Thursday, December 30, 2010

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Friday, December 17, 2010

Critical thinking in Islam, Evolution debate

1.       Stumbled upon some ongoing debates flying around in the world and the need to respond to this sort of thinking. Also, to clarify my own thoughts to serve as a reference point, as doubtless these are very influential positions for thinking that needs a fair bit of preparation for counterpoints and counterarguments.

2.       Positive side is there needs many more people to embody Irshad Manji’s spirit of critical thinking. Project Ijtihad sounds like a fairly good way to promote the idea of learning, education, thinking amongst all, particularly ringing true for many impoverished muslims throughout the world. If there is a way to promote Islam, good ethics, belief in Allah though rationalising and understanding of the beautiful religion, so it must be done – and this looks like a fairly good way for execution. So, remember the name – Irshad Manji.

3.       My worry is that it leads people away, rather than towards spirituality. Spirituality is a necessary component in life, belief in the oneness of God, belief in the Messenger giving us the Quran and his traditions leaving us an example for good that we should aspire to. Critical thinking at one’s own individual level does not do this.

4.       And this leads then to this discussion on evolution giving humanity the framework for moral guidance, after studying the moral structure of animals, including that of chimpanzees. Results are interesting, but the basis is already a hypothesis that if animals have this social structure, therefore humanity being evolved from chimpanzees would also have developed this sort of moral structure. Somehow, this is a presupposition that assumes too much. Even allowing that evolutionary evidence, the jump from animal kingdom to mankind ‘enlightenment’ is too large to support this thesis. Intellectual capacity alone as a means to invent moral guidance in the form of religiosity is an assumption by itself. I suppose if you believe that evolution can transform e v e r y t h i n g, then everything is possible, and there is no longer a theoretical basis for God, and therefore God doesn’t exist. Atheism is a belief, and science has nothing to do with it. The oft-quoted absence of evidence? Look at the scientific evidences of the universes around us – space, earth, biology, micro-biology, molecular structure – the scale of those worlds, each perfection by itself, each architecture on a scale that no one human mind can understand the entire co-mingling, interacting environment of these worlds. Isn’t this enough evidence?

5.       It is this kind of delusion that drives arrogant claims by militant atheists such as Dawkins that religion is a falsehood. The other side of the coin though, is that revealed books have too much accumulated wisdom within it that practically blows out these arguments of war and amorality on religion, and really reinforces the existence of God, the identity of which is revealed through selected messengers. This is faith. So is atheism. Given free will, you can then choose which side you want to stand on. Islam allows this diversity of opinion, and the critical thinking, even at this level of debate. This may go over many people’s head though, and the easy answer will be that this needs a death penalty for inducing confusion amongst the masses, but the right response is to rebut these misleading points.

6.       If science is so right that morality is induced in the genes, nothing but blind and consistent programming machine for human reactions, why then the need for policemen to enforce order? If religion is so wrong as the source of right and wrong, why would civilizations emerge where religions and beliefs thrived and falter correspondingly when they do?

 

 

http://www.irshadmanji.com/im-science-and-the-spirit

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/17/morals-without-god/?scp=3&sq=The%20Stone&st=cse

 

 

===================

 

October 17, 2010, 5:15 pm

Morals Without God?

By FRANS DE WAAL

The StoneThe Stone is a forum for contemporary philosophers on issues both timely and timeless.

Tags:

biology, Ethics, Evolution, morals, Philosophy, primates

I was born in Den Bosch, the city after which Hieronymus Bosch named himself. [1] This obviously does not make me an expert on the Dutch painter, but having grown up with his statue on the market square, I have always been fond of his imagery, his symbolism, and how it relates to humanity’s place in the universe. This remains relevant today since Bosch depicts a society under a waning influence of God.

His famous triptych with naked figures frolicking around — “The Garden of Earthly Delights” — seems a tribute to paradisiacal innocence. The tableau is far too happy and relaxed to fit the interpretation of depravity and sin advanced by puritan experts. It represents humanity free from guilt and shame either before the Fall or without any Fall at all. For a primatologist, like myself, the nudity, references to sex and fertility, the plentiful birds and fruits and the moving about in groups are thoroughly familiar and hardly require a religious or moral interpretation. Bosch seems to have depicted humanity in its natural state, while reserving his moralistic outlook for the right-hand panel of the triptych in which he punishes — not the frolickers from the middle panel — but monks, nuns, gluttons, gamblers, warriors, and drunkards.

Garden of Earthly Delights ParkHieronymus Bosch Hieronymus Bosch’s “Garden of Earthly Delights” depicts hundreds of erotic naked figures carrying or eating fruits, but is also full of references to alchemy, the forerunner of chemistry. The figures on the right are embedded in glass tubes typical of a bain-marie, while the two birds supposedly symbolize vapors.

Five centuries later, we remain embroiled in debates about the role of religion in society. As in Bosch’s days, the central theme is morality. Can we envision a world without God? Would this world be good? Don’t think for one moment that the current battle lines between biology and fundamentalist Christianity turn around evidence. One has to be pretty immune to data to doubt evolution, which is why books and documentaries aimed at convincing the skeptics are a waste of effort. They are helpful for those prepared to listen, but fail to reach their target audience. The debate is less about the truth than about how to handle it. For those who believe that morality comes straight from God the creator, acceptance of evolution would open a moral abyss.

