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Think morals are declining? So has everyone, ever, study says

By - Jul 18,2023 - Last updated at Jul 18,2023

Photo courtesy of pixabay.com

PARIS — Do you feel like society’s morals have declined recently? You are far from alone, and may be suffering from a “psychological illusion”, according to recent research.

At every point over the last 70 years, people across the world have continuously believed that morality is declining, US psychologists found by looking at historical surveys.

But rather than morals steadily falling throughout history, the researchers suggested this perception is an illusion caused by rose-tinted memories of the past and a focus on the grim news of the present.

In a study in the journal Nature, the researchers quoted an observer as saying that “the process of our moral decline” has led to “the dark dawning of our modern day”.

They then revealed that this is a quote from the Roman historian Livy written more than 2,000 years ago. 

“This feeling is always there, you can find quotes from any era of history where people are decrying the decline of people’s interpersonal goodness,” Adam Mastroianni, a researcher at New York’s Columbia University and the study’s lead author, told AFP.

The researchers first looked at 177 opinion polls that included more than 220,000 people in the United States from 1949 to 2019. 

In 84 per cent of the polls, a majority reported that morality had declined — and the rate remained steady regardless of the year.

Similar surveys from 59 other countries found a remarkably similar rate — 86 per cent — agreed that morals had tumbled.

“People all over the world believe that morality has declined, and they have believed this for as long as researchers have been asking them about it,” the study said.

 

Age, politics not major factors

 

While one might think that older people were more likely to believe the world has gone to hell, it turned out that young people do as well.

“The effect of age is pretty small,” Mastroianni said.

But young and old alike agreed when everything started getting worse.

“Participants believed that moral decline began at about roughly the same time they appeared on Earth,” the study said.

And while people with conservative political leanings were more likely to think morals had crumbled, liberals also felt this way, Mastroianni said.

So has the fabric of our society been consistently unravelling over the years?

For the researchers, the evidence suggests that “on average, modern humans treat each other far better than their forebears ever did”.

And when it comes to “everyday morality”, such as taking care of a neighbour’s dog or giving up a train seat to an elderly person, “we found pretty strong evidence of no change,” Mastroianni said.

 

‘Troubling consequences’

 

This illusion of moral decline could be the result of two well-established biases, the study said.

The first is what is known as the Pollyanna principle, in which people tend to forget the negative parts of the past. 

The second is that people are likely to seek out negative information about others — and “mass media indulge this tendency”, the study said.

Combined, these factors paint a rosy past that has decayed into a cruel present.

But these biases can evaporate when people judge the morals of their friends and family, not society at large.

In 2020, US participants of a survey said that in general people were not as kind, honest or nice as they were in 2005.

But they also said that the people they knew personally had improved morally over the same period.

This illusion of moral decline may have “troubling consequences”, the researchers warned.

Three quarters of US respondents in a 2015 poll said that “addressing the moral breakdown of the country” should be a high priority for the government, even amid serious crises such as climate change. 

The perception that morals have gone to the dogs could increase the appeal of “leaders who promise to halt that illusory slide — ‘make America great again’”, the study said, in a reference to the campaign slogan of former US President Donald Trump.

Land Rover Defender 130 P400: Extended expeditions

By - Jul 17,2023 - Last updated at Jul 17,2023

Photos courtesy of Land Rover

A highly stylised and modern take on Land Rover’s defining and utilitarian off-roader, the new Defender arrived in 2019 as an altogether different proposition to its predecessor. A more refined and practical SUV in the vein of the old Discovery, albeit with a retro-inspired Defender styling nods, it trades a ladder-frame chassis and live axles for monocoque construction, independent suspension and plenty of luxury and tech, and was sure to ruffle feathers among the faithful, even as it appeals to a wider client base.

 

Gainly gains

 

Initially offered in short wheelbase three-door ‘90’ or long wheelbase five-door ‘110’ versions, the Defender line gained its extended ‘130’ version in 2022. Sharing the same stylised retro-futuristic design cues, clamshell bonnet, straight lines, rounded edges and near equal width to height ratio, the 130 also shares the same wheelbase as the 110. It gains its added length from an extended rear overhang, which contrasts with its short front overhang for a more classically proportioned, albeit noticeably long, silhouette with a more rearward visual weighting.

Available with a choice of numerous petrol and diesel engines, the driven mid-range Defender P130 P400 is, however, probably the best compromise for refinement, ability and efficiency. With a new silky smooth turbocharged 3-litre “straight” six-cylinder engine offering enhanced efficiency and refinement over its supercharged V6 predecessor, the P400 develops 394BHP at a 5,500-6,500rpm plateau and 406lb/ft throughout a broad and versatile 2,000-5,000rpm range. It also features mild hybrid technology to help return relatively restrained 11.6l/100km combined fuel consumption for such hefty high-riding 2,625kg brute.

