Or this infographic from Information is beautiful.
The texture of silk is smooth and easily slips from the grasp. It is exciting and sensuous as a fabric. Anger, courage, love, heat, and passion, according to the chart.
Perhaps it might be easier to read them the referenced chart’s correspondences.
That infographic would have been much better as a regular table, instead of this circular thing. It seems to me as if it is not intended to be actually used, only to look nice.
It’s a dreadful graphic. No information leaps out at the viewer, you have to hunt through two tables for the meanings of the letters and numbers. It takes an effort to find the letter for any given block, or to find the block for any given letter, in radii far from where the letters appear. It’s difficult to tell apart yellow and gold, or grey and silver: the key only serves to highlight how indistinguishable the colours are.
And since this graphic does not work, I cannot see it as beautiful. It is an ugly sacrifice of function to superficial prettiness.
Agreed. I wish they’d stick to calling hard-to-read graphics like this ‘visualizations’ - the word ‘infographics’ implies a graphic designed to efficiently display information.
The worst part is it wouldn’t be hard to improve the graphic. They could drop the annoying 84-item list and just directly write the emotions in the 84 slots around the circle instead of using numbers. Enlarge the circle and blow up the font size a bit—then they can put the A to J list of cultures into the empty middle of the circle so you don’t have to keep looking off the side to cross-reference it. That’d help, even if it wouldn’t fix it.
Edit—I see that when they used that infographic as their book’s cover, they gave up on the idea of making it a real infographic and just made it into a pretty flower!
So looking at numbers 31, 2, and 46, a friendly AI should be orange and blue...
The texture of silk is smooth and easily slips from the grasp. It is exciting and sensuous as a fabric. Anger, courage, love, heat, and passion, according to the chart.
I don’t associate red with smoothness, or silk with any of those emotional qualities.
I can’t tell if this is wordplay based on the ambiguity in the quoted sentence (in which case, I like the joke :) ) or if you’re serious. If you’re serious, then yes, I’m sure: while emotions may not ask me for permission, I’m aware of what they’re associated with.
Strange. I have associations for green (foliage, leafs), yellow (sun), blue(water). Red requires conscious effort to select domain for association to pop up.
This is approximately in line with what studies on human responses depending on colour stimulus have found.
Sounds like it could just as well be cultural. “Red”, in particular, could easily get associated with “heat” in various cultures because of fire, but that doesn’t mean it’s hard-wired to the brain.
You don’t need to respond, but you seem to have misread the original comment. The David Gemmell quote compared red to silk. I said I didn’t associate that list of emotional qualities with silk. I also said that I did not associate red with smoothness. Those were the associations being discussed.
Or this infographic from Information is beautiful.
The texture of silk is smooth and easily slips from the grasp. It is exciting and sensuous as a fabric. Anger, courage, love, heat, and passion, according to the chart.
Perhaps it might be easier to read them the referenced chart’s correspondences.
That infographic would have been much better as a regular table, instead of this circular thing. It seems to me as if it is not intended to be actually used, only to look nice.
It’s a dreadful graphic. No information leaps out at the viewer, you have to hunt through two tables for the meanings of the letters and numbers. It takes an effort to find the letter for any given block, or to find the block for any given letter, in radii far from where the letters appear. It’s difficult to tell apart yellow and gold, or grey and silver: the key only serves to highlight how indistinguishable the colours are.
And since this graphic does not work, I cannot see it as beautiful. It is an ugly sacrifice of function to superficial prettiness.
Agreed. I wish they’d stick to calling hard-to-read graphics like this ‘visualizations’ - the word ‘infographics’ implies a graphic designed to efficiently display information.
The worst part is it wouldn’t be hard to improve the graphic. They could drop the annoying 84-item list and just directly write the emotions in the 84 slots around the circle instead of using numbers. Enlarge the circle and blow up the font size a bit—then they can put the A to J list of cultures into the empty middle of the circle so you don’t have to keep looking off the side to cross-reference it. That’d help, even if it wouldn’t fix it.
Edit—I see that when they used that infographic as their book’s cover, they gave up on the idea of making it a real infographic and just made it into a pretty flower!
So looking at numbers 31, 2, and 46, a friendly AI should be orange and blue...
I don’t associate red with smoothness, or silk with any of those emotional qualities.
Are you sure about that? Your emotions don’t ask you for permission before they make associations.
I can’t tell if this is wordplay based on the ambiguity in the quoted sentence (in which case, I like the joke :) ) or if you’re serious. If you’re serious, then yes, I’m sure: while emotions may not ask me for permission, I’m aware of what they’re associated with.
Strange. I have associations for green (foliage, leafs), yellow (sun), blue(water). Red requires conscious effort to select domain for association to pop up.
This is me saying that yes, you do have these associations with red, they are hardwired into your brain.
To be clear, we’re talking about associating red with smoothness? Why do you think this is hardwired into my brain?
And silk? You think silk is hardwired into people’s brains? What about humans who lived before the cultivation of silkworms was discovered?
My response referred to the emotional qualities, not to smoothness. The list I read in your comment was:
This is approximately in line with what studies on human responses depending on colour stimulus have found.
End of my contribution to this conversation.
Sounds like it could just as well be cultural. “Red”, in particular, could easily get associated with “heat” in various cultures because of fire, but that doesn’t mean it’s hard-wired to the brain.
You don’t need to respond, but you seem to have misread the original comment. The David Gemmell quote compared red to silk. I said I didn’t associate that list of emotional qualities with silk. I also said that I did not associate red with smoothness. Those were the associations being discussed.