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The Search for Justification in Clydes and Trouble in Mind – The New Yorker

Everybodys entitled to a little privacy. Character development in drama is similar to a growing friendshipa process of gradual divulgence. The puzzle of someones bearing and outward presentation gives way to the collection of secrets and fears and family history that make upand, over time, help to explainthat person. Still, the most interesting people, onstage and in our lives, hold on to a whiff of mystery. Theres something alien and ineffable about them that cant be reduced to mere facts, or be rationalized by psychology. Call it soul.

Lynn Nottages new play, Clydes, directed by Kate Whoriskey (at the Helen Hayes), about the staff of a run-down sandwich joint at a truck stop, takes a stark either-or stance regarding the lives of its characters. They spill their guts without much prompting, and, in the spilling, court intimacyor, in the frustrating case of the title character, give nothing at all. Both approaches render surfaces rather than spirit.

Clyde (Uzo Aduba) is the badass, shit-talking, intermittently horny, sometimes violent proprietor of the roadside shop. She wears formfitting clothes that highlight her curves and pedestal her dcolletage. Sex has something to do with her powerthe passes she makes at her employees register as vague threats. She always wants the sandwiches to come out faster, and she has no patience for the culinary ambition thats growing in the kitchen under her nose. She wants the basics, nothing more. Sometimes she shows up with odd gifts that might or might not be ill-gotten, the kind of stuff that euphemistically falls off the back of a trucksome olive oil from Central Europe, an inexplicable mess of wilted chard, a plastic bag full of sea bass in greenish liquid.

The fish smells rank, somebody says, to which Clyde replies, You know my policy. If it aint brown or gray, it can be fried. Fire up the skillet. A free beer for anybody who gets sick. Thats the kind of place this is.

Clyde is an ex-convict, and so are the people who work for her, a fact that she hangs over their heads like rain in a cloud at every opportunitynobody else is going to hire them, so theyd better submit to her whims, however brutal. Tish (Kara Young, who spins great performances out of straw in every show I see her in) is a single mom saddled by a trifling, untrustworthy co-parent. Rafael (Reza Salazar) fumblingly pines for her. Jason (Edmund Donovan) is the new guy, initially quiet and sullen, marked up with white-supremacist tattoos. Theyre all under the thrall of the sagelike Montrellous (Ron Cephas Jones), a kind of sandwich guru, who wants to jazz up the place with new recipes and more tender attention to ingredients. He leads the group in sessions of visualization and conjecturewhat kind of sandwich can your mind conjure up?

Often, the sessions lead to bouts of confessionall the employees give up the goods on why they did time, even, eventually, Jason. This is supposed to deepen the bonds among them, and, perhaps, to offer a well of complexity not often granted to working-class people chewed up by the system and given a harsh set of choices: eat shit, starve, or go back in. But the life stories come between slapstick riffs on sandwich-making and kitchen etiquettea bunch of well-performed gagsand as a result the play has trouble finding its tone. Its hard to figure out how seriously to take the putatively tough moments in Clydes, or what to do with the biographies were offered. (Clydes own answer to anybody elses suffering is to dismiss it. I dont do pity, she says.) The lighting, by Christopher Akerlind, tries to indicate emotionwhen Montrellous is rhapsodizing, he gets a fuchsia glowbut nothing that any character says steers the play in a new direction. Sad tales are divots for us to navigate between laughs.

Much of the problem lies with Clyde herself. In an early private moment, Clyde and Montrellouswho have a history that remains shrouded throughout the playare arguing about the future of the shop. Montrellous lets slip that Clyde has fallen into gambling debt, and that the shop is somehow mixed up in the trouble. Thats the only thing we ever really learnor, at least, think we learnabout Clyde. She rings a bell when new orders come in, appearing at the window to the kitchen all of a sudden, like a poltergeist at the climax of a horror flick. She rages through the kitchen, spewing just enough bile to get the objects of her tyranny complaining again, but shes never subjected to the kind of scrutiny that makes watching a character worthwhile.

Uzo Aduba is one of my favorite televisual performers of recent yearsas Suzanne (Crazy Eyes) Warren in Netflixs Orange Is the New Black, and as the therapist Brooke Taylor in the new season of HBOs In Treatmentlargely because she holds within her characters, and gradually reveals, many layers of tenderness and brokenness, irrationality and explosive pain. At her best, her eyes, deep with feeling, are like bowls left out in the rain, steadily filling up with the liquid stuff of personality. Here, those skills are tossed aside. Clyde toys with angry fear when her troubles come up, but she never revisits it. Shes like an ungenerous sketch-comedy depiction of a woman we want to meet, whom Aduba could, I think, play well: wrathful and dangerous, yes, but welling up and bubbling over with a pastand some drastic actionto justify it.

Speaking of justification, Trouble in Mindthe 1955 play by Alice Childress, now making its much belated dbut on Broadway (directed by Charles Randolph-Wright for Roundabout Theatre Company, at the American Airlines Theatre)slowly unravels an aging actress named Wiletta (LaChanze), who is reluctantly exposed to an acting approach that asks her to find emotions to support the actions of her character. Her director, Al Manners (Michael Zegen), fancies himself a social and artistic progressive. The play theyre rehearsing, slated for Broadway, is about small-town Black folks who, because they want the right to vote, get threatenedand worseby a gathering lynch mob.

Manners, who is white, thinks the play is on the cutting edge of race relationsat least, as close to that edge as the theatres commercial imperatives will allow. He pokes and prods Wiletta, expressing dissatisfaction with her performance as a mother whose son is in big trouble, asking her to justify her characters decisions, not merely to act them out with rote professionalism. Hes trying to make high art out of a play he doesnt know is offensive trash. The problem is that Wilettas got a real artist inside herI want to be an actress! she says in the middle of a reverieand she learns the new method a bit too well. She begins asking questions that the script, and her director, just cant answer.

Wiletta starts out as a jaded veteran, advising a younger actor to laugh at the directors jokes and tell little lies to pad his rsum. Shes not the only cynical one: her castmate Millie (the very funny Jessica Frances Dukes) is in a wry fury about how poorly shes served by the roles shes made to play. Last show I was in, I wouldnt even tell my relatives, Millie says. All I did was shout Lord, have mercy! for almost two hours every night. Its a representational lament that sounds stale until you realize that the play was written more than sixty-five years ago.

Trouble in Mind is pessimistic about the structures that underpin the entertainment industry, but it is bullish about the possibilities of earnest artistic pursuit. Even a schmuck like Manners can read some Stanislavsky, bring it clumsily into rehearsals, and, unwittingly, spark the beginnings of a revolution.

