150 Years of Through the Looking-Glass

150 Years of Through the Looking-Glass

Friday, 22 December 2023

Innovation in the 19th & 21st Century - What Would the Mayor of Baden Do?

Around 1887 Karl Benz had created a motor vehicle and driven it around the area. The first thing that the police did was to inform that to drive a mechanical vehicle in the province of Baden was against the law. He explained the future of the horseless vehicle and the precautions he had taken with his employees driving and that any prohibition on the part of the authorities would give other countries a lead in this future industry. He was given permission to drive within the boundaries of the city but to go further he would need the consent of the Minister of Baden.


He contacted the Minister who suggested speed limits of 6kmh (walking pace) within the city and 12kmh (trotting) outside. This was an unnecessary constraint and would've killed the industry in its infancy. 

Benz arranged to demonstrate his vehicle to the Minister and picked him up at Mannheim station. Benz also arranged for a milk cart to pull up alongside during the ride, let him pass and then overtake him. This was rehearsed so it didn't look too staged.  On the day Benz sent his foreman to pick up the Minister with the instruction that the speed limit was not to be exceeded. The milk cart turned up and swished past them, hurling insults and jeering at them as he went by. But even before the Minister had become impatient with the slow progress of the journey.


Once the milk cart had overtaken them the Minister said, as a response to the fact the police forbade them from travelling quicker, "we can't have milk carts passing us, push her along as hard as she will go". The Minister travelled to the factory, had the technology explained to him and was told that no further obstacles, in the form of speed-limits, would stand in his path.

This gave him impetus for further developments of the vehicle. Later at the Imperial Exhibition in Munich he would not be given official permission by the Police to demonstrate his vehicle. However the Police compromised and he was allowed to unofficially drive the car for 2 hours a day in Munich but be responsible for any damage and he was not to plead that he had been given official or unofficial permission.

More than 150 years later technology meets the same challenges as politicians who have more focus on regulation than innovation look to close down and restrict development, particularly in Europe. On the other hand they are clamouring for digitisation and wonder why the EU has not produced a Silicon Valley. 

Alas we do not have politicians with the foresight of the Mayor of Baden and the Police Force of Munich nowadays. Imagine if the EU had existed back then. It would have regulated to protect stables and carriages from the satanic majesty of the combustion engine.


Sunday, 26 November 2023

Satanic Technology Through The Ages Reaches AI

 

AI and other tech breakthroughs have been treated with similar suspicion. This applies to the arrival of the printing press, the locomotive and the motor vehicle. 


Below is what happened when Gottfried Benz took his vehicle into town for a drive in the 19th Century. It was the AI breakthrough of its time.


“It was soon apparent to him that not a word about his experiments had reached the ears of those outside Mannheim… It was as though some diabolical engine of the father of evil had suddenly dropped from the clouds; children fled screaming from him to their houses; mothers made a hasty rush for their offspring and pulled them indoors as they did so. A number of the older people, less agile than the others, fell down on their knees as he approached, and made the sign of the cross on their breasts. Horses took fright, and either bolted or performed circus tricks in the middle of the road.  One young man fled in terror in front of him shouting to all at the Devil had come; men repairing the roads threw down their tools and made off across Fields as fast as their legs would carry them. in other villages he passed through, the inhabitants took up an aggressive attitude; large numbers of stones were thrown … 

In many parts of the country it was regarded as something supernatural. Astonishment, terror and hostility were intermixed, for the inhabitants seldom read newspapers and so missed the brief allusions to the new invention which were beginning to appear in the German Press.”


The motor vehicle is one of a long list of overreactions to satanic technologies. For example, “With artificial intelligence, we are summoning the demon. In all those stories where there’s the guy with the pentagram and the holy water, it’s like – yeah, he’s sure he can control the demon. Doesn’t work out,” said Elon Musk in 2014.  


More recently there was a letter urging for a pause on development signed by tech leaders, professors and researchers in urged artificial intelligence labs to stop the training of the most powerful AI systems for at least six months, citing “profound risks to society and humanity.” 


The motor car provides many new opportunities and changed society. However, it put the horse and cart transport out of business. Should we have demanded a 6-month pause back then?


Wednesday, 2 November 2022

The Horrible Covid Injection and the nice German Doctor

 Lo and behold I had my 4th injection last week and I am on blood thinners with a bandage around my leg. I had the jab on Tuesday and felt a bit tired on Wednesday. The pain in my leg was there on Thursday after all the fatigue and blurriness had subsided. Obviously, this was some form of muscle cramp as I explained to my wife who works in Drug Safety the following day when the pain had breached a threshold where I would have to tell her.

The pain and swelling in my leg grew and shrank. Sometimes it was hotter and more swollen and sometimes it subsided to a level where I could hobble but at a reasonable pace and not completely inelegantly. 

