Natural Human Rights">Natural Human Rights
Recently, someone sent me a link to a web link to a website that that discusses the “Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” They have a very nicely done video that presents the history of how the Universal Declaration of Human Rights came into being, including historical efforts in different countries to establish laws and doctrines that define and protect these rights. This video is a great introduction to the ideas that define human rights, including the definition and meaning of various concepts such as what is defined by the word “human”, the word “rights” and the phrases “human rights” and “natural human rights.”
So the idea is that Natural Human Rights arose out of the observation that people naturally followed certain laws even if they weren’t told to do so. These were called “natural rights.” It started with “Cyrus the Great” as stated on the webpage of the United for Human Rights website. Quoting from the website just mentioned, it reads, “In 539 B.C., the armies of Cyrus the Great, the first king of ancient Persia, conquered the city of Babylon. But it was his next actions that marked a major advance for Man. He freed the slaves, declared that all people had the right to choose their own religion, and established racial equality. These and other decrees were recorded on a baked-clay cylinder in the Akkadian language with cuneiform script.
Known today as the Cyrus Cylinder, this ancient record has now been recognized as the world’s first charter of human rights.”
It is interesting and one can be proud as an American that we are part of this history of establishing, declaring and defending a set of human rights. These rights were declared and defined in our Declaration of Independence, our Constitution and our Bill of Rights. The United States had declared their independence from the British because, while the British king had recognized the idea of human rights, the United States felt that they must take a stronger stance in defending a set of human rights for our people (or for all people, at least in principal).
What does this mean, if you think about it? Well, it means that people fought and gave their lives for these principles, for these rights, in America, and elsewhere as well, of course. Though, the US Constitution is the oldest written national constitution in use. From this beginning, until now, this has been a defining characteristic of who we are as a country and nation. Presidents are sworn to defend this constitution. One can say that one loves his or her country to the extent to which he or she believes and supports all of these “rights,” because they do define America and who we are. While the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is not a defining characteristic of America, many of the rights in the Universal Declaration are in our Constitution and Bill of Rights.
It has been very perplexing to me to notice that at times, those people or groups, who defend and advocate for these rights, are viewed in a negative light and given negative labels. These are the rights that define us as a country. It seems to be a given that if you love your country you will defend the principles upon which that country is founded and defined. It would make more sense to say that an organization like the American Civil Liberties Union is a defender of these same values and beliefs – the same values that define us as a country. That truly is something that is perplexing to me. Even my left, logical brain, sees contradictions in the way that some people and groups have been viewed, or scorned, for believing in these values and advocating for the defense of these values, or rights. There will always be crises but immediately afterward, we as a nation do realize who we really are and what defines us… that there was always good and moral reasons for establishing these rights for all people and that by writing it into a constitution we can be guided in determining the just thing to do, the best moral decision based on these rights, these principles.
As I had mentioned, it puzzles me when I notice that some of these rights that define us as a country, are found to be inconvenient, disagreeable or when they are challenged and that two people who equally love their country could be on opposite sides of the fence when it comes to the defense of these rights. Specifically, I’d like to refer to the following rights (I will refer to items from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights with the assumption that one can find a similar right specified in our Constitution or Bill of Rights) :
1) Article 5. No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
2) Article 9. No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile. and related to this is,
3) Article 10. Everyone is entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal, in the determination of his rights and obligations and of any criminal charge against him.
I would find it highly immoral to deny any of those rights. Yet, our nation did these things. My left, logical, brain says that is and was morally wrong and unjust. It is embarrassing for anyone who loves America to realize that this did happen and was done.
4) Article 11 – 1 Everyone charged with a penal offence has the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law in a public trial at which he has had all the guarantees necessary for his defense.
5) What is most important to be noticed about Article 19, is that this right of freedom of expression, exists regardless of frontiers. People have gotten angry at those who would protest their countries actions, “on foreign soil” as if that was not their right. It is, though indeed, one might not find it spelled out in our constitution but neither is it’s opposite: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
6) Article 22: “Everyone has the right to social security…”
7) Article 23: “Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favorable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment… and Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.”
Article 25: “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.”
