Mike Huben - Huben's Wiki

Web Name: Mike Huben - Huben's Wiki

WebSite: http://huben.us

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Get to know me and my thinking In the greenhouse at IKIAM UniversityA brief sampler from below and elsewhere: My academic CV. Scourge of the Libertarians: Interview with Mike Huben. My views on libertarianism. My ideas file: free to anybody who wants to use them. What I think about Donald Trump. Stories from my life. Here's my Why I Am An Atheist posting at Pharyngula. Metamorphosis, my blog about my rebirth as an Ecuadorean entomologist. Nomination Poems for the Cambridge Entomology Club. One of my few poetic endeavors, where the rhymes are deliberately strained for fun. My daylily website, on this wiki: Diploids Resurgent. A Positive Model Of Rights: how I think rights really work. Critiques Of Libertarianism, my giant index of 2500+ links and writings that rebut libertarian claims. Linear Programming: an innovative method of teaching a badly taught concept. An idea for a Truth course. Annotated Key to the Ensign Wasp genera. My primary scientific publication. My favorite signature quotations that I've been using since the 80's. Things I love and admire about Ecuador. Currently Haemactis sanguinalis, female (Blood-Red Skipper)Right now, I'm in transition from teaching in the US to becoming an entomologist in Ecuador. You can read about it in my new blog Metamorphosis. I am engaged to Alina Freire Fierro, who is now a research professor at Universidad Técnica de Cotopaxi in Latacunga, Ecuador.I'm doing some evaluations for disease resistance in tomatoes, with 38 varieties growing so far at IKIAM. I have seed for another 80 varieties, seed for 50 varieties of peppers, and much more seed besides.Alina and I both have sizable libraries. I love the folding bookshelves that I brought from the US, but we don't have nearly enough. So we are having new custom folding bookshelves built by a local carpenter. Gardening, Botany and Agriculture Mucuna klitgaardiae with my favorite botanist, Alina. A corner of my US garden in peak season.My mom has a picture of me staring intently at Petunias on Jones Beach at age 2, so I guess I've been a plant guy for 60 years or so. I grew my first seedlings in first grade, and have not stopped since then. I worked in the botanical greenhouse of the Bailey Hortorium at Cornell University for a few years, caring for their live botanical collection of several thousand species in the greenhouse and their outdoor garden. I wanted to be a farmer for a while, until I realized that I had dreadful allergies. My home garden near Boston had a bit over 300 varieties of perennials and shrubs, not counting daylilies (see below.)Currently, I am working on a Tomato Project with some students at IKIAM University, in Tena, Ecuador. The goal is to find the most disease resistant varieties (and perhaps breed with them) to find tomatoes that do not need greenhouse protection from rain-spread diseases.Now I am in Ecuador: here's my list of Ecuador Botanical and Gardening Resources. Entomology and Evaniidae Mouse skin mites using Jamin-Lebedeff interference microscopy.One of my true loves has always been Entomology. I used to specialize in Acarology (the study of mites), and built a collection of a thousand slide-mounted specimens (and who knows how many more in alcohol that I've never mounted.) I've got a substantial number of colorful mite photographs that I've always wanted to publish, photographed by my friends in the New York Microscopical Society and me. After my last sabbatical collecting insects in Ecuador (1988), I finally settled on my current specialization, the Evaniidae (a family of wasps that parasitize cockroach egg cases.) I study these at the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology on an unofficial basis. I'm also a member of the Cambridge Entomological Club. My academic CV. My Researchgate page.One of the fun aspects of being a wide-ranging collector is that my collections are used for describing species. A warty leaf beetle, Neochlamisus gibbosus (Fabricius, 1777). Looks just like my car did!I have always named my cars: my previous Scion xB is named Neoclamisus because it looks like the beetle. Biography Age 18, working in the genetics lab at Cornell.I grew up in Plainview, NY (on Long Island.) I was thrilled to escape to Cornell University where I studied plant breeding, botany, entomology, and computer science. I had many part-time jobs there, working in a genetics lab (photo), the botanical greenhouses, the insect collection and the computer labs. I was a brother in Triangle Fraternity (see: Revenge Of the Nerds.) I worked 3 years for Control Data in NY City, then Minneapolis, and then took a year-long road trip around the US collecting insects and mites in 1981. I moved to Boston, worked six more years, then took a 7 month trip to Ecuador to collect more insects and mites in 1987. I returned to Boston and immediately married, bought a house in Arlington, and worked in software until I changed to teaching high school in 2005. Right now, I'm in transition from teaching in the US to becoming an entomologist in Ecuador. You can read about it in my new blog Metamorphosis. Family Mike, Carol, Robert and Peggy.When I married in '88, my ex-wife Peggy and I both changed our name to Huben (mine used to be Huybensz.) Our daughter Carol was born in '90, and our son Robert was born in '93. As of 2015: Peggy teaches Chemistry in Somerville. Carol is a graduate student at U. Mass. Amherst. Robert is a doctoral candidate in mathematics at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln. I am engaged to Alina Freire Fierro. Alina and Mike. Teaching My Euler (not Venn) diagram of 5-card poker hands.From 2010 until 2014, I was a math + CS teacher at Boston Latin School. I've taught: AP Computer Science Precalculus Geometry Algebra2I was the faculty sponsor for the following student organizations: BLS Math Team Greater Boston Mathematics League (GBML). Computer Science Club Email BLS Cinema Society (film club) Email Lists of FilmsI gladly write recommendations for my students, present and past. Just ask.I'm a science/math/technology weenie, and have also taught Biology, Chemistry, Physical Science, Design Technology, Honors Precalculus, Precalculus and Discrete Math.I've written an Intelligent