 

Responsive and refined

 

Propelling the Defender 130 through 0-100km/h in 6.6-seconds and onto 191km/h, its in-line six-cylinder engine provides ample top-end power and muscularly flexible mid-range muscle. With quick spooling turbo, the P400 is, meanwhile, confident and responsive from standstill, with little by way of turbo lag. Smooth and naturally-balanced in design, the P400 is eager through to high revs. Its mild hybrid system meanwhile collects kinetic energy through regenerative braking to run electric systems and reduce consumption, and very subtly assists the combustion engine when needed.

With low gear ratios and lockable differential allowing it to modulate power and traction as necessary for off-road conditions, the Defender dispatched both moderate dirt roads and a steep, narrow loose surface climb over uneven terrain in its stride, during a limited off-road test drive. Accessed through its user-friendly infotainment screen’s Terrain Response system, such hardware and other electronic off-road assistance features make the Defender an almost “idiot-proof” off-roader with the driver just selecting the relevant driving mode before continuing through moderately difficult terrain.

 

Composed comfort

 

Driving all four wheels through a slick shifting 8-speed automatic gearbox, the P400 delivers good road holding, while adjustable air suspension smoothens out dirt trails with forgiving ease. With air suspension rising for off-road driving, the Defender 130 boasts a generous maximum 291mm ground clearance and 900mm water fording. Little different to the shorter Defender 110 variant, the 130 features similar approach and departure angles at 37.5° and 27.8°, while departure is reduced, but still good at 28.5°, owing to a significantly longer rear overhang. 

An exponentially more refined and better handling vehicle than its predecessor, owing to its monocoque construction and independent suspension, the new Defender is relaxed, reassuring and confident in its stability, comfort and dynamic characteristics. Well-cushioned over lumps, bumps, cracks and poorly paved roads, the Defender is meanwhile vertically settled in most circumstances. More manoeuvrable and tidier into and through corners than expected for its height and weight, the Defender is composed and quick, and grips hard out of corners, while body lean is evident but not exaggerated.

 

Long on luxuriously

 

Similar to the Defender 110, the 130 is tidy through corners, if not outright sporty and connected. Pushed too hard into a corner it would have a similar instinct for predictable understeer and weight transfer away from the front inside wheel. However, its longer and heavier rear overhang is noticeable in rear weight transfers. Inside, its high driving position is supportive, comfortable and offers good front visibility, while, 360° and 3D cameras help navigate around its thick rear pillars and extended tail when reversing.

As stylised inside as it is out, the Defender 130’s luxuriously modern take on a rugged and utilitarian interior combines quality textures with easy clean surfaces, big chunky controls and a touchscreen infotainment system, and expedition vehicle-like ambiance. Extensively well equipped with modern amenities and tech, the Defender 130’s cabin is even more accommodating and versatile than the 110 variant, with its increased length translating into a three-row eight passenger cabin with much enhanced leg room for rear seat rows, and much more voluminous cargo capacity.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

  • Engine: 3-litre, turbocharged, in-line 6-cylinders
  • Bore x stroke: 83 x 92.29mm
  • Compression ratio: 10.5:1
  • Valve-train: 24-valve, DOHC, variable timing, direct injection
  • Gearbox: 8-speed automatic, four-wheel-drive, low gear transfer case
  • Mild Hybrid system: Permanent magnet motor, lithium-ion battery
  • Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 394 (400) [294] @5,500-6,500rpm
  • Specific power: 131.5BHP/litre
  • Power-to-weight: 150BHP/tonne (kerb)
  • Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 406 (550) @2,000-5,000rpm
  • Specific torque: 183.5Nm/litre
  • Torque-to-weight: 209.5Nm/tonne (kerb)
  • 0-100km/h: 6.6-seconds
  • 80-120km/h: 3.7-seconds
  • Top speed: 191km/h
  • Fuel economy, combined: 11.6-litres/100km
  • CO2 emissions, combined: 262g/km
  • Fuel capacity: 90-litres
  • Track, F/R: 1,706/1,702mm
  • Seating capacity, standard/optional: 5/8
  • Unladen/kerb weight: 2,550kg/2,625kg (8-seat)
  • Approach/departure/break-over angles: 30.1-37.5°/24.5-28.5°/22-27.8°
  • Suspension, F/R: Double wishbones/integral link, adaptive air suspension
  • Steering: Electric-assisted rack & pinion
  • Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs, 363/350mm
  • Tyres: 255/60R20

 

Mirror, mirror on the wall

By , - Jul 16,2023 - Last updated at Jul 16,2023

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

By Nathalie Khalaf
Holistic Counsellor

 

It is easy to spend our time complaining about aspects we dislike in others around us, be it family members, friends or partners alike, but it is not an empowering feeling, nor does it change anything.

