http://cryptome.org/2013/01/aaron-swartz/Philosophy-and-Computing.pdf Artificial Intelligence and fuzzy logic Thank you Aaron. Mod edit, addition at request of OP:
http://cryptome.org/2013/01/aaron-swartz/Acts-of-Rebellion.pdf Table of Contents INTRODUCTION: Acts of Rebellion: Notes on the Interaction of x History and Justice IN MATTERS OF LAW “THE LA W STOOD SQUAREL Y ON ITS HEAD:” U.S. 3 Doctrine, Indigenous Self-Determination, and the Question of World Order THE NULLIFIC A TION OF N A TI VE AMERIC A? An Analysis of 21 the 1990 American Indian Arts and Crafts Act CONFRON TING COLUMBUS D A Y : An Argument Based in International Law STRUGGLES FOR LANDS AND LIVES 39 THE E AR TH IS OUR MO THER: Struggles for American Indian 59 Land and Liberation in the Contemporary United States A BREACH OF TRUST: The Radioactive Colonization of Native 103 North America LIKE SAND IN THE WIND: The Making of an American Indian 131 Diaspora in the United States THE BLOOD Y W AKE OF ALC A TR AZ: Repression of the 151 American Indian Movement during the 1970s CUL TURE WARS F AN T ASIES OF THE MAS TER RACE: The Cinematic Colonization of American Indians 171 LE T’S SPREAD THE “FUN” AROUND: The Issue of Sports T eam 201 Names and MascotsINDIANS ‘R’ Us: Reflections on the “Men’s Movement” 205 PART IV. THE INDIGENIST AL TERNA TIVE FALSE PROMISES: An Indigenist Examination of Marxist Theory 227 and Practice THE NEW FACE OF LIBERATION: Indigenous Rebellion, State 241 Repression, and the Reality of the Fourth World I AM INDIGENIST: Notes on the Ideology of the Fourth World 251
Introduction 1 PART I INTERROGATIONS AND CONFESSIONS 1. Interrogation Tactics and Techniques 7 Police Training Manuals 7 The Reid Technique 10 The Format and Recording of the Confession 21 The Context of the Interrogation 24 American Research on Interrogation 31 How Things Can Go Wrong During Interrogation 34 Conclusions 36 2. Interrogation in Britain 38 Irving’s Studies 39 Softley’s Study 43 Walsh’s Study 43 Research at the University of Kent 44 Baldwin’s Study 48 British Training Manuals 51 Conclusions 55 3. Persons at Risk During Interviews in Police Custody: the Royal Commission Studies 57 The 1993 Royal Commission Study by Gudjonsson and Colleagues 58 Who Confesses? 69 Detainees’ Legal Rights 71 xix viii Contents General Conclusions 73 4. The Identification and Measurement of ‘Oppressive’ Police Interviewing Tactics in Britain. 75 John Pearse and Gisli H. Gudjonsson Background to the Research 75 The Cases Analysed 77 Methodology 79 Interview Tactics 80 Suspects’ Responses 83 Methodological Issues 85 Statistical Procedures 86 Application of the Framework to Individual Cases 87 The Heron Murder Case 96 The Miller Murder Case 106 Court Outcome 112 Conclusions 114 5. Why do Suspects Confess? Theories 115 Factors Inhibiting Confession 115 Theoretical Models of Confession 117 Conclusions 128 6. Why do Suspects Confess? Empirical Findings 130 How Important are Confessions? 130 How Commonly do Suspects Confess? 133 Factors Associated with Admissions and Denials 140 Self-Report Studies into Why Suspects Confess 151 Conclusions 156 7. Miscarriages of Justice and False Confessions 158 Miscarriages of Justice 158 Studies of Miscarriages of Justice 159 The Leo–Ofshe Study 164 Some Notorious British Cases 166 Conclusions 172 8. The Psychology of False Confession: Research and Theoretical Issues 173 Definitions of False Confession 174 The Frequency of False Confessions 174 False, Retracted and Disputed Confessions 178 The Innocent Pleading Guilty 184 The Broader Context of False Confessions 186 The Causes of False Confessions 193 Theoretical Implications of the Different Types of False Confession 197 Contents ix The Ofshe–Leo Model of Confessions 203 Differences between True and False Confessions 208 A Proposed Modified Framework 211 Recovered Memory and False Confession 212 Conclusions 215 9. The Psychology of False Confession: Case Examples 217 Voluntary False Confessions 