Christoph Maier
banner
christophmaier.fediscience.org.ap.brid.gy
Christoph Maier
@christophmaier.fediscience.org.ap.brid.gy
Fly on the Wall
Ivy League
Bebenhausen

[bridged from https://fediscience.org/@christophmaier on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
If I preach about

epistemic gerrymandering

am I writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear — because of epistemic gerrymandering?
December 22, 2025 at 7:23 PM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
@karl
Darüber spricht Deutschland nicht.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/89067995@N00/54027586136/in/album-72177720320658662
Cottbus, 15. September 2024
„Deutschland spricht“

Musikalisch kommentierter
Auszug der
Keynote von Mackie
(ex McKinsey-Partner)
Dr. Ralph Heck,
Vorstandsvorsitzender der […]
Original post on fediscience.org
fediscience.org
December 20, 2025 at 4:31 AM
A s[ectre is haunting Neural Networks — the spectre of spikes.
https://ucsd.zoom.us/j/2888083696
December 11, 2025 at 9:12 PM
December 11, 2025 at 5:54 AM
December 10, 2025 at 12:02 PM
Николаи всех стран, соединяйтесь!
December 6, 2025 at 10:51 PM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
Sometimes I just get an idea and it won't go away
November 28, 2025 at 11:18 AM
RE: https://mastodon.social/@Daojoan/115619577157318661

You had my curiosity.
But now you have my attention.
mastodon.social
November 27, 2025 at 6:31 AM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
@wackJackle
At vos omnes amo!
November 22, 2025 at 4:57 PM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
"Qualcomm-owned #arduino quietly pushed a sweeping rewrite of its Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, and the changes mark a clear break from the open-hardware ethos that built the platform."

(source: Adafruit […]

[Original post on waag.social]
November 20, 2025 at 7:37 AM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
Wie zu erwarten war, geht #arduino durch den Verkauf an #Qualcomm nun den Bach runter. Der neue Besitzer hat AGB und Datenschutz geändert. Die Arduino-Plattform ist somit wohl nicht mehr unter freier Lizenz. Auch erhält Qualcomm eine Nutzungsgenehmigung für alle hochgeladenen Materialien […]
Original post on social.adlerweb.info
social.adlerweb.info
November 20, 2025 at 12:20 PM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
Remember kids: "Passive income" is a term used to describe wealth handed out to people by society, through our economic system, without doing any work.

Many people receiving a "passive income" are intergenerationally wealthy, as opposed to the working class and long-term unemployed people who […]
Original post on gts.sadauskas.id.au
gts.sadauskas.id.au
November 7, 2025 at 7:12 AM
November 8, 2025 at 6:03 AM
Also sprach @larsweisbrod
[https://x.com/larsweisbrod/status/1983221541790777448]
"What we need is a labor theory of eigenvalue"

Be careful what you ask for.
Well, you got it […]

[Original post on fediscience.org]
October 29, 2025 at 6:04 AM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
Things are rough out there for a lot of folks, and it seems a good time to repost this. https://medium.com/a-side-of-my-own/what-are-broken-people-worth-24ecc562d9ac

