Sunday, May 14, 2017

Phain in Black and White


My favorite Minecraft Map is called Phain. It is a massive and detailed Minecraft map inspired by the Endless Legend video game. The map looks like a hexagonal game board and features many detailed zones to explore.

Here is a closer look at some of the hexagonal zones. As you can see there are lots of different areas in the map.


And here is a closer look at the map's detail.


If you haven't tried Phain yet and you have a few hours to kill, download it today! It's one of the best Minecraft maps out there!





Why We Want Stuff

Restricted things are seen as having more worth

There might be some truth people need the things they can’t have.

This “Romeo and Juliet” effect comes from the truth that people despise losing chances. So when something is prohibited or prohibited, it is not unlikely to appear even more desired. Parents frequently find this rebellious happening in their own kids: if your kid is expressly prohibited to play with it any toy can be a lot more appealing.

This presents interesting issues in the adult world also, mainly in terms of censorship, because banned information can also be regarded as more useful than advice that is freely accessible. A study revealed that when college students were told a speech fighting coed dorms was to be prohibited, they became more sympathetic to the argument of the address without having heard one word!

Likewise, court research shows that “censored” info can also affects juries. It is definitely understood that when juries understand that the invoice will be paid by an insurance carrier, they have a tendency to give plaintiffs bigger damages. Interestingly however, they give damages that are higher when the judge expressly tells them to dismiss the truth that the defendant has insurance. The “taboo” advice appears more important to them and makes them overreact, the same as a plaything that is banned looks hugely desired to any kid.

Advice and restricted things are seen as desirable.



We're close-obsessed with being consistent in our words and activities

When individuals on a shore watched a staged larceny of a radio from a nearby towel, only 20 percent responded; but in the event whoever owns the towel first requested folks to “please see my things,” 95 percent of them became close-vigilantes, chasing down the robber and powerfully snatching back the radio. Their want to not be inconsistent in what they'd said trumped their concern for personal safety.

However, what orders consistency? The solution is easy: dedication. Research suggests that after we commit to something with activities or words, we want to not be inconsistent with it; and dedication that is public is the strongest driver of all. A juror in a court of law, by way of example, is hardly likely to modify her view once it has been openly said by her.

We even change our personal self-image to be consistent with our earlier activities.

By way of example, Chinese interrogators got American prisoners to collaborate following the Korean War by requesting them to make tiny concessions including signing and writing statements that were innocuous like “America is imperfect.” His compatriots frequently labeled the prisoner a “collaborator” when these statements were read from the other side of the prison camp.

The prisoner subsequently began to find himself as a collaborator also, thus getting more helpful. He efficiently corrected his self-image to not be inconsistent with what he'd done. In writing obtaining the obligation was likewise a vital component in this procedure; there's something inescapably strong in written words.

This broadly known “foot in the door” technique takes advantage of how even modest obligations influence our self-image and is extremely well-liked by salesmen who often procure substantial purchases by getting customers to first make modest obligations that alter their self-image before a more substantial deal is offered.

We're close-obsessed with seeming consistent in our words and activities and being.

Making a choice to fight for something creates desire

From tribes in Africa to school fraternities in The United States, when a fresh member has been inducted right into an organization, initiation rites usually involve degradation and pain, sometimes leading to death. Attempts to suppress the practices that are barbarous and dogged opposition consistently encounter. Why?

Quite simply, the groups understand that if individuals go by way of lots of difficulty to achieve something, they often value it more once they reach it. The attempt makes the group was dedicated to by members.

But groups like school fraternities also have resisted attempts to transform their initiations into some kind of (slightly disgusting) community service, like changing bed pans at hospitals. This can be since they need associates to really make the decision that is internal to take part in the degradation rather than make excuses like, “This was for the benefit of the city,” which would permit them to use an external reason for his or her conduct. Studies have shown that such internal selections tend to be prone to make lasting internal change in comparison with selections made on account of outside pressure.

Compliance professionals make an effort to create such internal change in us, using the lowball trick, by way of example: A car dealer might make such an astoundingly affordable offer on an automobile that people promptly determine to purchase it. The seller knows full-well that, throughout the test drive, we'll subsequently alone build several other justifications to purchase the auto besides the cost, like ” “good mpg and “fine colour.”