Our Vaunted Frontal Lobe

Echoing this view, Reverend Al Sharpton opined in a recent videotaped debate: “If there is no order to the universe, and therefore some being, some force that ordered it, then who determines what is right or wrong? There is nothing immoral if there’s nothing in charge.” Similarly, I have heard people echo Dostoevsky’s Ivan Karamazov, exclaiming that “If there is no God, I am free to rape my neighbor!”

Perhaps it is just me, but I am wary of anyone whose belief system is the only thing standing between them and repulsive behavior. Why not assume that our humanity, including the self-control needed for livable societies, is built into us? Does anyone truly believe that our ancestors lacked social norms before they had religion? Did they never assist others in need, or complain about an unfair deal? Humans must have worried about the functioning of their communities well before the current religions arose, which is only a few thousand years ago. Not that religion is irrelevant — I will get to this — but it is an add-on rather than the wellspring of morality.

Deep down, creationists realize they will never win factual arguments with science. This is why they have construed their own science-like universe, known as Intelligent Design, and eagerly jump on every tidbit of information that seems to go their way. The most recent opportunity arose with the Hauser affair. A Harvard colleague, Marc Hauser, has been accused of eight counts of scientific misconduct, including making up his own data. Since Hauser studied primate behavior and wrote about morality, Christian Web sites were eager to claim that “all that people like Hauser are left with are unsubstantiated propositions that are contradicted by millennia of human experience” (Chuck Colson, Sept. 8, 2010). A major newspaper asked “Would it be such a bad thing if Hausergate resulted in some intellectual humility among the new scientists of morality?” (Eric Felten, Aug. 27, 2010). Even a linguist could not resist this occasion to reaffirm the gap between human and animal by warning against “naive evolutionary presuppositions.”

These are rearguard battles, however. Whether creationists jump on this scientific scandal or linguists and psychologists keep selling human exceptionalism does not really matter. Fraud has occurred in many fields of science, from epidemiology to physics, all of which are still around. In the field of cognition, the march towards continuity between human and animal has been inexorable — one misconduct case won’t make a difference. True, humanity never runs out of claims of what sets it apart, but it is a rare uniqueness claim that holds up for over a decade. This is why we don’t hear anymore that only humans make tools, imitate, think ahead, have culture, are self-aware, or adopt another’s point of view.

If we consider our species without letting ourselves be blinded by the technical advances of the last few millennia, we see a creature of flesh and blood with a brain that, albeit three times larger than a chimpanzee’s, doesn’t contain any new parts. Even our vaunted prefrontal cortex turns out to be of typical size: recent neuron-counting techniques classify the human brain as a linearly scaled-up monkey brain.[2] No one doubts the superiority of our intellect, but we have no basic wants or needs that are not also present in our close relatives. I interact on a daily basis with monkeys and apes, which just like us strive for power, enjoy sex, want security and affection, kill over territory, and value trust and cooperation. Yes, we use cell phones and fly airplanes, but our psychological make-up remains that of a social primate. Even the posturing and deal-making among the alpha males in Washington is nothing out of the ordinary.

The Pleasure of Giving

Charles Darwin was interested in how morality fits the human-animal continuum, proposing in “The Descent of Man”: “Any animal whatever, endowed with well-marked social instincts … would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as soon as its intellectual powers had become as well developed … as in man.”

Unfortunately, modern popularizers have strayed from these insights. Like Robert Wright in “The Moral Animal,” they argue that true moral tendencies cannot exist — not in humans and even less in other animals — since nature is one hundred percent selfish. Morality is just a thin veneer over a cauldron of nasty tendencies. Dubbing this position “Veneer Theory” (similar to Peter Railton’s “moral camouflage”), I have fought it ever since my 1996 book “Good Natured.” Instead of blaming atrocious behavior on our biology (“we’re acting like animals!”), while claiming our noble traits for ourselves, why not view the entire package as a product of evolution? Fortunately, there has been a resurgence of the Darwinian view that morality grew out of the social instincts. Psychologists stress the intuitive way we arrive at moral judgments while activating emotional brain areas, and economists and anthropologists have shown humanity to be far more cooperative, altruistic, and fair than predicted by self-interest models. Similarly, the latest experiments in primatology reveal that our close relatives will do each other favors even if there’s nothing in it for themselves.

ChimpanzeesFrans de Waal Maintaining a peaceful society is one of the tendencies underlying human morality that we share with other primates, such as chimpanzees. After a fight between two adult males, one offers an open hand to his adversary. When the other accepts the invitation, both kiss and embrace.

Chimpanzees and bonobos will voluntarily open a door to offer a companion access to food, even if they lose part of it in the process. And capuchin monkeys are prepared to seek rewards for others, such as when we place two of them side by side, while one of them barters with us with differently colored tokens. One token is “selfish,” and the other “prosocial.” If the bartering monkey selects the selfish token, it receives a small piece of apple for returning it, but its partner gets nothing. The prosocial token, on the other hand, rewards both monkeys. Most monkeys develop an overwhelming preference for the prosocial token, which preference is not due to fear of repercussions, because dominant monkeys (who have least to fear) are the most generous.

