The worst, unholiest popes in the history of the Vatican – Big Think

As a religious institution organized not by angels but imperfect human beings, the Roman Catholic Church has rarely if ever been able to live up to the lofty standards set by the omnibenevolent God whose very will it claims to represent and enforce.

Aptly titled books like The Bad Popes, written by the Jamaican-born author and historian E.R. Chamberlin, show us as much as they attempt to map out the saturnalian careers of the most incorrigible popes to have ever ruled over the Vatican. Though each of these popes thought they were as close to the grace of God as one could possibly be, they were in fact further removed from the ethical teachings of the Bible than just about any other members of their institution.

Like the kings and queens of medieval Europe whose loyalty they demanded, Chamberlins clergymen frequently dissolved the separation between church and state, meddling in the temporal world and its disreputable politics as they saw fit. Some popes openly engaged in sexual intercourse despite having vowed to remain celibate. Others were driven by greed and used their influence to hoard unholy amounts of wealth. A few were vindictive to the point of literally persecuting their opponents into the grave.

As a general rule, the regimes of these popes resembled those of the infamous Roman emperors Nero and Caligula. During their divisive and unpredictable reigns, cardinals and clerics alike lived in fear, for they knew history could often turn out stranger than fiction.

Stephen VI, who ruled from 896 until 897, subjected the Roman Catholic Church to what may well be the most bizarre episode in its entire history.

Upon his ascension to the papal throne, Stephen put his predecessor, Formosus, on trial for perjury. This was in spite of the fact that Formosus was already dead, and had been for more than seven months when his jury finally convened. At Stephens orders, Formosus disintegrating corpse was exhumed from his tomb, dressed in papal robes, and placed onto his old throne. As Stephen read out the accusations of perjury, a deacon shook the corpses skull and uttered pre-written responses in its stead.

After his remains plead guilty as charged, Formosus was stripped and redressed in rags. Three fingers the ones he had used to offer blessings were cut off, while the rest of his body was then thrown into the Tiber, the same place Romans once disposed of their criminals.

Though stories of the so-called Cadaver Synod have long been told with an air of Caligulan insanity, many historians believe there actually was a method to Stephens madness. Writing for JSTOR Daily, Amelia Soth suggested he wanted to prevent Formosus from becoming a relic. Through relics, writes Soth, saints continued to be members of the community. They were participants in the daily lives of the people that venerated them. In this sense, they were still alive. It was this continued presence that Stephen VI sought to deny his predecessor.

The sacrilegious nature of the Cadaver Synod was not lost on those whom Stephen had obligated to participate, and many interpreted an earthquake which struck during the procession as both a sign of Gods disapproval and an omen of Stephens eventual downfall. As one participant recalled sometime later, it had seemed as if the world around them would more willingly suffer spontaneous ruin, than that the Roman Church should remain depressed by so great a scandal.

Perhaps the most morally depraved pope of all, John XII hailed from a family of Machiavellian masterminds. His father had previously ruled Rome through puppet popes, while his grandmother married several Italian conquerors to place heirs in the Vatican.

Where his family was known for their cunning, the slow-witted John would go down in history for his sexual appetite. Unable and unwilling to honor the vows of celibacy that accompanied his position, he was said to have turned the Vatican into his own private brothel. Over the course of his tenure as pope, John had intercourse with hundreds of women, including his own sisters. Simon Sebag Montefiore, who devoted a chapter to John in his book, Titans of History, said he personified the papal pornocracy of the 10th century.

Thats not to say lust was the only sin that John was guilty of. According to Montefiore, the pope was also known to employ a spoils systems, offering titles and promotions to individuals who promised to help him with his mounting gambling debts.

As if this wasnt bad enough, John also made allegiances with German rulers to further cement his rule and more than once turned his back to those same rulers when they challenged that rule. Thanks to his rampant disloyalty, John was deposed numerous times. But, willing to stoop lower than any of his opponents, he always found his way back to the Vatican, and his stubborn determination to remain in power until the bitter end ultimately resulted in him dying while still in office.

If the contemporary Italian historian Liuprand of Cremona is to be believed, that death took place in 964, while John was caught committing adultery. Historians still debate whether he died of a stroke or had an unfortunate encounter with an outraged husband or lover.

In life as well as in death, Johns reputation loomed over the Catholic Church like a dark cloud. Bishops called him a monster without one single virtue to atone for his many vices. The Holy Roman Emperor Otto the Great said it would take a whole day to list all of Johns crimes.

The separation between church and state was a founding pillar of early modern democracies, one that many popes on this list sought to dismantle. Of all the incorrigible popes discussed by Chamberlin, however, none was more involved in temporal affairs than Boniface VIII.

Over the course of his nine-year reign, Boniface a former student and practitioner of canon law meddled in innumerable international affairs, leveraging the power of his office to turn the tide of major conflicts like the First War of Scottish Independence. Boniface fancied himself the highest authority under God and went to great lengths to remain independent from Europes empires. When, in 1296, Phillip IV barred members of the clergy from serving in his government, Boniface excommunicated him from the church.

Bonifaces eventful tenure inspired intense criticism. Dante Alighieri saw fit to work the pope into The Inferno. The crime that landed him there, in the eighth circle of hell, was fraud, specifically simony: the buying and selling of ecclesiastical privileges in exchange for money or services. Boniface believed the Holy Roman Emperor should always answer to the pope, whereas Dante whose understanding of Christianity was rooted in the contemplation of ones own sins believed that neither position should hold sway over the other.

The fact that Dante saw fit to condemn Boniface to hell when the pope was still alive (and in power) shows the extent of his unpopularity. At the same time, his cameo in the Divine Comedy was the least of Bonifaces worries.

After declaring the Vaticans independence from and superiority over the Holy Roman Empire, its emperor the aforementioned Phillip accused Boniface of both simony and sodomy before sending out his henchman to capture him. When his captors demanded his abdication, Boniface said that we would rather die. He was then slapped in the face by the French Chancellor in charge of the troops. Boniface was then held for three days, during which he was severely beaten and almost executed. Though his captors ultimately released him, the encounter left a considerable mark, and he died not long after.

Giovanni Villani said that when Boniface returned to Rome, the grief which had hardened in the heart of Pope Boniface, by reason of the injury which he had received, produced in him () a strange malady so that he gnawed at himself as if he were mad.

The legacies of these popes not only tarnished the reputation of the Roman Catholic Church but also inspired inquiry into the legitimacy of the supposedly eternal truths that its religious teachings claim to contain.

Jeremy Walls, who teaches philosophy at Houston Baptist University, said the fact that a number of popes have been bad in the sense that they did not even meet minimal standards of moral integrity and sincere piety poses a serious problem for Roman Catholicism.

This problem has led theodicists, religious scholars who try to find logical proof for the omnibenevolence of God, to draw a distinction between what they refer to as weak providence and strong providence. Weak providence holds that Gods involvement in the human world which includes the Catholic Church is minimal, and that he is not directly responsible for the election or actions of popes. Strong providence, holds that God is directly responsible for the election and actions of popes, and that our confusion is not a refutation of his benevolence but simply a testament to our inability to understand His ways.

With every incident of corruption or criminal activity amongst the ranks of the church, strong providence becomes a little less convincing. More recently, sex abuse scandals have led people to question their faith. Even if one chooses to believe that Gods involvement with the papacy was always minimal, the legacies of the worst popes were so shocking that they called into question the very essence of the institution they represented.

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The worst, unholiest popes in the history of the Vatican - Big Think

Local author to sign copies of his book ‘Hidden History of Mishawaka’ – South Bend Tribune

Tribune Staff Report| South Bend Tribune

MISHAWAKA Peter J. De Kever will sign copies of his new book, Hidden History of Mishawaka, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 4 at the downtown branch of the Mishawaka-Penn-Harris Public Library, 209 Lincoln Way E.

Published by Arcadia Publishing and The History Press, the 160-page paperback includes 10 essays on forgotten stories of people and events that shaped the city and even influenced the nation.

They include the life of Mishawakas first mayor, Manuel Fisher; Vice President Charles Fairbankss visit in 1908; the citys July 4 celebration in 1909 that saw the dedication of Hotel Mishawaka, and Ball-Bands vital role in the Doolittle Raid during World War II.

The book is illustrated with more than 50 historic and contemporary photos, many not published in decades.

Hidden History of Mishawaka retails for $21.99 and is available through arcadiapublishing.com and other online book retailers.