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The Search for Justification in Clydes and Trouble in Mind - The New Yorker

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Allen Harris | Mind Your Business: Keep your employees through the Great Resignation – Berkshire Eagle

The labor shortage is one of the three most significant challenges to businesses today. One way to attract new workers is to be sure you create a workplace attractive enough to keep your current employees.

Its safe to say that many readers of this column need more employees. According to the jobs site Indeed, this month, the number of U.S. job openings reached 11.2 million. An Indeed search for openings posted in the last 14 days, within 25 miles of Pittsfield, yielded 1,198 jobs.

A tight labor market was an issue before the pandemic. On April 15, 2019, I co-chaired a roundtable with the Associated Industries of Massachusetts called "Finders Keepers: Hiring and Keeping Employees." It remains relevant today; you can watch it at tinyurl.com/3dru34hp.

Employers are not going to be able to attract workers unless our houses are in order. We need to understand why the 7.4 million people in the U.S. are without jobs and why 4.4 million workers quit work in September 2021.

According to Future Forums study The Great Executive-Employee Disconnect, 57 percent of respondents said theyd consider taking a new job in the next year. According to Mercers 2021 Inside Employees Minds study, 23 percent of people earning more than $60,000 said they were seriously considering leaving their company. Supervisors, managers and executives are seriously considering resigning at rates of 31 percent, 24 percentand 15 percent, respectively. Its not just low-wage, entry-level workers who are at risk of quitting.

The amount you pay your employees is part of the equation; you must ensure they dont have economic stress. However, keeping (and finding) employees isnt just about wages. It would benefit employers to consider the unmet needs of their workforce.

According to the Mercer survey, physical health ranked as the top unmet need. The survey examined 16 concerns and found that other top unmet needs were work/life balance, mental health, personal fulfillment and purpose, and being able to retire. Digging deeper, different segments of the workforce (pay scale, nationalities, age ranges) have other priorities.

Strategies used to retain employees will lead to better talent acquisition. I advise a combination of immediate tactics and long-term solutions.

Driving down West Housatonic Street in Pittsfield, I passed a sandwich board in front of a company offering starting pay at $12 per hour. Thirty seconds later, I passed another company and another sandwich board offering $12.50. You may doubt that people would leave one company for another for 50 cents an hour. But, according to Zippia, in 2021 the average wage growth when switching jobs is 5.8 percent. The average salary increase is 14.8 percent.

If your business wants to retain employees, it should make pay a nonfactor. That can be accomplished by addressing those unmet needs. Or you can do it more immediately by finding a way to pay more even if the pay is a future promise.

If your business wants to retain employees, it should make pay a nonfactor. That can be accomplished by addressing those unmet needs. Or you can do it more immediately by finding a way to pay more even if the pay is a future promise.

Increasing pay now may not be a viable option for your company. Tell your employees this: Theyll respect the transparency. And it will lessen their resentment if you entice new hires with more pay or sign-on bonuses. For current employees, you could strike a profit-sharing or goals-based bonus to be paid in 12 months, so long as those defined goals are achieved.

Other immediate actions are to inform of a future match to the 401(k) or company retirement plan. The business could offer to pay down student debt after workers have been employed for two years. It could offer referral bonuses for introducing new employees.

At least half of that bonus should be paid upfront; the rest paid so long as both are employed six months later. Instead of increasing pay, other options are to pay for tuition and continuing education that sharpens the skills valuable to the company.

The biggest threat to losing your employees ages 55 to 64 is fear of running out of money in retirement.

Fifty-six percent say that their top reason for leaving is to find an employer who will better prepare them for retirement. Of that age group, 49 percent say they would consider leaving because of insufficient pay or benefits. Others cite a demanding workload and their relationship with their boss.

For employees ages 55 to 64, you could hire a certified financial planner to guide key employees through their working years into a successful retirement. Some money management firms offer Social Security and Medicare filing and a plan to maximize benefits. Your company could provide that to employees who remain on the payroll until a determined retirement age.

Jane, from Northampton, runs a graphic design company for furniture manufacturers. Jane was able to get an extra year of effort from a high-level employee, Margie. Jane allowed Margie to stay part time to mentor and transfer knowledge to other employees while allowing Jane to phase into retirement.

Some money management firms provide college funding solutions, potentially saving your employees tens of thousands of dollars. If you want to do something great for your employees, do something great for their kids like getting them into a top school or providing internship opportunities.

A quarter of U.S. workers are either highly or extremely stressed; half of employees say they would benefit from their employer making mental health help more affordable. But, dont treat it as if its a box to check. Realize that this is what you should do not only to protect your most valuable assets your employees but also because its what caring companies do.

Understand that you can be part of the solution, but your company might also be part of the problem. The stress could come from a lack of professional support, unclear or unstated roles and responsibilities, broken work boundaries and a stigma around the need for self-care. In addition to addressing those unmet needs, you could enhance medical coverage, provide mental health counseling, subsidize child care and offer flexible schedules.

Working from home may not be an adequate flexible-schedule strategy. My company, Berkshire Money Management, has had luck employing a personal assistant for employee use. Our assistant helps with errands, deliveries, waiting for cable or appliance installations, pet watching and whatever else might save employees a few hours per week reducing stress and freeing up the opportunity to enjoy time away from work.

But, an assistant cant go to medical appointments, the gym, or watch a childs school play. Flexibility means allowing workers to have a life during work, not just after.

Your company could benefit from this advice, but it will help more if you customize the actions. The process alone of customizing your advice is beneficial. Speak to your employees and ask them about their concerns and how you can support their ambitions. Ask deep, open-ended questions in these retention interviews, such as, "Does your position make good use of your skills? and What would your dream job look like here, and what can I do to make that happen?

Let your people know they are heard, and you want them to advance within the company.

An attitude of people over profits goes a long way. Nothing attracts top talent like culture. Nothing creates profit like top talent.

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Allen Harris | Mind Your Business: Keep your employees through the Great Resignation - Berkshire Eagle

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Kwai, Kuaishou & ETH Zrich Propose PERSIA, a Distributed Training System That Supports Deep Learning-Based Recommenders of up to 100 Trillion…

Modern recommender systems have countless real-world applications and have made astonishing progress thanks to the ever-increasing size of deep neural network models which have grown from Googles 2016 model with 1 billion parameters to Facebooks latest model with 12 trillion parameters. There seems to be no limit to the significant quality boosts delivered by such model scaling, and deep learning practitioners believe the era of 100 trillion parameter systems will arrive sooner than later.

The training of extremely large models that are both memory and computation-intensive is however challenging, even with the support of industrial-scale data centers. In the new paper PERSIA: An Open, Hybrid System Scaling Deep Learning-based Recommenders up to 100 Trillion Parameters, a research team from Kwai Inc., Kuaishou Technology and ETH Zrich proposes PERSIA, an efficient distributed training system that leverages a novel hybrid training algorithm to ensure both training efficiency and accuracy in such recommender models. The team provides theoretical demonstrations and empirical studies to validate the effectiveness of PERSIA on recommender systems of up to 100 trillion parameters.

