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m2 / foot2 |
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Floor 3 |
960 / 10333
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Floor 2 |
1929 / 20764 |
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Floor 1 |
2699 / 29052 |
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Ground |
3129 / 33680 |
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Basement |
3034 / 32658 |
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This website has now become a
Tumblr Blog
- follow it and never miss an update!
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Glasgow Science Centre - a magnificent
21st Century building
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Glasgow Evening Times 30-01-02 |
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.jpg)
The ScottishPower Planetarium (above)
with Zeiss Starmaster projector (below)
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A young visitor with the Starmaster planet
projectors visible to the left, and a variety of images on the dome
behind her. Being the best star projector in the world, the Zeiss
Starmaster can even project deep sky object which are only visible with
binoculars.
Picture: Martin Shields, Evening Times
(notice Betelgeuse finally exploding :-)
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Science Mall visitor numbers |
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Planetarium visitor numbers |
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Jul 01 - Jul 02 |
350 000 |
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Feb 02 - Jan 03 |
95 000 |
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Jul 02 - Jul 03 |
260 000 |
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Feb 03 - Jan 04 |
72 800 |
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Jul 03 - Jul 04 |
250 000? |
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Feb 04 - Oct 04 |
49 500 |
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Is your
boss a psychopath?
Probably, if we are to believe the results of a new
scientific study
Oliver James
Monday April 18 2005
The Guardian
Many years ago I worked for a man who forced a pair of employees who had
just ended their relationship to move to adjacent
workstations. He did it purely for
his amusement. Doubtless everyone has a story of this ilk. But
scientific evidence that leaders really are
different in their personal pathology from the
rest of us has been lacking - until now. Case studies by psychologists have
claimed that "successful psychopaths" really exist. These are
portrayed as emotionally detached, with superficial charm and an unbounded preparedness
to use others, differing only from
personality-disordered criminal psychopaths in
being law-abiding and less impulsive. |
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Because such reports are ultimately
anecdotal, Belinda Board and Katarina Fritzon of Surrey University
decided to test whether there was any overlap between the personalities of business
managers, psychiatric patients and hospitalised criminals
(psychopathic and psychiatrically ill). Their
results, published last month, make startling
reading.
Board and Fritzon found that three of 11 personality disorders (PDs) were
actually commoner in managers than in disturbed criminals. The first
was histrionic PD, entailing superficial charm,
insincerity, egocentricity and manipulativeness.
There was also a higher incidence of narcissism: grandiosity,
self-focused lack of empathy for others, exploitativeness and
independence. Finally, there was more compulsive
PD in the managers, including perfectionism,
excessive devotion to work, rigidity, stubbornness and dictatorial
tendencies.
So far, so David Brent, and it's easy to see how these characteristics might
contribute to office skills. But unlike Brent, these bosses were less
likely to have several career-stopping PD traits.
They were less prone to physical aggression,
irresponsibility and law-breaking (antisocial PD); they had less
impulsivity, suicidal gestures and emotional instability
(borderlines); and they were less prone to
hostility followed by contrition (passive-aggressives). David
Brent's possession of several of these traits explain his managerial
failure (and if The Office had continued, are why
he would have ended up in psychiatric care).
Other studies have revealed, rather surprisingly, that mental ability does
not in itself result in success. It has to be
combined with exceptional social skills and of
these, chameleonism and machiavellianism - common in many PDs -
are important. Since such people earn more and go higher than ones
without these
traits, it supports the idea that many leaders have PDs. But perhaps the
most persuasive indirect evidence concerns
leaders' deeper motivations.
In almost all the fields where a study has been done, a third of the highest
achievers lost a parent before the age of 14 (compared with 8% in the
general population). This is true in surveys of
prime ministers, US presidents and entrepreneurs.
Left high and dry at a young age, they have resolved to snatch
hold of their destiny. It suggests adversity is the key to
exceptional achievement: it's not that little bit
more that drives the powerful, it's that little
bit less.
There is also evidence that most PDs are caused by childhood maltreatment
rather than genes. Several studies suggest that
deprivation of love in infancy creates
a potential for the disorder which is more likely to be fulfilled if
there is subsequent abuse or neglect. At least
half of people with PDs suffered abuse in
childhood.