Something which could be considered to be empowering and could change a lot would be to learn how to observe what we dislike in others and then turn inwards to look within ourselves at what gets triggered and where those triggers may be coming from.

This is how we can release a lot of stagnant energy blocked within us and create our own wellness. This could lead to feeling balanced, content, happy and not triggered by the world around us. 

Carl Jung says that “everything that irritates us about others can lead us to a greater understanding about ourselves”. What we notice in others around us exists within us. If we did not have it within us, our psyche would not recognise it and we would therefore not notice it in others.

 

Self judgement

 

Think with me for a moment; do you fear other people’s judgement? I invite you to notice how you are judging yourself. Are there aspects in others you love and admire and wish you had? Then look into your heart because you will find the same traits you recognise in others. Whether it is something we love in others or something we hate, we are truly mirrors of each other.

 

Mirror work

 

Mirror work is slightly different but very impactful nonetheless. Many renowned teachers such as Barbara Ann Brennan and Louise Hay taught mirror work to primarily help increase our self-love. Mirror work is as simple as making time to look at yourself in the mirror every day for a few minutes and hopefully increase it to 15 minutes or more.

This exercise is extremely powerful and can help uncover many hidden layers we adopted in youth which stop us today from truly enjoying our life and being ourselves. I say “adopted layers” because the judgement and criticism did not come from us as children. 

 

Self criticism

 

Children do not criticise nor judge themselves; they are in complete acceptance, love, openness and joy all the time. I’m speaking about the age between birth and 6 years old. After that is when the ‘thinking mind’ starts developing and the child copies and absorbs images, sounds, ideas, beliefs and words from around.

So, if our parents, family, or teachers speak to us with conditional love and harsh criticism as children then this is what we will adopt and later on use as our inner voice throughout our lives. This is really where our self judgement and criticism come from. Changing the critical, judgemental, non-loving, non-supportive voice within us starts by becoming aware of it. Once aware, then we are detached from it and can start noticing it every time it pops up as a critical thought and feeling within us, towards ourselves.

 

Think positive

 

While practicing mirror work and becoming aware of all this judgement and criticism, we can remember where those came from and make a conscious decision to change them. To make a conscious decision is to think positively about yourselves and set your intention to fully accepting and loving yourselves.

Back to Carl Jung’s mirror quote, we can also merge his exercise with the exercise above. Together both exercises can help us work on releasing all aspects and traits we dislike and criticise within ourselves and replacing them with acceptance and love. 

The mirror exercise needs to be repeated daily for a minimum of 30 days. Remember, that critical voice takes time to settle in and pretend it is “your voice”, so you need to give yourself enough time to change the self-sabotaging voices into positive, loving, supportive ones until those become the norm and the new habit.

 

Critical judgement

 

Another part of this exercise is to look deep into your own eyes: Eyes reveal pain you had to hide. Perhaps you can release some of the sadness and promise yourself to always love and support the hurt child within. Journaling while doing this exercise can help a lot as you uncover layers of your past and set the intention to release all unwanted critical judgement.

By turning this exercise into a habit, you can more easily reach a place of inner peace where you will be more content with your life and yourself — the judgement of the self and others will cease.

We will thus find ourselves more accepting of others, whether we love them or not, by simply accepting them. You will not feel emotionally triggered, resulting in a happier lifestyle.

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

‘Succession’ tops Emmy nominations

By - Jul 15,2023 - Last updated at Jul 15,2023

Kieran Culkin in ‘Succession’ (Photo courtesy of imdb.com)

LOS ANGELES — “Succession”, the HBO drama about an ultra-wealthy family fighting for control of a sinister media empire, led the nominations for the Emmys — television’s version of the Oscars.

The show’s critically adored final season earned a whopping 27 nods, including best drama, in an announcement overshadowed by the threat of a Hollywood actors’ strike that could derail the industry’s entire awards calendar.

Topping the Emmys nominations for a second year in a row, “Succession” dominated the acting categories, becoming the first ever show to earn three of the six available slots for best lead actor in a drama.

Echoing their characters in the series, Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong and Kieran Culkin will now battle each other for the award, while their co-star Sarah Snook is the favourite for best lead actress.

“Succession”, which has twice won best drama series at the Emmys, was followed in this year’s nominations count by two more shows from HBO, which claimed 127 nods overall.

“The Last of Us” became the first live-action video game adaptation to earn major nominations, with 24, including best drama and acting nods for Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey.

“The White Lotus”, a stylish satire on wealth and hypocrisy which switched from the limited series categories to drama after returning for a second season set in Sicily, earned 23 nods.

Apple TV+’s feel-good “Ted Lasso” topped the comedy section with its third and possibly final season, taking 21 nominations.

Netflix’s “Beef” and “Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” led the limited series category with 13 nods apiece.