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Local author to sign copies of his book 'Hidden History of Mishawaka' - South Bend Tribune

Beyond the Freedom Trail, Boston history rocks – The Boston Globe

More than 600 million years ago, some of what we now call Boston was part of a chain of volcanoes whose lava flows hardened into a rock called rhyolite. The volcano chain later fused with the North American continent, and the volcanoes eroded over time into more modest landscape features like the Blue Hills and Lynn uplands. Far more recently but still thousands of years ago Massachusett Tribe members in the region began to quarry what remained of that beautiful volcanic rock from an outcropping in present-day Mattapan, harvesting it by hand and carving it into spears and knife tips.

Now the descendants of those Massachusett people want to see the city designate the ancient Mattapan rhyolite quarry, a 2.5-acre parcel across from the Jubilee Christian Church also known as the Babson-Cookson tract, as a city landmark. Its a worthwhile endeavor that would recognize an unsung part of Bostons history, while giving the Massachusett Tribe the chance to share more of their ancestors story with the broader public.

Hundreds of stone tools and weapons found at archaeological sites across the Commonwealth, including nearly all the stone fragments found at a Massachusett site at First Church in Roxbury, have been traced to the quarry in Mattapan including some dating back as far as 7,500 years ago. Known to archaeologists as Mattapan banded rhyolite, the stone varies in color from deep maroon to white or pale green striped with pinks, depending on its stage of weathering. According to oral histories of the Massachusett, rhyolite was considered highly valuable, and its dispersal to many sites suggests it was traded for other goods.

This quarry was active before the construction of Stonehenge or the pyramids of Egypt, said Joseph Bagley, Bostons city archaeologist, in a Nov. 9 city Landmarks Commission hearing where he spoke as a designee of the Massachusett Tribe. If the city makes the landmark designation, the Massachusett descendants of the original quarry-harvesters would seek to help manage the site and to educate the public about its importance.

The city will soon commission a study of the historic significance of the site, after which public comments will open. The landmark designation would elevate the city-owned quarrys status to that of historic sites like Boston Common and the Old State House, which could create more public awareness of the role the Massachusett have played in Bostons history. It could also help Bostonians and tourists learn a little more about the science of the ground beneath their feet. Separately, the city will determine whether to protect the tract as an urban wild, which would prevent it from being developed.

Boston is obsessed with its colonial and revolutionary-era history. A new landmark that surfaces both the deep geological history and the Indigenous history that predates the nations birth gives the city a chance to embrace a wider and no less remarkable view of its past. Thats why the landmarks commission, City Council, and mayor should give this piece of ancient Boston history its due.

Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us on Twitter at @GlobeOpinion.

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Beyond the Freedom Trail, Boston history rocks - The Boston Globe

Four Overtimes Iron Bowl gave us history, heartbreak – al.com

Weve had shocking Iron Bowls that were instant classics.

Beautiful endings, we have seen. Stunning things. Brilliant chaos, and violent art. Unbelievable mistakes, too, and unforgivable scores.

This 86th edition of Auburn vs. Alabama was none of those things, but it was unlike all the others, too. Never has this game that makes an entire state stop and watch given us an overtime battle until Saturday at Jordan-Hare Stadium when a most beautiful train wreck finally came to a scratching, grinding, silent stop with Alabama ahead 24-22 after four extra frames.

It was so, so loud, and then it was not.

Then, after it was Bryce Young to John Metchie III in the corner of the end zone for the win, it was Alabama center Chris Owens, a COVID-19 sixth-year super senior, waving good-bye to Auburns fans as they stood stunned and exhausted and spent like jilted lovers at the altar of eternal bliss.

So long, cozy happiness by the raging fire of a burning rivalry. So long love. The long, cold winter is here instead. For Auburn, the chill from this one will linger.

RELATED: Tide wins thrilling 4OT Iron Bowl

RELATED: How Auburn lost 24-22 OT Iron Bowl thriller

Alabama needed a Heisman-esque touchdown drive from its California quarterback in the final minutes of regulation just to send the game into overtime. With Young behind center, and given yet again another chance after so many inexplicable errors, the Crimson Tide went 97 yards to save its season. A lot about this game was difficult to watch for fans of competent offenses, but the catch by Alabama freshman receiver JaCorey Brooks with 24 seconds left in the fourth quarter was an all-time Iron Bowl moment.

The poise. The confidence. The glory. Who the heck cares about stats after an ending like that? It will be a noisy week for Alabama, but none of it will matter when the SEC championship game kicks off with No. 1 Georgia. Win and Alabama is in the College Football Playoff. Win and Young will have a strong case for the Heisman. Its all that simple. During Nick Sabans time at Alabama, it has never felt this difficult.

The ending was crazy just because of the adversity we had to go through, Metchie said.

We knew it was going to be a dogfight, said Alabama linebacker Will Anderson Jr. It was a dogfight.

It was Auburns nightmare in the end after blowing a lead for a third loss in a row. The Tigers led Mississippi State 28-3 before giving it all away. They were up on South Carolina 14-0 before blowing it. This time, Auburn led No. 3 Alabama 10-0, but for most of the game it felt more like 50-0.

The good news for Auburn should be obvious. The Iron Bowl can humble fan bases and players and especially the coaches, but this one showed that maybe Auburn isnt too far behind its in-state rival after all.

The bad news is less clear, but an ever-present concern unlike anything weve seen in sports. How is it that Auburns new coach, Bryan Harsin, still isnt saying whether or not he has complied with the federal directive to vaccinate himself during this ongoing pandemic? Its newsworthy because hes Auburns coach, but he might not be for too much longer.

He was asked after the game if he was committed to staying at Auburn amid rumors of opportunities elsewhere, and I heard a lot of things come out of his mouth, but never heard a definitive yes.

I love it here, Harsin said. I love the orange and blue and we have a lot more work to do.

Hopefully he sticks around because next year he might have an even better shot.

RELATED: Herculean effort by Auburn defense falls short

RELATED: Everything Nick Saban said after the Iron Bowl

Alabama just had a No.1-ranked recruiting class. Auburn had a backup quarterback from LSU playing for the injured Bo Nix, and by the time the fourth quarter and the four overtimes found TJ Finley behind center he was playing with one good leg, too. Auburns defense gave Finley the chance, and he nearly became one of the most unlikely stars in the history of the Iron Bowl.

Entering the game, Alabama was favored by 20.5 points. Entering halftime, Alabama trailed 10-0 and only had 68 yards of total offense. The Crimson Tide was hot and cold at times this regular season, but never like that.

Alabama quarterback Bryce Young set a single-game passing record last week against Arkansas (559 yards and five touchdowns), but he struggled in his first Iron Bowl due to constant pressure from Auburns defenders. For Alabama, it was the first victory in Jordan-Hare Stadium since 2015. For everyone watching the dynasty of dynasties, it was more proof that this might be Georgias year.

Its what you work for all year, Saban said of the ending, and no one can deny that Alabama surviving death like this is something its counterweight in the SEC East hasnt experienced.

Four Overtimes we will call this one, and put it right there alongside Kick Six, Punt Bama Punt and Wrong Way Bo. Maybe it was never pretty, but it was ugly only for the self-absorbed.

Self-absorbed Alabama fans are what Saban called supporters of the Crimson Tide who have grown fat with winning. Someone asked him a question during his radio show on Wednesday about the margin of victories, and the greatest college football coach of all time rattled his old gobbler with anger on Thanksgiving-eve.

Lean meat is no longer good enough, they say. The sacrifices must be marbled and juicy.

Wrong. One more grizzled victory is all that matters, and its Georgia with all the pressure now. We all know that when it comes to Alabama, the Dawgs have always lacked the power for the final bite.

Joseph Goodman is a columnist for the Alabama Media Group. Hes on Twitter @JoeGoodmanJr. His first book, We Want Bama: A season of hope and the making of Nick Sabans ultimate team is available wherever books are sold.

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Four Overtimes Iron Bowl gave us history, heartbreak - al.com

Is history repeating itself with Flynns one religion call, Trumps refusal to concede? – cleveland.com

Donald Trumps former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn insists that we must have one religion. Trump reduced our ties to NATO, just as the original America First movement of the early 1940s would have liked. That movement advocated that we ignore fascism in Europe and only concern ourselves with one country, the United States. Trump claims that he should still be president, never accepting his 2020 election loss. He sent an ambassador to a foreign country as though he were the one leader of the United States.

History repeats itself. One leader, one people, one country. Originally, this slogan was Fr Fhrer, Volk und Vaterland. Had space lasers existed when it was first shouted, Im certain its author would have accused the Rothschilds of using them to set the 1933 Reichstag fire, just as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene recently blamed the Rothschilds and space lasers for California wildfires.

The Fhrer of that slogan was known for his mustache, swastikas like those we saw in Charlottesville, and the straight-armed salute that ignorant people now raise at school board meetings. Those who repeat this are on the wrong side of history, decency, and what truly makes America great.