The team summarizes their studys main contributions as:

The team first proposes a novel sync-async hybrid algorithm, where the embedding module trains in an asynchronous fashion while the dense neural network is updated synchronously. This hybrid algorithm enables hardware efficiency that is comparable with the fully asynchronous mode without sacrificing statistical efficiency.

The team designed PERSIA (parallel recommendation training system with hybrid acceleration) to support the aforementioned hybrid algorithm with two fundamental aspects: 1) the placement of the training workflow over a heterogeneous cluster, and 2) the corresponding training procedure over the hybrid infrastructure. PERSIA features four modules designed to provide efficient autoscaling and support recommender models of up to 100 trillion parameters:

The team evaluated PERSIA on three open-source benchmarks (Taobao-Ad, Avazu-Ad and Criteo-Ad) and the real-world production microvideo recommendation workflow at Kwai. They used two state-of-the-art distributed recommender training systems XDL and PaddlePaddle as their baselines.

The proposed hybrid algorithm achieved much higher throughput compared to all other systems. PERSIA reached nearly linear speedups with significantly higher throughput compared with XDL and PaddlePaddle, and 3.8 higher throughput compared with the fully synchronous algorithm on the Kwai-video benchmark. Moreover, PERSIA demonstrated stable training throughput even when model size increased up to 100 trillion parameters, achieving 2.6 higher throughput than the fully synchronous mode.

Overall, the results show the proposed PERSIA effectively supports the efficient and scalable training of recommender models at a scale of up to 100 trillion parameters. The team hopes their study and insights can benefit both academia and industry.

The code is available on the projects GitHub. The paper PERSIA: An Open, Hybrid System Scaling Deep Learning-based Recommenders up to 100 Trillion Parameters is on arXiv.

Author: Hecate He |Editor: Michael Sarazen

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Consciousness from Descartes to Ayer: two ideas of the mind and two types of mind – The Irish Times

Book Title:Consciousness from Descartes to Ayer

ISBN-13:978-3-030-80920-1

Author:David Berman

Publisher:Palgrave Macmillan

Guideline Price:49.99

In a chapter in The Descent of Man (1871-77) on the question of how mental powers evolved from the simplest animals to humans, Charles Darwin was worried that it was so complex it might never be solved.

Progress is being made but the working of the human brain, especially consciousness, remains one of the two great unsolved problems in biology; the other is the emergence of life about 4 billion years ago. The brain is also one of the great unsolved problems of philosophy (and psychology), where it is usually called the mind.

The big divide in philosophy lies between the materialists for example, Toland, Hume, James and Ayer and the immaterialists for example, Descartes and Berkeley. Materialists believe that the brain is just another part of the body which has various functions such as thought, being, self-consciousness, communication, especially using language etc.

Modern materialists say that the brain is made of cells containing atoms and molecules; the bits follow the laws of nature, that is, of chemistry, physics and genetics. There is only one kind of world, the material world, and all kinds of activity including mental activity depend only on changes in the state of the bits of that world.

Most scientists are materialists, though almost all would say that they have very little idea how the brain works. It is obvious it is an electrochemical machine, but no materialist has yet explained with any precision what thought or consciousness is.

The immaterialists, originally influenced by religious ideas of the supernatural, immortality and the soul, believe that each person is essentially a self-conscious being, the self, who is immaterial and may be immortal. The self resides in our material body. The immaterial mind that is self-conscious, it thinks, and it is the self that defines our being and our relationship with the outside world. Descartes wrote: I think therefore I am.

David Berman, a distinguished philosopher, has been at Trinity College since coming from New York in the mid-1960s to study George Berkeley under AA Luce. Lunchtime conversations with David have been among the most enjoyable of my academic life.

He has been engrossed in the puzzle that is consciousness. In hisbeautifully written, succinct and stimulating book, drawing on his deep appreciation for the history of philosophy, he has set out to settle that big divide in philosophy, and great Irish philosophers have major roles in his story. On the way he makes some challenging proposals to scientists.

He has focussed on two major theories of consciousness: monism and dualism. A monist has only one kind of consciousness, a self-awareness experienced in the process of perceiving things. A dualist has this kind of consciousness and a second kind.

Berman says that a dualist can be aware of themselves as being different from the objects they perceive. According to him the dualist can sometimes feel detached from the objects being perceived, that is, they can be self-conscious at the same time as they are conscious of external phenomena. Berman calls this the core dualistic experience, an ability to experience mental activity distinct from the objects that are being sensed at the same time.

Berman has devised a questionnaire that allows him to assess whether a person is a monist or a dualist and in a small survey he has found that about half of us are one type and half the other. Berman argues that both ideas of the mind are true in that they exist as the real conscious experiences of two different kinds of people. He summarises this in what he calls the Two Consciousness Theory (2CT). Berman believes this resolves the opposition between philosophers of monism and dualism both are true because they are the true experiences of two different kinds of people. Some of us have minds distinct from the objects or phenomena we perceive, some of us do not.We are born as dualist or monist.Most immaterialists identify with dualism, and materialists with monism; philosophers who are monist are often immaterialists, dualists are materialists but the range of ideas is very great.

What do scientists think about consciousness today? Some progress is being made, vindicating Bertrand Russells prediction that science would impinge on philosophy. First they say the obvious: an individual can be in many different states of consciousness, for example from being awake to asleep, from being anaesthetised to being in a persistent vegetative state. They have used methods such as functional magnetic resonance imaging to show that different states of consciousness are associated with different levels of neural activity in different parts of the brain.

It is difficult to avoid the inference that consciousness requires and is caused by specific kinds of biochemical and biophysical neural activity which can detected and measured.

Second, sadly, many people suffer from genetic disorders that affect their mental capacity to various degrees and their brains show different kinds of neural activity. It is likely that many of them experience consciousness in ways that differ from the norm.

Thirdly, we may wonder about the kind of consciousness experienced by unusually talented people, for example while concert pianists are playing complex sonatas and concertos faultlessly often at great speed without the music are they conscious of what they are doing moment by moment? Great tennis players make shots which they cannot have time to think about.

Fourthly, we can surmise that a newborn child is not conscious in the same way as an adult: consciousness is an activity of the brain that changes with the development of the individual while maturing and, of course, while ageing, for example with dementia.

Finally, it is certain that human and animal consciousness evolved, probably slowly.Consciousness is certainly a complex trait and so it is likely to be have been affected by changes in many genes over evolutionary time.