Even though altruistic behavior evolved for the advantages it confers, this does not make it selfishly motivated. Future benefits rarely figure in the minds of animals. For example, animals engage in sex without knowing its reproductive consequences, and even humans had to develop the morning-after pill. This is because sexual motivation is unconcerned with the reason why sex exists. The same is true for the altruistic impulse, which is unconcerned with evolutionary consequences. It is this disconnect between evolution and motivation that befuddled the Veneer Theorists, and made them reduce everything to selfishness. The most quoted line of their bleak literature says it all: “Scratch an ‘altruist,’ and watch a ‘hypocrite’ bleed.”[3]

It is not only humans who are capable of genuine altruism; other animals are, too. I see it every day. An old female, Peony, spends her days outdoors with other chimpanzees at the Yerkes Primate Center’s Field Station. On bad days, when her arthritis is flaring up, she has trouble walking and climbing, but other females help her out. For example, Peony is huffing and puffing to get up into the climbing frame in which several apes have gathered for a grooming session. An unrelated younger female moves behind her, placing both hands on her ample behind and pushes her up with quite a bit of effort, until Peony has joined the rest.

We have also seen Peony getting up and slowly move towards the water spigot, which is at quite a distance. Younger females sometimes run ahead of her, take in some water, then return to Peony and give it to her. At first, we had no idea what was going on, since all we saw was one female placing her mouth close to Peony’s, but after a while the pattern became clear: Peony would open her mouth wide, and the younger female would spit a jet of water into it.

calming embraceFrans de Waal A juvenile chimpanzee reacts to a screaming adult male on the right, who has lost a fight, by offering a calming embrace in an apparent expression of empathy.

Such observations fit the emerging field of animal empathy, which deals not only with primates, but also with canines, elephants, even rodents. A typical example is how chimpanzees console distressed parties, hugging and kissing them, which behavior is so predictable that scientists have analyzed thousands of cases. Mammals are sensitive to each other’s emotions, and react to others in need. The whole reason people fill their homes with furry carnivores and not with, say, iguanas and turtles, is because mammals offer something no reptile ever will. They give affection, they want affection, and respond to our emotions the way we do to theirs.

Mammals may derive pleasure from helping others in the same way that humans feel good doing good. Nature often equips life’s essentials — sex, eating, nursing — with built-in gratification. One study found that pleasure centers in the human brain light up when we give to charity. This is of course no reason to call such behavior “selfish” as it would make the word totally meaningless. A selfish individual has no trouble walking away from another in need. Someone is drowning: let him drown. Someone cries: let her cry. These are truly selfish reactions, which are quite different from empathic ones. Yes, we experience a “warm glow,” and perhaps some other animals do as well, but since this glow reaches us via the other, and only via the other, the helping is genuinely other-oriented.

Bottom-Up Morality

A few years ago Sarah Brosnan and I demonstrated that primates will happily perform a task for cucumber slices until they see others getting grapes, which taste so much better. The cucumber-eaters become agitated, throw down their measly veggies and go on strike. A perfectly fine food has become unpalatable as a result of seeing a companion with something better.

We called it inequity aversion, a topic since investigated in other animals, including dogs. A dog will repeatedly perform a trick without rewards, but refuse as soon as another dog gets pieces of sausage for the same trick. Recently, Sarah reported an unexpected twist to the inequity issue, however. While testing pairs of chimps, she found that also the one who gets the better deal occasionally refuses. It is as if they are satisfied only if both get the same. We seem to be getting close to a sense of fairness.

Such findings have implications for human morality. According to most philosophers, we reason ourselves towards a moral position. Even if we do not invoke God, it is still a top-down process of us formulating the principles and then imposing those on human conduct. But would it be realistic to ask people to be considerate of others if we had not already a natural inclination to be so? Would it make sense to appeal to fairness and justice in the absence of powerful reactions to their absence? Imagine the cognitive burden if every decision we took needed to be vetted against handed-down principles. Instead, I am a firm believer in the Humean position that reason is the slave of the passions. We started out with moral sentiments and intuitions, which is also where we find the greatest continuity with other primates. Rather than having developed morality from scratch, we received a huge helping hand from our background as social animals.

At the same time, however, I am reluctant to call a chimpanzee a “moral being.” This is because sentiments do not suffice. We strive for a logically coherent system, and have debates about how the death penalty fits arguments for the sanctity of life, or whether an unchosen sexual orientation can be wrong. These debates are uniquely human. We have no evidence that other animals judge the appropriateness of actions that do not affect themselves. The great pioneer of morality research, the Finn Edward Westermarck, explained what makes the moral emotions special: “Moral emotions are disconnected from one’s immediate situation: they deal with good and bad at a more abstract, disinterested level.” This is what sets human morality apart: a move towards universal standards combined with an elaborate system of justification, monitoring and punishment.

Related
More From The Stone

Read previous contributions to this series.

At this point, religion comes in. Think of the narrative support for compassion, such as the Parable of the Good Samaritan, or the challenge to fairness, such as the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard, with its famous conclusion “The last will be first, and the first will be last.” Add to this an almost Skinnerian fondness of reward and punishment — from the virgins to be met in heaven to the hell fire that awaits sinners — and the exploitation of our desire to be “praiseworthy,” as Adam Smith called it. Humans are so sensitive to public opinion that we only need to see a picture of two eyes glued to the wall to respond with good behavior, which explains the image in some religions of an all-seeing eye to symbolize an omniscient God.

