Sunday, September 25, 2011

Week Fifty: The Lucifer Effect

The Lucifer Effect: How Good People Turn Evil by Philip Zimbardo is two things in one book and has been in progress for me for 3 years now. Firstly it is a first hand and incredibly detailed examination of the Stanford Prison Experiment as conducted by the authour in 1971. And then it's a follow up on the lessons learned and the present abuses of other systems that we cannot understand easily - like Abu Ghraib.

It is a brilliant book and I would recommend anyone to read this, but be warned it is not easy. Apart from the 500 page length and the tiny type filled with big words and not many pictures, it's personally confronting. Not shocking or disturbing even though it is both of those things. It confronts the ordinary origins of "evil" - this is that road to hell paved with good intentions.

I'd like to say I'd be a hero as defined in this book, my ego certainly wants that - but it's confronting because I don't know that to be as true as I once thought. It's easy to conceive what would make me cross moral lines, but impossible to know what won't.

Hard work but ultimately worth it. With two weeks to go to the end of my year of books I'm glad this one is done and dusted.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Week Forty Nine: The Exodus Case



The Exodus Case by Dr Lennart Moller is a book that purports to prove that the book of Exodus is an historially accurate portrayal of the actual events of history.


Spoiler alert - it does not.


There's a LOT of information in this - and it looks scientific - but a cursory glance at the offered proof and backing evidence shows it to be at best misguided or generously the product of belief and not method.


For a writer claiming to be unbiased and to not preach - he does an extraordinary amount of both.


Perhaps best summarised, belief is a matter of faith. If you have faith my opinion does not matter. Then again neither does this guy's.


Next week I'm getting inexorably closer to the end of the Lucifer Effect. (From god to the devil in one easy segue).


Sunday, September 11, 2011

Week Forty Eight: Blueback

Blueback by Tim Winton is a modern fable, an old fashioned tale told of a new world for people that don't fit. Not sure whether I liked this or not. It's nicely written, not as dense as his other works and a pleasure to read.

But the subject matter and message - because it feels like there is one - is bordeline Luddite. People who insist that close to nature and returning to the old ways is better annoy me. It shows ignorance and situational blindness.

But as a reminder that crime does exist and that sustainability is needed - it's ineffective and misguided. It's too black and white, while delivered in a grey flannel ordinariness - disguised as battling/old wisdom/nature etc...

Meh.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Week Forty Seven: Infinite Crisis

Infinite Crisis by Geoff Johns et al - is supposedly the be all and end all of DC event Graphic Novels/compilations.

Bollocks.

Overdone, too lofty, too confused and too many mixed messsages.

I've read parts of loads of things this week - but this is the one I had finished. And I started this one months ago - I got it just after I started this Blog and I still found it gruelling work slogging through to the unsatsifying and inconclusive end.

Superman should have fought to the death, Batman should have pulled the trigger - but the Joker wanting to play at the very end was at least a gem. Every thing else seemed pointless.