In summary, there is a consensus among scientists that consciousness depends on scientifically measurable activities in the human brain and varies with the activity of the brain. Berman may well say that these are all minor variations on the underlying dichotomy between monist and dualist, but this remains to be investigated, by scientists.

He ends his book with an astonishing hypothesis about the consequences of the hybridisation that took place between two sub-species of humans, Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis, 70,000 to 25,000 years ago in Europe and/or Asia. He is correct there is excellent genetic evidence for the hybridisation modern Eurasians have about 2-3 per cent Neanderthal DNA. The pure Neanderthals went extinct but the hybrids [modern Eurasians], who ended up with predominantly H. sapiens genes, survived and prospered. Berman says the initial and continued success of our hybrid ancestors was due to the emergence of language during this early period, and that this was a result of hybridisation of H. sapiens [who may have brought an ability to vocalise] with the Neanderthals [who may have contributed a capacity for the core dualistic experience dualism].

This is fantastic speculation about language. In spite of what Berman says there is no consensus among scientists that humans acquired language in this time frame of 70,000 to 25,000 years ago. We have little or no idea when recognisably modern linguistic ability appeared fully formed in the human lineage; but following Darwin and modern genetic theory about complex traits, it is likely that the process took hundreds of thousands if not millions of years and probably predated the separation between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens.

I am worried that Berman has relied far too heavily on Sapiens by Yuval Harari (2004), a highly successful example of what is called infotainment, full of titillating ideas for which there is little or no evidence. Harari was educated as an historian and has no expertise in any relevant science one reviewer described Sapiens as having made no serious contribution to knowledge. However, if Berman is right that language developed in a few tens of thousands of years at the time our ancestors mated with Neanderthals, he will take his place alongside Democritus who put forward the atomic theory more than 2,000 years before there was any evidence for it.

One last comment. Neuroscientists might decide to repeat Bermans questionnaire on a large scale, perhaps modifying it. If they find they can make a reliable distinction between monists and dualists, they will surely want to study them in much more detail, including studying them for differences in brain activity and genes. They would be testing Bermans daring hypothesis that there are two fundamentally different kinds of human minds; they might find the differences are ultimately explicable in material terms and go some way to explaining consciousness. That would be something.David McConnell is Fellow Emeritus at the Smurfit Institute of Genetics, Trinity College

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Consciousness from Descartes to Ayer: two ideas of the mind and two types of mind - The Irish Times

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Open mind, large heart – Times of India

In a sparkling comedic career spanning more than half a century, stand-up superstar and social commentator George Carlin eviscerated America and Americans like no one before or after. From calling the United States a war-mongering nation full of bullshit and a country that was stolen, to torching the American obsession with marketing and advertising, mindless consumption, and over-the-top religion, Carlin was relentless in his critiques of the people and the country he was born into, constantly questioning its self-professed greatness, and its commitment to economic, social and racial justice. For his scalding commentaries and epic rants, some of it coarse, vulgar, and scatological, America honoured him with a place in the stand-up comics Hall of Fame, a Mark Twain Prize for American Humour, more than a dozen HBO comedy specials, and a score of Emmy and Grammy nominations and awards. By most accounts, he is regarded as a comedic national treasure whose wit and wisdom will be weighed and worshipped by generations. No such honours will await Vir Das, 42, when he returns home from a US tour, after a mild takedown of India during one of his shows in Washington DC triggered atavistic passions among hypernationalists back home. Instead, he will likely be subjected to lawsuits and boycotts, and run out of work with specious complaints that he somehow lowered Indias image and prestige abroad. A fledgling field of stand-up comics and entertainers, already walking on eggshells in the face of increasing intolerance at home, will fold without a fight given the might of a troll patrol backed by the establishment.

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Open mind, large heart - Times of India

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Never mind the title. The Sex Lives of College Girls is a guilt-free pleasure – The Sydney Morning Herald

The Sex Lives of College GirlsBingeNew episodes Thursdays

Its OK. You dont need to skulk off to a darkened room to watch The Sex Lives of College Girls; despite the title, its not that kind of show. Yes, theres sex, but its more talked about than shown, and more often than not its used for comic effect.

Co-created by Mindy Kaling (The Mindy Project, Never Have I Ever) and Justin Noble (a veteran of Brooklyn Nine-Nines writers room), College Girls is basically an American campus comedy told from the female perspective.

Renee Rapp as Leighton, the spoiled rich kid with a secret life in The Sex Lives of College Girls.Credit:Binge

Its as if wed picked up the story of the girls from Booksmart or Blockers in their first year at university. Or its as if wed travelled back in time to find the women from Sex and the City forging their friendship in the crucible of a shared dorm room.

The 10-part series (mostly half-hour episodes, though the first clocks in at 49 minutes) is fresh and funny without quite being revolutionary. And while they thrum with authenticity, theres also an element of the stock character about our four leads.

Kimberly (Pauline Chalamet, sister of Timothee) is the scholarship girl from humble origins, having to work her way through college and suddenly realising that her class-topping French is no match for an accent honed on the ski fields of Chamonix. Alyah Chanelle Scotts Whitney is the soccer-playing daughter of a Republican senator, and Amrit Kaurs Bela is an aspiring comedian who sees college as an opportunity to shake off the shackles of her Indian heritage and dive into the deep end of the sex pool.

Alyah Chanelle Scott as Whitney, the soccer-playing daughter of a senator.Credit:Binge

As Leighton, Renee Rapp is an upper-class snob hiding her sexuality. That might sound like just another poor-rich-kid storyline in the mode of Gossip Girl et al, but its handled with a winning mix of comedy and empathy and is one of the strongest strands in the seven episodes available for preview.

Each of these young women is, to a degree, a projection of their parents fantasies, memories, desires and needs, at least until they can wriggle their way free of them and forge their identities.

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Never mind the title. The Sex Lives of College Girls is a guilt-free pleasure - The Sydney Morning Herald

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The Dirt: Digging deep with professor of epidemiology Rod Jackson – Stuff.co.nz

Rod Jackson is a professor of epidemiology at the University of Auckland, a father of two and grandfather of two. He lives and gardens with his wife Barbara, a retired librarian, in Ponsonby.

Gardening is my therapy. I grew up on a beef and sheep farm just out of Dargaville. I felt an affinity with the land, theres a closeness. Now Ive got a garden on a small section. Any time I can, I get out there.

Im an identical twin. My brother is a semi-retired lawyer. It was reasonably competitive between us. That was something my father instilled in us. There were five boys, including two sets of twins. He liked everyone to compete against each other. He was a bit of a slave driver. I learnt from a really early age that you worked really hard seven days a week.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

Rod Jackson is a professor of epidemiology at the University of Auckland but loves to get out in his garden.