The Atheist Dilemma

Over the past few years, we have gotten used to a strident atheism arguing that God is not great (Christopher Hitchens) or a delusion (Richard Dawkins). The new atheists call themselves “brights,” thus hinting that believers are not so bright. They urge trust in science, and want to root ethics in a naturalistic worldview.

While I do consider religious institutions and their representatives — popes, bishops, mega-preachers, ayatollahs, and rabbis — fair game for criticism, what good could come from insulting individuals who find value in religion? And more pertinently, what alternative does science have to offer? Science is not in the business of spelling out the meaning of life and even less in telling us how to live our lives. We, scientists, are good at finding out why things are the way they are, or how things work, and I do believe that biology can help us understand what kind of animals we are and why our morality looks the way it does. But to go from there to offering moral guidance seems a stretch.

Even the staunchest atheist growing up in Western society cannot avoid having absorbed the basic tenets of Christian morality. Our societies are steeped in it: everything we have accomplished over the centuries, even science, developed either hand in hand with or in opposition to religion, but never separately. It is impossible to know what morality would look like without religion. It would require a visit to a human culture that is not now and never was religious. That such cultures do not exist should give us pause.

Bosch struggled with the same issue — not with being an atheist, which was not an option — but science’s place in society. The little figures in his paintings with inverted funnels on their heads or the buildings in the form of flasks, distillation bottles, and furnaces reference chemical equipment.[4] Alchemy was gaining ground yet mixed with the occult and full of charlatans and quacks, which Bosch depicted with great humor in front of gullible audiences. Alchemy turned into science when it liberated itself from these influences and developed self-correcting procedures to deal with flawed or fabricated data. But science’s contribution to a moral society, if any, remains a question mark.

Other primates have of course none of these problems, but even they strive for a certain kind of society. For example, female chimpanzees have been seen to drag reluctant males towards each other to make up after a fight, removing weapons from their hands, and high-ranking males regularly act as impartial arbiters to settle disputes in the community. I take these hints of community concern as yet another sign that the building blocks of morality are older than humanity, and that we do not need God to explain how we got where we are today. On the other hand, what would happen if we were able to excise religion from society? I doubt that science and the naturalistic worldview could fill the void and become an inspiration for the good. Any framework we develop to advocate a certain moral outlook is bound to produce its own list of principles, its own prophets, and attract its own devoted followers, so that it will soon look like any old religion.


Frans de Waal’s essay is the subject of this week’s forum discussion among the humanists and scientists at On the Human, a project of the National Humanities Center.

Also, view an excerpt from a Bloggingheads.tv discussion about this post between Frans de Waal and Robert Wright, author of “The Moral Animal.”


Or watch the entire discussion at Bloggingheads.tv.


NOTES

[1] Also known as s’Hertogenbosch, this is a 12th-century provincial capital in the Catholic south of the Netherlands. Bosch lived from circa 1450 until 1516.

[2] Herculano-Houzel, Suzana (2009). The human brain in numbers: A linearly scaled-up primate brain. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 3: 1-11.

[3] Ghiselin, Michael (1974). The Economy of Nature and the Evolution of Sex. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

[4] Dixon, Laurinda (2003). Bosch. London: Phaidon.


Frans de Waal

Frans B. M. de Waal is a biologist interested in primate behavior. He is C. H. Candler Professor in Psychology, and Director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center at Emory University, in Atlanta, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences. His latest book is “The Age of Empathy.”

 

Monday, December 13, 2010

Continual increase of political sophistication, complexity and fragmentation

1.       In the “Menang” dimension, to exercise leadership, it is necessary to be articulate and convincing on a personal interaction level, as well as a mass public policy orientation level. There is this level of wisdom involved, exercising principles of life that includes humanity, as guided by Allah as ordained in the Quran and His Mesenger. Without this guidance, we will forever seem lost, turning around and around and unable to find the direction and spiritual guidance we so require to live our life for the benefit of mankind as encapsulated by the Ayat which requires to be khilafatu fil ‘Ardh.

2.       It is obvious that going back to the Quran, we accept that while some aspects of life which is rejected eg that of excessive capitalism and all-encompassing tolerant liberalism which promotes LBGT, there are solutions to this which takes into account the depths of directionlessness of the people in providing solutions for society’s problems. Thus, RS is a solution, even when zina is one of the kabaair, but it’s not a deed of the daei to judge the fate of a person, even one who has grossly erred. At the same time, prevention in continual awareness against zina must be promoted.

3.       It is within this context that some news items of growing ‘sophistication’ of certain segments in society must be assessed wrt to the existing static movement of the main body of society, particularly that of the Malay society. The impetus must be on growing a middle class of Malays who still safeguard the importance of Islam on the basis of rationalism, not emotional pull which triggers reactionaries like that of a jihadi – and in later years sees that the idealism was misplaced. Islam is a pure rationalizing force which brings people out of the jahiliyyah, and Allah’s words are our guidance, and we continuously seek His blessings into the things that we do and guides us in what we’d want to execute, to bring about the goodness and peace in this world. This makes it a powerful proselytizing force, which balances the excessive and instinctive abuse of primal instincts of nafsu and whatever the base cravings of the heart entail. It is a moderating factor, which balances the dunyaa and the akhirah, and sufficient wealth and spirituality, and shapes its adherents and fundamentalists ideal traits for leadership.