On Friday the local hospital outpatient thought it was muscular and told me to keep an eye on it and that it was too early for it to be related to the vaccine. 

During this period I had been working but had not been able to walk much as I waited for the pain to die down as I was due to travel to Munich (about 6 hours) to work in the office. On Monday I hobbled to the local GP who compared the two legs with a measuring tape (the Germans like that kind of thing) and declared that I had a thrombosis of the leg and organised a prescription and a blood test.

There are no lessons to be learned but I was pretty healthy before the jab and now I'm not. No Good Deed Goes Unpunished and I am reminded by my wife of how fatal blood clots can be. 

Next week I'll have a check-up and go to Munich as I expect I will be a bit better by then. In the meantime, I am handing over a project to a colleague and I've come up with an art idea that I may be able to do with someone who works locally.








Wednesday, 10 August 2022

Guglhupf Geschwader at the Cinema in Munich

 I saw my first film at the cinema in Germany yesterday, This is the latest in a series of crime films set in rural Bavaria. These are based on books by a lady called Rita Falk. Both the films and the books deserve to be better known but I would expect that an English or American version would lose some of the humour.

There is a main character the cop who is Bavarian Bruce Willis and his friend Rudi, they comprise 'the Dream Team'. The other family members, colleagues and friends are always involved in the case or cases as there was a serial murderer in an earlier film. Despite the deaths this is a funny film that celebrates rural Bavaria and its manners and customs.


I saw it at the Sendlinger Tor Cinema which is a great venue and the actors and the writer were there to promote it. There is no way I would have been able to enjoy them talking about working on the film (30 days a year and they produced one during the pandemic) and encouraging people to support local bookshops and not Amazon.

This aspect of Germany is such a revelation. Their vibrant film industry and their humour. Guglhupf Geschwader is doing twice the box office of 'Bullet Train' and I am not surprised. There is no hullabaloo about the promotion of this film, no men dressed in skirts to create attention just hard working actors and writers who enjoy what they are doing.




Tuesday, 9 August 2022

Unexpected Things in the German Language 'KopfKino' and 'Mimik'

 I moved to Germany last year with no job lined up as my wife had an opportunity over there. To get a job and to function well you need to speak and understand German. I continue to learn and I am surprised and fascinated with the culture and activities that Germany has to offer.

One myth is that all the German words are long and there is a shorter English equivalent. In my new job I train people in English who may have English as their 2nd or 3rd language. It's a balance between making the course boring by using too simplistic phrasing or being entertaining and having references they don't understand without explanation. I try and avoid anything that sounds too 'new age' even if I think that the concept works. Often I use the term visualisation to encourage people to share information in pictures or graphs or to rehearse mentally a situation they are going to be involved in. It turns out the Germans have a word kopfkino (head cinema) that does all the work for me and more and is more elegant. Another word I have discovered is Mimik which is German for facial expressions.

Getting past the surface and stereotypes of culture opens up a different game to explore and try out new things. Mark Twain may have complained about the German language but I put that in Mark Twain's nature to tweak the tail of his host country. 





Friday, 5 March 2021

'Hello Kitty' and Alice in Wonderland

 


I watched this today and found it very good. It is simplified for children and I wish it was longer animation than just about 15 minutes. In his lifetime Carroll created a cut-down, children's version of Alice in Wonderland that was intended to be read to and with the child. This fits into the same category but, as an adult, I could appreciate the bits they cut out because they would be boring to young minds and parts they changed. They can always read the book later on but this is visually interesting, funny and challenging. It's a good adaptation and far better than the Pikachu film that my nieces took me to.

This came across my desktop because I had read 'Pure Invention' by Matt Altt which describes how Japanese pop-culture has influenced Western culture. It discusses the impact of films, animation, toys but not music. Music hasn't travelled well. which is strange because they gave us Karaoke. It's a good book for people who are interested in how inventions occur and how they become a fad or something deeper. Sanrio, the makers of 'Hello Kitty' now own the Mister Men which has a similar look and feel to the Hello Kitty culture.



Wednesday, 10 February 2021

Mark Twain and Lewis Carroll - 'The Dream-Brothers'

 

Twain and Carroll – ‘The Dream-Brothers’


Introduction

In my work with organisations, I often recommend the works of Lewis Carroll and Mark Twain to clients and colleagues as a colourful, non-scientific, stylish and imaginative description of how companies deal with change and disruption. ‘Alice in Wonderland’ (Carroll, 1867) describes a situation where things are disordered because nothing has changed and everything works the way it always has. “A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court”, (Twain, 1889) shows what happens if you introduce changes into a system without considering the context and the consequences. A high-level view of their lives and works (see table below) throws up some interesting similarities and differences. Outwardly the quiet Oxford don does not look as though he would have anything in common with the American extrovert apart from their literary success. However, there are opportunities for exploration at a literary and behavioral level that could provide entertainment and education.