At the age of 15 I dont know the reason why, but I read this book called The Population Bomb. The basic premise was that unless we managed the worlds population there would be starvation and disease and wed be well and truly uhhh Thered be catastrophe. That was in the late 60s. It got me thinking about health for the first time, and about populations.

Barbara was my girlfriends best friend. That was around the beginning of university. A few years later we reconnected and ended up rapidly getting together. I think wed always had feelings for each other that had never been expressed.

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I was just going to be a normal doctor and I enjoyed clinical medicine, but I had a real interest in prevention. I remember I was working in a respiratory ward at Auckland Hospital. This lovely volunteer - Blue Cross ladies, we used to call them - went down to the hospital shop to buy cigarettes for a patient because he was too sick to get them himself. And I just thought this is bizarre, so I met with the hospital organisation committee and I said you should ban selling cigarettes at the hospital and they thought I was crazy. This is like 1976, 1977.

People knew I was a bit like that. So when there was a job for a junior doctor to go and work in public health someone said to me Hey Rod would you like to try this? This was now about 1980. So I ended up with this one-year job, working with an epidemiologist called Robert Beaglehole - this amazing guy, the key person behind New Zealands Smokefree Environments [Act]. And I just got sucked in and I never went back. I just loved it.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

I was just going to be a normal doctor and I enjoyed clinical medicine, but I had a real interest in prevention.

In March 2020, a colleague whod moved to Australia sent me a very simple model hed developed showing what the peak Covid infection rates would be by May, if there were no restrictions. I just remember seeing that chart and thinking oh my god, were dealing with a crisis.

No, I dont find it exciting. I find it terrifying. Im an academic epidemiologist, but Im also a public health doctor Every New Zealander who isnt vaccinated its a failure of me as their doctor.

The official number of deaths from Covid is 5 million but every epidemiologist knows thats a huge underestimate. Its probably 12 million up towards 15 to 20 million. In lower income countries many people who die dont even get a death certificate.

I get multiple emails every day from people who are angry about the things I say. They range from the anti-vaxxers to people who just dont like the fact that Im pushing mandates. Unless theyre death threats from whackos I try to answer them. And I have had people whove come around.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

Rod Jackson says he gets multiple emails every day from people who are angry about the things he says.

Mandates work. Yes they impact on peoples freedom, but this is war. This virus doesnt play by any rules. You talk about road maps? The virus doesnt drive. Its designed to do one thing, survive. It doesnt care if it kills you or not.

Im known as the butter cop. My work has mainly been in predicting the risk of heart disease. Eat less saturated fat, dont smoke, less salt, less sugar, and dont be sedentary. The five Ss.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

Jackson and his wife Barbara look after different parts of their garden.

I love wine. And I love ice cream. Ill have a couple of glasses of wine most nights and I have ice cream on the weekends. Favourite flavour? Probably... chocolate.

We have a bit of a demarcation in the garden. Barbara does all the flowers and I do all the vegetables. She tells me that I only let her have parts of the garden. But I love her garden out the front - this wild garden of shrubs and flowers. I just love watching things grow, building things. Im a bit of a dumpster diver. Around here people throw out amazingly good timber. Weve got a 400 sq metre section in Ponsonby. Weve been here since 1984. Its the only house weve ever had.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

Rod Jackson is a fan of square foot gardening, rather than planting in rows.

I had the most amazing mother. She had five kids under 5. She treated us all differently but she had no favourites. She died in 2019 and it kind of brings tears to my eyes. She left at the right time, she wouldnt have coped well with Covid, she was always out. She was a goer.

If youre not vaccinated youre going to get Delta once it gets loose, which is inevitable. This is my one goal. I have a one track mind. Get vaccinated.

Jason Dorday/Stuff

Rod Jackson has compost and a worm farm, as well as using sheep pellets, lime, blood and bone.

Rods gardening tips

- Use lots of fertiliser - Ive got a compost and a worm farm. I use sheep pellets, lime, blood and bone.

- Theres a book (and a site) called Square Foot Gardening. Rather than planting in rows, you garden in one foot square areas. I dont know why but I found it very liberating. It made it so much easier to experiment and companion plant.

- Make your own seed tape. You know those tiny little seeds like carrot seeds that are an absolute pain to plant? You just get toilet paper, fold it over once, put the seeds down along it, fold it on top of them again, moisten it and lay it out in your garden. Some people make a glue from flour and water but you don't need to, you just need to wet it slightly.

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Ways to help let go of resentment – ABC Life

Two weeks after Prisha* was diagnosed with a chronic health condition, her long-term relationship broke down.

(*Namechanged for privacy.)

"I was crying non-stop for weeks," she says.

"I had thought we would be married one day and envisioned my entire future alongside him."

After grieving the loss of her relationship, Prisha says another feeling began to replace the devastation.

"I became resentful about what had happened."

Stan Steindl, clinical psychologist and adjunct associate professor at the School of Psychology University of Queensland, says resentment is a complex and painful human emotion.

"Itrelates to a bitter disappointment coupled with anger and fear about having been insulted, wronged or treated unfairly by another person," Dr Steindl explains.

Not recognising people have the potential to be reactive during a break-up can leave us open to further hurt.

While resentment can serve a helpful purpose in signalling something we might need to address or correct, it can often become harmful.

Clinical psychologist and CEO of Relationships Australia New South Wales Elisabeth Shawsays it can lead to even more negative behaviours.

"It can be hard to reconcile or come to peace with what has happened, and that can lead to lingering anger, frustration, rumination and a need to keep discussing it with others," she says.

Dr Steindl adds that "human resentment can often turn into vengeance motivations, and a desire to 'teach them a lesson' or get some sort of 'payback'".

While Prisha says she never felt the need to seek vengeance, her resentment did begin to dominate her life.

"I would talk to my friends and family non-stop. I thought about it when I wasn't talking about it."

While resentment is a commonly experienced emotion, it can negatively impact our mental health, relationships with others and self-esteem.

"Chronic resentment can be a precursor to anxiety and depressive disorders, relationship distress and dysfunction, withdrawal and isolation and sometimes aggression and violence," says Dr Steindl.

For Prisha, constantly feeling resentful left her emotionally exhausted and began to impact her mental health.

"This is when I knew I needed some assistance," she says.

Seeking professional support can help you work through resentment and any related issues.

This was the best option for Prisha.

"I've been working with a psychologistand it has helped me deal with what happened in a more positive way," she says.

"I still have a way to go but I'm confident eventually I will fully let go of the resentment that was holding me back."

Resentment arises from your threat system (an emotional system of the brain, often known as the fight/flight/freeze/appease response designed to help us with threat protection), and specifically some aspect of social threat.

