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Maybe relevant, from Conversations with Tyler (Ep. 184, with David Bentley Hart):

  COWEN: Let’s say Poland, Slovenia, Czechia, which have a lot of Catholicism in their backgrounds — they seem to be converging on Western norms, living standards much more than, say, the EU members to the East: Bulgaria, Romania.

  HART: Well, they had certain advantages to begin with, too, but better relations. Again, I don’t think it has any particular... To be honest, Polish Catholicism is basically culturally very much like Slavic Orthodoxy. There, you’re going to find that culturally, Catholicism and Orthodoxy are closer to one another in many ways than Catholicism in the East is with Catholicism in the West.

  Trying to draw causal ties between what are very complex social histories, I just think is a mistake. There’s no way of saying one way or the other. Greek democracy flourished in the modern age for a while after Greek independence in the early 19th century, and Greece remains Orthodox, too. Even more than Poland, it is committed to a set of real democratic norms. In Poland, there are stronger reactionary forces at present than there are in Greece.
and also from Ep. 192, with Jacob Mikanowski:

  MIKANOWSKI: [...] I think that idea of an Orthodox disease is maybe a figment of geography more than a deeply cultural matrix that we think. I’m not — I think we could be optimistic about Croatia and Romania simultaneously. Bulgaria maybe too. I’m not sure that I believe in a kind of Orthodox curse. I think it has more to do with how things shook up internally in former Yugoslavia and where those countries are in relationship to that industrial core of Germany, Austria, Switzerland.


Yeah, I also don't think I'd really call Czechia a place with a "lot of Catholicism in its background." It was a hostile top-down imposition from the Austrians, with the consequence that Czechs are largely agnostic/areligious today.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_the_Czech_Republic


What would Czech have if not for Austria? Would it be Protestant or Orthdox?


Prior to re-Catholicization of the 17th century, there was a strong presence of homebrewn Hussite/Brethren Protestantism (mostly Czech-speaking people) and somewhat smaller presence of classical Lutheranism/Calvinism (mostly German-speaking people). There wasn't any clear geographic boundary between those two, the communities were mixed, though there were regional "strongholds" - e.g. Silesia was strongly German-Protestant while southern Moravia was strongly Czech-Catholic.

Orthodox communities, with the exception of ambassadors or foreign businesspeople, weren't a thing in Early Modern Kingdom of Bohemia.


Without Austria it would be about half Catholic, half Protestant with a significant Jewish minority.


I have to say that I met Mikanowski in HS in passing a few times in academic competitions and I never heard anything about him being bigoted in any way whatsoever.


I see that Matthias has responded and issued an apology on his website: https://felleisen.org/matthias/Thoughts/Apology.html


Although weirdly he only apologized for the single incident Matthew described in detail, even though Matthew explained that it was just one example from years of bad behavior.


HN discussion about response: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27544797 although very low quality comments so far.

https://lobste.rs/s/6rnyn9/why_i_no_longer_contribute_racket has some good quality discussion on this topic.


Here are video recordings of similar material, but taught at Google in 2009 by Sussman and Hanson:

https://archive.org/details/adventures-in-advanced-symbolic-...


Whoah, thank you for this, from skimming the lecture videos this seems very close to the class as I remember it.


You might be also interested in checking the post "The Best Textbooks on Every Subject" from LessWrong: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/xg3hXCYQPJkwHyik2/the-best-t... For each topic they look at at least three alternatives and provide a brief argument for their recommendation.


This paper, "Programming by Numbers: A Programming Method for Novices", presents a recipe of how to design recursive functions:

https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254242/1/p_by_numbers.pdf

And the "The Little Schemer" book has a series of exercises that expose recursive thinking:

https://www.amazon.com/Little-Schemer-Daniel-P-Friedman/dp/0...

Hope this helps!


Stephen Dolan's pearl "Fun with semirings" might be relevant:

http://stedolan.net/research/semirings.pdf

But I would also like to know what other resources Neel has to recommend.


If you like Matlab more than Haskell, try https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11768822-graph-algorithm...


What is the current state of collaborating on Anki decks? I see there is the CrowdAnki plug-in – this exports decks to a JSON file, which can be version controlled and uploaded to Github. But how well does this work in practice? I feel it would be nice to have a more integrated way of collaborating on decks.


I took the "learning how to learn" course in Coursera. They discuss Anki and recommend each person makes their own flash cards because that's also part of the learning process.


Sort of related, but on a more humorous note, a short film about a man who has only 1500 words left to live:

https://www.shortoftheweek.com/2016/05/25/1500-words/


This is a set of lecture notes compiled for a third-year computer science course at the University of Nottingham. At a quick glance they seem surprisingly crisp and readable despite being hand-written and rather succinct. Probably a more thorough text on the matter is "Semantics with Applications: A Formal Introduction" [1]. Does anyone have any other recommendations?

[1] http://www.dis.uniroma1.it/~degiacom/CogRobCourse01/NielsonN...


Hello! A more general question: What are some of your favourite resources (books, articles, conferences) on information visualization? I'm familiar with the works of Tufte and Cleveland, but I was curious if you have any other recommendations. Thanks!


For conferences, IEEE InfoVis. For a book, try Tamara Munzner’s Visualization Analysis and Design. https://www.cs.ubc.ca/~tmm/vadbook/


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