The title of this post comes from a phrase taught in the medical profession, the intended interpretation of which is along the lines, given an existing problem, it may be better to do nothing than to do something that risks causing more harm than good.
As with intervention by doctors, intervention by police, especially violent intervention - however well-intentioned - has the possibility of being more harmful than helpful. It is important that police officers are aware of this, and that they are imaginitive enough to consider and assess the likely outcomes of the different courses of action available to them when handling an incident.
Cognitive Conga: a blog
Dancing the conceptual kerfuffle shuffle
Ratiocination, n. An instance of [reasoning]. Also: a conclusion arrived at by reasoning. Doubt the applicability of this at your peril leisure.
Archive for the ‘Ethics’ Category
First, do no harm – the importance of being gentle
Monday, April 27th, 2009Not that Innocent
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009Despite growing up in England, I'm not fond of many English drinks. The school canteens, vending machines, newsagents, mini-supermarkets and pubs at which, in my youth, I sought refreshment typically offered no healthy options except overpriced still mineral water. The fruit juice was thin and sharply acidic and everything else was carbonated (bad for the teeth, because of carbonic acid), sugary (also, obviously, bad for the teeth - but also very high-GI), loaded with dubious artificial sweeteners like aspartame (laxatives; possible carcinogens; and more's the point, an unnecessary industrial adulterant), or some combination of these. In the US, on the other hand, it was easy to buy fresh drinks with wholly natural ingredients: horchata, for instance, or fruit smoothies. I longed for these to be available in the UK. They're delicious, affordable, hydrating, nutritive, and have, if I'm not mistaken, a lower GI than conventional sugary soft drinks.
(more...)Face-blurring fail
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009There's a lot to be said for Street View. I've wanted something like this to exist ever since I realised that the Encarta '95 globe barely let you zoom in at all. I wanted full zoom on the world! And Google, via Google Maps, Google Earth, and Street View, have pulled this off - finally - to an impressive degree.
(more...)Darling Dear
Wednesday, March 18th, 2009DARLING DEAR
YOU ARE MY LOVING LUST: MY BEAUTIFUL HUNGER. MY AFFECTION LUSTS FOR YOUR WINNING HEART. YOU ARE MY DEVOTED FERVOUR: MY SYMPATHETIC LONGING.
YOURS AFFECTIONATELY
M. U. C.
... and people say the British are not romantic.
(more...)Moving attention upstream
Monday, March 16th, 2009Jon Stewart's public dissection of Jim Cramer reminded me of an activity pattern I try to exercise whenever there's an appropriate opportunity. It's a pattern I think of as moving attention upstream
. It's something that I feel driven to do on a slightly subconscious level, but I'll try to explain it nonetheless.
The Pirate Bay is not illegal (or else the law is an ass)
Friday, March 6th, 2009The Pirate Bay is on trial. Not just a media trial, though: that has been a given for many years. No, a real trial in the district court of Stockholm, where the furniture is from Ikea and the justice system is built like a Volvo. Or something.
(more...)Human(e) Meat
Monday, February 23rd, 2009I just bought, via a small donation, the first two tracks released from the latest Propagandhi album, Supporting Caste. They're both great songs, but one of them, Human(e) Meat, is particularly excellent: an absurdist yet serious argument for vegetarianism.
(more...)Incensed
Tuesday, February 17th, 2009For my sins, I run Vista. I want to kick the Microsoft habit, but years ago I invested in copies of a few programmes I enjoy using (Wavelab, for instance) that need Windows, so it's a hard habit to kick. I do frequently kick myself for buying Vista instead of XP when I upgraded from Windows 2000, because Vista is worse on several important fronts.
(more...)Rainstorms in cloud computing
Tuesday, February 17th, 2009Losing your data isn't considered good practice or fun. Losing all your data, when it includes lots of other people's data, is surely much worse. When your business is in saving data for other people, losing it is dire indeed. The popular social bookmarking site Ma.gnolia was recently in just this predicament.
(more...)Survivalism
Tuesday, February 17th, 2009I stumbled across Scott Carpenter's blog via a post he wrote last year about a WordPress XHTML validator plugin.
(more...)