James Marder,

Shaker Heights

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Is history repeating itself with Flynns one religion call, Trumps refusal to concede? - cleveland.com

‘This is living history’: UA highlights Muscogee artist Mary Smith – The University of Alabama Crimson White

In 2009, Mary Smith, an award-winning artist and a member of the Muscogee Nation, handwove a traditional feathered cloak for three months for a permanent display at Moundville Archaeological Park.

Now Smiths intricately woven mats and baskets, tiny corn husk dolls, and detailed pottery are featured in the Weaving Muscogee Creek Culture: The Artistry of Mary Smith exhibit at the Transportation Museum.

While teaching museum education and exhibits at The University of Alabama in the spring, Alex Benitez, the director of Moundville Archaeological Park, collaborated with Katherine Edge, the director of the Mildred Westervelt Warner Transportation Museum.

They allowed students to create a temporary exhibit at the Transportation Museum instead of a mock exhibit. While creating the exhibit, Benitez and Edge remembered Smiths previous work with the park and showcased her work in the exhibit.

Edge said the goal of this exhibit was to highlight Native Americans in contemporary spaces.

Moundville Archaeological Park is a historic site that primarily displays the early history of the land. The Transportation Museum is a local museum that focuses on the city of Tuscaloosas modern history through the lens of transportation.

We felt like this [exhibit] was a really good way of blending those two worlds together and presenting a contemporary Native American artist in a more contemporary space, Edge said.

Smith is credited with reintroducing the traditional double-false braid rim. The technique had not been practiced in the last 100 years. When Smith received a basket, woven by a Muscogee woman, that had been passed down through generations of a family, she wanted to learn the technique and replicate it.

The Southeastern Tribes had their own rimming method, she said. Most of them were doubled around, so when you look at the rim, you would know it was a Muscogee woman who had woven that basket. I wanted my baskets to be traditional.

Smith studied the basket for two weeks until she learned to weave it herself. Like the basket, many of her projects take hours to make. When she is creating a mat, Smith said she quits tracking her time after 400 hours.

Though this basket and her other creations, such as mats and pottery, are now considered art, Smith said these items have a deeper traditional history.

I would hope my art would tell [students] that what we now consider art was created by our ancestors by necessity out of everyday living, she said. Learn about the Native art, and appreciate the time that it took to make it.

Riva Cullinan, a graduate student in the history department, was one of the students in the museum education and exhibits class. She worked over the summer, communicating with Smith and creating educational material now available at the exhibit.

Both Cullinan and Edge said they hope this exhibit demonstrates to students that Native American culture is not a thing of the past.

Theres this idea in all of America that Native Americans are gone. That is very incorrect, Cullinan said. This is living history, and it is changing and evolving like everything else.

On Nov. 6, Smith visited Tuscaloosa and hosted Weave with Mary: Meet the Artist, a class where she taught attendees how to weave their own baskets and shared stories from her life. She demonstrated her weaving on Nov. 10 at the Intercultural Diversity Center.

I consider it an honor to be recognized by such a prestigious university and that they place an emphasis on Native American culture, Smith said.

Smith has an award-winning mat featured in the Lost Realms of the Moundbuilders exhibition at the Birmingham Museum of Art. The University of Alabama took a field trip to the exhibit on Nov. 23.

Weaving Muscogee Creek Culture: The Artistry of Mary Smith will be at the Mildred Westervelt Warner Transportation Museum until March 2022.

Smiths exhibit is just one event students can attend for Native American Heritage Month.

The Intercultural Diversity Center collaborated with Moundville Archaeological Park to produce the Millennia of Movement Exhibit, open through Jan. 4. The exhibit features replicas and artifacts of both ancient and contemporary southeastern Native Americans relating to culture and movement.

Throughout the month, The University of Alabama also hosted events such as stargazing at Moundville, a Native American Film Festival, a Moundville 5K, a TEDTalk Tuesday raising awareness for missing and murdered indigenous women, and a demonstration by artist John Brown.

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'This is living history': UA highlights Muscogee artist Mary Smith - The University of Alabama Crimson White

Brits know more about Game of Thrones than real history and believe Dracula actually existed, survey… – The Sun

BRITS are getting real-life history muddled up with fiction as more than a third admit they know more about made-up histories like Game of Thrones than parts of their own, such as The Wars of the Roses.

One in 10 mistakenly believe Jon Snow was a real-life historical figure while some believe King Arthur (40 per cent), Robin Hood (29 per cent) and Count Dracula (12 per cent) all existed.

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Another one in 20 people thought it was the Lannisters and Starks (from Game of Thrones) contesting the Wars of the Roses in the 15th century when in reality the houses of York and Lancaster were the two main families in conflict.

The study of 2,000 adults found seven in 10 consider themselves knowledgeable about British history, but only 32 per cent knew the Wars of the Roses took place during the 1400s and just 36 per cent knew that The Black Death occurred in the 1300s.

And nearly half didnt know how many wives Henry VIII had, with a tenth believing he had eight, rather than the six he actually got through and the same proportion believed Joan of Arc was one of them.

Over a third didn't realise Henry VIII created the Church of England, showing how, for many, school history lessons really are history.

A further 54 per cent had no idea William Shakespeare was alive during the Tudor period and one in twenty think Gandalf the Grey, from Lord of the Rings, really existed.

Brits appear to at least be aware of some of historys most famous battles, with just over six in 10 having heard of the Battle of Hastings (67 per cent), Battle of Waterloo (66 per cent), D-Day (63 per cent) and The Somme (62 per cent).

However, other famous historical battles Brits thought they recalled included The Battle of Hogwarts which took place in the Harry Potter universe - and The Clone Wars, from Star Wars.

A spokesperson for Sky HISTORY, which commissioned the research as part of the launch of its new TV series Royal Bastards: Rise of the Tudors on Mondays at 9pm, said: "British history is littered with so many important stories as well as iconic myths and legends, its hardly surprising that peoples memories can be a little foggy.

What is clear is that British people take pride in their history and have a thirst for more information and knowledge about it. Our role is to show them that history is well and truly alive, and that fact is very bit as exciting and dramatic as fiction.

The Battle of Bosworth Hill, at which the future Henry VII defeated and killed Richard III, was recognised by 43 per cent of those surveyed.

But the Battle of Townton, at which Edward of York routed the Lancastrians, was known by just one in 10 - both key battles in the War of the Roses.

More than seven in 10 adults believe many womens achievements throughout history have been overlooked and need to be heard.

Marie Curie was named the most inspiring female figure throughout history, chosen by 51 per cent of respondents to the survey run via OnePoll.

She was followed by Florence Nightingale (48 per cent), Emmeline Pankhurst (38 per cent) and Rosa Parks (30 per cent).

But only 21 per cent of respondents knew Margaret Beaufort was mother to the first Tudor monarch, and instrumental in ending the Wars of the Roses with less than one in 10 believing she was the most inspiring woman in history.

A Sky HISTORY spokesperson added: We wanted to shine a light on the role that Margaret Beaufort played in founding the Tudor dynasty and putting an end to the bloodshed of the Wars of the Roses.

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Brits know more about Game of Thrones than real history and believe Dracula actually existed, survey... - The Sun

Warriors of History and Legend – The New York Times

Three new books scrutinize the reputations of some legendary warrior groups the Spartans, the Vikings and the Spanish conquistadors.

In THE BRONZE LIE: Shattering the Myth of Spartan Warrior Supremacy (Osprey, $30), Myke Cole pretty much does what the subtitle says. Laconophiles, beware. Cole, a prolific writer of science fiction as well as a previous work on ancient military history, painstakingly examines the evidence from five centuries of Spartan warfare, from 739 B.C. to 207 B.C., and concludes that they were not superwarriors, but reasonably competent war fighters dogged by norms in their military culture that held them back. Overall, he calculates that they posted a battle record of 50 wins, 71 losses and five ties. Not terrible, but hardly dominant, more Chicago Cubs than New York Yankees.

Cole detects several persistent shortcomings in the Spartan approach to combat. They failed to scout their foes and were notably poor at besieging fortifications. They also were slow to adapt tactically, because, he says, their rigidly conservative social culture made them resistant to change. They compensated for these flaws by being well disciplined and well organized.

Those who think people no longer care about history should consider this: Cole reports that his sharp skepticism about Spartan military prowess has provoked death threats against him.