4.       So, without this base guideline, when someone like Malik Imtiaz Sarwar and RPK wants to shape a third force, it’s absolutely naïve to think they can win. I’m not sure they will even get their deposits should they stand for election. As ideologically impoverished as PKR is, in the shape of DSAI is someone Islamists, including Nik Aziz, see as fulfilling a certain profile of Islamic leadership (although I’m not too sure he can pull this off, and whether he has crossed the line too far in too many instances to return,.. ie has he sold out too much?).

5.       Scenario planning is important in this respect, and continual monitoring of these moving, dynamic dimensions is necessary to understand where the forces will be realigned in the coming mid-term future of 3-5 years. I would think that PAS has the necessary sophistication to deliver and pander to the differing societal requirements with the right demographic orientation ie Malay, and PKR, beyond Anwar is getting to be something of a joke. That leaves DAP as the joker in the pack, and again without majority support, and wanting to remain true to its socialist, secular principles will just be a force in urban areas and a fringe party everywhere else. Where would the swing go in the next GE?  There isn’t much choice it seems, BN will win. And they will win big if PAS remains on the fringes and abdicates its leadership credentials to others.

 

 

 

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Disequilibrium

Resolution against disequilibrium
  1. Quick thinking on your feet, rationalisation, and then speed of execution is important. Risk mitigation, opportunity realisation, sharing of benefits with others and not being too self-centred, firmness of position. All these are important facets of the thought processes taking place mentally when assessing something new.
  2. When these complexities are arrested or deferred on the basis of procrastination, then all else fails to function as everything is left hanging. Sort of the multi-coloured rainbow roulette of the Mac, or the infamous hourglass of Windows. Only when resolution is forthcoming is everything rebooted, so to speak.
  3. That is how I must approach the disequilibrium of the new corner house. Lots of other things hinges on this resolution.
Cant see Roy turning this around
  1. Roy is at it again. I think the last full game that I watched was the 2-0 defeat against Everton. He's utterly hopeless.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Tribute to Tun Razak and Tun Ismail and the NEP's future, and by extension our future.

1.       We live in strange times in Malaysia, or perhaps not so strange. There’s such a thick miasma on all the Malay rights and ketuanan issues that it’s difficult to take a principled stand on what things should be, and even more difficult would be to decide on what things must be in the future. It is in this respect I feel the need to pen some thoughts on Tun Razak’s legacy, (after all I take this heavily jammed road named after him everyday!) and that of his purported ‘thinktank’ of a deputy, Tun Ismail (name of a place where I was brought up).

2.       Back in the 60s, Malaysia just had independence, and there was this euphoria. When issues of Malay economic dependence and solutions to overcome it was sought, obviously there would be tension, thought tp the credit of the Alliance then, MCA and MIC were magnanimous enough to recognise that this needed to be settled. 1969 changed things. Racial riots meant that the causalities had to be removed from the public sphere, and the policy implementation were then expedited through the NEP.

3.       NEP had brought about astounding changes. Since early 70s when Razak and Ismail put this into place, within a generation the Malays have improved their standing. Razak’s farsightedness and excellent leadership paved the way for this to happen. For this we are grateful.

4.       Sultan’s participation in all this is less clear. Obviously, they did not impede in NEP’s policy implementation, and were also beneficiaries. As constitutional monarch’s, they, of Malay origin, will always have the final constitutional authority on matters within their jurisdiction, but Razak and Ismail’s government were the architects and the constructors of this wonderful policy instrument.

5.       Fast forward 2010. Is this policy still useful? I saw Halija and Akbar’s figures where if we were to exclude foreign ownership, Malays have already exceeded their 30% target, but obviously it became less than 20 if we were to include it. The issue then becomes, which benchmark / KPI do we use to decide to sustain, modify or discontinue this policy?

6.       Issues then become that of (i) bastardisation of the policy by the privileges lingering only amongst the elite classes, (ii) what happens to the malays in poverty, (iii) quality of malays becoming entrenched in an entitlement mindset, (iv) erosion of the Malay political power, beginning with UMNO and potentially spreading to opposition (at federal level), thereby raising a risk with Islamic leadership, (v) overall national leadership mandate, and which includes revisiting the social contract between the various races with now this being the Malays turn to give up some ‘benefits’ ala MCA-MIC in the early 60s.

7.       From a bystander perspective, the best individual / entity that can articulate these concerns and propose a resolution to this stands the best chance. I’m uneasy with the way PKR lobs this issue very irresponsibly into the public space knowing the emotive volatility of the subject, and I shudder at the thought of a PKR-led government. PAS, a very moderate PAS, should be eased into a leadership position in the PR, and again that opens itself a different can of worms seeing the differing hardline and Erbakan-styled camps within it.

8.       In the meantime, the country continues to stumble along issue-to-issue, and there still remains the miasma that remains unresolved for some time in the near future. Upping sticks seems to be quite attractive in the next 5 years.

 

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Malaysian Tech Scene

1.       I was asked an impromptu question on what the tech scene looked like in Malaysia yesterday, asked by no less the poster girl of India’s biotech / molecular biology industry, Dr Villoo. Didn’t really have time to prepare the answer, and FZ answered it nonetheless. If I was to give my own assessment it would be this:

·         We have never had the tech development and innovation culture, and in that respect were similar to India back in the early 90s

·         Then Bangalore and MSC burst onto the scene, but Bangalore is almost fully wi-fied now, and Cyberjaya is only now looking to move beyond its ghost town image

·         So what went wrong? Did we lack the skills? Apparently, our institutions failed to produce the required manpower. And failed also to take heed of what made Si Valley tick when Asian immigration provided some of the brainpower to generate this.