218 Pressured–Compliant False Confessions 224 Pressured–Internalized False Confessions 233 Conclusions 242 PART II LEGAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS 10. The English Law on Confessions 247 The Admissibility and Reliability of ConfessionThe Voire Dire 258 Issues Affecting Vulnerable Defendants 259 The Admissibility of Expert Evidence 275 Conclusions 281 11. The American Law on Confessions 283 Gisli H. Gudjonsson and Lorca Morello The Basic Law of Confessions 283 Voluntariness and Mentally Vulnerable Suspects 288 Challenging a Confession in Court 293 Differences between English and American Law and Practice 304 Conclusions 306 12. The Psychological Assessment 308 The Assessment Framework 309 Psychological Vulnerabilities 316 Learning Disability as a Vulnerability 320 The Court Report and Oral Evidence 327 Conclusions 330 13. Suggestibility: Historical and Theoretical Aspects 332 Theoretical Approaches 334 Some Characteristics of Suggestion and Suggestibility 335 Brief Historical Background to Suggestibility 336 The Classification of Suggestibility 338 Theories of Suggestibility 340 Reinforcement and Suggestibility 343 Suggestibility: a State or a Trait? 343 Definition of Interrogative Suggestibility 344 The Gudjonsson–Clark Theoretical Model 347 Implications of the Model and Hypotheses 352 x Contents External Evaluation of the Model 353 Conclusions 358 14. Interrogative Suggestibility: Empirical Findings 360 The Gudjonsson Suggestibility Scales 361 Suggestibility and Hypnotic Susceptibility 368 Compliance 370 Acquiescence 376 Correlations between Suggestibility, Compliance and Acquiescence 378 Suggestibility and Gender 379 Suggestibility and Ethnic Background 380 Suggestibility and Age 380 Suggestibility and Intelligence 381 Suggestibility and Memory 384 Suggestibility and Anxiety 385 Suggestibility and Impulsivity 388 Suggestibility and the MMPI-2 389 Suggestibility and Sleep Deprivation 389 Suggestibility: Dissociation and Fantasy Proneness 390 Suggestibility and Instructional Manipulation 391 Suggestibility and the Experimenter Effect 392 Suggestibility and Social Desirability 394 Suggestibility and Coping Strategies 395 Suggestibility and Assertiveness 396 Suggestibility and Self-Esteem 396 Suggestibility and Locus of Control 398 Suggestibility and Field Dependence 399 Suspiciousness and Anger 400 Suggestibility and Test Setting 402 Suggestibility and Previous Convictions 403 Police Interviewing and Suggestibility 403 Resisters and Alleged False Confessors 404 Suggestibility and False Confessions 407 Suggestibility and Eyewitness Testimony 410 Suggestibility and Recovered Memory 411 Conclusions 412 15. The Effects of Drugs and Alcohol Upon the Reliability of Testimony 415 The Extent of the Problem 416 Theoretical Perspectives 418 The Effects of Intoxication and Withdrawal 421 The Effects of Alcohol Withdrawal on Interrogative Suggestibility 428 False Confessions to Murder by a Heroin Addict 430 Conclusions 432 PART III BRITISH COURT OF APPEAL CASES 16. The Court of Appeal 437 Contents xi The Beginning of Expert Psychological Testimony 440 Conclusions 441 17. The ‘Guildford Four’ and the ‘Birmingham Six’. 445 Gisli H. Gudjonsson and J. A. C. MacKeith The Guildford Four 445 The Birmingham Six 452 Conclusions 456 18. Psychological Vulnerability 458 Engin Raghip—The Beginning: Landmark Decision for Psychology 458 Jacqueline Fletcher—Unidentified Borderline Intelligence 468 Judith Ward—Personality Disorder 470 David MacKenzie—Inability to Distinguish Facts from Fantasy 472 Idris Ali—Pathological Lying 473 George Long—Clinical Depression 476 Patrick Kane—Anxiety and Compliance 479 Andrew Evans—Misdiagnosed Psychogenic Amnesia 482 John Roberts—Abnormal Compliance 492 Ashley King—Abnormal Suggestibility and Compliance 493 Darren Hall—Disorder in the Absence of a Psychiatric Diagnosis 495 Ian Hay Gordon—Exploitation of Sexuality 499 Peter Fell—Poor Self-Esteem 506 Conclusions 512 19. Police