Re: [silk] German ban on 'double barreled' surnames

2009-05-09 Thread .
On Wed, May 6, 2009 at 8:15 AM, Deepa Mohan mohande...@gmail.com wrote:

 She's the daughter of two Silk-lurkers, but she makes as much noise
 (and makes as much sense)  as the third member of her family who is on
 this list.

Congrats for the high decibel levels or should i say to higher
octaves like g'ma...err paati  :)

-- 
.



Re: [silk] German ban on 'double barreled' surnames

2009-05-09 Thread Deepa Mohan
On Sat, May 9, 2009 at 11:36 AM, . svaks...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Wed, May 6, 2009 at 8:15 AM, Deepa Mohan mohande...@gmail.com wrote:

 She's the daughter of two Silk-lurkers, but she makes as much noise
 (and makes as much sense)  as the third member of her family who is on
 this list.

 Congrats for the high decibel levels or should i say to higher
 octaves like g'ma...err paati  :)


As of now (= when I am with her!) she is a very well-behaved and quiet baby! :)

Deepa.



Re: [silk] America's Sri Ram Sena

2009-05-09 Thread Tim Bray
On Fri, May 8, 2009 at 10:55 PM, . svaks...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Fri, May 8, 2009 at 9:55 PM, Ravi Bellur rav...@gmail.com wrote:
 Like I said, we got 'em too. So concerned with repressive control that they
 miss the essential points of their religions.

Historically, the essential point of many religions has been
repressive control: of sexuality, of particular ethnic or other
outsider groups, of whatever.  With an elegant theological backing
of course, but terribly convenient for those exercising control.  -Tim



Re: [silk] Best Science book you would recommend to a friend ?

2009-05-09 Thread Keith Adam

 -Original Message-
 From: silklist-bounces+keith.adam0=blueyonder.co...@lists.hserus.net
 [mailto:silklist-bounces+keith.adam0=blueyonder.co...@lists.hserus.net]
 On Behalf Of Dave Long
 Sent: 07 May 2009 14:11
 To: silklist@lists.hserus.net
 Subject: Re: [silk] Best Science book you would recommend to a friend ?
 
 In a related but different vein, I'm interested in finding more books
 like _QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter_ or _Naive set
 theory_.
 
 Any suggestions for science books which actually manage to hit that
 elusive median, where the calculations are neither too daunting for
 novices nor simply handwaved away?
 
 -Dave


I would recommend 'In Search of Schrodinger's Cat' and 'Schrodinger's Kittens' 
by John Gribbin.  Good balance between science, maths and diagrams.  He also 
manages to come up with some pretty good analogies without diluting the 
science.  

In the second book, quite some time is spent in discussion of QED.  It also 
reminded me of one of the footnotes mentioning Feynman...

'...when a colleague of mine, Marcus Chown, was a student at CalTech he asked 
Feynman to explain to his (Chown's) mother why physics was important.  Feynman 
wrote to her to put things in perspective.  He told her not to worry about what 
her son's work was all about.  Physics is not important, said Feynman in that 
letter, love is'. 

Keith
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[silk] Why?

2009-05-09 Thread Deepa Mohan
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=secrets-of-the-phallus

I found that on the blog of a friend, and since it was interesting


The subject reminds me of the man who was asked to speak about sex. He
faced the microphone, and said, Ladies and gentlemen, it gives me
great pleasure... and then sat down.


-Deepa.