 

‘Swift resolution’

 

Nominations were announced by “Community” star Yvette Nicole Brown, in a live-streamed ceremony hosted by Frank Scherma, chairman of the Television Academy, which organises the awards.

After a final round of voting by the Television Academy’s 20,000-odd members, the 75th Emmy Awards are scheduled to take place on September 18. 

 

 

‘Look like the devil’

 

Actors took to picket lines outside studio headquarters from California to New York on Friday as movie and television production ground to a halt in the most serious Hollywood strike in decades.

Hundreds of strikers marched with placards at the Netflix building on Los Angeles’ famed Sunset Boulevard, as well as at Disney, Paramount, Warner and Amazon premises, with passing drivers honking their horns in support.

In New York, Jason Sudeikis and Susan Sarandon were among A-listers who showed up for demonstrations, triggered by the refusal of studio bosses to meet actors’ demands for better pay and job security.

“The studios are tone-deaf and greedy, and they need to wake up — because we are the ones that made them rich,” actress Frances Fisher, who starred in “Titanic”, told AFP while marching outside Paramount Pictures.

Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) members joined writers who have been on strike for weeks, triggering the first industry-wide walkout for 63 years and effectively shutting down Hollywood.

“We’ve been out here for about 80 days... The fact that SAG-AFTRA went on strike brought a lot of energy, and there’s incredible solidarity,” said “Friends” co-creator Marta Kauffman.

The studios “look like the devil”, she told AFP, at the picket line outside Netflix. 

Actors formally went on strike at midnight Thursday after negotiations to reach a new deal with production studios ended without an agreement.

 

Record votes

 

Other shows that proved popular with voters included Amazon Prime’s period comedy “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”, which earned 14 nods, and “The Bear”, a cult hit that takes viewers inside the astonishingly stressful kitchen of a run-down Chicago sandwich shop, with 13.

Disney+’s “Star Wars” series had a successful morning — “The Mandalorian”, “Andor” and “Obi-Wan Kenobi” earned 22 nods between them. 

In the battle of the mega-budget fantasy series, HBO’s “Game of Thrones” prequel “House of the Dragon” (eight nominations) bested Amazon Prime’s “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” (six).

Perennial Emmy winners “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” and “Saturday Night Live” will go head-to-head in the new scripted variety series category, while “RuPaul’s Drag Race” returns as favourite for best reality competition programme.

“In these dark political times, the Television Academy’s gracious recognition of ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ is a bright light. Thank you for the love,” said host RuPaul Charles.

 

Using snakes as therapy animals as reptiles help heal in Brazil

By - Jul 13,2023 - Last updated at Jul 13,2023

David de Oliveira Gomes, who has autism, attends therapy sessions with reptiles at a clinic in Sao Paulo, Brazil (AFP photo by Nelson Almeida)

 

SAO PAULO — A yellow-and-brown boa constrictor wraps itself around David de Oliveira Gomes’s neck like a scarf, but the 15-year-old Brazilian with autism is fascinated, not afraid.

For him, this is therapy.

“His name is Gold. He’s cold. He eats mice,” Gomes tells his therapist at a treatment centre in Sao Paulo, gently holding the large snake as it slithers around him.

That is exactly the kind of sentence his therapist, Andrea Ribeiro, is trying to elicit.

She specialises in treating people with disabilities, autism or anxiety, using an unusual method: reptile therapy, which she says helps patients relax and improve their communication, motor skills and other abilities.

“He’s working on speech and memory formation,” the 51-year-old language-speech therapist says of Gomes, sitting at a table with him and the large snake.

Ribeiro has pioneered this method over the past decade at the treatment centre, which features an open-air space where patients interact with lizards, turtles and a “jacare” — a kind of alligator native to Latin America that is common in Brazil, including in the Amazon rainforest.

The treatment is not scientifically proven.

But “it’s been medically demonstrated that when people come in contact with animals, it releases neurotransmitters such as serotonin and beta-endorphins that give a sense of pleasure and well-being”, says Ribeiro.

“That makes [patients] feel good and want to learn.”

The reptiles “enable us to achieve better, faster results”, she told AFP.

 

Step aside, dogs

 

Ribeiro used to use dogs in her treatment sessions.

But she found their constant attempts to play and interact made some patients uneasy, especially those with autism.

So she turned to reptiles.

It’s a class of animals that makes many people squirm.

But people with autism tend to approach them “without prejudice”, she says: The animals spark their curiosity without making them uncomfortable.

The reptiles, for their part, “are indifferent”, she says.

“They don’t seek attention the way some mammals do.”

Ten-year-old Gabriel Pinheiro is petting a small alligator, trying to imitate Ribeiro’s syllables by opening his mouth wide three times: “Ja-ca-re.”

“It’s wet,” he says, his eyes fixated on the creature from behind his glasses.