Impropriety 514 Stephen Miller 515 Alfred Allen (the ‘UDR Four’) 517 The Carl Bridgewater Case 519 Derek Bentley 520 Conclusions 522 20. Misleading Special Knowledge 523 Stefan Kiszko 523 The Darvell Brothers 530 Donald Pendleton 533 Conclusions 537 PART IV FOREIGN CASES OF DISPUTED CONFESSIONS 21. Four High Profile American Cases 541 Waneta Hoyt 541 Joe Giarratano 550 xii Contents Henry Lee Lucas 554 John Wille 563 General Conclusions 572 22. Canadian and Israeli Cases 573 A Canadian Case of Non-Custodial Interrogation 573 An Israeli Terrorist Case 582 General Conclusions 589 23. Murder in Norway: a False Belief Leading to a False Confession 590 Background to the Case 590 Pre-Trial (1997) Psychological Evaluation 594 The First Trial 595 The Psychological Evaluation Prior to the Appeal 596 Interviews with Informants 602 Mr A’s Strengths and Vulnerabilities 605 The Interrogation and Confinement 606 Repression and Psychogenic Amnesia 608 The Appeal 609 Conclusions 611 Conclusions 615 General Comments and Conclusions 615 Interrogation 619 Psychological Vulnerability 621 True Confessions 622 Retracted and False Confessions 623
I'm posting the table of contents so you can select what to read. It's all tl; but read. It's important.
Chapter IV is l ikely the most pioneering. It addresses the “deepest inner self” as a human component distinct from intellect, feelings, and body. Comprehensive, authoritative sources are used to present the material with a structured, analytic approach. In this fashion is also addressed the potential of human spirituality to empower IT workers with “psychological robustness.” It is in this perspective that a structured, operational definition of “emotional intelligence” is developed, and the potential of such an intelligence in IS efforts is promoted considerably. 2013-0036.pdf Aaron Swartz: Managing InfoSys Emotional Intel January 14, 2013 (3.0MB
2013-0031.pdf Psychiatric Slavery (Scientology will not be pleased, it is about involuntary commitment and forced treatment relevant now because of the move to treat homosexuality as a disease.) Source: Aaron Swartz
THE MIT ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE COGNITIVE SCIENCES EDITED BY ROBERT A.WILSON AND FRANK C. KEIL COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE CULTURE, COGNITION, AND EVOLUTION LINGUISTICS AND LANGUAGE NEUROSCIENCES PHILOSOPHY PSYCHOLOGY The
Preface ix Introduction 1 PART I Overview 11 1 Toward a Necessary Utopianism: Democratic Global Governance 13 2 The Power of Rights and the Rights of Power: What Future for Human Rights? 25 3 Orientalism and International Law 39 PART II Nurturing Global Democracy 55 4 Toward Global Democracy 57 5 Citizenship and Globalization 67 PART III International Criminal Law 81 6 The Holocaust and the Emergence of International Human Rights 83 7 The Pinochet Moment: Whither Universal Jurisdiction? 97 8 Genocide at the World Court: The Case Against Serbia 121 PART IV Human Rights After 9/11 127 9 A Descending Spiral 129 10 Encroaching on the Rule of Law: Counter-Terrorist Justifications 144 11 Humanitarian Intervention 166 PART V Beyond Politics 179 12 Crimes, Lies, and Law: Human Rights in Adversity 181 13 Humanity in Question 192 14 The Ideal of the Citizen Pilgrim 202 2013-0046.pdf Aaron Swartz: Achieving Human Rights January 15, 2013 (844KB
2013-0047.pdf Aaron Swartz: Disposable Women of Global Capital January 15, 2013 (2.2MB Contents Acknowledgments xi 1 Introduction: Disposable Women and Other Myths of Global Capitalism 1 I Storylines 2 Disposable Daughters and Factory Fathers 23 3 Manufacturing Bodies 45 4 The Dialectics of Still Life: Murder, Women, and Disposability 71 II Disruptions 5 Maquiladora Mestizas and a Feminist Border Politics 93 6 Crossing the Factory Frontier 123 7 Paradoxes and Protests 151
One more bump for Cryptome. They got a DMCA last week, unrelated to Aaron Swartz. This might be a good time to buy the archive before it gets erased.