Identifying the threat and feeling of resentment is the first step in addressing it, says Dr Steindl.

Resentment is related to sympathetic nervous system activation, so we want to try to slow down the body and the mind by activating the parasympathetic nervous system.Activities like meditation, massageand deep breathing can help do this.

One exercise Dr Steindl recommends that can help ease body tension and calm the mind: Sit in an upright but relaxed position, relax your face,soften your self-talk so you'reusing supportive inner voice tones, and slow down your breath, breathing in for four and out for four.

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To practise forgiveness and move towards a feeling of ease and peace of mind, Dr Steindl suggests the following exercise:

From this place of calm, Dr Steindl says you can start to consider: What would be most helpful in this situation? What could I do that would help to bring balance back to the needs of both parties? What is it that I really need right now from this relationship?

Resentment can cause us to be "narrowly focused", says Dr Steindl, so to help expand your attentiondo meaningful activities you enjoy with friends and family who make you feel good.

This is general information only. For detailed personal advice, you should see a qualified medical practitioner who knows your medical history.

Shona Hendley is a freelance writer and ex-secondary school teacher from Ballarat, Victoria. She lives with her four fish, three goats, two cats, one chicken, as well as her two human children and husband. Find her@shonamarion.

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How to Deal With Social Anxiety During the Holidays – The New York Times

Sarah Ahmed, co-founder of Wellnest, a psychotherapy clinic in Toronto, agreed. I know for me, I cap out at two events a week, a number that was much higher prepandemic, she said. Use your body, she suggested, as an indicator to tell if youve reached capacity. Our bodies are constantly talking to us, said Ahmed. Common symptoms of social anxiety, she said, include exhaustion, headaches, sweating, difficulty speaking, nausea and increased heart rate. If you are feeling particularly fatigued after a social event, Id revisit future commitments that week.

If youre turning down an invitation, Mr. Lerman said, do it as early as possible, and keep your explanation brief and polite. (That sounds fun, but I will need to pass this time, or Thanks for the invite, but I already have plans.)

On the day of a holiday get-together, vow to be extra gentle with yourself, said Dr. Bryant. Do things that you know will soothe and calm you, like playing music beforehand that puts you in a festive mood.

Make a post-event plan of self-care, too, she advised. It may be that you promise yourself, Im going to have a bubble bath after and a hot cup of green tea, or maybe you schedule a call with a person that you trust, and as soon as you get in that parking lot you know you can call them to debrief.

If you are feeling overwhelmed at an event, create a little space to reorient yourself. Depending on the neighborhood, you can take a quick walk, just to get fresh air, said Dr. Bryant. If the walls are closing in at a family affair, volunteer to be the errand person: Oh, we didnt get enough butter? Ill go!

And its a perfectly acceptable conversation-starter to acknowledge and normalize the awkwardness during this transitional phase, said Ahmed. You can say, My brain is remembering how to socialize, so pardon me if Im still a bit rusty.

If you only feel up to attending an event for an hour, tell the host as soon as possible, said Monica Lewis, co-founder (with her husband, Darian) of the Monica Lewis School of Etiquette in Houston. Or you can ask when the best time would be to swing by. They may say, Oh, make sure youre here for the cocktail hour, or I dont want you to miss the gift exchange, Ms. Lewis said.

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How to Deal With Social Anxiety During the Holidays - The New York Times

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What We Will Never Know – Gizmodo

There is a realm the laws of physics forbid us from accessing, below the resolving power of our most powerful microscopes and beyond the reach of our most sensitive telescopes. Theres no telling what might exist thereperhaps entire universes.

Since the beginning of human inquiry, there have been limits to our observing abilities. Worldviews were restricted by the availability of tools and our own creativity. Over time, the size of our observable universe grew as our knowledge grewwe saw planets beyond Earth, stars beyond the Sun, and galaxies beyond our own, while we peered deeper into cells and atoms. And then, during the 20th century, mathematics emerged that can explain, shockingly welland, to a point, predictthe world we live in. The theories of special and general relativity describe exactly the motion of the planets, stars, and galaxies. Quantum mechanics and the Standard Model of Particle Physics have worked wonders at clarifying what goes on inside of atoms.

However, with each of these successful theories comes hard-and-fast limits to our observing abilities. Today, these limits seem to define true boundaries to our knowledge.

On the large end, there is a speed limit that caps what we can see. It hampers any hope for us to observe most of our universe first-hand.

The speed of light is approximately 300,000,000 meters per second (or 671,000,000 miles per hour, if thats how your brain works). The theory of special relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein in 1905, forbids anything from traveling faster than that. Massless things always travel this speed in a vacuum. Accelerating massive objects to this speed essentially introduces a divide-by-zero in one of special relativitys equations; it would take infinite energy to accelerate something with mass to the speed of light.

If, as a child, you hopped on a spaceship traveling out of the solar system at 99% the speed of light, you might be able to explore other parts of the galaxy before succumbing to age, but because time is relative, your friends and family would likely be long gone before you could report your observations back to Earth. But youd still have your limitsthe Milky Way galaxy is 105,700 light-years across, our neighboring galaxy Andromeda is 2.5 million light-years away, and the observable universe is around 93 billion light-years across. Any hope of exploring farther distances would require multigenerational missions or, if using a remote probe, accepting that youll be dead and humanity may be very different by the time the probes data returns to Earth.

The speed of light is more than just a speed limit, however. Since the light we see requires travel time to arrive at Earth, then we must contend with several horizons beyond which we cant interact, which exist due to Einsteins theory of general relativity. There is an event horizon, a moving boundary in space and time beyond which light and particles emitted now will never reach Earth, no matter how much time passesthose events we will never see. There is also the particle horizon, or a boundary beyond which we cannot observe light arriving from the pastthis defines the observable universe.

Theres a second kind of event horizon, one surrounding a black hole. Gravity is an effect caused by the presence of massive objects warping the shape of space, like a bowling ball on a trampoline. A massive-enough object might warp space such that no information can exit beyond a certain boundary.

These limits arent static. We will see further and further as time goes on, because the distance light travels outward gets bigger and bigger, said Tamara Davis, astrophysics professor who studies cosmology at the University of Queensland. But this expanding perspective wont be permanentsince our universe is also expanding (and that expansion is accelerating). If you fast-forward 100 billion years into the future, all of the galaxies that we can currently see will be so far, and accelerating so quickly away from us, that the light they emitted in the past will have faded from view. At that point, our observable universe would be just those nearby galaxies gravitationally bound to our own.

