same results. * the ability to submit a search through the engine to other platforms -- Youtube, Flicker, etc., and even Google itself. Worth a look.

School library advocacy

Some months ago, I had the privilege of facilitating a meeting of the Colorado Association of School Libraries (CASL). The topic was advocacy -- and it was urgent. I asked them this question: suppose you were running a great ship, with all kinds of important operating tasks. Suddenly, that ship is the Titanic, and it just hit an iceberg. Would you keep doing the same tasks? School libraries in Colorado are in trouble. Despite wonderful research showing just how much they contribute to academic performance, school librarians are being laid off, replaced with volunteers or technology people, and generally being dismissed from a progressive educational strategy. The good folks of CASL came up with a host of ideas for communicating differently, in a way that is more focused on the people who make these funding decisions. To that end, they've put together a website - caslsurvive/ with a bunch of ideas, and immediately useful tools, to get the word out. Definitely worth a look.

Carson Block at SXSW

Great article here about "the fate of libraries." It has at least two great quotes: Carson: “I’m not sure why publishers are so afraid of libraries,” he said. “We pay ." Reporter Harry McCracken: "We’ve always needed libraries; now, more than, ever, libraries need us."