9) It wasn’t clear that any of these specifically define a right to protection against unlawful search and seizure.
I believe in these rights because I think they are necessary for justice and a moral society. Defending and supporting these rights is an expression of righteous behavior and belief. It seems to me that most if not all of these reflect the values of America and as such define who we are as a nation. I believe there are good reasons for all of these rights.
Learning about My Wife’s Culture">Learning about My Wife’s Culture
So for us in America, spring is coming. In another place, so far away, the Persian New Year approaches. It is called No Rouz. There is a great tradition of 12 days of celebration, being with family and gift giving. On Wikipedia, it is spelled Nowruz, meaning “New Day” – that is the name for the Iranian New Year and corresponding traditional celebrations. Nowruz is widely referred to as the Persian New Year.
Continuing from Wikipedia.org:
Nowruz and the spring equinox
The first day on the Iranian calendar falls on the March equinox, the first day of spring. At the time of the equinox, the sun is observed to be directly over the equator, and the north and south poles of the Earth lie along the solar terminator; sunlight is evenly divided between the north and south hemispheres.
So, this is now a time that has greater meaning for me than in so many past years. Yet, we will be apart, my wife and I, on this time of celebration. Sometimes it seems there is Nietzsche’s void that separates us and at other times, I think of Victor Frankl who penned the book, “Man’s Search for Meaning.” He was writing from a concentration camp… and somehow, without knowing where his wife was, as they were separated, he could feel a connection to her.
Pictured left “Sofreyeh Haft Seen”. These things represent good fortune for the coming year: health, posterity, happiness, well-being, and prosperity. This image is taken from the website: Culture of Iran: No-Rooz, The Iranian New Year at Present Times
I joined Moveon.org To put My Moral Values Into Action">I joined Moveon.org To put My Moral Values Into Action
I have to act on my morals and beliefs. It’s one thing to have morals and a internal guide that tells what is right and what is not right. It is different to act on those morals. For me, as a Christian, this is also a reflection of what I am driven to do as a Christian! Moveon.org is just one organization that works for the rights and welfare of all people, for the value of life itself. To value life itself is to fight for the elimination of poverty… to demand a living wage for all, not our immoral minimum wage that exploits hard working people… and access to health care for all! These are my moral values as a Christian. I hope I can make a difference.
I am part of a group in my Church and have felt inspired to do things that involve giving and acting to help others and putting our teaching, our beliefs, our morals into action.
This is what I wrote for my about statement as to why I was joining Moveon.org:”I am a business owner of Future Wave Designs, a NC Web Design and Web Development company, located in Carrboro. I also work a second job to make ends meet when work is slow in web design and development. I have a background in social work. I want to get involved in doing things that make a difference in my community. I feel that I have a moral obligation to work for a more just and fair society that cares about the people, all people, especially the most vulnerable. This is a part of who I am, my values and beliefs.”
Semantics and Syntax">Semantics and Syntax
In earlier postings I have written about the Semantic Web. It is interesting to me that in my recent work in the area of web technologies that there would be such an overlap with my interest in writing and communications. The semantic web technologies are changing the web in very exciting ways. In simple terms this is making the web smarter.
When people communicate and when computers communicate there is a syntax to that communication. Until recently, the semantics of the communication was not made known in a way that computers could understand. Applications on the web have given the impression that they understood what you meant, the semantics, by allowing you to ask questions and seem to get answers in the way of websites or a search engine might respond to your search with this statement, “Did you mean…?” However, in terms of the web, for the most part, none of these websites had any meaning embedded into them, at least nothing that would help a computer program to understand what was on the web page. They just have information to allow a browser to know how to display the content for human viewers to understand.
This leads to the topic of syntax. Syntax is about structure, the structure of sentences and phrases in English. Written communication in English is structured with grammar, spelling and punctuation. Similarly, when we speak much of that structure also exists in the way we speak. Punctuation is articulated, sometimes, with pauses, for example.