 

The table below gives some categories that we can consider in assessing each against the other and how their experiences influenced their lives. For example, they were both interested in the paranormal but had a different view on foreign travel. Their personal connections indicate their variety of interests and curiosity.

  Table 1 – High-Level View of Twain and Carroll

Twain

Carroll

Themes

Change, Disruption, Time, Space and Hierarchy

Change, Disruption, Time, Space and Hierarchy

Modern Influence

Marx Brothers, Freud, W C Fields

Marx Brothers, The Beatles

Marketing Skills

Twain was a great self-promoter with tours and lectures

Carroll was a product marketing specialist. The ‘Alice’ brand was used on items including ‘The Wonderland Postage-Stamp Case’, Biscuit Tins.

Education

Left school and became an apprentice. A lot of self-education from libraries. Writing from an early age.  Spoke German.

Local school, then Rugby, then Oxford as a student then teacher. He was writing from an early age.

Travel

Travelled across the World for book tours and research. Lived abroad frequently.

One trip abroad to Russia and spent college vacations in Eastbourne for many years.

Inventions

Invested in typesetting, He also had patents for a self-pasting scrapbook, a fastener for shirts and a history trivia game.

Created a mechanical bat and a note taking machine to use in the dark, justifying margins on typewriters. He had ideas for ideas for a postal order and double-sided adhesive tape

Interests outside of Writing

Publishing, Travel – his best-selling work in his lifetime was ‘The Innocents Abroad’. The Paranormal – he was a member of the Society for Psychical Research.

Photography, The Theatre, Puzzles, Word Games, Logic and Poetry. He wrote a book on ‘Euclid and his Rivals’. The Paranormal – He was a member of the Society for Psychical Research. 

Other writing

Historical fiction such as ‘Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc’, ‘The Private Life of Adam and Eve’

A number of pamphlets that included vivisection, voting strategies and vaccination.

Connections

Ulysses Grant, Nikola Tesla, P T Barnum, Bram Stoker

The Rosettis, George MacDonald, Ellen Terry

              

They were both extremely productive individuals. The timeline below gives an idea of their output during their lives but does not include all of their work including non-fiction, speeches, pamphlets and correspondence.

                            Figure 1 - Timeline of Lifetime Events and Publications

They met only once at a dinner with a common friend who was George MacDonald, the writer. Twain notes in his autobiography that Carroll was interesting to look at, “for he was the stillest and shyest full-grown man I have ever met except ’Uncle Remus’.  Dr Macdonald and several other lively talkers were present, and the talk went briskly on for a couple of hours, but Carroll sat still all the while except that now and then he answered a question. His answers were brief. I do not remember that he elaborated any of them”. However, he also referred to Carroll as his ‘dream-brother’ which shows the regard he had for Carroll’s work.

 They both used pseudonyms and perhaps these were also dual personas. Mark Twain's real name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens. Before he became a writer, he held a variety of jobs including piloting a steamboat up and down the Mississippi River. Biographer Justin Kaplan suggests that the name ‘Mark Twain’ derived from the common practice of marking up two drinks on credit elsewhere it is suggested it was the cry for a measured river depth of two fathoms (12 feet), which was safe water for a steamboat.  Lewis Carroll’s real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. The name change occurred as follows: Carroll took his original name "Charles Lutwidge" translated this into Latin as "Carolus Ludovicus". This was then translated back into English as "Carroll Lewis" and then reversed to make "Lewis Carroll". This was many years before Google Translate but Carroll, like many students, knew Latin. Aside from his other interests, Carroll was a teacher at Oxford University.  He wanted to keep his personas separate so much that he would refuse letters sent to “Lewis Carroll, Christ Church, Oxford”, claiming no such person lived there.

 The casual observer would describe Twain as the bold risk-taker and Carroll as the more conservative individual. The truth is they were both risk-takers. Carroll paid for the publication of ‘Alice in Wonderland’ himself which meant that he received better royalties but it was a big risk for an unknown Oxford teacher who could not even afford to get married. We cannot imagine the outcome if ‘Alice in Wonderland’ had not turned Carroll into ‘the tycoon of whimsy’ as described in The New Yorker (Gopnik, 1995). He could have been in serious financial trouble. Twain was involved in printing and publishing, and he became an investor in a typesetting invention. This cost him millions in today’s money, and he had to undertake lectures and book tours to pay for the costs and the debts to the investors. Twain and Carroll were both were prepared to back their judgement with their own money.

The Worlds of Wonderland and Camelot

The ‘Alice’ stories and ‘A Connecticut Yankee at the court of King Arthur’ both deal with people who travel into another place where time is different and the habits of the local population are not what they are used to. They are in alternate universes with a particular social structure where the normal rules have been suspended, and they have to work out a way to deal with them.