By contrast, the Vikings were quite as fierce as their reputation, if the account in MEN OF TERROR: A Comprehensive Analysis of Viking Combat (Westholme, $50) is anywhere near accurate. William R. Short and Reynir A. Oskarson, two experts in Viking culture and martial arts, report that Norsemen, if they did not have a weapon in hand, trained to end a fight three ways: strangulation, biting through the neck or trachea and breaking or dislocating the neck. But, they add, Vikings rarely were caught without their weapons, especially their swords, which they revered.

The Vikings were innovative fighters, displaying what the authors term an improvisational nature. They also were fairly high-tech for their time that is, the centuries around A.D. 1000 wielding swords that used advanced metallurgy. Their seagoing ships were able to sail closer to the wind than others and were also of such shallow draft that they could move high up rivers and coves, enabling them to launch surprise attacks in unexpected places.

Fittingly, this book held two surprises for me: First, I had assumed that a battle ax was heavy. In fact it was lighter and sharper than a wood ax, because flesh is easier to cleave than wood, and also because a weighty war ax would fatigue its bearer. A battle ax swung with two hands delivered three times as much destructive energy as a sword, the authors helpfully note. Second, they say that, contrary to the cartoon images, Viking helmets probably did not sport horns. That makes sense: In serious close combat, why give the foe a key point to grab and twist?

The well-named Fernando Cervantes sets out to upgrade the reputation of the 16th-century Spanish conquerors of Mexico and western South America in CONQUISTADORES: A New History of Spanish Discovery and Conquest (Viking, $35). It is a decidedly uphill task. Cervantes, a historian at Englands University of Bristol, concedes that the conquistadors are seen today as brutal, genocidal colonists. But, he argues, that sweeping caricature is partly the result of a powerful sustained propaganda campaign against the Spanish Hapsburgs. He asks us to look beyond the unintended excesses and horrendous brutality. He portrays Hernn Corts, the conqueror of Mexicos Aztecs, as a politically astute and tactically flexible leader. Corts and other conquistadors were able to succeed as well as they did, he notes, because local populations often saw them as liberators who would help overthrow the cruel and exploitative regimes of the Aztecs and, in South America, of the Incas.

I came away unpersuaded. In this work Cervantes engages in a kind of sleight of hand, I believe, by mentioning the enslavement of Indigenous peoples but never really focusing on it. Ultimately, the conquistadors dont really seem to me very different from the Vikings. They were out to raid, to enslave people and to steal whatever they could carry away, usually in the form of gold, silver and precious stones. And they wrangled with one another for those treasures as well as for land and power. Indeed, Francisco Pizarro, the conqueror of the Incas, was killed by other Spaniards in one such dispute. The major difference between the Vikings and the Spaniards seems to be that the Spaniards had a more lasting effect, in part because the Old World diseases they carried with them devastated the people of the New World, who lacked immunities.

Putting these books down, I found myself wondering about how future historians will write in a few centuries about the American mission in Afghanistan over the last 20 years. We went there late in 2001 passionately full of righteous answers just as the conquistadors went to the New World. And, like them, brimming with unequaled military power, we tried to use force to change a culture we did not remotely understand. But then we left. Our recent chaotic exit from Kabul reminded me of a brutal line in Thucydides history of the Peloponnesian War. It was uttered not by a Spartan but by a leader of the Athenians, supposedly the more enlightened people. The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must, he informs the inhabitants of a small, besieged island. That also was, I think, the message that President Biden sent last summer to the people of Afghanistan.

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Warriors of History and Legend - The New York Times

Jets QB Zach Wilson executes the worst shovel pass in football history – Touchdown Wire

To say that Jets rookie quarterback Zach Wilson has struggled with the challenges presented by the NFL would be an understatement. The second-overall pick had been out since Week 7 with a PCL injury, but as the rest of the Jets quarterback room is in COVID protocol after Mike White caught it and Joe Flacco remains unvaccinated, Wilson who had thrown four touchdowns to seven interceptions before he was injured was back on the field against the Texans.

It didnt take long for Wilsons gift for randomness to show up all over again. On this play, Wilson tucked the ball down to the point where running back Ty Johnson thought Wilson was a quarterback on the move, and turned upfield to block. Wilson wasnt on the same page here, and he thought hed go Full Brett Favre with the shovel pass despite the fact that his target had his back turned.

The results were predictable this could well be the worst shovel pass in the history of football, and it was intercepted by Texans defensive back Tavierre Thomas as the ball was about to hit the ground.

Wilson has a lot of talent, but he really needs to get going on the whole situational awareness thing. The Jets have a particularly awful history when it comes to shovel passes (of course they do), but this takes the proverbial cake.

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Jets QB Zach Wilson executes the worst shovel pass in football history - Touchdown Wire

5 Famous Tapestries from History That Feature Stories Woven in Thread – My Modern Met

One of the oldest forms of textile art, tapestry weaving was a prominent craft from the second half of the 14th century to the end of the 18th century. In Europe, the period saw the production of large wall tapestries that were typically owned by royals and the elite. Kings, queens, and aristocrats often used them to decorate both indoor and public spaces in order to display their wealth. Henry VIII, for example, had around 2,000 tapestries hanging in his various palaces.

A tapestry is created by weaving colored weft threads through plain warp threads. Using wool or silk, the weaver builds up blocks of color in a specific order to create patterns and images. The complex technique allows the maker to create tapestries that illustrate colorful scenes. Many famous tapestries from history retold stories from the Bible and mythology while others depicted scenes from significant, real-life events. Read on to discover five tapestries from history that contain fascinating tales, rendered in thread.

The Apocalypse Tapestry was woven in Paris between 1377 and 1382. It was commissioned by Louis I, the Duke of Anjou, and depicts the story of the Apocalypse from the Book of Revelation by Saint John the Divine. The 140 meters long, six-meter-high tapestry features around 90 scenes woven in colorful thread spread over six panels. A Flemish artist named Jean Bondol came up with the designs that were later interrupted by craftspeople as large, textile weaves.

Although the theme of the apocalypse is somewhat bleak, the tapestry actually displays a positive message. During the 14th century, the apocalypse was a popular story and focused on the heroic aspects of the last confrontation between angels and beasts. Many of the scenes in the Apocalypse Tapestry depict destruction and death, but the design ends with a joyful story of good conquering evil.

It is unclear how Louis I displayed the tapestry, but some historians believe it was exhibited publicly, outdoors. The Apocalypse Tapestry now sits in the castle Chteau d'Angers in west-central France.

The Unicorn Defending Himself from the Unicorn Tapestries series, 14951505 (Photo: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)

The Hunt of the Unicorn (also known as the Unicorn Tapestries) is a series of seven tapestries made in Paris during the 16th century. Woven from natural-dyed wool, metallic thread, and silk, the tapestries feature a variety of bright hues and beautiful details.

The elaborate textile design depicts a group of high-born men hunting a unicorn, set in an idealized French landscape. Each tapestry illustrates a different moment from the pursuit, from The Start of the Hunt to The Unicorn in Captivity. There are a number of theories about the symbolism of the series, but some Christian scholars believe the unicorn represents Christ and the hunt represents his crucifixion.

The Unicorn Tapestries are currently housed in The Met Cloisters Museum in New York.

The Lady and the Unicorn 1484-1500 (Photo: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)

The mystical unicorn was a common motif in historic tapestries, but unlike the previous Hunt of the Unicorn series, this six-part collection has a more peaceful narrative.

The Lady and the Unicorn series was designed in Paris and woven in Flanders around 1500. Woven from wool and silk in the style of mille-fleurs (meaning thousand flowers), the series is often considered one of the greatest European works of art of the Middle Ages.

Each of the six designs features a noblewoman with the unicorn on her left and a lion on her right (some also include a monkey in the scene). It is commonly accepted that five of the tapestries represent the five sensestouch, taste, smell, hearing, and sight, while the sixth represents love or desire. In Touch, the ladys hand touches the unicorns horn; in Taste, a monkey is eating a sweetmeat; in Smell, the monkey is sniffing a flower; in Hearing, the animals listen to music; and in Sight, the unicorn is looking at itself in a mirror. In the final tapestry, the woman places down (or picks up) a necklace into a box, which is believed by some to represent desire.

Fun fact: All six tapestries covered the walls in the Gryffindor Common Room in the Harry Potter film series. The set is now on display in the Muse de Cluny in Paris.

Bayeux Tapestry (detail), c. 1051-1099 (Photo: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)

Although its called the Bayeux Tapestry, this iconic piece of textile art wasnt woven (like traditional tapestries)it was embroidered. Measuring 231 feet (70 meters) long and 19.5 inches (49.5 centimeters) wide, it presents a rich representation of the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 with 58 different scenes.