At the final minute, the first amazing offer is retracted due to a “bank mistake, a higher priced cost and ” is given. Generally, we find yourself purchasing the car due to internal change.

Internal change is generated by creating a decision to fight for something.

When unsure, we look for social proof

The principle of social proof states that people frequently discover by looking at what others are doing, things to do.

This inclination can be used to control us, by way of example, when TV shows use laughter that was man-made to make when church ushers “salt” group baskets with a couple bills prior to the service to allow it to be look like everyone is making contributions, or jokes seem more amusing.

Social proof is particularly powerful when uncertainty reigns, that was sadly the case when a young woman, Kitty Genovese, was stabbed in Ny in 1964. The aspect that was really shocking was the strike lasted over 30 minutes, with 38 people listening and watching from their flats, but no one even bothered to phone law enforcement or interceded.

This so called bystander inaction was mainly due to two variables. When a lot of people are involved, it belittles the private obligation felt by every participant. An urban surroundings includes a large amount of doubt: unknown things and individuals that are unknown abound. When individuals are not certain, they look to view what others are doing. In the Genovese case, folks were attempting to inconspicuously peep from their windows, which appeared to demonstrate that inaction was the correct strategy.

Considering these facts, in the event you find yourself amid a bunch in a crisis, you ought to single out an individual from your group and direct a help request that is clear at him. By doing this, certainly will most likely help and the individual won’t should try to find guidance in the others.

When unsure, we look for proof that is social.

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Benjamin Franklin - A Biography

OK, this is clearly a bit off-topic for this blog, but I've always been a big fan of Benjamin Franklin, an incredible inventor and statesman and truly an American icon.

I recently read the Franklin biography by Walter Isaacson. He wrote it over a decade ago, but I only just recently got around to it!

Here's a summary.



Youthful Benjamin Franklin was rebellious yet exceptionally intelligent, despite having had little formal schooling.


Benjamin Franklin was born in Boston on January 17, 1705. As a young lad, Franklin showed signs of inventiveness and independence, evident for example in how he approached swimming.

Wanting to swim faster yet recognizing his fingers and toes were keeping him from doing this, Franklin started tinkering with contraptions to help propel him faster through the water. His remedy? Fashioning paddles for his feet for his hands and flippers!

Then enter the church and his parents planned for Franklin to receive an instruction. Yet his father Josiah soon understood that his youngest son wasn't match for the clergy. There are many anecdotes describing youthful Benjamin’s mischievous none and ways – paint him as especially pious.

For example, Franklin thought the grace before each meal was boring his father recited. So after the meat for that winter had been salted and stored in barrel, Franklin asked his father if he would say grace over the barrel, as it'd save time!

Franklin spent only two years enrolled at a local school, where he was taught arithmetic and writing. Subsequently, at only 10 years old, he began work as an apprentice. First he worked then, and under his father with his older brother James, who founded the very first independent paper in Boston, the New England Courant.

Eventually Franklin grew tired of working alongside his brother, chafing at his subordinate part as an apprentice – especially when James was away in England since he had managed the paper on his own.

So even though he was a teenager, Franklin decided to strike out on his own instead.


Benjamin Franklin’s wanderings took him to London and back, but his fantasy above all was to write.


In 1723, when Franklin was merely 17 years old, he boarded a sloop heading for Philadelphia.

There he found a job with Samuel Keimer, Franklin thought “an odd fish” but stayed on with him, although a printer because he loved their extended philosophical discussions. It was during this time that Franklin honed the debating skills that would prove so significant after in his life.

After befriending Pennsylvania governor Sir William Keith, Franklin was presented with the chance to go to London. He stayed there for almost two years working as a printer’s assistant. Yet after a Quaker merchant offered him a position as a clerk in his general store back in Philadelphia, Franklin returned to America and accepted the position.

In writing, despite moving up in business, his real passion lay elsewhere –.

Franklin understood while working at his brother’s printing shop, he wanted to write and had read voraciously. John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress affected him profoundly, and also the novel’s notions of progress and self improvement stayed with him for the rest of his life.

