Driving

Driving

Recently I had a very brief week-long career as a driver. I signed up as a Lyft driver in Austin, TX. It took me a couple of hours on the web to do so, and I became a driver for hire.

There were several reasons why I did that. Foremost reason was that I was curious to know how it feels to do a low-status service job. All jobs I had done before have also been service jobs but they were cognitively demanding, high status jobs such as teaching college courses in reputed universities or product marketing at a multinational corporation in the Silicon Valley. In contrast to that kind of service work, a taxi driver’s job though it requires skill is not intellectually challenging or high status. Continue reading “Driving”

Book Titles

Back in the day when I read fiction, I liked to know (and I still do) the sources of the titles. For example, Ernest Hemingway took the title for his novel “For Whom the Bell Tolls” from John Dunne’s 1623 “Meditations XVII.” That meditation is my favorite. Here’s that part:

“No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. … any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.”

We are all part of the same living tree of life. I recommend reading the whole bit.

Hemingway took the title “A Farewell to Arms” for his 1929 novel from a poem by George Peele. Economist Gregory Clark tipped his hat to Peele and used the homophony in ‘arms’ and ‘alms’ to title his 2007 book, “A Farewell to Alms”, with the subtitle “A Brief Economic History of the World.” I included that book in the reading list for a course on economic development I had taught some years ago. Continue reading “Book Titles”

Diversity

Over the Sierra Nevada in California. Click to embiggen.

Humans, I tell you dear fellow human, are unique. Here’s a quick reminder on our zoological classification.

At the most specific classification — the species level at the bottom of the zoological taxonomic tree — we are homo sapiens, the modern humans. One level up from our species is the genus. We are in the genus homo. We are the only species in that genus.

Go up one level, we belong to the family hominidea. Our family includes chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans — the other great apes. We can detect the family resemblance. Apes have large brains and are bipedal.

Apes like us belong to the order primates. Besides us humans, the primate order includes apes, monkeys, and lemurs — animals that have a large brain, and they use their hands to manipulate objects. There are over 500 species of primates in the world. Continue reading “Diversity”