![]() | September 21, 2000 | ![]() |
![]() September 21, 2000. A pattern that has recently come to my attention, because of my recent discussions about politics and economics with my mother, is social patterns and anthropologic patterns. Social patterns would include that there is always a class system in a society, and there is no way to change that. Other social topics that are patterns are racism, prejudice, hunger, and the list goes on. So, what I am trying to say is that because of these patterns and nature's basic law, we cannot grow out of or change these problems in our society or the world. This does not mean that we cannot help the situation; it only means that we can never deplete the problem to nothing. When I was thinking anthropology I was actually thinking about things like growth (height) of humans over the period of their life. If we would map out height of humans on a graph it would all have patterns within the graphs, and if we looked at the statistically we would conclude that there is a sure pattern to the graphs when looked at as a population. The idea of Normal Distribution is a pattern is Statistics, which says that in situations where a population is "counted" many situations will show a Normal Distribution (the frequency of people within distributed standard deviations). Patterns are everywhere, and always have been, and they won't go away It's a tragedy, how come Shakespeare didn't write a play on patterns? | Journal Entries September 7, 2000 September 12, 2000 September 15, 2000 September 19, 2000 September 21, 2000 September 23, 2000 September 26, 2000 September 27, 2000 September 28, 2000 September 29, 2000 September 30, 2000 October 2, 2000 October 3, 2000 October 4, 2000 October 5, 2000 October 7, 2000 October 8, 2000 October 9, 2000 October 10, 2000 October 11, 2000 October 12, 2000 October 13, 2000 October 15, 2000 October 17, 2000 October 18, 2000 October 20, 2000 October 21, 2000 October 24, 2000 October 25, 2000 October 26, 2000 October 27, 2000 October 28, 2000 October 29, 2000 October 31, 2000 November 1, 2000 November 2, 2000 November 4, 2000 November 7, 2000 November 9, 2000 November 10, 2000 November 12, 2000 November 13, 2000 November 14, 2000 November 16, 2000 November 17, 2000 November 18, 2000 November 21, 2000 November 22, 2000 November 23, 2000 November 24, 2000 November 27, 2000 November 28, 2000 November 29, 2000 |