First Things First

One may wonder at the oddity of an argument from orderliness. The theist innocently demands a cause for orderliness, forgetting, of course, that ’cause’ presupposes ‘orderliness.’ Without the laws of causality, no causes would be operative. The laws of causality must therefore exist before any cause can operate. Therefore the laws of causality cannot be the result of any cause. These are laws which cannot be caused even by God.

— B.C. Johnson, The Atheist Debater’s Handbook, 1983

Moving Parts

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Detroit_FordMuseum_01.jpg
Image: Wikimedia Commons

The Henry Ford museum in Dearborn, Mich., contains an “exploded” 1924 Model T touring car, its parts arrayed in the order of their assembly, echoing the component diagrams in the vehicle’s manuals.

Ford’s assembly line was inspired by the “disassembly line” that engineer William Klann observed in a Chicago slaughterhouse, in which one worker at a conveyor belt performed the same task repeatedly without himself moving. Ford’s line divided his car’s assembly into 45 steps, producing each unit in 93 minutes.

A Little Latin

mcbryde whistle illustration

In M.R. James’s superbly creepy 1904 short story “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You My Lad,” a Cambridge professor investigating a Templar ruin finds a whistle bearing the inscription “Quis est iste, qui venit?”

“I suppose I am a little rusty in my Latin,” he thinks. “It ought to mean, ‘Who is this who is coming?’ Well, the best way to find out is evidently to whistle for him.” And he does, and everything follows from there.

“It’s a rare use by M.R. James of Latin as a pivotal plot point, and a wonderful pedagogic caution to study hard in your lessons or else be grabbed by a ghoul,” writes Roger Clarke in A Natural History of Ghosts.

James says no more about it, but “a Latin scholar would know that iste was a pejorative term, that whoever was coming is unpleasant or, indeed, not exactly human. It should be translated as ‘What is this revolting thing coming towards me?'”

Black and White

mackenzie chess puzzle

An “eccentricity” by Arthur Ford Mackenzie. White to mate in half a move.

Click for Answer

The Chrysler Norseman

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:1956_chrysler_norseman_concept.jpg

For Chrysler’s 1957 auto show, designer Virgil Exner prepared a one-of-a-kind prototype: the Norseman, a sleek four-seat fastback coupe with a sloping hood, cantilevered roof, and aerodynamic underbody.

After 15 months’ work, the fully drivable $150,000 concept car missed its shipment date and was put aboard the next available transport.

That was the SS Andrea Doria. The unique prototype was lost in the sinking, and the car was never produced.

Grammatical Illusions

More people have been to Russia than I have.

Most listeners find this sentence acceptable when they first hear it, but it’s meaningless: The phrase “more people” seems to set up a comparison between two sets of individuals, but there’s no second set.

“In light of the fact that the sentence lacks this basic property, it is remarkable that speakers so commonly fail to notice the error,” write linguists Colin Phillips, Matthew W. Wagers, and Ellen F. Lau.

No head injury is too trivial to be ignored.

At first this seems to mean “No head injury should be ignored — even if it’s trivial,” but reflection shows that it really means “All head injuries should be ignored — even trivial ones.”

“This difficulty has certain interesting properties,” write psychologists Peter Wason and Shuli Reich. “When the correct interpretation was explained it was often adamantly rejected in our informal studies, as if the informants literally could not see an alternative view.”

(Colin Phillips, M. Wagers, and E. Lau, “Grammatical Illusions and Selective Fallibility in Real-Time Language Comprehension,” in Jeffrey T. Runner, ed., Syntax and Semantics 37: Experiments at the Interfaces, 2011; Peter C. Wason and Shuli S. Reich, “A Verbal Illusion,” Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 31:4 [1979], 591-597.)

The Value of Disagreement

In 1907, Francis Galton famously found that when a crowd were asked to guess the weight of an ox, the average value of their responses was surprisingly accurate — in Galton’s experiment, it fell within 1 percent of the ox’s true weight. This is “the wisdom of crowds”: By canceling errors across individuals, the mean response often proves more accurate than individual estimates.

Interestingly, the same phenomenon can arise when we aggregate multiple estimates made by a single person (the “wisdom of the inner crowd”). And organizational behavior researchers Philippe van de Calseyde and Emir Efendić now find that the accuracy can be refined still further when people are asked to consider a question from the perspective of someone they often disagree with.

“In explaining its accuracy, we find that taking a disagreeing perspective prompts people to consider and adopt second estimates they normally would not consider as viable option, resulting in first and second estimates that are highly diverse (and by extension more accurate when aggregated),” the researchers write. “Our results suggest that disagreement, often highlighted for its negative impact, can be a powerful tool in producing accurate judgments.”

(Philippe van de Calseyde and Emir Efendić, “Taking a Disagreeing Perspective Improves the Accuracy of People’s Quantitative Estimates,” PsyArXiv, Nov. 15, 2019.)

Unquote

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Subsidised_Mineowner.jpg

“It tires me to talk to rich men. You expect a man of millions, the head of a great industry, to be a man worth hearing; but as a rule they don’t know anything outside their own businesses.” — Theodore Roosevelt

Podcast Episode 322: Joseph Medicine Crow

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Joseph Medicine Crow was raised on a Montana reservation in the warrior tradition of his Crow forefathers. But during World War II he found himself applying those lessons in very different circumstances. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast, we’ll describe Joseph’s exploits in the war and how they helped to shape his future.

