“No such thing as a dumb question”

I actually began writing this in August 2019, but obviously got distracted… until I read this Guardian article https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/05/trust-in-scientists-grows-as-fake-coronavirus-news-rises-uk-poll-finds, suggesting that public trust in the work of scientists and health experts has grown during the coronavirus pandemic, amid a surge in misinformation about the virus.

In a world of DeepFakes and #FakeNews, and especially during our battle with COVID19, it is more important than ever for us to critically think and be sceptical of the information shared in the world around us.

Last year, I read Carl Sagan’s book, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, which expertly predicted today’s world where fake news stories and Internet conspiracy run riot. In this book, Carl Sagan ‘aims to explain the scientific method to laypeople, and to encourage people to learn critical and skeptical thinking. He explains methods to help distinguish between ideas that are considered valid science and those that can be considered pseudoscience. Sagan states that when new ideas are offered for consideration, they should be tested by means of skeptical thinking and should stand up to rigorous questioning’.
From <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Demon-Haunted_World>

Sagan describes how there are “naïve questions, tedious questions, ill-phrased questions, questions put after inadequate self-criticism. But every question is a cry to understand the world. There is no such thing as a dumb question.” A cliché often used in corporate meeting rooms, but a phrase we could do better to act on more often.

I also love Carl Sagan’s view on how “bright, curious children are a national and world resource”. There is something amazing about the way children investigate and discover the world they find themselves in, and something which tends to be lost as we age. There is a brilliant Sagan quote, and one of my favourite from the book, that he might not “…know the answer. Maybe no one knows. Maybe when you grow up, you’ll be the first person to find out”.

Sagan suggests children “need to be cared for, cherished, and encouraged; but mere encouragement isn’t enough. We must also give them the essential tools to think with.” I think this is a critical skill to learn at a young age, but also crucially, one not to abandon as you grow older.

With the situation we all find ourselves in, I hope that this drives a real cultural change around trust in science and data based decision making, but also that we all begin to question and critically analyse the information we are provided with more scrutiny.

Back again. Oxide, Neutrino, settin’ the trend…

Firstly, apologies for the title.. I’ve been listening to a lot of UK garage recently. For anyone interested, there are some great recent documentaries on the history of the genre here, here and here!

However, it is true, I am reviving this site… again. This post makes me laugh, because 1) I completely failed to do what I set out and 2) it’s still pretty spot on.

Over the last half year or so, I’ve moved to a new role at Microsoft, and now working as a Digital Advisor focused on the Retail sector. I have a passion for retailing, as both a consumer, and harking back to my days on the shopfloor at Gamestation, and so am thoroughly enjoying the opportunity to discuss business strategy and cutting edge technology with some of the best in the industry.

Additionally, this new role lends well to sharing my thoughts through a medium such as this blog. With this, I plan to become more rigorous with my posting schedule, and share interesting content around retailing, technology, as well as my first love, music. I hope someone finds this useful and interesting, and I look forward to sharing my thoughts with you.

93 ’til Infinity

Towards the end of university, I felt a compelling need for a platform to share my thoughts and interests without clogging up everyone’s news feeds. I really wasn’t bothered whether anyone would read it, but I wanted a place to vent and express myself through creative thinking, writing and sharing content. I spent a few days putting together a website with a blog page and sporadically posted music I liked, interesting videos I had watched, alongside some posts I had written for my virtual business module at university and other topics of interest. However, as I started full time work, I forgot about this site completely.

I have decided to renew the hosting, redesign the site and want to get posting again. The writing process can be meditative, and keeping up my projects such as the ‘monthly mix’ allow me to remain structured and focused outside of work. My recent trip to the US taught me how important this is, by giving me some time to get away from the emails and the general mad rush of work. I hadn’t realised but for close to a year I’d dropped a lot of the activities that I love and lost clarity around what I do with my spare time. A big example of this being music. Forgetting that the passion I had for music has been a topic of discussion in every interview I’ve done, I’d somehow allowed myself to significantly lose interest in it because I was so consumed by work. In reality, being more focused in my time away from work on what makes me happy, will most likely make me more productive during the time that I am there.

I will make an effort to regularly update the site ongoing with a variety of content that I find interesting. This is how we chill from 93 ’til…