29 April 2017

Nautilus Magazine: Why Doesn’t Ancient Fiction Talk About Feelings?

These examples illustrate Western literature’s gradual progression from narratives that relate actions and events to stories that portray minds in all their meandering, many-layered, self-contradictory complexities. I’d often wondered, when reading older texts: Weren’t people back then interested in what characters thought and felt?

Perhaps people living in medieval societies were less preoccupied with the intricacies of other minds, simply because they didn’t have to be. When people’s choices were constrained and their actions could be predicted based on their social roles, there was less reason to be attuned to the mental states of others (or one’s own, for that matter). The emergence of mind-focused literature may reflect the growing relevance of such attunement, as societies increasingly shed the rigid rules and roles that had imposed order on social interactions. [...]

It’s unlikely that these results arise from underlying genetic differences shared by parents and children—that is, that parents talk more about mental states because they themselves have better mentalizing abilities, which their children in turn are likely to inherit. Evidence for a direct role of language comes from psychologists Jennie Pyers and Ann Senghas, who studied deaf adults exposed to Nicaraguan Sign Language, a language that recently emerged when the Nicaraguan government began educating deaf children together in one national school.2 What began as a simple gesturing system has flowered into an elaborate and complex language, allowing researchers to study the birth and development of an entirely new language and its community.

Haaretz: Why Orthodox Jews Tried and Failed to Block Israel’s First Woman Shariah Court Judge

Khatib, an Arab-Israeli lawyer, was confirmed Tuesday by a Justice Ministry committee responsible for appointing judges (qadis in Arabic) to the nine Islamic courts that adjudicate the country's Islamic family law. Although, with Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked’s support, the committee unanimously appointed Khatib, her appointment represents the fruition of a fraught 22 year struggle against conservative Muslim and Jewish ultra-Orthodox  leadership to open the benches of Israel's Islamic judiciary to women - exposing the complex relationship between Islam, women, and the Jewish state. [...]

From this perspective, Khatib's appointment represents a potential step towards transforming the Islamic courts into secular Israeli institutions. Academic specialists Mousa Abou Ramadan and Yuksel Sezgin have explained that Muslim leadership view patriarchal elements of the Islamic courts as protection for their religion’s authenticity and independence within a Jewish majority state. This attitude is intensified by the framing of Islamic courts as a last bastion of Muslim legal autonomy in Israel. Issues of identity were far less at play in the Palestinian Authority’s Islamic courts, where women became judges without obstruction in 2009. [...]

In a Knesset discussion, MK Issawi Freij (Meretz) explained the Haredi opposition: "They do not want to create a precedent that could return like a boomerang to us in Judaism... If it is possible to appoint a qadiya among the Muslims, which according to Islamic law is permissible, we are creating a precedent for ourselves in Judaism, that tomorrow there will be the demand to appoint female rabbis to rabbinic courts." Orthodox state-funded rabbinic courts in Israel, who have a denominational monopoly on religious legal services for the country’s Jews, do not accept women as judges.

Haaretz: First-ever Photos of Yemen's Jews Stunned the Jewish World

The search for the authentic Jew was a common pursuit among Jewish communities in the 19th century. Many asked themselves the question in one form or another: “Am I really living according to the ways of my ancestors?”

In those years, a young German-Jew who had just turned 30 decided to leave the family business and set off on a journey around the world that would incorporate two of his great passions: photography; and the study of ancient and exotic peoples. Hermann Burchardt decided to use his substantial inheritance to rent an apartment in Damascus, which would serve as the base for his research expeditions and adventures. He had already studied Arabic and Turkish, which he hoped to use to his advantage. [...]

The images were nothing short of a revelation for European Jewry. After a break of thousands of years, there was at last a tangible sign of the existence of the Yemenite Jewish community. It seemed as if the world’s most authentic Jew, who had lived completely isolated from any foreign influence, had finally been found – at least, this is what they believed in Europe. The article so excited the journal’s readership that the photographs were turned into postcards, which were sold and circulated by the thousands.

America Magazine: Ending the death penalty is closer than you think

Opponents of the death penalty got some good news at the end of 2016. A year-end analysis from the Death Penalty Information Center finds that the use of the death penalty fell to historic lows across the United States with 20 inmates executed in 2016. That is the lowest number of executions since 1991, when 14 inmates were executed. [...]

The United States is one of 58 nations, China, Pakistan, Iran,India and Saudi Arabia among them, that have not abolished or otherwise declined to make use of capital punishment. Ms. Rust-Tierney believes the public sentiment away from the death penalty in the United States reflects a growing appreciation that “we don’t need it and the troubles it creates.” [...]

One major reason for the overall national decline was a decrease in Texas, which executed seven inmates this year, a 20-year low, Pew reports. A declining homicide rate in recent years may have contributed to the reduction in capital sentences in Texas, but the state's highest criminal court also sent multiple cases back to trial courts in 2016 because of faulty evidence. [...]

While the numbers were dramatically down, “unfortunately, the 20 executions that took place demonstrate some of the problems with our criminal justice system,” Ms. Clifton said. “This year’s executions were geographically isolated, and many of the executed prisoners had serious mental illnesses or did not receive adequate representation or court review.”

