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Showing posts from September, 2020

My experiments with R

  artwork by@allison_horst     After framing the title I realised that it is reminiscent of The title of ‘my experiments with truth’ by Mahatma Gandhi. As, I have never read that book or its summary, so I can not put any disclaimer here whether or not this article is inspired by that work. Now these tidbits aside, let us move on to the topic. I was first introduced to this magical language called ‘R’ in my masters. To say that my masters course exposed me to the areas of research and methods of teaching for science which I was not exposed to in my graduate course (which was basically an extension of school work), would be an understatement. It widened my perspective on science which otherwise I would have treated in the same as textbooks. Even though we were taught bioinformatics in bachelors, the need for learning programming wasn’t mentioned even in passing. It will definitely not improve your career prospects. It was just about using a set of tools for some analysis an...

​​Fields Of Blood

The most imperative thing here is the reason why I started reading this book. Because this defines the context in which I saw its content. It has been some years since I started wondering what the cause of violence by religious people is. Violence is part of human nature. But if we blame certain religious beliefs incite violence then why, why Buddhist majority countries like Vietnam and Sri Lanka persecuted their minorities. If religion does grant you peace then why another majorly Buddhist country, japan, turned out to be one the worst offenders of war crimes in world war II. Do their beliefs not create an inherent conflict? Where nationalism triumphs religion? And where religion directs nationalism. Most of the Tibetan protests have been non-violent. But at the same time, can you ignore the firebrand Buddhist monks of Sri Lanka? I wanted to know how such deeply religious people could live a life that is in complete contrast to the ​​original teachings of their dharma. Although this b...

What kept me sane during lockdown?

I revisited origami During lockdown. And initially..... I went berserk. When you have got no work to do, You have to have something to keep your hands (but more importantly, mind) busy... and especially if you are one of those people whose mind keep flitting from one thing to other and you get bored rather easily, After 2-3 movies series down... I was left with the same existential question again, Who do I do?   So, I again turned to origami. I guess this is one of those hobbies which you can pick up whenever you want and wherever you have left it. And the fact that you only need a paper to begin with (later on, you can down the rabbit hole of exquisite papers, sizes, designs, textures, etc.) It's the perfect way to get going when you are in total lockdown to no access to any non-essential supplies, whatsoever.   I find this particularly suitable for me since its an art which doesn’t require you have an excellent freehand. Here having a rigid hand helps (in many branches of or...