It begins with the journey to Normandy in 1064. King Edward the Confessor is talking with Harold, Earl of Wessex, who then departs for his family estate in Sussex with his hunting dogs. Although the end panel of the embroidery is missing and still a mystery, the existing end of the cloth shows the Anglo-Saxons fleeing at the end of the Battle of Hastings in October 1066.

The Bayeux Tapestry was likely commissioned by Odon de Conteville, Bishop of Bayeux and half-brother of William,to decorate the new cathedral of Bayeux in the 11th century. However, today it still provides a fascinating and accurate depiction of the Middle Ages. In addition to presenting visual information about military items (such as weapons and armor), it also gives details of everyday life during the time. Luckily, the piece survived both the French Revolution and the Nazi occupation of France. It now stays at the Muse de la Tapisserie de Bayeux in Bayeux, Normandy.

The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries; Swan and Otter Hunt 1430-1450 (Photo: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)

The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries are a group of four very large tapestries made between 1430 and 1450 in Arras in Artois, France. Each one measures around 9 feet wide (3 meters) and depicts early 15th century men and women in elaborate court dress hunting forest animals such as boars, bears, swans, otters, deer, and falconry.

The almost 600-year-old works are the only great 15th Century hunting tapestries to survive. They belonged to the Devonshire family and were displayed in their Chatsworth House in England for more than 500 years before they were allocated to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. However, it was recently announced that two of the tapestries are returning to Chatsworth House. The current Duke of Devonshire said it was a great privilege to have them back.

Free Online App Lets You Create Your Own Bayeux Tapestry

Artist Spends 520 Hours Reimagining World Map as a Giant 20-Foot-Wide Tapestry

30-Foot Hand-Stitched Tapestry Tells the Story of Star Wars

Learn to Love the Loom When You Try the Ancient Art of Weaving

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5 Famous Tapestries from History That Feature Stories Woven in Thread - My Modern Met

The 15 Best Odd Couples In Television History – /Film

The Couple:Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) and Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen)

The Show:Hannibal

Why They're Terrible For Each Other:Hannibal is not only a cannibal who murders people and eats the rude, but he also manipulates Will at every turn. Because of Hannibal,Will loses everything he loves multiple times.Well, not everything, because he still has Hannibal, but I digress. Hannibal even keeps Will's encephalitis a secret from him, which I'm pretty sure is the exact opposite of what doctors are supposed to do for their patients. Will really isn't all that bad for Hannibal, except that the cannibal loves him so much that he gets a little sloppy in his work because of it.

Why They're Perfect For Each Other:There's a reason the fandom, or "Fannibals," call Will and Hannibal "murder husbands." The two have a deep connection that goes beyond their cat-and-mouse games. Together they have a murder daughter, Abigail Hobbs (Kacey Rohl), whom they both try to mentor after Will kills her serial killer father to save her life. In Hannibal's dream world, the three of them would travel the planet, turning rude people into fine dining. While that's probably not great for the rest of the world, the three of them would have a strange kind of happiness. Will is an empath, capable of feeling other people's emotions as his own, and Hannibal is very close to being a sociopath, unable to relate to others in any way. Together, they're almost a whole man.

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The 15 Best Odd Couples In Television History - /Film

ISLAND HISTORY: Hula Girl canned tuna and the Nawiliwili Canning Co. – The Garden Island

From 1950 until 1955, when it ceased operations, the Nawiliwili Canning Co. packed its Hula Girl tuna at its cannery in Nawiliwili Harbor.

Supplying the cannery with fresh-caught tuna were the firms two sampans, the Tradewinds, skippered by Junichi Higashi, and Holokahana, with Ichiro Teramoto as its captain.

Solid-pack tuna in oil, flakes in oil and chunks in oil for the local and mainland markets were prepared in the cannery.

Typical local Hula Girl tuna prices for solid-pack cans were two for 69 cents, flakes at 25 cents a can, and chunks three for 83 cents.

Sam Wilcox was president of the firm, Charles Harker was its vice president, and Arthur Rice served as manager.

Wilcox was then an executive with Bishop National Bank (now First Hawaiian Bank), and in 1968 became the president and chief executive officer of his familys Grove Farm Co.

In 1952, Wilcox appointed Kotake Company of Honolulu as distributor of Hula Girl tuna.

By that time, the company had been in the market since August 1951, and with Kotake it would achieve national distribution throughout the mainland.

During one week in July 1952, Nawiliwili Canning Co., which did most of its canning during the summer, canned 1,000 cases of tuna from 50,000 pounds of fish.

A year later, Henry Haserot of Haserot Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, became the Mainland sales representative for the company, and provided financial backing.

And, in the following year, 1954, the tuna-canning industry of Hawaii, represented by Hawaiian Tuna Packers, Ltd. and Nawiliwili Canning Co., had grown from a $25,000 business in 1922 to one worth more than $1,000,000.

Nawiliwili Canning Co.s prospects for continued financial success seemed good in 1954.

It had a monthly payroll of $9,000 and employed 75 to 85 workers that year.

But, in December 1954, disaster struck unexpectedly when Haserot announced that due to the disrupted condition of the domestic tuna industry, it would be unable to continue pack financing beyond the end of our current fiscal year, May 31, 1955.

Alas, Kauais short-lived venture into tuna canning came to a close.

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ISLAND HISTORY: Hula Girl canned tuna and the Nawiliwili Canning Co. - The Garden Island

Artificial intelligence in oncology: current applications and future perspectives | British Journal of Cancer – Nature.com

In this paper, a comprehensive overview on current applications of AI in oncology-related areas is provided, specifically describing the AI-based devices that have already obtained the official approval to enter into clinical practice. Starting from its birth, AI demonstrated its cross-cutting importance in all scientific branches, showing an impressive growth potential for the future. As highlighted in this study, this growth has interested also oncology and related specialties.

In general, the application of the FDA-approved devices has not been conceived as a substitute of classical analysis/diagnostic workflow, but is intended as an integrative tool, to be used in selected cases, potentially representing the decisive step for improving the management of cancer patients. Currently, in this field, the branches where AI is gaining a larger impact are represented by the diagnostic areas, which count for the vast majority of the approved devices (>80%), and in particular radiology and pathology.

Cancer diagnostics classically represents the necessary point of start for designing appropriate therapeutic approaches and clinical management, and its AI-based refining represents a very important achievement. Furthermore, this indicates that future developments of AI should also consider unexplored but pivotal horizons in this landscape, including drug discovery, therapy administration and follow-up strategies. In our opinion, for determining a decisive improvement in the management of cancer patients, indeed, the growth of AI should follow comprehensive and multidisciplinary patterns. This represents one of the most important opportunities provided by AI, which will allow the correct interactions and integration of oncology-related areas on a specific patient, rendering possible the challenging purposes of personalised medicine.

The specific cancer types that now are experiencing more advantages from AI-based devices in clinical practice are first of all breast cancer, lung cancer and prostate cancer. This should be seen as the direct reflection of their higher incidence compared with other tumour types, but in the future, additional tumour types should be taken into account, including rare tumours that still suffer from the lack of standardised approaches. Since AI is based on the collection and analysis of large datasets of cases, however, the improvement in the treatment of rare neoplasms will likely represent a late achievement. Notably, if together considered, rare tumours are one of the most important category in precision oncology [11]. Thus, in our opinion, ongoing strategies of AI development cannot ignore this tumour group; although the potential benefits seem far away, it is already time to start collecting data on rare neoplasms.

One of the most promising expectancy for AI is the possibility to integrate different and composite data derived from multi-omics approaches to oncologic patients. The promising tools of AI could be the only able to manage the big amount of data from different types of analysis, including information derived from DNA and RNA sequencing. Along this line, the recent release of American College of Medical Genetics standards and guidelines for the interpretation of the sequence variants [12] has fostered a new wave of AI development, with innovative opportunities in precision oncology (https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190401005976/en/Fabric-Genomics-Announces-AI-based-ACMG-Classification-Solution-for-Genetic-Testing-with-Hereditary-Panels; last access 09/21/2021). In our opinion, however, the lack of ground-truth information derived from protected health- data repositories still represents a bottleneck in evaluating the accuracy of AI applications for clinical decision-making.

Overall considered, AI is providing a growing impact to all scientific branches, including oncology and its related fields, as highlighted in this study. For designing new development strategies with concrete impacts, the first steps are representing by knowing its historical background and understanding its current achievements. As here highlighted, AI is already entered into the oncologic clinical practice, but continuous and increasing efforts should be warranted to allow AI expressing its entire potential. In our opinion, the creation of multidisciplinary/integrative developmental views, the immediate comprehension of the importance of all neoplasms, including rare tumours and the continuous support for guaranteeing its growth represent in this time the most important challenges for finalising the AI-revolution in oncology.