Design Overview For US Science Teachers.Why Is Math Hard?The One Ring: a riff on Tolkein about unit circles. I always included this on tests to amuse the students.Linear Programming: an innovative method of teaching a badly taught concept.If 1∘4=5 and 2∘5=12 and 3∘6=21 then what is 8∘11? (The ∘ symbol is an unspecified operator.) The answer might surprise you.Here's my Resume.An idea for a Truth course.Some Recreational Math Problems.My theme song is "Weird Al" Yankovic's White Nerdy. Aikido and Iaido Tachi-tori, Aikido techniques for taking swords.I've practiced Aikido and Iaido at New England Aikikai with the late Mitsunari Kanai for more than twenty years. I'm yondan (4rth degree black belt) in Honbu style (USAF) Aikido and sandan (3rd degree black belt) in Muso Shinden Ryu Iaido. I haven't been active in Iaido lately. I teach children's classes and practice at New England Aikikai, and I also sometimes attend Aikido Tekkojuku Boston, a newer school founded by numerous instructors from New England Aikikai. I also have taught at the Harvard Aikido Club and the Tufts Aikido Club. I met my wife at the Aikido dojo, and the whole family practices. Entertainment Terry Pratchett's "Hogfather".I read omnivorously in science, politics, and philosophy, but I've always read a LOT of SF and Fantasy. My favorite has long been comic fantasy, especially the Discworld and Dresden Files series. My favorite SF is Babylon 5, the most enormous and brilliant space opera in print or film: 120 episodes of one complex story. It makes Star Wars look like the overproduced pablum that it is. I avoid almost all sports programs and events. I don't have a working TV: I tend to watch the rare interesting TV show on the internet. John Stewart and Stephen Colbert are like unto gods. Favorite Comics Here is a short list of my favorite books, films, etc. A recent copy of my Bookmarks. Daylily Breeding Vanilla Stella, one of my daylily introductions.Daylilies are my major garden interest. While I refuse to be so smitten that I myopically class other perennials as "companion plants", I've built a medium size assortment (400) for garden pleasure and hybridizing. I've always wanted to hybridize again, and daylilies are such a no-care and simple group to work with that I could not resist. I currently have about 3000 seedlings, 1000 from each of the past 3 years. I am a modestly successful hybridizer with about 20 introduced varieties that sell widely in North America and Europe.I'm a member of both local daylily societies: the New England Daylily Society and the Patriot Daylily Society. I regularly speak around the region about my hybridizing program and my gardening interests. My newest daylily website, on this wiki: Diploids Resurgent. My second daylily web site, a blog. My first daylily web site, Mike Huben's Garden Page. Cooking and Eating Viennese Crescent Cookies, one of my family traditions.I do a lot of cooking in many styles, mostly really yummy but none terribly expert. I've long kept my recipes on the computer. I cook some Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Italian, Viennese, and Latin American dishes, as well as Canadian/American mainstays.I most love Asian foods with the exception of Korean and Indonesian (I just haven't grown accustomed to them.) Europe holds less gastronomic allure for me, since I don't appreciate wine or cheese, can do without beer, and can't eat most sausages or cured meats because the salt levels are too high. My favorite Chinese places to eat out are: Mary Chung (Central Square, Cambridge) and Yen Ching (Harvard Square, Cambridge.) If anybody can get me Mary's recipe for Dun Dun Noodles or the Yen Ching recipes for Kung Pao Chicken, I'd be grateful. I also enjoy Dim Sum in Chinatown. When I crave Japanese food, I usually go to the restaurants of my Aikido friends: Yasu Itoh's Tampopo in Porter Square, Cambridge, or Shinji Murakai's Toraya north of Arlington Center. Philosophy and Countering Libertarianism David Friedman visiting me. He called this picture "consorting with the enemy".My philosophical ideas spring from skepticism, relativism, positivism, pragmatism, progressivism and humanism. When evaluating ideas, I work with the assumption that theories ought to match reality -- it is surprising how much theory matches reality badly. This tends to produce a preference for ideas that are valid (ie. work well) rather than theoretically correct (without working well.) Critiques Of LibertarianismI specialize in criticizing libertarianism, and run the only site I know of dedicated to that. This features: The Non-Libertarian FAQ a host of related materials I've been able to find. Signature quotes from my collection related to libertarianism.Economics in Two Lessons: Why Markets Work So Well, and Why They Can Fail So Badly by John Quiggin. An extraordinary rebuttal to the bad economics of libertarians and neoliberals. I assisted John Quiggin by commenting on almost all the chapters, suggesting changes for clarity, completeness, anticipating responses, etc. Earned myself a very nice credit! Mike's SkepticismI was briefly a contributing editor writing a monthly column for Suite101. That ended when I did not meet deadlines. The originals were at: Skepticism.Disgust With PhilosophyI believe philosophical thinking is a necessary tool. But not for any knowledge or wisdom. The only valid use I find for philosophy is to REJECT ideas: most prominently those of philosophers. When students tell me they are interested in philosophy, I want to steer them away from it: what a futile waste of time! Atheism Vortices from jet engines resembling the Flying Sphagetti Monster.I am a zealous, evangelistic, crusading agnostic and skeptic, in religion, politics, pseudoscience, and quack medical practice. I've been posting for about 40 years (first on the old PLATO system and later on USENET) to political and religious newsgroups. I'm a huge fan of Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett and PZ Meyers. Humanist Community at Harvard: I've long hung out with these folks and their allied organizations. Here's my Why I Am An Atheist posting at Pharyngula. Here's an autobiographical posting from an old secular humanist mailing list. I have a small index of writings against various Creationism arguments.

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