A definition if syntax from the website reference.dictionary.com is as follows: “Computers. the grammatical rules and structural patterns governing the ordered use of appropriate words and symbols for issuing commands, writing code, etc., in a particular software application or programming language. “1 So, in terms of the web, we have web pages that are presented in the browser using different languages or markup code. There is also a structure to the way the browser requests the web page from the web server. There are rules that define how this communication must be structured. This is the syntax of the communication.
Semantics is about the meaning of what is being communicated. Before the semantic web started changing things, there was virtually nothing on a web page or in the code underlying a web page to tell a computer anything about the meaning of what was on the web page. The computer, by way of the browser, knew how to display the content but had no understanding, as it were, of the semantics, the meaning of what was being communicated.
The semantic web is not about teaching computers to speak and understand English or any language, per se. Languages are a bit more complex than what would be required by the semantic web. However, this is about including coding the web page with information about the meaning of what is contained on the web page. This semantic code will not be displayed to the viewer but it will be read by computers. Some semantic web applications will involve what is called “natural language processing” but there will be limits and requirements to what can be said or asked.
By including semantic web technology in web pages and in web applications, search engines will better help us find what we are seeking. There are already some semantic search engines out there, such as what you will find at hakia.com In addition, just one other example of how this can help us is with the ability to combine and reuse information from various sources. Information can be pulled in from a number of different sources and used in an entirely new way.
More on this topic will be coming. I find this very exciting.
Live Writer by Microsoft">Live Writer by Microsoft
I just downloaded this tool from Microsoft’s website. It is called Live Writer. I can add various blogs to the application and publish from my desktop. This is a pretty useful tool.
I started adding some of the different plug-ins that Microsoft has for the tool. This feature allowed me to post a map from Bing on my blog. I added a push-pin that showed my home/business location. I can zoom to different levels from street level to a wider view that shows more of the surrounding cities and even more.
There are a large number of useful plug-ins that extend the functionality of the software. These let you include a number of different things in your blog, from video to website images, to content from the various photo sharing sites.
I’ll have to share more when I learn more about the features.
My Poem is accepted for "The Love Book"">My Poem is accepted for "The Love Book"
The poem appears below. I’ll get details soon as to how to order copies and where it is being published, etc.
Captivated
For Elnaz Rezaei Ghalechi
You are the river
that flows through me
like relaxation…
the place I go
for comfort…
the dream that inspires me
and reminds me
of those things I had forgotten
and everything
I see
hear
and feel
is some part
of you.
To be in your presence
is to be
in trance.
By Bruce Whealton
Internet Semantic Web Web 3.0">Internet Semantic Web Web 3.0
Importance of the semantic web for dealing with overwhelming quantity information, data, etc.
Intro to the Semantic Web">Intro to the Semantic Web
Let’s start with a definition of Semantics. Semantics is closely related to syntax. The syntax is how we say something and the semantics is the meaning behind what we say. Take a sentence in English as an example. The sentence is made up of punctuation, spelling, and the letters. The semantics is what the sentence means.
When we talk about syntax and semantics we are talking about communication. The Internet gave a way for computers to communicate with one another. It gave them a voice so that they could talk to one another. However, just as a parrot can mimic human speech, a computer on the web can only mimic human information. It does not understand what the information means.
The web is made up of web pages that use a syntax that tells how to display or present documents or information for us. The need for the semantic web is because computers and the web were not designed to understand the meaning of what is contained on a web page. Computers can recognize the syntax of web pages, i.e. how to display the information on a web page but not the semantics of what is contained on a web page.
The semantic web is about things, people, events, places and any concept you can think about. The semantic web is not only about understanding the meaning of what is contained on a web page but how these things are related to one another. Two technologies for embedding semantic information in web pages are microformats and RDFa. So, this is not about something that will happen in the future, it is about technologies that exist now… and are happening now.
Once a computer and the web can understand what a person, a place and an event is, it can start helping you interact with these things. A good example is in semantic web searches. Search engines would be more accurate. You could tell the search engines whether you are searching for a person, a place or a song. They wouldn’t only depend on keywords but also the semantics contained within web pages. It is about helping computers get us what we want.
See http://microformats.org/about and http://rdfa.info/about by the web consortium.
Post by Bruce Whealton
http://futurewavedesigns.com
http://brucewhealton.com

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