·         Added to this, MOSTI squandered the opportunity by going for glam policies of sending supermodels into space. (no personal disrespect meant to our astronaut, I’m only referring to misguided policies being initiated by the leadership who failed to acknowledge that we were working on a declining and thinner wallet since 1998 to pursue glam policies)

·         Our ecosystem of tech agencies was falsely pursuing picking winners policies instead of tech transfer to indigenous development. Not such a major mistake to make, Singapore hasn’t been doing that well either when looking at their biotech initiative

·         In essence, we missed the boat, but we’re still in the game

2.       So, where to now? The IT still has some life in it, and is slowly transforming into the creative space but we do need the creative inputs from the same people who had managed to produce Ipin and Upin (or is it the other way around?) We probably do not have the scale to do widespread and need to be very selective in which techs to concentrate on, and produce the necessary ecosystem in the academic and industries to push this through.

3.       RE is a nice platform. Obviously, carbon markets is a nice touch, seeing that we have untapped resources in biomass and EFB. Smart grids are another that could tap the existing database and network capabilities. I think the solar manufacturing thing is good as it sits nicely off our existing E&E ecosystem, but again trying to compete with China is suicidal. A bit lower up or down the value stream and focusing on higher margin areas, research for instance and we could possibly look better. Machining tech probably not our best bet but we could take some components off here and there and use these horizontal capabilities across multiple platforms, including that of orthopaedics.

4.       Biotech is a touch and go thing, same as Agri. Funds are still flowing in, but the scale, patience and trust could be wearing thin already. Are we able to hold on for much longer in these last 2 areas? In addition to Agri, we need to do look at the role of Petronas, apart from feeding the fat cats in investment banks for IPOs and such.

5.       Lots of work, lots of work, lots of trust to be gained, lots of capabilities to be developed. Do we have the right attitudes for knowledge and skill accumulation to push this through? Meritocracy is the main game-changer for me. Without this, tech suffers. Even worse, the country suffers, a slow, painful disease eating away our core at creating our own internal wealth.

 

 

 

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Quick thots on the Malaysian RE landscape

1.       There are significant demand drivers eg uncertainty of oil price, effective FiT and RPS incentives that increase usage of RE as a proportion of total energy source portfolio in developed countries. As a result, tech is improving and thin film solutions and next-gen cells and wafers are seeing increased efficiencies while prices are dropping with China’s manufacturing capabilities that competes with US and Germany’s unparalleled leadership.
2.       As a result, Malaysia is joining the bandwagon – very late in the game. Even then, decisions have been painfully slow, NGTC is formed but it appears there is a belated appreciation that a new statutory body is required – so SEDA comes in. This is now separate from EC and I assume it will fall under KETTHA. Which will be the hobbyhorse when we look at the various RE tech options?
3.       If we breakdown the tech source options, then we find that GBI, which is more industry-led and has acceptance from professionals and market potential could be more regional, and then we have the other biomass, biogas, solar PV options which is very dependent on FiT rates being put in. There seems to be some revision to the rates and I’m not sure which has national policy backing now. It’s very undecided –and there is a distinct lack of leadership. K could be right by focusing only on the carbon capture part.
4.       The absence of market creation strategies seems to hinder the whole initiative. There probably needs to be a change management advisory which focuses primarily on the regulators that can help close this huge gap. Suddenly the existing networks seem to be very valuable. Where are the penalties for polluting to complement the incentives? Even a no plastic day seems to be seen as a major breakthrough. This is a strategic focus then.


Monday, November 22, 2010

Reflections & calibration: Naeem, Hira', Al-Juneid and ARMA

Naeem on Tahfiz

1.       Naeem’s first steps on his journey to be hafiz / (huffaz?) of the quran yesterday is something I’d need deep reflection on. The steps I did not take, the opportunity costs of not wanting to extend myself, of averting from additional pressure probably cost me aspects of personality that could have been changed. Is this regret? No, Alhamdulillah, things have turned out as it were, though there are aspects where in a parallel universe I would have found more ease in. I suppose the weakness in this thinking is the fatalism that I’ve subjected myself to that this is the best that I could be – the main point is, were there things that could have been improved? The answer then is of course, just as things could be improved now. But, if we are intent on taking the best opportunities, increasing the preparedness in our lives we need to be ready for these openings.

2.       Naeem going to tahfiz provides a stronger spiritual dimension in his life. It is also preparation for an academic study into spirituality-deeniyah and dunya. It also follows that his parents need to improve as parents of a hafiz. The objectives here are for a pathway into deeniyah studies and a suitable dunya education following the strength and character building part of his self. These would be the main things to watch out for in Hira’.

3.       Therefore watch out and strengthen the little things, as well as the large things which have been in error or in omission. And to Him we beg for forgiveness and ask for an expiation from sins, and the fortitude to stay on His path.