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Artificial intelligence in oncology: current applications and future perspectives | British Journal of Cancer - Nature.com

Artificial intelligence may not actually be the solution for stopping the spread of fake news – The Conversation CA

Disinformation has been used in warfare and military strategy over time. But it is undeniably being intensified by the use of smart technologies and social media. This is because these communication technologies provide a relatively low-cost, low-barrier way to disseminate information basically anywhere.

The million-dollar question then is: Can this technologically produced problem of scale and reach also be solved using technology?

Indeed, the continuous development of new technological solutions, such as artificial intelligence (AI), may provide part of the solution.

Technology companies and social media enterprises are working on the automatic detection of fake news through natural language processing, machine learning and network analysis. The idea is that an algorithm will identify information as fake news, and rank it lower to decrease the probability of users encountering it.

From a psychological perspective, repeated exposure to the same piece of information makes it likelier for someone to believe it. When AI detects disinformation and reduces the frequency of its circulation, this can break the cycle of reinforced information consumption patterns.

However, AI detection still remains unreliable. First, current detection is based on the assessment of text (content) and its social network to determine its credibility. Despite determining the origin of the sources and the dissemination pattern of fake news, the fundamental problem lies within how AI verifies the actual nature of the content.

Theoretically speaking, if the amount of training data is sufficient, the AI-backed classification model would be able to interpret whether an article contains fake news or not. Yet the reality is that making such distinctions requires prior political, cultural and social knowledge, or common sense, which natural language processing algorithms still lack.

Read more: An AI expert explains why it's hard to give computers something you take for granted: Common sense

In addition, fake news can be highly nuanced when it is deliberately altered to appear as real news but containing false or manipulative information, as a pre-print study shows.

Classification analysis is also heavily influenced by the theme AI often differentiates topics, rather than genuinely the content of the issue to determine its authenticity. For example, articles related to COVID-19 are more likely to be labelled as fake news than other topics.

One solution would be to employ people to work alongside AI to verify the authenticity of information. For instance, in 2018, the Lithuanian defence ministry developed an AI program that flags disinformation within two minutes of its publication and sends those reports to human specialists for further analysis.

A similar approach could be taken in Canada by establishing a national special unit or department to combat disinformation, or supporting think tanks, universities and other third parties to research AI solutions for fake news.

Controlling the spread of fake news may, in some instances, be considered censorship and a threat to freedom of speech and expression. Even a human may have a hard time judging whether information is fake or not. And so perhaps the bigger question is: Who and what determine the definition of fake news? How do we ensure that AI filters will not drag us into the false positive trap, and incorrectly label information as fake because of its associated data?

An AI system for identifying fake news may have sinister applications. Authoritarian governments, for example, may use AI as an excuse to justify the removal of any articles or to prosecute individuals not in favour of the authorities. And so, any deployment of AI and any relevant laws or measurements that emerge from its application will require a transparent system with a third party to monitor it.

Future challenges remain as disinformation especially when associated with foreign intervention is an ongoing issue. An algorithm invented today may not be able to detect future fake news.

For example, deep fakes which are highly realistic and difficult-to-detect digital manipulation of audio or video are likely to play a bigger role in future information warfare. And disinformation spread via messaging apps such as WhatsApp and Signal are becoming more difficult to track and intercept because of end-to-end encryption.

A recent study showed that 50 per cent of the Canadian respondents received fake news through private messaging apps regularly. Regulating this would require striking a balance between privacy, individual security and the clampdown of disinformation.

While it is definitely worth allocating resources to combating disinformation using AI, caution and transparency are necessary given the potential ramifications. New technological solutions, unfortunately, may not be a silver bullet.

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Artificial intelligence may not actually be the solution for stopping the spread of fake news - The Conversation CA

Computer Conservation: Lily Xu Uses Artificial Intelligence To Stop Poaching Around the World – SciTechDaily

By Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied SciencesNovember 28, 2021

Lily Xu. Credit: Eliza Grinnell/Harvard SEAS

Lily Xu knew from a young age how much the environment and conservation mattered to her.

By 9 years old, shed already decided to eat vegetarian because, as she put it, I didnt want to hurt animals.

Xu grew up believing her passions would always be separate from her professional interest in computer science. Then she became a graduate student in Milind Tambes Teamcore Lab, and everything changed.

Xu is now doing award-winning research into using machine learning and artificial intelligence to help conservation and anti-poaching efforts around the world. Her recent paper, Learning, Optimization, and Planning Under Uncertainty for Wildlife Conservation, won the 2021 INFORMS Doing Good with Good OR Student Paper Competition.

From our earliest conversations, it was crystal clear that Lily was very passionate about sustainability, conservation, and the environment, said Tambe, the Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). This was also the reason our wavelengths matched and I went out of my way to recruit her and ensure she joined my group.

In the Teamcore Lab, Xu helped develop Protection Assistant for Wildlife Security (PAWS), an artificial intelligence system that interfaces with a database used by park rangers to record observations of illegal poaching and predict which areas are likely to be poaching hotspots. The system makes it easier for rangers to choose the best locations to patrol.

Lily Xu poses at the entrance to Srepok Wildlife Sanctuary in Cambodia. Credit: Lily Xu

In 2019, Xu and the Teamcore Lab partnered with the Srepok Wildlife Sanctuary in Cambodia to test the efficacy of PAWS. At the time, the sanctuary only had 72 rangers to patrol an area slightly larger than the state of Rhode Island.

Our work with Cambodia was the most intensive collaboration with a park that weve had, said Xu. We had several months of meetings, and our interactions with them and the feedback they were giving us about the process really shaped the design of our algorithms.

Xu played a lead role in implementing field tests of the PAWS program. Through Tambe, Xu and her lab mates, Srepoks rangers greatly increased the number of poachers snares they removed throughout the sanctuary.

Lily has led and taken PAWS from a small research concept to a globally impactful research effort leading to removal of thousands of lethal animal snares, saving endangered wildlife globally, said Tambe. Lily has led a global effort that has made the PAWS software available worldwide to hundreds of national parks. This is true global impact, aiming to save endangered wildlife around the world.

Lily Xu patrols Srepok Wildlife Sanctuary in Cambodia. Credit: Lily Xu

Xu has always loved nature, but didnt get to experience much of it while growing up in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C. Once she got to Dartmouth College as an undergraduate in 2014, she finally got to immerse herself in the outdoors.

I went hiking and camping for the first time as part of my freshman orientation trip, just absolutely fell in love with it, and then spent as much time as I could outdoors, she said. That made me even more attuned to how precious the natural environment is, and how much I care about doing my part to preserve it.

She eventually began to help organize Dartmouths first-year trip and took on leadership roles with the schools sophomore trip and canoe club. Xu didnt want to just experience nature, she wanted others to care about it too.

Thats continued at Harvard, where shes mentored four students since the summer of 2020, and been part of several mentorship teams.

I care a lot about mentorship in all capacities, whether thats bringing people out of their comfort zone, encouraging them to explore the outdoors and realize that this is a place for them, Xu said. The outdoors community is traditionally wealthy and traditionally white. Im neither of those things, and I really want to encourage other people and show them that this can be their space too. Similarly, from a computer science standpoint, this is a field that is traditionally male-dominated, and especially in AI research, its traditionally people in the western world.

Xu has published multiple award-winning publications through her work on PAWS. A paper presented at the 35th Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, Dual-Mandate Patrols: Multi-Armed Bandits for Green Security, was named a Best Paper Award Runner-Up as a top-six paper out of nearly 1,700 accepted papers, while another publication, Enhancing Poaching Predictions for Under-Resourced Wildlife Conservation Parks Using Remote Sensing Imagery, won the Best Lightning Paper Award at the Machine Learning for Development Workshop at the 34th Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems in 2020.

Xu is working to address those disparities as a member of Mechanism Design for Social Good (MD4SG), a multi-school, multi-disciplinary research initiative that organizes working groups and colloquium series to address the needs of underserved and marginalized communities all over the world. Xu joined MD4SG in 2020 as co-organizer for the groups environmental working group, and this past March became a co-organizer for the entire organization.

I thought, Oh this sounds like a phenomenal opportunity, because I dont really know of a strong community of computational researchers who are working in environmental challenges, and I would love to help foster a community, Xu said. Our working group, for example, has really been able to bring in people from all around the world.

Shes fantastic to work with in all of these areas, said Bryan Wilder, PhD 21, a former Teamcore lab member and member of the MD4SG leadership team. She has the combination of being incredibly engaged and energetic and really making things happen, while also just being a kind person to work with.

For Xu, research is about more than just publishing its all about building relationships and fostering community engagement.