Contents 2013-0054.pdf Aaron Swartz: Spying Blind: CIA, FBI, 9/11 January 16, 2013 (1.1MB) CHAPTER ONE An Organizational View of 9/11 1 CHAPTER TWO Canaries in the Coal Mine: The Case for Failed Adaptation 15 CHAPTER THREE Crossing an Academic No-Man’s Land: Explaining Failed Adaptation 43 CHAPTER FOUR Fighting Osama One Bureaucrat at a Time: Adaptation Failure in the CIA 61 CHAPTER FIVE Signals Found and Lost: The CIA and 9/11 101 CHAPTER SIX Real Men Don’t Type: Adaptation Failure in the FBI 120 CHAPTER SEVEN Evidence Teams at the Ready: The FBI and 9/11 156 CHAPTER EIGHT The More Things Change . . . 169 Source: Aaron Swartz
2013-0052.pdf Aaron Swartz: Norms in a Wired World January 16, 2013 (1.6MB) Contents Introduction 1 part i. the pattern conception of norms 1 Rule Conception Versus Pattern Conception 17 2 Rational Norms 38 3 Norm Utilitarianism 79 4 Emergent Moral Norms 96 5 Critical Moral Norms 120 part ii. negligent norms 6 The Traditional Rule of Custom 149 7 The Evidentiary Rule of Custom 163 8 A World of Dangerous Norms and Customs 178 9 Regulating the Rule of Custom to Create Safe Social Norms 198 10 Juror Norms and the Reasonable Person Standard 215 11 Rejection of the Dominant Paradigm of Negligence 226 part iii. cyberspace privacy norms 12 Harmful Online Personal Data Practices 243 13 The Emergence of Online Privacy Entitlements 261 14 Website Privacy Respect: Real and Feigned 282 Conclusion 306 Source: Aaron Swartz
Even tho Barrett Brown is a horses ass, one of his charges is for pasting a link- It seems the US government is trying to criminalize on-line advocacy for freedom of information.
http://cryptome.org/2013/01/aaron-swartz/dmca-swartz.htm I may be contacted by the following methods: Greta Lindquist, University of California Press, 2120 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, CA 94704; Phone: 510-643-9795; Email: greta.lindquist[at]ucpress.edu; I hereby request that you remove or disable access to this material as it appears on your service in as expedient a fashion as possible. In particular, the author is upset that his work appears in connection with his cousin, Aaron Swartz, and asks that you respect his wishes and remove the link. Thank you. Regards, -- Greta Lindquist Subsidiary Rights Assistant University of California Press 2120 Berkeley Way Berkeley, CA 94704 Phone: 510-643-9795 Fax: 510-643-7127
So sad those in academia have a monetary need to try to restrain knowledge to their purview behind paywalls. Anybody got this stuff on torrent?
2013-0051.pdf Aaron Swartz: Prison State: Mass Incarceration January 16, 2013 (1.4MB) Contents Acknowledgments page ix 1 The Buildup to Mass Incarceration 1 2 Causes of the Prison Buildup 14 3 More Prison, Less Crime? 51 4 Prison Buildup and Disorder 81 5 The Buildup and Inmate Release 116 6 Impact of the Buildup on the Labor Market 141 7 Conclusion: Right-Sizing Prison 169 Notes 181 His argument is that we depend of human capital, it is what drove the US economy for the decades after ww2. Since so many people are incarcerated, we need to turn prisons into human capital. IDK, seems odd. Does he think we should have mandatory education in prisons? For-profit prisons use hunan capital for cheap labor, he is arguing for a different use.
2013-0057.pdf Aaron Swartz: Munitions of the Mind: Propaganda January 16, 2013 (1.4MB) This is a history of PsyOps. It closes with
http://cryptome.org/2013/01/aaron-swartz/Marketing-Rebellion.pdf Contents Maps and Tables Acknowledgments 1 INSURGENT GROUPS AND THE QUEST FOR OVERSEAS SUPPORT 2 POWER, EXCHANGE, AND MARKETING 3 FROM ETHNIC TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONFLICT: NIGERIA’S OGONI MOVEMENT 4 THE MAKING OF AN ANTIGLOBALIZATION ICON: MEXICO’S ZAPATISTA UPRISING 5 TRANSNATIONAL MARKETING AND WORLD POLITICS