 

Tahfiz model

4.       On the other hand, the tahfiz model as per Al-Junied is as below:

Islamic Studies: Quranic Studies : Hifz / Tilawah with tajwid, At-Tafsir, Ulum Al-Quran,  Al-Akhlak, At-Tauhid, Al-Mantiq

Al-Fiqh :  Usul Al-Fiqh, Al-Qawaid Al-Fiqhiyah, Al-Hadith / Mustalah Al-Hadith, Al-Faraidh

Arabic Studies: Al-Insya’, An-Nahwu,  As-Sarf, Al-Adab Al-Arabi, Al-Balaghah, At-Tarikh Al-Islamic

Academic Education The curriculum for the academic adheres to the syllabus prescribed by the Ministry of Education, Singapore. PSLE at Primary 6 and ‘O’ Level at Sec 4 where the students qualify for Polytechnics / JC in Singapore.

Co-Curricular Activities:   Islamic Calligraphy, Recitation of the Holy Quran (Taranum), Sports, Domestic Science, Nasyid ( An Islamic choir), Astronomy

Community Involvement Programme: Students are directly involved in all special projects and fund raising activities conducted by madrasah or Muslim organizations, Students assisted financially by the welfare department will have to serve 30 hours of CIP

 

5.       I am absolutely convinced that just as Hira’ and Al-Amin chain of schools under Musleh is superior to the government model, and that includes the new Ulul-Albab model being rolled out under Yayasan Terengganu, MRSM and JAIS – which I believe is still experimental and may lack the necessary academic staff aptitude and support (and this I need to ascertain) – I believe given time, the madrasah system in Singapore will be the model to emulate. Talk of meritocracy being a superior model to the ‘assisted support program for underperforming majority’. The Singapore model is quietly transforming themselves from quite good to excellent, shepherded by very capable people and supported by the government. I repeat, the Government of Singapore! Contrast this with unhelpful rhetorics of Al-Amin being a breeding ground of Wahhabis and such.

6.       Ya Allah, grant me the strength to make a contribution to the way things are proceeding here in Malaysia, so that it could be for the betterment of the ummah.

 

BR Consult

7.       Interesting opp. I’d need to put on a very different thinking model here. One, how can I support the business growth objectives so that this ould become a self-sustainable opportunity for me, family and transform the way things are currently. The kiasu-ness needs to kick-in. I should not allow this to work towards a standard op, but study what successful consulting firms are doing. This is a business development problem.

 

 

 

 

Friday, November 19, 2010

Learnings on leadership, need for project tracking

Leadership

1.       It is so much more comfortable to lead than to be led. But power distance studies done by Hofstedes is interesting. There are cultures, and of course made up of individuals who are uncomfortable with wielding power, such as the Swedes. Not so the malays who come from hierarchical feudalistic backgrounds. Leaders are expected to lead. Abdication, syura, discussion – kalau boleh tak payah la…

2.       That’s the funny thing. So here I am needing to decide on where I go. I’m being pressured to lead in the traditional sense, rather than being who I am. Examining my heritage, there is a certain suspicion of power and authority, one I detedted since shildhood that made me slink out from being given the responsibility of headboy in primary school, that made me silently back away from being a prefect. In one sense, this made me lose out on developing innate skills to develop large groups, to stand in front, make my opinions known, seize the moment so to speak, stand my ground but it is who I am. Here when I need to my position wrt the crossroads, I need to derive a certain authority and power to make things happen.

3.       I need to stand firm on what I want, communicate innermost thoughts, understand transmitter motivations and things should flow from there. Again, these are the back-to-basics which needs to be done, executed, action-orientation. Convey the key messages well, and monitor that the key messages get to be translated into action, not just by me individually, but my immediate inner circle. Widening the circle then becomes the next phase of leadership. Gaps should be identified and addressed. Strategy, and action, and back again.

4.       In a nutshell, leadership is about getting right transmission of the key message of where we want to go. Action point: tazkirah, family meeting, blog writeups, lunchmate discussions. My utmost appreciation of Allah’s creation of our lisaan as an instrument of leadership, Alhamdulillah, subhanallah.

 

Project tracking

5.       Some items just never get moved: going wallclimbing, swimming, agriculture, tendering my resignation etc. I need a platform for synthesizing the different knowledge, otherwise the clutter in the noggin just doesn’t facilitate thinking on my feet, and therefore hinders whatever I intend to do. Sunday mornings look the best bet, or rather, very late at night.

 

 

 

 

Monday, November 15, 2010

Review of Gladwell's Books - Tipping Point, Blink

1.       I finished “The tipping Point” and “Blink” over the weekend. He’s got good narrative structures for what is essentially heave collection of research and academic papers in social science, but repackaged them into layman’s terms, interwoven into a storyline which provokes thoughts. Freakonomics was written in a similar vein, and again, there are items which we could dig and raise as gold findings – such as the message that we can offer bettermwnet to the world, but overall there’s a cynical part of me that thinks we do need to sort out the simplification and exaggerations out, and reconnect and understand the context of our situation better before jumping headlong into some of the shared findings and narratives from the books. Although it can be argues that this was the assertion that the Tipping Point was making.

2.       My comments are that there’s only so much we can absorb from what is fundamentally a biased narrative, even if the messaging and the writing is solid and convincing. It is at the end of the day, still the opinions of Gladwell. Note: I bought the books with my money, and I have the right to comment on it the way I like.. J

3.       I remember Aznir’s attempt to list out the mavens, connectors and salesmen in TNB from his position as Chief Skunkworks (sorry, cant remember the name of the Unit / Dept, but that is the role – and the position has very positive connotation in the realm of change management in the US, although Malaysians not familiar to the language may take offence). I remember the fact that he tried to keep the message sticky by having the T7 messages everywhere (even behind toilet doors) except on the toilet seats. But messaging is everything and context failure was evident. In the end, measured from the perspective of the T7 initiative, it was unclear if it achieved its intended success.