Another boundary lives on the other end of the scale. Zoom in between molecules, into the center of atoms, deep into their nuclei and into the quarks that make up their protons and neutrons. Here, another set of rules, mostly devised in the 20th century, governs how things work. In the rules of quantum mechanics, everything is quantized, meaning particles properties (their energy or their location around an atomic nucleus, for example) can only take on distinct values, like steps on a ladder, rather than a continuum, like places on a slide. However, quantum mechanics also demonstrates that particles arent just dots; they simultaneously act like waves, meaning that they can take on multiple values at the same time and experience a host of other wave-like effects, such as interference. Essentially, the quantum world is a noisy place, and our understanding of it is innately tied to probability and uncertainty.

This quantum-ness means that if you try to peer too closely, youll run into the observer effect: Attempting to see things this small requires bouncing light off of them, and the energy from this interaction can fundamentally change that which youre attempting to observe.

But theres an even more fundamental limit to what we can see. Werner Heisenberg discovered that the wonkiness of quantum mechanics introduces minimum accuracy with which you can measure certain pairs of mathematically related properties, such as a particles position and momentum. The more accurately you can measure one, the less accurately you can measure the other. And finally, even attempting to measure just one of those properties becomes impossible at a small enough scale, called the Planck scale, which comes with a shortest length, 10^-35 meters, and a shortest time interval, around 5 x 10^-44 seconds.

You take the constant numbers that describe naturea gravitational constant, the speed of light, and Plancks constant, and if I put these constants together, I get the Planck length, said James Beacham, physicist at the ATLAS experiment of the Large Hadron Collider. Mathematically, its nothing specialI can write down a smaller number like 10^-36 meters But quantum mechanics says that if I have a prediction to my theory that says structure exists at a smaller scale, then quantum has built-in uncertainty for it. Its a built-in limit to our understanding of the universethese are the smallest meaningful numbers that quantum mechanics allows us to define.

This is assuming that quantum mechanics is the correct way to think about the universe, of course. But time and time again, experiments have demonstrated theres no reason to think otherwise.

These fundamental limits, large and small, present clear barriers to our knowledge. Our theories tell us that we will never directly observe what lies beyond these cosmic horizons or what structures exist smaller than the Planck scale. However, the answers to some of the grandest questions we ask ourselves might exist beyond those very walls. Why and how did the universe begin? What lies beyond our universe? Why do things look and act the way that they do? Why do things exist?

The unobservable and untestable exist beyond the scope of scientific inquiry. Alls well and good to write down the math and say you can explain the universe, but if you have no way of testing the hypothesis, then thats getting outside the realm of what we consider science, said Nathan Musoke, a computational cosmologist at the University of New Hampshire. Exploring the unanswerable belongs to philosophy or religion. Its possible, however, that science-derived answers to these questions exist as visible imprints on these horizons that the scientific method can uncover.

That imprinting is literal. Ralph Alpher and Robert Herman first predicted in 1948 that some light left over from an early epoch in the universes history might still be observable here on Earth. Then, in 1964, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson were working as radio astronomers at Bell Labs in New Jersey, when they noticed a strange signal in their radio telescope. They went through every idea to figure out the source of the noiseperhaps it was background radiation from New York City, or even poop from pigeons nesting in the experiment? But they soon realized that the data matched Alpher and Hermans prediction.

Penzias and Wilson hadspotted the microwave radiation from just 400,000 years after the Big Bang called the cosmic microwave background, the oldest and most distant radiation observable to todays telescopes. During this era in the universes history, chemical reactions caused the previously opaque universe to allow light to travel through uninhibited. This light, stretched out by the expanding universe, now appears as faint microwave radiation coming from all directions in the sky.

Astronomers experiments since then, such as the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), and the Planck space observatory have attempted to map this cosmic microwave background, revealing several key takeaways. First, the temperature of these microwaves is eerily uniform across the skyaround 2.725 degrees above absolute zero, the universes minimum temperature. Second, despite its uniformity, there are small, direction-dependent temperature fluctuations; patches where the radiation is slightly warmer and patches where its slightly cooler. These fluctuations are a remnant of the structure of the early universe before it became transparent, produced by sound waves pulsing through it and gravitational wells, revealing how the earliest structures may have formed.

At least one theory has allowed for a scientific approach to probing this structure, with hypotheses that have been tested and supported by further observations of these fluctuations. This theory is called inflation. Inflation posits that the observable universe as we see it today would have once been contained in a space smaller than any known particle. Then, it underwent a burst of unthinkable expansion lasting just a small fraction of a second, governed by a field with dynamics determined by quantum mechanics. This era magnified tiny quantum-scale fluctuations into wells of gravity that eventually governed the large-scale structure of the observable universe, with those wells written into the cosmic microwave background data. You can think of inflation as part of the bang in the Big Bang theory.

Its a nice thought, that we can pull knowledge from beyond the cosmic microwave background. But this knowledge leads to more questions. I think theres a pretty broad consensus that inflation probably occurred, said Katie Mack, theoretical astrophysicist at North Carolina State University. Theres very little consensus as to how or why it occurred, what caused it, or what physics it obeyed when it happened.

Some of these new questions may be unanswerable. What happens at the very beginning, that information is obscured from us, said Mack. I find it frustrating that were always going to be lacking information. We can come up with models that explain what we see, and models that do better than others, but in terms of validating them, at some point were going to have to just accept that theres some unknowability.

At the cosmic microwave background and beyond, the large and the small intersect; the early universe seems to reflect quantum behaviors. Similar conversations are happening on the other end of the size spectrum, as physicists attempt to reconcile the behavior of the universe on the largest scale with the rules of quantum mechanics. Black holes exist in this scientific space, where gravity and quantum physics must play together, and where physical descriptions of whats going on sit below the Planck scale.

Here, physicists are also working to devise a mathematical theory that, while too small to observe directly, produces observable effects. Perhaps most famous among these ideas is string theory, which isnt really a theory but a mathematical framework based on the idea that fundamental particles like quarks and electrons arent just specks but one-dimensional strings whose behavior governs those particles properties. This theory attempts to explain the various forces of nature that particles experience, while gravity seems to be a natural result of thinking about the problem in this way. Like those studying any theory, string theorists hope that their framework will put forth testable predictions.

Finding ways to test these theories is a work in progress. Theres faith that one way or another we should be able to test these ideas, said David Gross, professor at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics and winner of the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics. It might be very indirectbut thats not something thats a pressing issue.

Searching for indirect ways to test string theory (and other theories of quantum gravity) is part of the search for the theory itself. Perhaps experiments producing small black holes could provide a laboratory to explore this domain, or perhaps string theory calculations will require particles that a particle accelerator could locate.

At these small timescales, our notion of what space and time really is might break down in profound ways, said Gross. The way physicists formulate questions in general often assumes various givens, like spacetime exists as a smooth, continuous manifold, he said. Those questions might be ill formulated. Often, very difficult problems in physics require profound jumps, revolutions, or different ways of thinking, and its only afterward when we realize that we were asking the question in the wrong way.