We are researchers that are not just trying to get your data sets, publish a paper and then just walk away, said Xu. We are here for the long run. We are committed. We want to achieve conservation results as much as we want to achieve academic publication.

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Computer Conservation: Lily Xu Uses Artificial Intelligence To Stop Poaching Around the World - SciTechDaily

193 countries adopt first-ever global agreement on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence – UN News

Artificial intelligence is present in everyday life, from booking flights and applying for loans to steering driverless cars. It is also used in specialized fields such as cancer screening or to help create inclusive environments for the disabled.

According to UNESCO, AI is also supporting the decision-making of governments and the private sector, as well as helping combat global problems such as climate change and world hunger.

However, the agency warns that the technology is bringing unprecedented challenges.

We see increased gender and ethnic bias, significant threats to privacy, dignity and agency, dangers of mass surveillance, and increased use of unreliable Articificial Intellegence technologies in law enforcement, to name a few. Until now, there were no universal standards to provide an answer to these issues, UNESCO explained in a statement.

Considering this, the adopted text aims to guide the construction of the necessary legal infrastructure to ensure the ethical development of this technology.

The world needs rules for artificial intelligence to benefit humanity. The Recommendation on the ethics of AI is a major answer. It sets the first global normative framework while giving States the responsibility to apply it at their level. UNESCO will support its 193 Member states in its implementation and ask them to report regularly on their progress and practices, said UNESCO chief Audrey Azoulay.

Unsplash/Maxime Valcarce

The increase in data is key to advances made in artificial intelligence.

The text aims to highlight the advantages of AI, while reducing the risks it also entails. According to the agency, it provides a guide to ensure that digital transformations promote human rights and contribute to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals, addressing issues around transparency, accountability and privacy, with action-oriented policy chapters on data governance, education, culture, labour, healthcare and the economy.

One of its main calls is to protect data, going beyond what tech firms and governments are doing to guarantee individuals more protection by ensuring transparency, agency and control over their personal data. The Recommendation also explicitly bans the use of AI systems for social scoring and mass surveillance.

The text also emphasises that AI actors should favour data, energy and resource-efficient methods that will help ensure that AI becomes a more prominent tool in the fight against climate change and in tackling environmental issues.

Decisions impacting millions of people should be fair, transparent and contestable. These new technologies must help us address the major challenges in our world today, such as increased inequalities and the environmental crisis, and not deepening them. said Gabriela Ramos, UNESCOs Assistant Director General for Social and Human Sciences.

You can read the full text of the decisionhere.

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193 countries adopt first-ever global agreement on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence - UN News

Seattle Researchers Claim to Have Built Artificial Intelligence That Has Morality – The Great Courses Daily News

By Jonny Lupsha, Current Events WriterDue to computational programming, artificial intelligence may seem like it understands issues and has a sense of moralitybut philosophically and scientifically is that possible? Photo By PopTika / Shutterstock

Many questions have arisen since the advent of artificial intelligence (AI), even in its most primitive incarnations. One philosophical point is whether AI can actually reason and make ethical decisions in an abstract sense, rather than one deduced by coding and computation.

For example, if you program into an AI that intentionally harming a living thing without provocation is bad and not to be done, will the AI understand the idea of bad, or why doing so is bad? Or will it abstain from the action without knowing why?

Researchers from a Seattle lab claim to have developed an AI machine with its own sense of morality, though the answers it gives only lead to more questions. Are its morals only a reflection of those of its creators, or did it create its own sense of right and wrong? If so, how?

Before his unfortunate passing, Dr. Daniel N. Robinson, a member of the philosophy faculty at Oxford University, explained in his video series Great Ideas of Psychology that the strong AI thesis may be asking relevant questions to solve the mystery.

Imagine, Dr. Robinson said, if someone built a general program to function that way, so the program could provide expert judgments on cardiovascular disease, constitutional law, trade agreements, and so on. If the programmer could then have the program perform these tasks in a way indistinguishable from human experts, the position of the strong AI thesis is that its programmers have conferred on it an expert intelligence.

The strong AI thesis suggests that unspecified computational processes can exist which then would sufficiently constitute intentionality due to their existence. Intentionality means making a deliberate, conscious decision, which in turn implies reasoning and a sense of values. However, is that really possible?

The incompleteness theoremGdels theoremsays that any formal system is incomplete in that it will be based on, it will require, it will depend on a theorem or axiom, the validity of which must be established outside the system itself, Dr. Robinson said. Gdels argument is a formal argument and it is true.

What do we say about any kind of computational device that would qualify as intelligent in the sense in which the artificial intelligence community talks about artificial intelligence devices?

Kurt Gdel developed this theorem with the apparent exception for human intelligence that liberates it from the limitations of his own theorem. In other words, Gdel believed there must be something about human rationality and intelligence that cant be captured by a formal system with the power to generate, say, an arithmetic.

If you accept that as a general proposition, then what you would have to say is that human intelligence cannot be mimicked or modeled on purely computational grounds, Dr. Robinson said. So, one argument against the strong AI thesis is that its not a matter of time before it succeeds and redeems its promises. It will never succeed and redeem its promises for the simple reason that the intelligence it seeks to simulate, or model, or duplicate, is, in fact, not a computationally-based [] intelligence.

Should the mystery ever be solved, we may finally be able to answer Philip K. Dicks question: Do androids dream of electric sheep?

Edited by Angela Shoemaker, The Great Courses Daily

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Seattle Researchers Claim to Have Built Artificial Intelligence That Has Morality - The Great Courses Daily News

6 positive AI visions for the future of work – World Economic Forum

Current trends in AI are nothing if not remarkable. Day after day, we hear stories about systems and machines taking on tasks that, until very recently, we saw as the exclusive and permanent preserve of humankind: making medical diagnoses, drafting legal documents, designing buildings, and even composing music.

Our concern here, though, is with something even more striking: the prospect of high-level machine intelligence systems that outperform human beings at essentially every task. This is not science fiction. In a recent survey the median estimate among leading computer scientists reported a 50% chance that this technology would arrive within 45 years.

Importantly, that survey also revealed considerable disagreement. Some see high-level machine intelligence arriving much more quickly, others far more slowly, if at all. Such differences of opinion abound in the recent literature on the future of AI, from popular commentary to more expert analysis.

Yet despite these conflicting views, one thing is clear: if we think this kind of outcome might be possible, then it ought to demand our attention. Continued progress in these technologies could have extraordinarily disruptive effects it would exacerbate recent trends in inequality, undermine work as a force for social integration, and weaken a source of purpose and fulfilment for many people.

In April 2020, an ambitious initiative called Positive AI Economic Futures was launched by Stuart Russell and Charles-Edouard Boue, both members of the World Economic Forums Global AI Council (GAIC). In a series of workshops and interviews, over 150 experts from a wide variety of backgrounds gathered virtually to discuss these challenges, as well as possible positive Artificial Intelligence visions and their implications for policymakers.

Those included Madeline Ashby (science fiction author and expert in strategic foresight), Ken Liu (Hugo Award-winning science fiction and fantasy author), and economists Daron Acemoglu (MIT) and Anna Salomons (Utrecht), among many others. What follows is a summary of these conversations, developed in the Forum's report Positive AI Economic Futures.

Participants were divided on this question. One camp thought that, freed from the shackles of traditional work, humans could use their new freedom to engage in exploration, self-improvement, volunteering, or whatever else they find satisfying. Proponents of this view usually supported some form of universal basic income (UBI), while acknowledging that our current system of education hardly prepares people to fashion their own lives, free of any economic constraints.

The second camp in our workshops and interviews believed the opposite: traditional work might still be essential. To them, UBI is an admission of failure it assumes that most people will have nothing of economic value to contribute to society. They can be fed, housed, and entertained mostly by machines but otherwise left to their own devices.

People will be engaged in supplying interpersonal services that can be provided or which we prefer to be provided only by humans. These include therapy, tutoring, life coaching, and community-building. That is, if we can no longer supply routine physical labour and routine mental labour, we can still supply our humanity. For these kinds of jobs to generate real value, we will need to be much better at being human an area where our education system and scientific research base is notoriously weak.

So, whether we think that the end of traditional work would be a good thing or a bad thing, it seems that we need a radical redirection of education and science to equip individuals to live fulfilling lives or to support an economy based largely on high-value-added interpersonal services. We also need to ensure that the economic gains born of AI-enabled automation will be fairly distributed in society.

One of the greatest obstacles to action is that, at present, there is no consensus on what future we should target, perhaps because there is hardly any conversation about what might be desirable. This lack of vision is a problem because, if high-level machine intelligence does arrive, we could quickly find ourselves overwhelmed by unprecedented technological change and implacable economic forces. This would be a vast opportunity squandered.