We’ll also consider how to distinguish identical twins and puzzle over a physicist’s beer.

Intro:

Two opposing bullets struck one another during the siege of Petersburg.

Which full house is likeliest to win?

Sources for our feature on Joseph Medicine Crow:

Joseph Medicine Crow and Herman J. Viola, Counting Coup: Becoming a Crow Chief on the Reservation and Beyond, 2006.

Charles A. Eastman, Living in Two Worlds: The American Indian Experience Illustrated, 2010.

Rick Graetz and Susie Graetz, Crow Country: Montana’s Crow Tribe of Indians, 2000.

Joseph Medicine Crow, From the Heart of the Crow Country: The Crow Indians’ Own Stories, 2000.

Phillip Thomas Tucker, Death at the Little Bighorn: A New Look at Custer, His Tactics, and the Tragic Decisions Made at the Last Stand, 2017.

Cindy Ott, “Crossing Cultural Fences: The Intersecting Material World of American Indians and Euro-Americans,” Western Historical Quarterly 39:4 (Winter 2008), 491-499.

James Welch, “Killing Custer: An Excerpt,” Montana: The Magazine of Western History 44:4 (Autumn 1994), 16-27.

“See You Later, Joe Medicine Crow,” Wild West 29:2 (August 2016), 13.

“War Songs of the Plains: Joseph Medicine Crow,” Economist 419:8985 (April 16, 2016), 82.

Nina Sanders, “Remembering Dr. Joe Medicine Crow,” Smithsonian, April 6, 2016.

Mardi Mileham, “Honoring a Cultural Treasure,” Linfield Magazine 6:2 (Fall 2009), 6-11.

“Roundup,” Wild West 21:2 (August 2008), 9.

Bradley Shreve, “Serving Those Who Served,” Tribal College Journal 29:2 (Winter 2017) 10-11.

Brenda J. Child and Karissa E. White, “‘I’ve Done My Share’: Ojibwe People and World War II,” Minnesota History 61:5 (Spring 2009), 196-207.

Emily Langer, “Native American Icon Was ‘Warrior and Living Legend,'” Montreal Gazette, April 13, 2016, B.14.

“Joe Medicine Crow: Indian War Chief Decorated for Bravery Who Regaled Custer’s ‘Last Stand,'” Sunday Independent, April 10, 2016, 29.

“Joe Medicine Crow: War Chief Decorated for Bravery Who Told of Custer’s ‘Last Stand’ From the Perspective of the Natives,” Daily Telegraph, April 6, 2016, 27.

Mike McPhate, “Joseph Medicine Crow, Tribal War Chief and Historian, Dies at 102,” New York Times, April 4, 2016.

Sarah Kaplan, “Joe Medicine Crow, a War Chief, Historian and the Last Link to the Battle of Little Big Horn, Dies at 102,” Washington Post, April 4, 2016.

Alex Johnson, “Revered Indian Leader Joe Medicine Crow, Last Crow War Chief, Dies at 102,” NBC News, April 4, 2016.

“Native American Chief Joe Medicine Crow Dies Aged 102,” BBC News, April 3, 2016.

Matthew Brown, “Crow Tribe Elder, Historian Joe Medicine Crow Dead at 102,” Associated Press, April 3, 2016.

Mike Ferguson and Jordon Niedermeier, “Joe Medicine Crow Dies in Billings on Sunday Morning,” Billings [Mont.] Gazette, April 3, 2016.

Jack McNeel, “Joe Medicine Crow, War Chief,” Indian Country Today, Sept. 24, 2008, 21.

“Dr. Joseph Medicine Crow to Receive the French Legion of Honor Award and the Bronze Star,” Custer Battlefield Museum, May 21, 2008.

Robin A. Ladue, “The Last War Chief,” Tribal Business Journal (accessed Nov. 22, 2020).

“Smithsonian Curator Remembers Plains Indian War Chief Joe Medicine Crow,” All Things Considered, National Public Radio, April 4, 2016.

Jurek Martin, “Joe Medicine Crow, Warrior and Historian, 1913-2016,” FT.com, April 8, 2016.

“President Obama Names Medal of Freedom Recipients,” White House, July 30, 2009.

Herman Viola, “High Bird: Eulogy for Joe Medicine Crow (Crow), 1914-2016,” National Museum of the American Indian, April 21, 2016.

rubber chicken

Tim Ellis’ daughter and the world’s largest rubber chicken.

Listener mail:

Kevin W. Bowyer and Patrick J. Flynn, “Biometric Identification of Identical Twins: A Survey,” IEEE Eighth International Conference on Biometrics Theory, Applications and Systems, 2016.

Sandee LaMotte, “The Other ‘Fingerprints’ You Don’t Know About,” CNN, Dec. 4, 2015.

Cailin O’Connor, “Life Is Random,” Slate, Sept. 12, 2014.

Thomas G. Kaye and Mark Meltzer, “Diatoms Constrain Forensic Burial Timelines: Case Study With DB Cooper Money,” Scientific Reports 10:1 (Aug. 3, 2020), 1-9.

This week’s lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Carsten Hamann, who sent these corroborating links (warning — these spoil the puzzle).

You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss.

Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet — you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we’ve set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website.

Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode.

If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!