The alligator’s scales are “hard,” its belly “soft,” he says, as the therapist helps him work on opposites.

He and Ribeiro then sing a song about the jacare to practice auditory memory skills.

Pinheiro’s mother, Cristina, credits four years of this therapy with helping improve his listening, communication and motor skills.

“He’s always happy when we come,” she says.

 

Reptilian massage

 

Another patient, 34-year-old Paulo Palacio Santos, suffered severe brain damage in an accident that left him paralysed and speechless.

Ribeiro wraps his face with a thick snake, whose weight and cold temperature help reactivate Santos’s swallowing reflex, she says.

She then uses a smaller boa constrictor to work the muscles around his mouth.

The handling of these species is regulated by Brazil’s environmental authority, IBAMA.

Ribeiro works side-by-side with biologist Beatriz Araujo, whose job is to monitor the animals’ stress levels and ensure patients remain safe.

There has never been an accident in 10 years of treatment, the centre says.

The reptiles, which are raised on site, are accustomed to human contact. No poisonous snakes are used.

“I’m always here, just in case [an animal] reacts unexpectedly,” says Araujo.

“The dangers are the same as for close contact with any animal.”

Simple and cheap measures can prevent a million baby deaths a year

Jul 12,2023 - Last updated at Jul 12,2023

Photo courtesy of wordpress.com

PARIS — Providing simple and cheap healthcare measures to pregnant women — such as offering aspirin — could prevent more than a million babies from being stillborn or dying as newborns in developing countries every year, recent research said.

An international team of researchers also estimated that one quarter of the world’s babies are born either premature or underweight, adding that almost no progress is being made in this area.

The team called for governments and organisations to ramp up the care women and babies receive during pregnancy and birth in 81 low- and middle-income countries.

Eight proven and easily implementable measures could prevent more than 565,000 stillbirths in these countries, according to a series of papers published in the Lancet journal.

The measures included providing micronutrient, protein and energy supplements, low-dose aspirin, the hormone progesterone, education on the harms of smoking, and treatments for malaria, syphilis and bacteria in urine.

If steroids were made available to pregnant women and doctors did not immediately clamp the umbilical cord, the deaths of more than 475,000 newborn babies could also be prevented, the research found.

Implementing these changes would cost an estimated $1.1 billion, the researchers said.

This is “a fraction of what other health programmes receive”, said Per Ashorn, a lead study author and professor at Finland’s Tampere University.

Another study author, Joy Lawn of the London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told AFP that the researchers used a new definition for babies born premature or underweight.

She said the traditional way to determine a baby had a low birthweight — if it was born weighing under 2.5 kilogrammes — was “a bit randomly selected” by a Finnish doctor in 1919.

This “very blunt measure” has remained the benchmark for more than a century, despite plentiful evidence that “those babies are not all the same”, Lawn said.

The researchers analysed a database that included 160 million live births from 2000 to 2020 to work out how often babies are born “too soon and too small”, she said.

“Quite shockingly, we found that this is much more common once you start to think about it in a more nuanced way.”

The researchers estimated that 35.3 million — or one in four — of the babies born worldwide in 2020 were either premature or too small, classifying them under the new term “small vulnerable newborns”.

While most of the babies were born in southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, Lawn emphasised that every country was affected.

Another published study estimated that a different simple and cheap treatment plan could reduce the rate of severe bleeding in women after giving birth by 60 per cent.

Postpartum bleeding is the leading cause of women dying during pregnancy worldwide, affecting 14 million people a year, mostly in developing countries.

The treatment plan combines a drape, which is put under the woman to measure how much blood is being lost, with uterine massage, an intravenous drip and some drugs to stop the bleeding. 

Study co-author Arri Coomarasamy of Birmingham University in the UK said the new approach could “radically improve women’s chances of surviving childbirth globally”.

Pascale Allotey of the World Health Organisation, which co-led the research, said: “No woman should fear for her life when giving birth.”

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, involved more than 210,000 women in Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Tanzania.

 

Will AI really destroy humanity?

Jul 11,2023 - Last updated at Jul 11,2023

Photo courtesy of wordpress.com

PARIS — The warnings are coming from all angles: artificial intelligence (AI) poses an existential risk to humanity and must be shackled before it is too late.

But what are these disaster scenarios and how are machines supposed to wipe out humanity?

 

Paperclips of doom

 

Most disaster scenarios start in the same place: machines will outstrip human capacities, escape human control and refuse to be switched off.

“Once we have machines that have a self preservation goal, we are in trouble,” AI academic Yoshua Bengio told an event this month.

But because these machines do not yet exist, imagining how they could doom humanity is often left to philosophy and science fiction.

Philosopher Nick Bostrom has written about an “intelligence explosion” he says will happen when superintelligent machines begin designing machines of their own.