4.       The point is that in the context of stickiness, it worked in the initial stages. But it failed in the context of getting thinking and commitment going hand-in-hand to get the transformation going. There was a lack of getting people into the right places, giving support to people capable of getting things going, and in he end it was a missed opportunity. Change management is always a people business to get to the tipping point. In the end, there was just too little to get the stickiness. The tipping point opportunity was lost. It was lost because CMU thought getting enough people scented with the idea of change was enough. It wasn’t because there were still huge efforts required to get change happening on a secondary, tertiary level for the stickiness to endure. Context was absent.

5.       In a way, the above seemed to vindicate Gladwell. But I would think also that this wasn’t the application that it was meant to be. Say we wanted to address the baby dumping issue. Where do we start using Gladwell’s model? It doesn’t appear to be a PR problem alone, and he seemed to address the issue also with the evidence on the needle distribution program, even though he tried to offset the weakness of that example with some side benefits. Again, asking the question as before, how effective is the needle distribution program in combating AIDS?

6.       We all want a simplified model where our version of truth lies victorious, and that model helps us to achieve our objectives. I guess that the dakwah approach, of studying our relationship to God and society, organizing our society according to the tenets as ordained by the Almighty, gives a more powerful model for change and stickiness to grow. How did Islam grow within such a short period of time after the first revelations? Growth of the empire after the Prophet’s Death? Growth of Islam in Europe and US? It is a combination of funding, power of communication, and above all strength of the message. I’m prevaricating, and again I suppose this vindicates Gladwell. It’s just that as a matter of preference, I don’t like simplifying models of huge issues, like Freakonomics and Tipping Point. I also fell asleep more that a few times while trying to finish the latter.

7.       I like Blink. It makes no recommendations. It was just a roundtrip of what our intuitions tell us and the need to be careful, to cultivate the right positive thoughts about people and first impressions. Above all, be careful of what others think of you is perhaps the message I take the most.

8.       Good writer. Blink better than Tipping Point. Having said that, I’ll come back to reexamine some of the things in there at some point in the future hopefully.

 

 

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Continuing turmoil in PKR; Back to basics; Concerns on the future; Bravery and courage to stand up for truth

Continuing turmoil in PKR;

1.       DSAI was labeled a dinosaur by Dr Asri recently. How can we be definitive and decisive about such a divisive figure in Malaysian history. And I say this as a compliment, not as a source of deriding and spin the likes that Utusan is fond of.

2.       DSAI has many strong point – his convictions, principles and courage are exemplary. His ability to convince and articulation of thoughts on issues of values and morality is legendary. Mass mobilisation in 74, 98 nad thereafter are examples of these abilities. The negatives however would be to see how he synergises, builds and leaves a legacy of success once he is gone, a true test of leadership. Dependence on DSAI is now such that people see without him, PR would spiral back into chaos. And that is a huge problem, an acide test of leadership not a sign of it. I shall hold the similarities with Hitler and comments made by Dr Rozhan on the dangers of charismatic leaders, but again this is a warning sign.

3.       If we want Malaysia to stand on truth, the realities of the community, on principles of diversity and success – then old-timers such as LKS, Karpal must go. DSAI should begin to plot how Malaysia should stand as a democratic nation found on ideals of liberty, plurality and respectful religiosity (– not secularism) – you know, stuff that DSAI has lectured the world over, and find concrete action steps to do this, not on rhetorics and speeches alone. The PKR elections is a clear demonstration of a botched execution for all to see – no denial should be done, but clear up this mess and stop blaming others. DSAI should be magnanimous enough to do this, and more from within the party should do this. There should be an avenue for PKR young turks to rise within the party, ingrained with the principles and ready to take decisive action.

 

Back to basics

4.       The need to go back to basics on qiyam, tilawah, reflections on tafseer, jamaah and superegoratory prayers, fatherhood and role modeling, ma’thurat; NJ is on the verge of being terminated yet still active in delivering aid and support to flood-stricken areas in Kedah, JL is talking about the creation of a Hidayah Centre TC in KK with a cadre of muslim preachers, the need to setup hospital visits, plans are afoot for a high-impact program on inter-faith dialogue on science, society and etc, the selling of ibn Kathir’s tafseer, and these were good timely reminders.

5.       Missing solat Isya’ and Fajr are examples of hypocrisy – so extra effort should be made to pray this at the surau.

6.       Personal strength should be based on these simple acts, and these should be my jihad.

 

Concerns on the future

7.       These are clearly concerns I need to take heed of, and if I can surmise them:

  • Strengthen basic ‘amal
  • Think through positions, seek alternative views and promulgate your own
  • Think through best ways to effect change, be brave and have bold BHAG ideas – be a mover and shaker
  • Strengthen networks

 

Bravery and courage to stand up for truth

8.       At the end of the day, once I set my position, think through what are the best ways to effect those changes with lasting stickiness. No small amount of bravery is required, and again this comes from the strengthening of the core through back to basics amal.