For this reason, the workshop attendees and interview participants, from science-fiction writers to economists and AI experts, attempted to articulate positive visions of a future where Artificial Intelligence can do most of what we currently call work.

These scenarios represent possible trajectories for humanity. None of them, though, is unambiguously achievable or desirable. And while there are elements of important agreement and consensus among the visions, there are often revealing clashes, too.

The economic benefits of technological progress are widely shared around the world. The global economy is 10 times larger because AI has massively boosted productivity. Humans can do more and achieve more by sharing this prosperity. This vision could be pursued by adopting various interventions, from introducing a global tax regime to improving insurance against unemployment.

Large companies focus on developing AI that benefits humanity, and they do so without holding excessive economic or political power. This could be pursued by changing corporate ownership structures and updating antitrust policies.

Human creativity and hands-on support give people time to find new roles. People adapt to technological change and find work in newly created professions. Policies would focus on improving educational and retraining opportunities, as well as strengthening social safety nets for those who would otherwise be worse off due to automation.

The World Economic Forums Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, in partnership with the UK government, has developed guidelines for more ethical and efficient government procurement of artificial intelligence (AI) technology. Governments across Europe, Latin America and the Middle East are piloting these guidelines to improve their AI procurement processes.

Our guidelines not only serve as a handy reference tool for governments looking to adopt AI technology, but also set baseline standards for effective, responsible public procurement and deployment of AI standards that can be eventually adopted by industries.

We invite organizations that are interested in the future of AI and machine learning to get involved in this initiative. Read more about our impact.

Society decides against excessive automation. Business leaders, computer scientists, and policymakers choose to develop technologies that increase rather than decrease the demand for workers. Incentives to develop human-centric AI would be strengthened and automation taxed where necessary.

New jobs are more fulfilling than those that came before. Machines handle unsafe and boring tasks, while humans move into more productive, fulfilling, and flexible jobs with greater human interaction. Policies to achieve this include strengthening labour unions and increasing worker involvement on corporate boards.

In a world with less need to work and basic needs met by UBI, well-being increasingly comes from meaningful unpaid activities. People can engage in exploration, self-improvement, volunteering or whatever else they find satisfying. Greater social engagement would be supported.

The intention is that this report starts a broader discussion about what sort of future we want and the challenges that will have to be confronted to achieve it. If technological progress continues its relentless advance, the world will look very different for our children and grandchildren. Far more debate, research, and policy engagement are needed on these questions they are now too important for us to ignore.

Written by

Stuart Russell, Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Center for Human-Compatible AI, University of California, Berkeley

Daniel Susskind, Fellow in Economics, Oxford University, and Visiting Professor, Kings College, London

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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6 positive AI visions for the future of work - World Economic Forum

Global AI (Artificial Intelligence) Market Report 2021: Ethical AI Practices and Advisory will be Incorporated in AI Technology Growth Strategy to…

DUBLIN, Nov. 25, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Future Growth Potential of the Global AI Market" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming organizations, industries, and the technology landscape. The world is moving to the increased adoption of AI-powered smart applications/systems, and this trend will increase exponentially over the next few years. AI technologies are maturing, and the need to leverage their capabilities is becoming a CXO priority.

As businesses make AI part of their core strategy, the transformation of business functions, measures, and controls to ensure ethical best practices will gain importance. The implementation and the governance of ethical AI practices will become a priority and a board-level concern.

The deployment of AI solutions that are ethical (from a regulatory and a legal standpoint), transparent, and without bias will become essential. As governments and industry bodies across the world articulate AI regulations, AI companies must establish their ethical frameworks until roadmaps are clearly defined.

The operationalization of ethical AI principles is challenging for enterprises, given the large volumes of user-centric data that need to be processed, the breadth of use-cases, the regulatory variations in operating markets, and the diverse stakeholder priorities.

This also opens up opportunities for technology vendors and service providers. To effectively partner with enterprises and monetize these opportunities, ICT providers need to assess potential areas impacting AI ethics and evaluate opportunities across the people-process-technology spectrum.

Forward-thinking technology and service companies, including large ICT providers and start-ups, are working with enterprises and industry stakeholders to leverage potential opportunities. Ethical challenges will continue to be discovered and remediated to create sustained growth in potential advisory services.

As enterprises define goals, values, strategic outcomes, and key performance metrics, the time is right for technology companies to strategically partner with enterprises in the detection and the mitigation of ethical AI concerns.

Key Topics Covered:

1. Strategic Imperatives

2. Growth Environment

3. Growth Opportunity Analysis

4. Growth Opportunity Universe

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/l7isqw

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Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager [emailprotected]

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Global AI (Artificial Intelligence) Market Report 2021: Ethical AI Practices and Advisory will be Incorporated in AI Technology Growth Strategy to...

Defining what’s ethical in artificial intelligence needs input from Africans – The Conversation CA

Artificial intelligence (AI) was once the stuff of science fiction. But its becoming widespread. It is used in mobile phone technology and motor vehicles. It powers tools for agriculture and healthcare.

But concerns have emerged about the accountability of AI and related technologies like machine learning. In December 2020 a computer scientist, Timnit Gebru, was fired from Googles Ethical AI team. She had previously raised the alarm about the social effects of bias in AI technologies. For instance, in a 2018 paper Gebru and another researcher, Joy Buolamwini, had showed how facial recognition software was less accurate in identifying women and people of colour than white men. Biases in training data can have far-reaching and unintended effects.

There is already a substantial body of research about ethics in AI. This highlights the importance of principles to ensure technologies do not simply worsen biases or even introduce new social harms. As the UNESCO draft recommendation on the ethics of AI states:

We need international and national policies and regulatory frameworks to ensure that these emerging technologies benefit humanity as a whole.

In recent years, many frameworks and guidelines have been created that identify objectives and priorities for ethical AI.

This is certainly a step in the right direction. But its also critical to look beyond technical solutions when addressing issues of bias or inclusivity. Biases can enter at the level of who frames the objectives and balances the priorities.

In a recent paper, we argue that inclusivity and diversity also need to be at the level of identifying values and defining frameworks of what counts as ethical AI in the first place. This is especially pertinent when considering the growth of AI research and machine learning across the African continent.

Research and development of AI and machine learning technologies is growing in African countries. Programmes such as Data Science Africa, Data Science Nigeria, and the Deep Learning Indaba with its satellite IndabaX events, which have so far been held in 27 different African countries, illustrate the interest and human investment in the fields.

The potential of AI and related technologies to promote opportunities for growth, development and democratisation in Africa is a key driver of this research.

Yet very few African voices have so far been involved in the international ethical frameworks that aim to guide the research. This might not be a problem if the principles and values in those frameworks have universal application. But its not clear that they do.

For instance, the European AI4People framework offers a synthesis of six other ethical frameworks. It identifies respect for autonomy as one of its key principles. This principle has been criticised within the applied ethical field of bioethics. It is seen as failing to do justice to the communitarian values common across Africa. These focus less on the individual and more on community, even requiring that exceptions are made to upholding such a principle to allow for effective interventions.

Challenges like these or even acknowledgement that there could be such challenges are largely absent from the discussions and frameworks for ethical AI.

Just like training data can entrench existing inequalities and injustices, so can failing to recognise the possibility of diverse sets of values that can vary across social, cultural and political contexts.

In addition, failing to take into account social, cultural and political contexts can mean that even a seemingly perfect ethical technical solution can be ineffective or misguided once implemented.

For machine learning to be effective at making useful predictions, any learning system needs access to training data. This involves samples of the data of interest: inputs in the form of multiple features or measurements, and outputs which are the labels scientists want to predict. In most cases, both these features and labels require human knowledge of the problem. But a failure to correctly account for the local context could result in underperforming systems.

For example, mobile phone call records have been used to estimate population sizes before and after disasters. However, vulnerable populations are less likely to have access to mobile devices. So, this kind of approach could yield results that arent useful.

Similarly, computer vision technologies for identifying different kinds of structures in an area will likely underperform where different construction materials are used. In both of these cases, as we and other colleagues discuss in another recent paper, not accounting for regional differences may have profound effects on anything from the delivery of disaster aid, to the performance of autonomous systems.

AI technologies must not simply worsen or incorporate the problematic aspects of current human societies.

Being sensitive to and inclusive of different contexts is vital for designing effective technical solutions. It is equally important not to assume that values are universal. Those developing AI need to start including people of different backgrounds: not just in the technical aspects of designing data sets and the like but also in defining the values that can be called upon to frame and set objectives and priorities.

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Defining what's ethical in artificial intelligence needs input from Africans - The Conversation CA