For example, some hope to know what happened at the beginning of the universeand what happened before time began. That, I believe, isnt the right way to ask the question, said Gross, as asking such a question might mean relying on an incorrect understanding of the nature of space and time. Not that we know the correct way, yet.

Walls that stop us from easily answering our deepest questions about the universe well, they dont feel very nice to think about. But offering some comfort is the fact that 93 billion light-years is very big, and 10^-35 meters is very small. Between the largest and the smallest is a staggering space full of things we dont but theoretically can know.

Todays best telescopes can look far into the distance (and remember, looking into the distance also means looking back in time). Hubble can see objects as they were just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, and its successor, the Webb Space Telescope, will look farther still, perhaps 150 million years after the Big Bang. Existing galactic surveys like the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Dark Energy Survey have collected data on millions of galaxies, the latter having recently released a 3D map of the universe with 300 million galaxies. The upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile will survey up to 10 billion galaxies across the sky.

From an astronomy point of view, we have so much data that we dont have enough people to analyze it, said Mikhail Ivanov, NASA Einstein Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study. There are so many things we dont understand in astrophysicsand were overwhelmed with data. To question whether were hitting a limit is like trolling. Even then, these mind-boggling surveys represent only a small fraction of the universes estimated 200 billion galaxies that future telescopes might be able to map.

But as scientists attempt to play in these theoretically accessible spaces, some wonder whether the true limit is us.

Today, particle physics seems to be up against an issue of its own: Despite plenty of outstanding mysteries in need of answers, the physicists at the Large Hadron Collider have found no new fundamental particles since the Higgs Boson in 2012. This lack of discovery has physicists scratching their heads; its ruled out the simplest versions of some theories that had been guiding particle physicists previously, with few obvious signposts about where to look next (though there are some!).

Beacham thinks that these problems could be solved by searching for phenomena all the way down to the Planck scale. A vast, unknown chasm exists between the scale of todays particle physics experiments and the Planck scale, and theres no guarantee of anything new to discover in that space. Exploring the entirety of that chasm would take an immense amount of energy and increasingly powerful colliders. Quantum mechanics says that higher-momentum particles have smaller wavelengths, and thus are needed to probe smaller length scales. However, actually exploring the Planck scale may require a particle accelerator big enough to circle the Sunmaybe even one the size of the solar system.

Maybe its daunting to think of such a collider, but its inspiration for a way to get to the scaleand inspiration to figure out how to get there with a smaller device, he said. Beacham views it as particle physicists duty to explore whether any new physical phenomena might exist all the way down to the Planck scale, even if there currently isnt evidence theres anything to find. We need to think about going as high in energy as we can, building larger and larger colliders until we hit the limit. We dont get to choose what the discoveries are, he said.

Or, perhaps we can use artificial intelligence to create models that perfectly explain the behavior of our universe. Zooming back out, Fermilab and University of Chicago scientist Brian Nord has dreamed up a system that could model the universe with the help of artificial intelligence, constantly and automatically updating its mathematical model with new observations. Such a model could grow arbitrarily close to the model that actually describes our universeit could generate a theory of everything. But, as with other AI algorithms, it would be a black box to humans.

Such issues are already cropping up in fields where we use software-based tools to make accurate models, explained Taner Edis, physicist at Truman State University. Some software toolsmachine learning models, for examplemay accurately describe the world we live in but are too complex for any individual to completely understand. In other words, we know that these tools work, but not necessarily how. Maybe AI will take us farther down this path, where the knowledge we create will exist spread over a civilization and its technology, owned in bits and pieces by humanity and the algorithms we create to understand the universe. Together, wed have generated a complete picture, but one inaccessible to any single person.

Finally, these sorts of models may provide supreme predictive power, but they wouldnt necessarily offer comfortable answers to questions about why things work the way they do. Perhaps this sets up a dichotomy between what scientists can domake predictions based on initial conditionsand what they hope these predictions will allow them to dolead us to a better understanding of the universe we live in.

I have a hunch that well be able to effectively achieve full knowledge of the universe, but what form will it come in? said Nord. Will we be able to fully understand that knowledge, or will it be used merely as a tool to make predictions without caring about the meaning?

Thinking realistically, todays physicists are forced to think about what society cares about most and whether our systems and funding models permit us to fully examine what we can explore, before we can begin to worry about what we cant. U.S.legislators often discuss basic science research with the language of applied science or positive outcomesthe Department of Energy funds much particle physics research. The National Science Foundations mission is To promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare; and to secure the national defense; and for other purposes.

Physicists hoping to receive funding must compete for resources in order to do research that promotes the missions of these organizations. While many labs, such as CERN, exist solely to fund peaceful research with no military applications, most still brag that indirectly solving bigger problems will lead to new techthe internet, or advances in data handling and AI, for example. Private funding organizations exist, but they, too, are either limited in their resources, driven by a mission, or both.

But what if answering these deep questions requires thinking that isnt driven by anything? How can scientists convince funders that we should build experiments, not with the hope of producing new technology or advancing society, but merely with the hope of answering deep questions? Echoing a sentiment expressed in an article by Vanessa A. Bee, what if our systems today (sorry, folks, Im talking about capitalism) are actually stifling innovation in favor of producing some short-term gain? What if answering these questions would require social policy and international collaboration deemed unacceptable by governments?

If this is indeed the world we live in, then the unknowable barrier is far closer than the limits of light speed and the Planck scale. It would exist because we collectivelythe governments we vote for, the institutions they funddont deem answering those questions important enough to devote resources to.

Prior to the 1500s, the universe was simply Earth; the Sun, Moon, and stars were small satellites that orbited us. By 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus proposed a heliocentric model of the universethe Sun sat at the center, and Earth orbited it. It was only in the 1920s that Edwin Hubble calculated the distance of Andromeda and proved the Milky Way wasnt the whole universe; it was just one of many, many galaxies in a larger universe. Scientists discovered most of the particles that make up todays Standard Model of particle physics in the second half of the 20th century. Sure, relativity and quantum theory seem to have established the size of the sandbox we have to play inbut precedent would suggest theres more to the sandbox, or even beyond the sandbox, that we havent considered. But then, maybe there isnt.

There are things that well never know, but thats not the right way to think about scientific discovery. We wont know unless we attempt to know, by asking questions, crafting hypotheses, and testing them with experiments. The vast unknown, both leading up to and beyond our boundaries, presents limitless opportunities to ask questions, uncover more knowledge, and even render previous limits obsolete. We cannot truly know the unknowable, then, since the unknowable is just what remains when we can no longer hypothesize and experiment. The unknowable isnt factits something we decide.

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