He illustrated the idea with the story of a superintelligent AI at a paperclip factory.

The AI is given the ultimate goal of maximising paperclip output and so “proceeds by converting first the Earth and then increasingly large chunks of the observable universe into paperclips”.

Bostrom’s ideas have been dismissed by many as science fiction, not least because he has separately argued that humanity is a computer simulation and supported theories close to eugenics.

He also recently apologised after a racist message he sent in the 1990s was unearthed.

Yet, his thoughts on AI have been hugely influential, inspiring both Elon Musk and Professor Stephen Hawking.

 

The Terminator

 

If superintelligent machines are to destroy humanity, they surely need a physical form.

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s red-eyed cyborg, sent from the future to end human resistance by an AI in the movie “The Terminator”, has proved a seductive image, particularly for the media.

But experts have rubbished the idea.

“This science fiction concept is unlikely to become a reality in the coming decades if ever at all,” the Stop Killer Robots campaign group wrote in a 2021 report.

However, the group has warned that giving machines the power to make decisions on life and death is an existential risk.

Robot expert Kerstin Dautenhahn, from Waterloo University in Canada, played down those fears.

She told AFP that AI was unlikely to give machines higher reasoning capabilities or imbue them with a desire to kill all humans.

“Robots are not evil,” she said, although she conceded programmers could make them do evil things.

 

Deadlier chemicals

 

A less overtly sci-fi scenario sees “bad actors” using AI to create toxins or new viruses and unleashing them on the world.

Large language models like GPT-3, which was used to create ChatGPT, it turns out are extremely good at inventing horrific new chemical agents.

A group of scientists who were using AI to help discover new drugs ran an experiment where they tweaked their AI to search for harmful molecules instead.

They managed to generate 40,000 potentially poisonous agents in less than six hours, as reported in the Nature Machine Intelligence journal.

AI expert Joanna Bryson from the Hertie School in Berlin said she could imagine someone working out a way of spreading a poison like anthrax more quickly.

“But it’s not an existential threat,” she told AFP. “It’s just a horrible, awful weapon.”

Species overtaken

 

The rules of Hollywood dictate that epochal disasters must be sudden, immense and dramatic — but what if humanity’s end was slow, quiet and not definitive?

“At the bleakest end our species might come to an end with no successor,” philosopher Huw Price says in a promotional video for Cambridge University’s Centre for the Study of Existential Risk.

But he said there were “less bleak possibilities” where humans augmented by advanced technology could survive.

“The purely biological species eventually comes to an end, in that there are no humans around who don’t have access to this enabling technology,” he said.

The imagined apocalypse is often framed in evolutionary terms.

Stephen Hawking argued in 2014 that ultimately our species will no longer be able to compete with AI machines, telling the BBC it could “spell the end of the human race”.

Geoffrey Hinton, who spent his career building machines that resemble the human brain, latterly for Google, talks in similar terms of “superintelligences” simply overtaking humans.

He told US broadcaster PBS recently that it was possible “humanity is just a passing phase in the evolution of intelligence”.

 

AI can’t replace Mickey Mouse, says voice of Disney mascot

By - Jul 10,2023 - Last updated at Jul 10,2023

BURBANK, California — Aw, gee! The technology driving artificial intelligence (AI) sure is swell, but it could never capture the essence of Mickey Mouse, according to the man who voices Disney’s mascot.

As part of Disney’s upcoming 100th anniversary celebration, AFP spoke with animators, archivists and Mickey voice actor Bret Iwan about the company’s past and future, including the potential for AI — a topic currently roiling Hollywood.

“Gosh, I would say, of course there’s amazing technology being developed with AI, and it’s so impressive,” said Iwan.

“But I don’t think anything can replace the heart of a character and more importantly, the heart of storytelling.”

AFP’s visit to Disney’s sprawling studio near Los Angeles came during the ongoing strike by writers, in part over fears that AI could replace them.

The issue is also among demands being negotiated by Hollywood actors who are worried about AI cloning their voices and likenesses, and who could strike as soon as Thursday.

But for Iwan, character and storytelling are “unique to a performer, a writer, an animator, an artist, a creator”.

“I have to believe that that part is what’s going to hold out, and keep real people doing the job for a while!”

Iwan is one of just four people to have ever been Mickey’s official voice. 

Mickey’s falsetto was first voiced by company founder Walt Disney himself, with 1928’s “Steamboat Willie”. Two other men each voiced the character for more than three decades.

“I hope I get to do it as long as this holds out,” said Iwan, pointing to his vocal cords.

In animation — perhaps the art form most associated with Disney — the role of sophisticated computers is well-established.

Computer-generated animation has long overtaken traditional hand-drawn artistry as the genre’s dominant form.

While humans are still designing and creating those films, the use of AI to generate the credits for the Disney+ show “Secret Invasion” recently triggered anger.

