Collin's 130 Blog
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Global Warming - A Logical Fallacy
It's been argued by many people, especially liberals, that global warming is caused by human factors. Factories, cars, ad power plants are to blame for the warming of our planet. This argument is a NON SEQUITUR. Correlation does not indicate causation - There could be a bunch of different reasons why the planet is warming, and just because it started happening right at our industrial revolution doesn't mean we're the cause. We COULD be the cause, but you can't make a logical argument that we are just based on the fact that how we live and how the planet is warming are correlated.
Music Piracy - Not as Bad for the Artists as it Might Seem
People today are getting all upset over music piracy, how it's ethically wrong, how it hurts the artists, etc. In reality, many artists really don't mind music piracy, and many have turned to embracing it instead of fighting it. Artists such as Kanye West, Radiohead, Pretty Lights, and more are putting their music out for free, and are making money through donations and concerts instead. Artists don't make the majority of their profits from CD sales - those go to the greedy record companies. Artists make a lot more money performing live and touring - what if we moved toward a system that lets artists put their music out for free, and they make just as much as they would have from people attending their shows? Maybe that would work out better in the long run.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
America Runs on Dunkin - Fallacy

Dunkin' Donuts' slogan is also a BANDWAGON fallacy - it is an attempt to a person think that everyone is starting off at Dunkin' Donuts in the morning, and therefore he or she should too.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Media piracy is a topic that is becoming more and more prominent in our country, especially as the debate of internet regulation is continually growing. Some argue that stealing intellectual property is as heinous of a crime as stealing physical property, and people should be punished as such. Others argue that you just cannot regulate music and media like you can physical property, and since artists and production companies experience no tangible loss per song stolen.
In the article in USA Today, the writer explains his experience in China where he bought a CD, and was sure it was pirated, since most of the CDs sold, even in legitimate CD stores, are pirated and sold for dirt cheap. The pirated music was of excellent quality - indistinguishable from areal CD. This lead the writer to realize that musicians in China use CDs not as money makers but as promotion tools. Artists in China make their real money off of donations and concerts. The writer argues that this is a good thing, and that the artists are okay with the system as is.
In a different article in TNJN, the writer argues that music piracy is still an issue, and needs to be fixed. The article states: "Music piracy is not only stealing music from the artist but the producers, technicians and everybody involved in the music making process. By pirating music, individuals are being put out of jobs and limiting the flow of new bands entering the industry." It discusses how the RIAA has sued 159 students at UT, offering a $3,000 settlement in place of challenging them in court.
Both of these articles highlight the extreme endpoints of the media piracy debate; There are many people with much more moderate views in between. Personally, I think the actions of the RIAA are disgusting, and I cannot comprehend how a court actually justified making some poor lady pay 200K for a couple downloaded songs.
In the article in USA Today, the writer explains his experience in China where he bought a CD, and was sure it was pirated, since most of the CDs sold, even in legitimate CD stores, are pirated and sold for dirt cheap. The pirated music was of excellent quality - indistinguishable from areal CD. This lead the writer to realize that musicians in China use CDs not as money makers but as promotion tools. Artists in China make their real money off of donations and concerts. The writer argues that this is a good thing, and that the artists are okay with the system as is.
In a different article in TNJN, the writer argues that music piracy is still an issue, and needs to be fixed. The article states: "Music piracy is not only stealing music from the artist but the producers, technicians and everybody involved in the music making process. By pirating music, individuals are being put out of jobs and limiting the flow of new bands entering the industry." It discusses how the RIAA has sued 159 students at UT, offering a $3,000 settlement in place of challenging them in court.
Both of these articles highlight the extreme endpoints of the media piracy debate; There are many people with much more moderate views in between. Personally, I think the actions of the RIAA are disgusting, and I cannot comprehend how a court actually justified making some poor lady pay 200K for a couple downloaded songs.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
New Museum Idea
I've decided to change my museum idea - I'm going to do a museum based on nutrition. It will be a lot easier to form a good paper around this topic because it's a topic that I am more interested in more and feel more passionately about. There are going to be several exhibits that are fun and interactive, that show people the dangers of some of the foods they eat, and how easy it is to pursue delicious, easy, healthy alternates. The reason the museum should exist is because obesity is a terrible epidemic in the United States, and obesity related complications kill more people than anything else.
Monday, April 4, 2011
Dictator Museum
There should be a museum dedicated to history's worst and cruelest dictators and revolutionary leaders. Stalin, Hitler, Kim Jong Il, Saddam Hussein, etc. While these people were terrible men who were responsible for the deaths of an unbelievable amount of innocent people, they need to be remembered. When people think of, for example, the innocent people that were killed in the Holocaust, they need to be reminded that there was a person behind all of it. In the case of Hitler/the Holocaust, it's what happens automatically anyway, but a sole reminder of all the terrible things certain people are capable of with certain powers (such as a museum) would go a much farther way in raising awareness and helping to prevent people like this from ever abusing their power again.
I could do a lot of research for this on things like the Holocaust museum in DC (I've been there, it's an incredibly graphic but enlightening experience) to see what was successful there and what I could incorporate into my museum. I'd also have to research into a couple dictator's specific lives/reigns/crimes, so I could use them as examples in the paper.
I could do a lot of research for this on things like the Holocaust museum in DC (I've been there, it's an incredibly graphic but enlightening experience) to see what was successful there and what I could incorporate into my museum. I'd also have to research into a couple dictator's specific lives/reigns/crimes, so I could use them as examples in the paper.
Monday, March 28, 2011
San Diego Museum of Man
I visited the San Diego Museum of Man. I don't think it was quite as interesting as some of the visits in my blog group. I kind of wish I had gone to a science or aerospace museum, but I decided to try something new. It wound up being pretty cool - It was fun learning about where man came from and everything that made us what we are today. The museum definitely managed to make it a lot more interesting than my high school anthropology class did! The museum had some interesting exhibits, from one on ancient Egypt to one investigating the evolutionary curiosities of the human skeleton. All in all it was a pretty good trip, and I definitely learned some cool stuff. Not enough to make me switch from a technical major though!
Museum website: http://www.museumofman.org/exhibits
Museum website: http://www.museumofman.org/exhibits
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