Sunday, January 28, 2024

Niggertown (2010 Remaster)


Genetic analysis of apolipoprotein A-I in two dietary environments





While extensive research on Brain Computer Interface (BCI) was conducted internally, social scientists recognized the importance of testing "Group Think" innovations in a real-time closed society. 

 To study the mind, most neuroscientists agreed that a stylized childhood, characterized by imprints and ingrained symbolistic referentials, would be necessary. In 1963, Edward A. Feigenbaum and Julian Feldman, computer scientists and artificial intelligence researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, published Computers and Thought, the first anthology on artificial intelligence. Notably, the anthology included Marvin Minsky's "A Selected Descriptor-Indexed Bibliography to the Literature on Artificial Intelligence" (1961), which served as a companion to his survey on the field's literature titled "Steps toward Artificial Intelligence." 

Experiments on families and intergenerational attributes concerning a model of 'everyman' and how this E-man might respond as all people do to stimuli ( TV and movies , in these projects).

The Jukes family, a well-known "hill family" from New York, was extensively studied during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. These studies were part of a larger series of family studies, such as the Kallikaks, the Zeros, and the Nams, which were often used to support the concept of eugenics. However, the original study conducted by Richard L. Dugdale focused more on the impact of the environment on criminality, disease, and poverty. One notable figure, Elisha Harris, a doctor and former president of the American Public Health Association, published reports describing Margaret, a resident of Upstate New York, as the "mother of criminals." He went on to label her children as "a race of criminals, paupers, and harlots." In 1874, sociologist Richard L. Dugdale, who was a member of the executive committee of the Prison Association of New York and a colleague of Harris, was assigned to visit jails in upstate New York. During his visit to a jail in Ulster County, he discovered six members of the same "Juke" family (a pseudonym), although they were using different family names. Further investigation revealed that out of 29 male "immediate blood relations," 17 had been arrested and 15 had been convicted of crimes. Dugdale extensively studied the records of inmates in the 13 county jails of New York State, as well as poorhouses and courts, in order to trace the ancestry of the New York hill family and understand the factors contributing to their criminal behavior. His book claimed that Max, a frontiersman and descendant of early Dutch settlers, born between 1720 and 1740, was the ancestor of over 76 convicted criminals, 18 brothel-keepers, 120 prostitutes, more than 200 relief recipients, and two cases of "feeble-mindedness."

No comments:

Post a Comment