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Footnotes

[1] Professor of Philosophy Sydney University from 1927 to 1958

[2] Ecclesiastes (Qoheleth), Chapter 3.1-3.9, 3.18-3.22

[3] A taxonomic group whose members can interbreed

[4] John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

[5] Samuel (Dr) Johnson. (1709–1784)

[6] The Bible: John 1:1

[7] The independence of the US set in train the events that led to Australia, as we know it.

[8] William Shakespeare, 1564-1616 Romeo & Juliet, Act II Scene 2.

[9] 1926–1984

[10] Leonardo da Vinci - Painter, Sculptor, Architect and Engineer 1452-1519

[11] Sir Alfred Jules Ayer: Language, Truth and Logic (1936); The Problem of Knowledge (1956). Bertrand Arthur William Russell (Earl Russell) OM, FRS (1872 –1970): co-author Principia Mathematica; A history of Western Philosophy; On Denoting; Nobel Prize Laureate.

[12] Little person, invented by the alchemists – thought to reside in sperm and to be passed to a woman at conception – see also Stewie in Family Guy

[13] George Bernard Shaw

[14] D.H. Lawrence Lady Chatterley's Lover Chapter 11

[15] Albert Einstein

[16] The great mathematician Alfred North Whitehead described the history of philosophy as simply "a series of footnotes to Plato".

[17] Macquarie Dictionary. This is tautological; life as the absence of death is not a very useful definition.

[18] Coleridge

[19] Milton Areopagitica

[20] Richard Dawkins 1941-The Selfish Gene (1976) ch. 2

[21] The bases are adenine (A); thymine (T); cytosine (C); and guanine (G) A bonds only with T, C with G.

[22] Written in 2000 – we now know a lot more, look it up

[23] Charles Darwin 1859 English natural historian 1809-82

[24] New Scientist 28June 2003 P20

[25] Richard Dawkins 'The Selfish Gene'

[26] See Susan Blackmore 'The Meme Machine'.

[27] Unless, of course, we cause it.

[28] Air from the Musical 'Hair' 1968

[29] U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division quoting McEvedy, Colin and Richard Jones, 1978, "Atlas of World Population History,"

[30] U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division

[31] Not even oil – long predicted to be the first cab to run out of fuel

[32] Catch 22 – ibid

[33] Byron; Don Juan - ibid.

[34] More strictly the Last Universal Ancestor (LUA) AKA Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA), the unicellular organism or single cell that gave rise to all life on Earth three to four billion years ago.

[35] I will leave you to ponder our moral obligation to the unborn (or never to be born) both human and no-human – if any.

Every sperm is sacred.

Every sperm is Great.

When a sperm is wasted God gets quite irate.

– Monty Python's Meaning of life

[36] Douglas Adams - Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

[37] Encyclopaedia Britannica 2002 – Form and Function of the Nervous System

[38] This is the prevailing view at the moment but it is in dispute and some leading scientists think that Neanderthals bred with pre-humans and were absorbed.

[39] Fallingwater

[40] See New Scientist 4 Sept 1999 pp 31

[41] Song: Lloyd Price Personality 1960

[42] Alfred C Kinsey Sexual Behaviour In The Human Male 1948; Sexual Behaviour In The Human Female 1953

[43] Oscar Wilde: The Importance of Being Earnest Act III

[44] First Essay on Population 1798

[45] Twelfth Night Act III Scene IV

[46] WS Gilbert - Pooh-Bah in The Mikado

[47] George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) - Don Juan

[48] Andy Warhol – Andy Warhol's exposures, Studio 54

[49] Sydney 'Truth', 1892 (note the use of grammar to add scorn)

[50] Oscar Wilde – Lane the butler in The Importance of Being Earnest.

[51] Of course a few are just thieves like Bond or Skase.

[52] 1921 song. Kahn, Egan & Whiting - Ain't We Got Fun

[53] The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money –Chapter 24 (1936).

[54] In Didier Eribon, Michel Foucault (1989, trans. 1991). "Les Reportages d'Idées," Corriere Della Sera (Milan, Nov. 12, 1978).

[55] Walter Lippmann

[56] Joseph Heller Catch-22

[57] Franklin Delano Roosevelt - 32 President of the United States

[58] Edgar Degas

[59] Albert Einstein (1879-1955) Physicist & Nobel Laureate

[60] Horace Walpole (1717–1797), British author. Horace Walpole's Miscellany 1786-1795, p. 58, ed. Lars E. Troide, Yale University Press (1978).

[61] In 1999 Hubble Space Telescope images were used to estimate that there are over 125 billion visible galaxies in the universe

[62] The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) - a NASA satellite launched on June 30, 2001 to survey the sky to measure the temperature of the radiant heat left over from the Big Bang.

