Arts, Books

Book Club: Your Driver is Waiting

SYNOPSIS

Damani is a South Asian taxi driver for a ride-share app who lives in Toronto. Her father died six months ago and she barely sleeps as she picks up every job going, desperate to support her severely depressed mother.

The streets are alive with protests against injustice, but Damani feels like a background character in her own life. She struggles to make ends meet while feeling utterly broken emotionally.

But when she meets beautiful, brave and brilliant Jolene, Damani cannot deny the intense connection between them and finally feels like she’s come back to life.

However, despite Jolene’s passionately declared activism and bold claims about being an ally, Jolene is still a wealthy white woman who will never truly understand where Damani comes from. It’s superb on race, equality, privilege and grief. Funny, angry, and beautifully narrated; a compulsive page-turner.  

Your Driver is Waiting by Priya Guns is published by Atlantic, 320pp

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Arts, Psychology, Science

Can I raise my IQ?

IQ SCORE

Intro: We revere intelligence and award “smart” people with a high IQ score, but are we actually born with our intelligence, and can we learn to be smarter?

THE IQ (Intelligence Quotient) score is an internationally-accepted measure of total brain power, calculated via a series of tests. These tests usually involve numeracy, spotting patterns, and logic – so if your forte lies in practical problem solving, negotiating with others, or creativity, the chances are you won’t excel at an IQ test.

Intelligence has no clear definition. Like beauty or personality, it’s relatively subjective, and this is one reason why IQ scores are problematic.

Another issue is that IQ tests have historically been created by (mostly) men in Europe and North America – and are skewed in favour of people from Western culture. Someone from a community that values storytelling, for example, may have great verbal reasoning and memory, yet their overall IQ score might be low because they flopped on the number puzzles.

So, although scientists have worked hard to make tests reliable and relevant across cultures, IQ tests have a limited use. For mentally taxing jobs such as programming, a test is an effective barometer for picking the best candidate. However, if we were patients given the choice between a 22-year-old novice surgeon with a genius IQ and a 55-year-old expert with countless surgical operations under their belt, we will all know who to choose.

Experience, knowledge, social skills, drive, and conscientiousness – all of which could all be considered intelligence – are not accounted for in the conventional IQ test. Even though young adults tend to get the best overall IQ scores, just like a fine wine, many of our abilities continue to improve with age.

Good IQ score or not, everyone can improve their cognitive powers, regardless of their age, schooling, and past experience. Don’t be sold on quick fixes: brain training games and programs will help you get better at those games and tasks, but rarely translate into any practical thinking powers. To get really good at something – be it memorising place names, coding software, or crafting musical compositions – you’ll need to practise that particular skill for many hours.

IQ’S disturbing history

The first intelligence tests were devised by French psychologist Alfred Binet in the early 1900s as a benevolent way to find the least able children who needed special schooling. A strong believer in the idea that intellectual prowess was not set in stone and could be improved with teaching, practice, and discipline, Binet insisted that intelligence tests should never be used “for ranking [people] according to mental worth”.

Soon after his death in 1911 however, Binet’s test, later named “IQ” tests, were seized by scientists in the eugenics movement who reformulated it for adults, labelling those who scored poorly as “feeble-minded” or “degenerate”. In the early 1900s, 30 US states passed laws that meant low-scoring people could be forcibly sterilised. By the middle of the 20th century, around 60,000 people had been sterilised against their will.

Adolf Hitler also espoused the IQ test and created his own stylised version. Hundreds of thousands of low-scoring people were duly sterilised or executed in Nazi Germany.

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Arts, History, Science

Quantum Leaps: Albert Einstein

1879–1955

OF the essays written by Einstein in 1905, arguably the most influential was his enunciation of a “special” theory of relativity, which advanced the idea that the laws of physics are actually identical to different spectators, regardless of their position, as long as they are moving at a constant speed in relation to each other. Above all, the speed of light is constant. It is simply that the classical laws of mechanics appear to be obeyed in our normal lives because the speeds involved are insignificant.

The Speed of Light

But the implications of this principle if the observers are moving at very different speeds are bizarre and normal indicators of velocity such as distance and time become warped. Indeed, absolute space and time do not exist. Therefore, if a person were to theoretically to travel in a vehicle in space close to the speed of light, everything would look normal to them, but another person standing on earth waiting for them to return would notice something very unusual. The space ship would appear to be getting shorter in the direction of travel. Moreover, whilst time would continue as “normal” on earth, a watch telling the time in the ship would be going slower from the earth’s perspective even though it would seem correct to the traveller (because the faster an object is moving the slower time moves). This difference would only become apparent when the vessel returned to earth and clocks were compared.

If the observer on earth were able to measure the mass of the ship as it moved, he would also notice it getting heavier too.

Ultimately, nothing could move faster than or equal to the speed of light because at that point it would have infinite mass, no length, and time would stand still.

A General Theory of Relativity

From 1907 to 1915, Einstein developed his special theory into a “general” theory of relativity which included equating accelerating forces and gravitational forces. Implications of this extension of his special theory suggested light rays would be bent by gravitational attraction and electromagnetic radiation wavelengths would be increased under gravity. Moreover, mass, and the resultant gravity, warps space and time, which would otherwise be “flat”, are turned into curved paths which other masses (for example, the moons of planets) caught within the field of the distortion follow.

Amazingly, Einstein’s predictions for special and general relativity were gradually proven by experimental evidence. The most celebrated of these was the measurement taken during a solar eclipse in 1919 which proved the sun’s gravitational field really did bend the light emitted from stars behind it on its way to earth. It was the verification which led to Einstein’s world fame and wide acceptance of his new definition of physics.

Einstein spent much of the rest of his life trying to create a unified theory of electromagnetic, gravitational and nuclear fields but failed. It was at least in keeping with his own remark of 1921 that “discovery in the grand manner is for young people and hence for me is a thing of the past.”

E=MC²

Fortunately, then, he had completed three other papers in his youth (in 1905) in addition to his one on the special theory of relativity! One of these included the now famous deduction which equated energy to mass in the formula E=mc² [where E=energy, m=mass and c=the speed of light]. This understanding was vital in the development of nuclear energy and weapons, where only a small amount of atomic mass (when released to multiply by a factor of the speed of light squared under appropriate conditions) could unleash huge amounts of energy.

The third paper described Brownian motion, and the final paper made use of Planck’s quantum theory in explaining the phenomenon of the “photoelectric” effect, helping to confirm quantum theory in the process.

Further Achievements

Almost inevitably, Einstein was also drawn into the atomic bomb race. He was asked by fellow scientists in 1939 to warn the US President of the danger of Germany creating an atomic bomb. Einstein himself had been a German citizen, but had renounced his citizenship in favour of Switzerland, and ultimately America, having moved there in 1933 following the elevation of Hitler to power in his home country. Roosevelt’s response to Einstein’s warning was to initiate the Manhattan project to create an American bomb first.

After the war Einstein spent time trying to encourage nuclear disarmament.

In 1922, Albert Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics.

. Science Book

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