Bilirubin, 1500
Bilirubin. A reddish-yellow bile pigment, C33H36N4O6, derived from the degradation of heme.
Heme
heme Pronunciation Key (hm)
n.
The deep red, nonprotein, ferrous component of hemoglobin, C34H32FeN4O4.
[Short for hematin.]
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Heme
n : a complex red organic pigment containing iron [syn: haem]
Source: WordNet ® 1.6, © 1997 Princeton University
Bile
bile Pronunciation Key (bl)
n.
1. A bitter, alkaline, brownish-yellow or greenish-yellow fluid that is secreted by the liver,
stored in the gallbladder, and discharged into the duodenum and aids in the
emulsification, digestion, and absorption of fats. Also called gall1.
2. Bitterness of temper; ill humor; irascibility.
3. Either of two bodily humors, black bile or yellow bile, in ancient and medieval physiology.
Yep, been suffering from some bile lately. My liver ain't good enough to filter it all out. Seems like the only cure is heavy keyboard use.
I'm moving today to a little house in the redwoods. It's nice and quiet.
I'm gonna set my liddle putter up in a small bedroom near where I'm gonna put the woodstove.
An octogonal window peers out into a redwood faerie ring.
Piano Goes Here. Someday.
There's a little 8x14 separate office for when I need to get away from even that much civilization, next to a a huge veggie garden, plants
and flowers everywhere. There's room for chickens. And any deer that come visiting.
and a 2 1/2 car garage... with a 3/4 car entrance. I'm convinced that males have a built-in garage gene that usually activates at 28, but is delayed in some individuals.
Hm. Bl.
Humble.
Meme Shifts
The power of language to mis-state, to mis-inform, to mis-lead, has reached a high art in the last 40 years.
We are plagued by Orwellian double-thinking terms, like Digital Rights Management (DRM). Richard Stallman lampoons the acronym as Digital Restrictions Management - and he has a good point, DRM is not about your rights at all. DRM is about the "rights" of the entertainment lobby to twist every bit of common sense out of copyright law in favor of perpetuating their profits. But DRM is officially defined as Digital Rights Management, and through repetition, it is what many people will believe it's actually about.
Now, it's not so bad to have a set of words defined by whatever industry or group attempts to put them over on us; I can even admire the sheer audacity and creative thought that went into redefining copying software as
piracy. At least the naming game the public, too, can play, and some of us play it pretty well. It's been great fun renaming the otherwise unpronounceable acronym for the despicable CBDTPA bill as "Consume, But Don't Try Programming Anything" , and describing Fritz Hollings as "The Senator from Disney", and so on. The creation of the term"Open Source" was a brilliant stroke.
The events of the last few years have shown to me that he who coins the best phrase, soonest, can shape the public debate. (For good or for ill)
Coining new words and phrases is all well and good, but I pity anyone a century from now that attempts to make sense of todays intellectual debates without a guide of shakespearian size to our language's ever-shifting
definitions We have sets of terms and phrases that everyone knows about and thinks they understand, that change, over time, to be subtly biased in one direction or another. I've been calling this sort of thing a
Meme Shift. which may not be the right phrase (A learned friend tells me that the natural analog for what I'm trying to describe here is "Lexical drift". Both a "Shift" and a "Drift" are too passive for what I'm actually trying to describe, any suggestions on a better phrase are welcome!) .
Meme Shifting is much subtler than what Orwell's Ministry of Information did while re-writing history; it's the rewrite of the definition of a long established word or phrase without bothering to communicate well that the definition has shifted. The change gets lost in the past. It becomes impossible to take history at face value or even interperet current events. Imagine someone trying to make sense of the "Conservative" and "Liberal" tags without a clear sense for when and how the meanings of those political terms shifted over the last century.
Here's a big Meme Shift you probably haven't heard about.
Inflation
Everybody knows what inflation is, right?
Did you know that in 1983, how we calculate inflation was changed to reflect a different measure of the cost of housing? Housing as well as food and so on are included in both the earlier and current CPI, but the measure of housing changed. As an economist wrote me a few weeks ago:
'This change had an impact on measured inflation. Inflation fell from 12.4 percent in 1980 to 3.8 percent in 1983. Urban Institute economists estimated that about 1.6 percentage points of the drop (or 18.6 percent of the total change) were due to the change in CPI measurement. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics provides data that applies the post-1982 CPI to the period starting 1950. [...] The 'market basket' used to develop the CPI does not exactly match anyone's purchasing patterns. In addition, as you mention about California, there are large regional variations (the BLS does provide various regional and specific-city CPIs, which can be used to examine, say,
San Francisco).'
The new method of calculating inflation has been re-cast into the past, and the original calculation is no longer used to calculate the present... Hmm. How Orwellian. An ostensibly objective measure we all think we understand has vanished down the memory hole.
Lucklily, data going back prior to 1983 still exists for comparison. Think you suffered from 11.4% inflation in 1979? Think again, according to the new measure, you only suffered from 9.6%
Low inflation is GOOD. All kinds of good things result from low inflation, not least of which, expenses and salaries and social security payments that are tied to the inflation number don't inflate as much, in turn, which in turn results in less inflation.
But not calculating the old method forward to see how it compares with the new is profoundly unscientific. Why? Compound interest adds up. Assume, for a minute, that the inflation measure, back in 1983, really was accurate, and real inflation since has been running at official inflation * 1.186 (this is not a very scientific extrapolation. It's just as likely that the basket has changed upwards or downwards and the data prior to 1983 shows much variation). But just assume 1.186 for a second. Here's
a site with the data. Here's a little
spreadsheet I worked up. The difference, compounded, is that a 2001 dollar, in 1983, would be worth 41 cents the new way.
31 cents the old way.
It seems pathetically obvious to me that my housing costs have far outstripped my personal wage increases, far more than the inflation index shows. But the facts to support this feeling are annoyingly sparse.
A few weeks ago I found a single page (page 79-80) from Orwell's 1984, torn out, stuck between some pages in an old Larry Niven book. How this page got there I haven't a clue. But what George had to say here inspired me to finish this blog entry.
'Within twenty years at the most, Winston reflected, the huge and simple question "Was life better before the Revolution than it is now?" would have ceased once and for all to be answerable. But in effect it was unanswerable even now, since the few scattered survivors from the ancient world were incapable of comparing one age with another. They remembered a million useless things, a quarrel with a workmate, a hunt for a lost bicycle pump, the expression on a long dead sisters face, the swirls of dust on a window morning seventy years ago; but all the relevant facts were outside the range of their vision. They were like the ant, which can see small objects but not large ones. And when memory failed and written records were falsified - when that happened, the claim of the Party to have improved the conditions of human life had got to be accepted, because there did not exist, and never again could exist, any standard against which it could be tested.'
In an age where spreadsheets capable of manipulating 32768 rows of information and home database systems capable of handling gigabytes of information exist, in this supposedly free, open society, why aren't the raw data for the inflation calculation and the algorithms available? I I think I need to take this issue up under the freedom of information act. Or maybe one of my readers can clue me in.
"And so you see/I have come to
doubt/all that I once held as true/the only truth I know is you."
-- Paul Simon