Politico: MEPs increasingly back kicking Viktor Orbán out of EPP

But many in the EPP view Orbán’s crackdown on the Central European University (CEU) as the last straw after a series of measures that went against the letter and the spirit of EU rules — from erecting fences against migrants through mounting an anti-Brussels communication campaign to passing a law targeting NGOs that receive foreign funding.

“We had sympathy for Fidesz, a sister party which did things a bit differently than we did,” said Frank Engel, a Luxembourgish MEP from the EPP.  “Now we think that the best thing they could do is just leave the EPP.” [...]

Whether Orbàn ultimately faces any sanction will depend on the stance of the EPP’s leaders. They have so far appeared cool on the idea of excluding Fidesz, which contributes 11 MEPs to the EPP group in the parliament. [...]

Orbán has long benefitted from leniency within the EPP leadership. He enjoys friendly relations with Joseph Daul, the president of the EPP and the only person with the power to expel Fidesz. Orbán has also benefitted from good relations with the Christian Social Union, an EPP member which is the Bavarian sister party of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats.

Al Jazeera: The case for gender equality in the Muslim world

Two-thirds of the world's illiterate adults are women. Only half of the world's women are employed, compared to three-quarters of the world's men. In most developing countries, female employment is even lower, at around 25 percent. Yet, women spend two and a half times more time and effort than men on unpaid care work and household responsibilities.

The total value of the global employment participation gap and the wage gap between women and men is $17 trillion; in other words, women only have a 36 percent share of global income, measured in purchasing power parity terms. This generates massive inequalities in overall incomes, health and education.  [...]

These challenges are particularly pronounced in the Muslim world, where approximately 65 percent of women are illiterate, compared to 40 percent of men. The UN's Arab Human Development Report points out that in Arab countries, the high rates of gender inequality coincide with a lack of economic opportunities among women. Female labour force participation is slightly less than 24 percent, and among young women, less than 18 percent - the lowest rate among all regions. The share of women in GDP in the Arab region is only about 29 percent, against 50 percent in all developing countries. And the poverty rate is 31.6 percent among women, but 19 percent among men. [...]

The challenges women face in the Muslim world are often enshrined in archaic laws and practices on ownership, early marriage, female genital mutilation, education, healthcare, job opportunities and wages. Yet the irony is that these laws and practices are in violation of the letter and spirit of Islamic teachings on women's rights. 

Political Critique: Marine Le Pen, or the Normalization of the Far-Right

In other words, the task now at hand is not just to show how much of a monster Le Pen is. Rather, the task requires calm evaluation of the points on which her politics reach an audience beyond her political party. This is something being witnessed all over Europe: far-right voices push the agenda to the far-right for the whole of the political spectrum. And this happens even more so when other parties not only incorporate these views out of political opportunism, but also collaborate with extremists.

This clearly happened when the extreme right political party LAOS participated in Lucas Papademos’ administration, despite its openly anti-Semitic views. It also happened when Nicolas Sarkozy adopted far-right views while supposedly condemning the far-right. This phenomenon resulted in tougher stances on immigrant rights in countries like Denmark and Austria, and a general shift to the right in countries where extreme right parties held office, such as in Poland, Slovakia, and Romania. [...]

The process of de-demonisation (dédiabolisation) of Marine Le Pen has started to bear fruit. Journalists working for Le Monde say that they believe it is better to treat the National Front just like any other party, “even though it’s not a party like any other.” Why? Because voters do not like it when they are intimidated, taken by the hand and told that they should avoid bad company. [...]

In the case of Le Pen, the fact that we are dealing with a political rhetoric that now focuses on “our European values” rather than blood or race, means that we are treading on the common ground of the central argument of modern day Islamophobia, which is reproduced across the political spectrum. The idea that France has “too many immigrants” also runs across the political spectrum.

Broadly: Dogs Will Lie to Get What They Want, New Study Says

In other words, more than half of the dogs realized taking the competitive person to the box of sausages would not benefit them in the least, so they lied when asked to show her the food. In fact, two dogs named Arwen and Nelson were so smart, they always led the cooperative person, never the competitive person, to the sausages. Baxter, Cicca, Barni, and Caju also never led the competitive partner to the sausages, although they were less consistent with the cooperative partner. [...]

The question is: Should dog owners start to side eye their pets a little more? Marianne Heberlein, the lead author on the study, suggests maybe so. "A dog still is a loyal, lovely companion," she tells Broadly. "However, the study shows that dogs, like other animals, try to optimize [their] own profit. They seem to know what they want and also can manipulate humans to reach their goal." She recommends owners "be careful and precise in rewarding your dog" as it may have faked a behavior just to get a reward.

Jakub Marian: Europe: Unemployment Rate by Region in 2016

(All three conditions must be fulfilled simultaneously.) Simply put, an unemployed person is someone who currently does not have a job, is in principle capable of having a job, and is actively trying to find a job. Therefore, unemployment statistics do not include people who choose not to seek employment although they would be physically able to, but the number of such people is relatively low (less than 3% of total population in most countries), and a large fraction of them are full-time students.

The following map is based on data by Eurostat from 2016. Note that Eurostat provides annual unemployment rates based on a survey that takes place quarterly, without clearly explaining the methodology used (they probably take the average of the results):