Eric Goldberg — the Disney animator who designed the Genie in “Aladdin”, and a stalwart champion of hand-drawn animation — believes AI is unlikely to impact his work.

“I think AI has less of a chance of affecting hand-drawn animation than it does computer animation, because AI is about replicating realism,” he said.

“The characters that I do, the Genie’s head can turn into a toaster! Which you can’t do with an AI character!”

“So hand-drawn gives us a little bit of an advantage that way.”

Goldberg recently finished training five new Disney hand-drawn apprentices, and believes there will always “be a core of us who want to see hand-drawn animation”.

“Because we have to use our imaginations so much to represent hand-drawn characters, because of the flexibility of what they can do, I don’t think AI is going to be a problem to that side of medium,” said Goldberg.

“As long as there are people who still want to do it!”

Kia Niro Plus HEV: Practical segment-crossing hybrid’s encore edition

By - Jul 10,2023 - Last updated at Jul 10,2023

Photo courtesy of Kia

 

Introduced globally early last year, the Kia Niro Plus arrived just months after the late 2021 launch of an all-new second generation Kia Niro. The Niro Plus is in essence a more spacious legacy model derived from the first generation model, circa 2016.

Designed as more practical and accommodating version of the Korean manufacturer’s segment-bending and purpose-built hybrid that combined an assertive Crossover aesthetic with MPV-like utility, the Niro Plus’ slightly higher roofline, however, leans into latter side of its persona.

 

Confident continuation

 

Intended as a more accommodating an accessible car for certain markets such as the Middle East, the Niro Plus was also designed to serve as a taxi for other markets, where its low fuel consumption and enhanced cabin space would be of particular benefit. Bucking the trend for ever lower rooflines in favour of the practicality and comfort of an 85mm higher roof that deliver excellent rear headroom, the Niro Plus cuts a more upright and individualistic shape among competitors.

Otherwise little changed in dimensions and basic design, the Niro Plus retains the outgoing Niro’s aggressively swept back diamond-like headlights, convex and concave surfacing, sculpted sills and rear light deign. It does, however, gain a more aggressive facia with bigger lower side light housing and light elements. Its lower air intake is meanwhile noticeably wider, and makes up for the loss of an actual grille opening, which is now replaced with a textured body coloured panel in place of the previous Niro’s grille mesh.

 

Frugal efficiency

 

Designed from the ground up for service as either a hybrid of EV, the Niro Plus is better weighted and better integrates hybrid components than most cars that are converted from conventional combustion engine designs to hybrids. It also features comparatively lighter batteries and construction, at least for when it was first launched as the original Niro. Under its bonnet, the Niro Plus retains the same naturally aspirated direct injection 1.6-litre four-cylinder engine driving the front wheels, and assisted by an electric motor. 

With its thermally efficient but somewhat low-revving Atkinson cycle combustion engine producing 103BHP at 5,700rpm and 108lb/ft at 4,000rpm, and electric motor developing 43BHP and 125lb/ft, the Niro’s maximum combined system output is 139BHP and 195lb/ft. With both motors working in unison or individually, depending on conditions, throttle input and battery charge, the Niro is perkier than stats suggest, with its electric motor’s near instant torque allowing for confidence from low speed and in mid-range, while fuel consumption is frugal at 4.3l/100km, combined.

 

Smooth and refined

 

Capable of estimated 0-100km/h acceleration in 11.5-seconds and a 162km/h top speed, the Niro Plus’ hybrid system is smoother and better integrated than lesser hybrids, especially on throttle lift-off response when driven hard. Able to drive briefly in electric-only mode, the Niro Plus’ battery charge and discharge times impressed, as driven on mostly flat yet fast roads. That said, steep, sustained and swiftly driven inclines would be expected to deplete batteries quicker and leave the combustion engine to both provide drive and charging.

Riding on MacPherson strut front and multi-link rear suspension, the Niro felt refined and comfortable on Saudi roads, where driven. More forgiving over road imperfections — and with better steering feel — as driven with moderately taller and slimmer 215/55R17 tyres than its predecessor — the Niro was smooth, stable and refined on highway. Unexpectedly agile for a tall and comparatively high riding car of its segment, the Niro Plus is happy to be hustled briskly through winding roads and quick and tight corners and direction changes.

 

Pleasantly practical

 

Turning in tidily with little at the limit understeer, the Niro Plus’ electric-assisted steering is quick and direct if not especially textured or nuanced for road feel, but felt positive with good self-centring when exiting corners. Leaning somewhat through corners, as expected, the Niro Plus’ rear grip was reassuring, but nevertheless allowed one to easily adjust cornering lines by shifting weight to the outside rear for a pivot effect on throttle lift-off. At the limit oversteer was meanwhile gradual, predictable and easily controlled.