Another favourite tome was Daniel Defoe. Defoe’s work asserted that it was not humane to bar women from the rights and also education that men freely appreciated.

Always working refine his writing skills and to prepare himself, Franklin started regularly reading essays printed in The Spectator, a British daily paper. A few days later, he’d write the essays he’d compare his work with the original, and then read in his own words.

Franklin’s really first efforts at composing were actually printed in his brother’s paper – these hilarious essays were submitted anonymously under the female pseudonym, Mrs. Silence Dogood. For someone his age, Franklin’s early work displayed an uncommon amount of imagination!


After founding a group of likeminded thinkers, Franklin’s notions on community and authorities took root.


Franklin’s life as a shopkeeper was short-lived, and he soon returned to his old position at Samuel Keimer’s printing shop. Yet nothing could sate his growing curiosity and aspiration.

In 1727, Franklin founded a club named the Leather Apron Club, later known as the Junto. Unlike older men Junto members were young tradesmen and artisans who met to discuss current events.

The Junto became a springboard for many of Franklin’s ideas for community enhancement, like a subscription library, a tax for neighborhood constables, a volunteer fire department and a school – which later evolved into the University of Pennsylvania.

Franklin’s thoughts on security and authorities were extreme for the time. In 1747, he conceived of a thought to form a voluntary military, colonial authorities that was independent from Pennsylvania’s. He believed such a corps was needed, given the colony’s inept management of the threat from France and its Indian allies.

Many people supported the initiative – some 10,000 individuals signed up elect Franklin as its colonel, although he turned the position down. to to join the corps and sought Instead, Franklin wrote the corps’ motto and designed insignias for its sections. The corps disbanded in 1748, however, as the risk of war had vanished.

It’s potential that Franklin didn’t recognize how extreme it was for a private group to assume a government function. But, Thomas Penn, the colony’s proprietor, did. He proclaimed Franklin a dangerous man and condemned Franklin’s activities as contempt for the colonial authorities.

Of course, the actual power struggle was still 20 years away. In the meantime, Franklin wasn’t yet exceedingly preoccupied with politics – he was focused, instead, on the natural world.

Franklin’s curiosity led him to make serious scientific discoveries, especially with regards to electricity.


Greek philosopher Plato said the unexamined life was not worth living – and no one embodied than Benjamin Franklin.

Franklin’s insatiable curiosity would make him famous. During a trip to Boston in 1743, a performance which contained some tricks using electricity was noticed by Franklin. At the time, no one fully comprehended how electricity really worked.

Intrigued by what he saw at the performance, Franklin began his own experiments. He soon discovered that there clearly was a link between lightning and electricity – a phenomenon that most folks still considered unnatural.

He conceived of an experiment in which someone would hold an iron pole on a clear hilltop during a thunderstorm, with the goal of bringing a lightning strike – thereby proving not only that a metal thing could draw an electric charge, but also that lightning was really electricity.

Franklin described this groundbreaking experiment in a letter to the Royal Society in London. Word rapidly spread. In May 1752, a group of French scientists had the ability to successfully replicate Franklin’s experiment.

Franklin decided to perform the experiment himself, using not a stick but a metal key string. Flying the kite in a storm, Franklin proved his instinct was right – lightning struck the key! He was subsequently able to transfer the charge from the key to a special jar that stored electricity, called a Leyden jar.

Franklin’s breakthrough resulted in the creation of the lightning rod. Yet his further explorations into electricity brought more acclaim; Franklin was the first person to call linked Leyden jars a “ battery,” for example.

Yet Franklin’s work brought him both condemnation and praise. Religious figures like AbbĂ© Nollet condemned his work as an offense to God, while German philosopher Immanuel Kant called him a “new Prometheus having stolen fire “from the gods.” However, his star was rising. He was rewarded with honorary degrees from both Yale and Harvard.

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OK, ok. You hung in there through all of that. Thank you. As a reward, here's a different photo that's more in tune with the nature of my Blogger blog.



En Fuego


I just really like how this one came out. The background seems to be on fire, and so does she.

My Tumblr

Did you know I have a Tumblr, too? Do you care? She does:


My Tumblr is called Instantly Humongous Barbarian and let's be clear: that's the most awesome Tumblr name ever.