The broken people, the weirdos, the sads, the uncomfortably pointing things out, the sometimes can't get out of bed, never saying […]
Original post on social.circl.lu
social.circl.lu
October 24, 2025 at 2:11 PM
Robert W. Fuller. Courtesy of his family Robert Works Fuller, a physicist, academic leader, author, global humanitarian, and founding voice of the modern dignity movement, died on July 15 in Berkeley. He was born Oct. 26, 1936, in Summit, New Jersey. Bob spent a lifetime integrating expertise in physics, education, diplomacy, social justice, and the arts to challenge conventional wisdom and bring about social and political change. Bob entered Oberlin College at age 15 on a Ford fellowship and graduate school at Princeton University at age 18, in physics. After additional study at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris and the University of Chicago, he returned to Princeton to work with the renowned theoretical physicist John Wheeler, coauthoring with him a foundational paper on wormholes: _Causality and Multiply Connected Space-Time._ This paper pushed physicists to consider quantum topology, a key concept in quantum gravity research today. Bob received his Ph.D. in physics in 1961. Along with John Wheeler, Bob worked with Nobel Laureate Isidor Rabi; friend Judd Fermi, mathematician and son of physicist Enrico Fermi; and Peter Putnam. Peter and Bob published a paper on Putnam’s Darwinian model of brain function. In the early ’60s, Bob taught physics and mathematics at Columbia University in New York, as well as at Barnard and Wesleyan. During this time, he co-authored (with Fred Byron) the book _Mathematics of Classical and Quantum Physics_. It’s still in print and used today. In 1967, Bob’s attention was drawn towards the Civil Rights movement and educational reform. He developed a course for inner city high school dropouts in Seattle to show them that they could indeed learn and be successful students. That project led to a new career in educational reform as the Dean of Faculty at Trinity College. While dean, Bob travelled to India and briefed Prime Minister Indira Gandhi regarding atomic energy and her Institutes of Technology. He also worked with Alaskan Inuits in the Bering Straits. In 1970, at age 33, Bob returned to become president of Oberlin College. At Oberlin, Fuller spearheaded sweeping reforms: inaugurating a Commission on the Status of Women, tripling the enrollment of minority students, expanding co-ed dormitories, and hiring African American head coaches, including Tommie Smith, the Olympic gold-medal sprinter. He supported the students’ anti-war demonstrations and feminist and gay liberation movements. Under his leadership, Oberlin also reformed its curriculum, eliminated distribution requirements and incorporated student representation into the decision-making structure of the college. It was a turbulent time in America and Bob’s leadership at Oberlin made national news, from _Life Magazine_ and _The Wall Street Journal,_ to an _ABC Sports_ special with Howard Cosell. While these reforms were in the spirit of these times, they were sometimes controversial, and he resigned in 1974. Robert Fuller as president of Oberlin College in the 1970s. Courtesy of his family During the 1970s, Bob traveled to Vietnam to get a first-hand view of the conflict. He also visited India and after witnessing the famine in Calcutta, he mounted a campaign to address world hunger, partnering with singer John Denver in that effort. In 1977, the two met with President Carter and Vice President Mondale at the White House. That meeting in the Oval Office led to the creation of the _Presidential Commission on World Hunger_. For the next decade, it was the nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union that consumed Bob’s energy. Knowing the science behind the making of nuclear weapons, he became active as a writer, citizen diplomat and public speaker about arms control. In 1978, Bob and his family took the trans-Siberian Railway from Leningrad across 11 time zones to the Sea of Japan. In the 1980s, he took the “trans-Sib” in the reverse direction, and made frequent trips to the USSR as Chairman of Internews, an organization devoted to fostering independent media in emerging democracies. Internews created so-called “spacebridges,” linking American and Soviet audiences via two-way live television that explored a range of political issues with the goal of de-stereotyping the Cold War antagonists to each other. As a result of this work, Fuller met Mikhail and Raisa Gorbachev and traveled to Afghanistan with Yevgeny Primakov, who would later serve as Boris Yeltsin’s prime minister. During this time, Fuller also worked on other projects dealing with conflict resolution and economic development, traveling to Ireland, Israel, Palestine, Kenya, South Africa, and throughout South Asia and South America. In 1992, Bob worked in Somalia to help bring images of the devastating famine there to the attention of the United Nations. With the collapse of the USSR, Bob’s work as citizen diplomat came to a close and he began reflecting on his career. He had observed a lot of man-made suffering: the degradation of poverty and food insecurity, educational injustices, harassment in the workplace, corporate fraud and abuse, and the horrors of famine and war. It became clear to Bob that reducing “man’s inhumanity to man” would require a strategy that deals with how “somebodies” degrade and exploit “nobodies.” His years of crossing social hierarchies, from esteemed academic to grassroots activist, led him to coin the term “rankism”: the systemic abuse of power inherent in social ranking, and its antidote: “Dignity for All.” He authored several influential works, including _Somebodies and Nobodies_ (2003), _All Rise_ (2006), and _Dignity for All_ (2008), and became a leading voice in a global Dignity Movement that reached universities, corporate boardrooms, and national policymakers. Bob has been featured in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Oprah Magazine, NPR, C-Span, the BBC, and in TED talks, and his books have been translated and published in China, India, Korea, and Bangladesh. His outreach earned international recognition, including serving as keynote speaker at a 2011 “Dignity for All” conference hosted by the president of Bangladesh. In his 80s, Bob turned his attention to art and music. He loved playing Schubert on the piano and experimenting with color and shapes in his paintings at his Berkeley art studio. Days before Bob’s death, his written short story was published in the Princeton Alumni Magazine, integrating concepts from physics to social justice in an imaginary conversation through wormholes with John Wheeler. Bob, a sprinter, was motivated by the “Run Your Age” concept, in which runners attempt to run the quarter mile equal to their age in years. Days past his 64th birthday, he broke 63 seconds for the quarter mile and was inducted into the “Quarter-Milers Club,” a club which he had proposed to the magazine Runner’s World (later described in the February 2001 issue). Robert Fuller was married to Ann Fuller and later to Alia Johnson. He is survived by four children (Karen, Ben, Noah, and Adam), four grandchildren (Azamat, Arden, Thomas and Charlie), and his wife of 35 years, Claire Sheridan. Bob also had well-honed aptitude for deeply listening to his many friends of all ages, and consequently many of them considered him to be their “best friend” in life. Bob’s legacy lies not only in his scientific and institutional achievements but in his enduring vision of a more equitable and dignified world, one where power respects all persons. For more information on Bob’s work, please refer to his website. ## We know that most readers don't get to the end of the article. But you did! To support our in-depth, rock-solid reporting, please consider making a donation to our nonprofit newsroom today. We rely on our readers — particularly the ones who read the whole story! Yes, I want to support Berkeleyside’s newsroom. "*" indicates required fields Send a note to the editors.* Have a comment on this story? See an error that needs correcting? Have a tip, question or suggestion? Drop us a line. Email* Name Phone Would you like to be anonymous No Yes If you reply "no," we may publish your comment in a story or newsletter under your name. __This field is hidden when viewing the form Embed URL Δ
www.berkeleyside.org
October 25, 2025 at 4:15 AM
Reposted by Christoph Maier
I interviewed Paulina Borsook, who warned of tech culture's toxic underbelly over 30 years ago.

She wrote a prescient and scathing book, "Cyberselfish."

It tanked her career, but a new generation is discovering her work as tech fascism tries to kill democracy 👇

www.youtube.com/watch?v=DL-k...
October 21, 2025 at 4:06 PM
An econpmic analysis of personalized medicine dosing
October 10, 2025 at 6:28 AM
October 8, 2025 at 9:59 AM
October 8, 2025 at 9:52 AM
October 7, 2025 at 9:51 AM
Following the local house motto
and
creatively combining facts no one else has connected before …

When I think of the German saying:
„Wer schweigt macht sich mitschuldig“

I wonder whether having remained silent while Trump effectively made his (or Thiel's) […]

[Original post on fediscience.org]
October 4, 2025 at 12:33 AM