[63] Shakespeare – Hamlet, Act I Scene 5

[64] At least 'til Thursday (Woden's day Thor's day)

[65] Aldus Huxley Time Must Have a Stop 1945

[66] Section 116

[67] AA Milne - Now We Are Six, "Explained"

[68] Matthew 19:16-24, Mk. 10:25, Lk. 18:25 (Rope: kamilo in Greek was originally mistranslated as Camel in the English Bible)

[69] graffito

[70] Shakespeare Hamlet's soliloquy Act III Scene 1

[71] See also Romeo, Juliet, Ophelia, Gloucester (in Lear) etc.

[72] Friedrich Nietzsche

[73] The Truman Show - written and directed Peter Weir (1998)

[74] Dorothy Parker

[75] Samuel Butler Way of all Flesh

[76] Gore Vidal Two Sisters

[77] Mark Twain 19th Century Author

[78] Mae West

[79] In George Orwell's 1984; not the TV Show

[80] Book: John Irving - Screenplay: John Irving, based on his novel The Cider House Rules

[81] WS Gilbert – The Mikado

[82] Janis Joplin - Me and Bobby McGee

[83] Mark Twain - Eruption

[84] Lewis Carroll – Alice in Alice in Wonderland

[85] Anon. Song Tune: Auld Lang Syne

[86] Albert Einstein 1879-1955 - Letter to Max Born, 4 December 1926; in Einstein und Born Briefwechsel (1969) p. 1 (often quoted: 'Gott würfelt nicht [God does not play dice]')

[87] TS Eliot - The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

[88] NewScientist.com news service 13 April 2008

[89] Wired Magazine: Issue 15.06

[90] 9 or 10 space dimensions and one time dimension.

[91] Three space and one time dimension.

[92] Sayings of Dan Quayle US Vice President, 1989-1993  https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Dan_Quayle

[93] We do not presently know any reason for the cosmological constants that determine the shape and laws of our Universe, to be as they are. There is every prospect that there are or have been other Universes in which life could not exist.

[94] Using this logic, we might be concerned that there will not be many more billions of humans in future, else why weren't we born then.

[95] Mark Twain - Letter to Mr. Burrough, 11/1/1876; Mark Twain and I

[96] Donald Rumsfeld US Secretary of Defence - May 16, 2001, interview with the New York Times

[97] Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

[98] Cabaret – Fred Ebb, J Van Druten / C Isherwood.

[99] Speak, Memory - Vladimir Nabokov

[100] A movie by Frederico Fellini 1960. Fellini no doubt had more reward making a great movie than the characters he portrayed did in partying and spending money. Fellini is dead – but his film goes on.

[101] F Scott Fitzgerald – This side of Paradise

[102] Shakespeare – The Tempest Act III, Scene II

[103] Susan Sontag, U.S. essayist. Notes on 'Camp', Against Interpretation (1964, repr. 1966).

[104] Bertrand Russell

[105] Shakespeare – Hamlet's Soliloquy

[104] British Medical Association

 

 

 

 

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Travel

Berlin

 

 

 

I'm a bit daunted writing about Berlin.  

Somehow I'm happy to put down a couple of paragraphs about many other cities and towns I've visited but there are some that seem too complicated for a quick 'off the cuff' summary.  Sydney of course, my present home town, and past home towns like New York and London.  I know just too much about them for a glib first impression.

Although I've never lived there I've visited Berlin on several occasions for periods of up to a couple of weeks.  I also have family there and have been introduced to their circle of friends.

So I decided that I can't really sum Berlin up, any more that I can sum up London or New York, so instead I should pick some aspects of uniqueness to highlight. 

Read more: Berlin

Fiction, Recollections & News

Cars, Radios, TV and other Pastimes

 

 

I grew up in semi-rural Thornleigh on the outskirts of Sydney.  I went to the local Primary School and later the Boys' High School at Normanhurst; followed by the University of New South Wales.  

As kids we, like many of my friends, were encouraged to make things and try things out.  My brother Peter liked to build forts and tree houses; dig giant holes; and play with old compressors and other dangerous motorised devices like model aircraft engines and lawnmowers; until his car came along.

 

Read more: Cars, Radios, TV and other Pastimes

Opinions and Philosophy

World Population – again and again

 

 

David Attenborough hit the headlines yet again in 15 May 2009 with an opinion piece in New Scientist. This is a quotation:

 

‘He has become a patron of the Optimum Population Trust, a think tank on population growth and environment with a scary website showing the global population as it grows. "For the past 20 years I've never had any doubt that the source of the Earth's ills is overpopulation. I can't go on saying this sort of thing and then fail to put my head above the parapet."

 

There are nearly three times as many people on the planet as when Attenborough started making television programmes in the 1950s - a fact that has convinced him that if we don't find a solution to our population problems, nature will:
"Other horrible factors will come along and fix it, like mass starvation."

 

Bob Hawke said something similar on the program Elders with Andrew Denton:

 

Read more: World Population – again and again

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