A well thought out and executed car with a 6-speed automated dual clutch gearbox providing more driver engagement than elastic-feeling continuously variable transmissions, the Niro Plus also delivers MPV-like practicality and improved cabin space, especially rear headroom, owing to the higher roofline. Pleasant, uncluttered and ergonomic, the Niro Plus’ horizontally-oriented cabin design features user-friendly layouts, controls and infotainment screen, while wide-swinging doors allow easy access. Well equipped and spacious, the Niro Plus features comfortable and well-adjustable seating, good visibility and generous, expandable luggage room.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

  • Engine: petrol/electric hybrid, 1.6-litre, transverse, 4-cylinders
  • Bore x stroke: 72 x 97mm
  • Compression ratio: 13:1
  • Valve-train: Direct injection, 16-valve, DOHC
  • Gearbox: 6-speed automated dual clutch, front-wheel-drive
  • Power – petrol engine, BHP (PS) [kW]: 103.5 (105) [77.2] @5700rpm
  • Power – electric motor, BHP (PS) [kW]: 42.9 (43.5) [32]
  • Power – combined, BHP (PS) [kW]: 139 (141) [104] @5700rpm
  • Torque – petrol engine, lb/ft (Nm): 108 (147) @4000rpm
  • Torque – electric motor, lb/ft (Nm): 125 (170)
  • Torque – combined, lb/ft (Nm): 195 (265) @4000rpm
  • 0-100km/h: 11.5-seconds (estimate)
  • Top speed: 162km/h (estimate)
  • Fuel consumption, city/highway/combined: 3.9-/4.9-/4.3-litres/100km
  • Fuel capacity: 45-litres
  • Wheelbase: 2,700mm
  • Track, F/R: 1,562/1,574mm
  • Ground clearance: 180mm
  • Cargo volume, min/max: 425/1,500-litres (estimate)
  • Unladen weight: 1,450kg 
  • Suspension, F/R: MacPherson struts/multi-link, anti roll bars
  • Steering: Electric-assisted, rack and pinion
  • Lock-to-lock: 2.66-turns
  • Turning circle: 10.6-metres
  • Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs/discs, regenerative braking
  • Tyres: 215/55R17

Giving your mental health priority

By , - Jul 09,2023 - Last updated at Jul 09,2023

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

By Sara Mahdawi
Clinical Psychologist

 

I can’t emphasise how crucial it is to give our mental health the highest priority. You deserve to feel good; looking after our mental health is just as important as looking after our physical health.

Neglecting our mental health can have serious repercussions since it influences how we feel, think and behave. If you don’t take care of the engine in your car, it won’t run well, and the same is true of our mental health. 

 

Psychological issues

 

The stigma associated with mental illness can make people avoid seeking help. Many are reluctant to discuss their psychological problems because they worry about being judged or putting themselves at risk of being discriminated against. This can worsen mental health issues by causing feelings of humiliation and loneliness in addition to what they’re already going through.

 

A more inclusive society

 

However, it’s important to remember that psychological problems don’t discriminate. Mental health issues can affect anyone, regardless of their age, gender, race, or socio-economic status. We need to be kind to ourselves and others because, at the end of the day, everyone is fighting their own battle. By reducing stigma, we can promote a more inclusive and accepting society, where mental health issues are not taboo.

Mental illness is treatable, and seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness. Unfortunately, mental health hasn’t only been affecting individuals, but also society at large. The World Health Organisation estimates that mental illness accounts for approximately 15 per cent of the global burden of the disease.

Mental health related problems can lead to a series of social and economic problems such as decreased productivity and increased absenteeism in the workplace, which can result in economic losses for businesses and the overall economy.

 

The financial cost

 

Moreover, mental health issues can also lead to increased healthcare costs, as individuals may require more medical attention or hospitalisation. These costs can burden families and communities, and it could also lead to higher healthcare premiums and taxes.

It can also impact the social fabric of our communities. Individuals with untreated mental health conditions may struggle with maintaining relationships or engaging in social activities, which can lead to social isolation and feelings of loneliness. In some cases, individuals may turn to substance abuse or other unhealthy coping mechanisms to manage their symptoms, which can further compound their mental health issues and contribute to wider social problems like addiction and crime.

By raising awareness and reducing stigma around mental health, we can work towards creating a society where mental health is given the same level of importance as physical health. We can support individuals who are struggling with mental health issues and help them access resources and the treatment they need.

 

Care for ourselves

 

We can also work to create more supportive and inclusive communities, where individuals feel comfortable sharing their mental health concerns and receiving support from others. In doing so, we can foster a healthier and more productive society, where individuals can thrive both personally and professionally.

The best way to take care of your mental health is by taking care of yourself and others. By working together to prioritise mental health, we can create a brighter future for ourselves and make sure that everyone feels empowered to seek help when they need it.

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

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