For many high achievers, the pursuit of status is a compensation for
feelings of worthlessness and despair caused by
early adversity. They want to be recognised
by strangers because needs went unrecognised in infancy; want money
to feel richer than others because they felt
poorer, emotionally, as children; and want
to have control over others because they were rendered impotent by
parental care. They reveal the chain linking
childhood adversity to PD to exceptional success.
Such people seem peculiarly ill-suited to the job of setting the parameters
of our everyday lives. Most of us do not like
working seven days a week for years on end. We
take all the holiday we can. That our political and business bosses
are so different - driven, even desperate people, compensating for
their
distress with workaholia - makes them the very last citizens you would
logically select to decide your work-life balance.
A few years ago I chaired a debate between several British business figures,
of whom one was Sir Brian Pitman (head of Lloyds
TSB for 18 years). Over lunch, he revealed that
his father had died before he was old enough to know him. Speaking
in the debate, he told us that if we thought the present environment
was competitive, we "ain't seen nothing yet". Over
the next five years companies would be forced to
become far more efficient. The principle of "up or out" would
become universal: if you don't do well enough to be promoted, you get
fired.
I asked if he was concerned about the increased stress this would cause. To
my surprise, he appeared not to have given the
idea any consideration. Finally, he commented that
"you will never stop progress. Children will always want to outdo
their parents".
Of course, for those of us who are never going to get near the top of any
organisation, the idea that leaders are several sandwiches short of a
picnic is reassuring. While we may like to think
of ourselves as their moral superiors, we may also
be motivated to look down from this moral high ground out of a mixture
of envy, thwarted ambition and dislike for authority.
What's more, while leadership is often a dirty business, someone's got to do
it. I don't want to work all the time and you
probably don't either. Surely you'd
prefer a superefficient workaholic to be representing your interests if the
alternative was an easygoing, decent chap who couldn't politic his
way out of a paper bag?
But these are not the only options. I visited Denmark last year while
writing a book about middle-class affluenza.
Interviewing Toeger Seidenfaden, a newspaper
editor, I was staggered to hear that he leaves work at 4.30pm.
British editors are usually still in the office
long after their kids have been put to bed. But
Toeger has to collect the kids from school and cook the supper and he claims
that only a tiny minority of high-achieving Danes are any different.
Working long hours is simply culturally
unacceptable.
Quite how we get from our Americanised society to one where top editors
knock off at teatime I leave to other,
harder-working people to decide. Only of this am I
sure: the Danes probably don't have the best lager in the world, but
emulating their working practices would do us all a power of good.
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Facile loony
Nicely a fool
Ice on a folly
One oily calf
dark mean retch |
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July 2007 and nothing's changed: the science is still in the arms of IMAX...
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The 'scientific' way to
be 'the best'
What makes 100%? What does it mean to give MORE than 100%? Ever wonder about
those people who say they are giving more than 100% and
so should you? We have all been
in meetings where someone wants
us to give over 100%. How about achieving 103%?
What makes up 100% of life anyway?
Heres a little mathematical formula that might help you answer these
questions:
If:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y X Z
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Then:
H-A -RD-W - O - R - K
8+1+18+4+23+15+18+11 = 98%
and
K - N O W L-E -D-G-E
11+14+15+23+12+5+4+7+5 = 96%
But,
A- T T - I- T U -D-E
1+20+20+9+20+21+4+5 = 100%
And,
B U L L S H-I -T
2+21+12+12+19+8+9+20=103%
AND, look how far ass kissing will take you.
A S S K- I S S I N -G
1+19+19+11+9+19+19+9+14+7 = 118%
So, one can conclude with 'scientific'
certainty that while hard
work and knowledge will get you close, and
attitude will get you there, its the
bullshit and ass-kissing
that will take you the furthest!
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The photo below, which I helped set up on the day of the launch of the
ScottishPower Planetarium (30 Jan 2002), has not only been published ad
nauseam, but continues to make front pages! The photographer suggested
the child stand on the central projector well wall, and point to the Zeiss
starball. In the background I projected a ghostly white planetary nebula
through a DLP projector, and two 35mm slides - one of the Veil Nebula -
which by complete co-incidence looks like a spark of electricity connecting
the child and the projector.

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The associated article is realistically
bleak though:
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