 Twain’s book was an exploration of utopian fiction looking at the psychology and the social impact of changes to an alien environment. Twain’s hero, Hank Morgan, travels to medieval Camelot via a blow to the head while working in a car factory. He unsuccessfully attempts to introduce modern democratic ideas with devastating results. With Carroll, Alice also enters an unconscious state before she falls down a hole following a white rabbit. In Wonderland she has to come to terms a new set of rules and not the one that she left.  Things do not work out well for her, and she ends up in court.

Their Love of Inventions

Twain was an early adopter of the typewriter and a long-time enthusiast of new science and technology, Twain lost the bulk of his fortune by investing huge sums on a typesetting machine, buying the rights to the apparatus outright in 1889. The machine was overcomplicated and frequently broke down, and “before it could be made to work consistently,” writes the University of Virginia’s Mark Twain library, “the Linotype machine swept the market [Twain] had hoped to corner.”

 Carroll was an early adopter of photography and took pictures of the celebrities of the day such as members of the Royal family, the Rosetti family and Tennyson, the poet laureate. He also came up with ideas for postal orders, queuing systems outside the theatre, voting systems. In this Victorian-era there were so many possibilities due to industrialisation, railways where things could be standardised, invented or improved.

 The advances in typesetting and photography during these times had a similar impact to that of the internet had on modern-day. Before photography, only the rich could get likenesses of themselves via portraits. As typesetting improved more books could become available and literacy would improve.

 It is also noted that Carroll went to the Great Exhibition in London in 1851 and Twain to the 1889 World Exhibition in Paris. These particular exhibitions were used to promote British and American advancement, respectively, to an interested world and attracted attention and visitors.

Influence on Language

Twain and Carroll particularly influenced writers and comedians by their use of language and paradox. We can see their style represented with ‘The Marx Brothers’ who use words to develop comic possibilities and with other comedians who are looking to subvert our certainties or stereotypes such as W.C Fields. Lewis Carroll used language in a colourful way and he invented new words that we use today such as ‘galumph’ and ‘chortle’. This technique of ‘portmanteau words’ is used, particularly in journalism and sociology, for example, metrosexual or chocaholic.  The Marx Brothers and W.C. Fields are a rich source of the type of material produced by Twain and Carroll.

 ‘Who are you going to believe, me or your own eyes?’ Groucho Marx in ‘Duck Soup’ sounding like the Cheshire Cat

 Also, from ‘Duck Soup’ although it sounds like a dialogue with Carroll’s Hatter:

 Labor Minister: The Department of Labor wishes to report that the workers of Freedonia are demanding shorter hours.

Firefly: Very well, then we'll give them shorter hours. We'll start by cutting their lunch hour to 20 minutes.

 From ‘The Innocents Abroad’, ‘I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a week sometimes to make it up’ This could be Groucho Marx dialogue.

 ‘A crowded police docket is the surest of all signs that trade is brisk and money plenty.’ Is it Twain Groucho Marx or W C Fields?

 ‘I once spent a year in Philadelphia, I think it was on a Sunday.’ W. C. Fields observation on time and place. Both Carroll and Twain were fond of time distortion in their writing.

 W C Fields said, ‘I never voted for anybody. I always voted against.’ (Taylor,1967). This would not be out of place in either ‘Alice in Wonderland’ or ‘Duck Soup ‘or ‘Horse Feathers’

 From Lewis Carroll we get the dialogue between the Alice and the Mock Turtle where Alice asks the Mock Turtle what he learned at school and the answer is:

'Reeling and Writhing, of course, to begin with,' the Mock Turtle replied; 'and then the different branches of Arithmetic — Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and Derision.'

 From ‘Horse Feathers’ we have the following discussion about education between Groucho and Chico Marx.

Wagstaff: “As you know, there is constant warfare between the red and white corpuscles. Now then, baboons, what is a corpuscle?

Baravelli: That's easy! First isa captain, then isa lieutenant, then isa corpuscle.

Conclusion

 These two writers provided insight and entertainment in equal measure and continue to enchant. This article does not aim to explore in detail the rationale behind the differences and similarities. Some will be cultural, environmental or individual but it is always interesting to contrast and compare two influential figures who co-existed but did not directly influence each other. We can consider whether this was an America v England effect, Mississippi v Oxford or just different sparks of genius flickering away.

References

Carroll L. 1865. Alice in Wonderland, MacMillan.
Carroll L. 1871. Alice Through the Looking Glass. MacMillan.
Twain M. 1889. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. Chatto and Windus.
Twain M. 1872. Roughing It. American Publishing Company.
Twain M. 1869. The Innocents Abroad. American Publishing Company.
Taylor R. L.1967. W.C. Fields: His Follies and Fortunes. St Martin’s Press.
Gopnik A 1995. Wonderland, 02 October 1995 The New Yorker.