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The Long and Short of It: Statistical Arguments

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

So there’s an inflammatory post on the physics preprint server blog with the headline Massive Miscalculation Makes LHC Safety Assurances Invalid.   It’s based on a paper by Toby Ord and others titled “Probing the Improbable: Methodological Challenges for Risks with Low Probabilities and High Stakes.”   Here is the abstract: Some risks have extremely high stakes. […]

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Understanding Science…Not Entirely

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

So I saw a story about a new educational website run out of Berkeley called Understanding Science. I’m very supportive of such things in general, and I like a lot of things on the site. Unfortunately — you what is coming by now, don’t you? — there’s some politically correct biased rubbish in there as […]

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Childhood Dreams and the Golden Age of Your Life

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

They say that the golden years are your last ones in life, the gold age of comic books was the 1940s, and while there was a similar boom in pulp sf, that the golden age of science fiction is when you were twelve. You’ve probably already seen this, or heard of it, but for those […]

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Living on Mars among alien creatures…

Monday, January 5th, 2009

I’m not talking about the interesting TV show, Life on Mars, but an Einstein quote from a letter he wrote in 1933 to a professional musician living in Germany: I am the one to whom you wrote in care of the Belgian Academy…Read no newspapers, try to find a few friends who think as you […]

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Einstein on Science Fiction

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

I was reading a book of quotes, and one of the notes mentioned that Einstein, much to my consternation, believed that people should NOT read science fiction. His reasoning? It distorts science, and gives people the illusion of understanding science. Hmm, shades of Buzz Aldrin here.   I have some of the same objections as Einstein, […]

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Redshifts and Redshift Rendezvous

Monday, December 29th, 2008

I think I may have touched on this topic in the past, but reading Redshift Rendezvous the other day reminded me of a common misconception with regard to astronomy. Again, I recommend John Stith’s novel of mystery and action involving a hyperspace ship on which the speed of light is quite slow and relativistic effects […]

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Problems with Heroes

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

I’ve been a big fan of comic books since I was a kid, and most make little sense when viewed from a scientific perspective.   That’s fine.   I let that axe rest years ago.   They’re a particular type of modern, urban fantasy and I can happily enjoy them as such, as long as they enjoy some […]

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Why So Much Dumb in Science Reporting?

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

OK, I’m going to go after a biology story today that I found particularly poor.   The Perfect Mate: What We Really Want, by Meredith F. Small, apparently an anthropologist at Cornell, somehow, according the bio. First she opens with something of strawman argument, simplifying a position she’s both going to support and contradict in the […]

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How to Build a Giant Monster

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

Build a small monster, then soak it in water overnight. Heh. More seriously, my guide for this sort of mad scientist activity is the fossil record.   Anything resembling a giant monster there is plausible.   Look at dinosaurs, giant sloths, giant lizards and crocs, etc.   Plausible.   Anything else needs some more work. The limits on giant […]

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Scientific Self-Help?

Friday, December 5th, 2008

One of my common themes is how to properly educate people to think more scientifically.   I think the world would be a better place, more rational, more productive, if people made their decisions based on reliable information — the kind that comes from science.   Unfortunately a majority of people don’t do this regularly, and even […]

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What If Everyone Was Smart and Rational?

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

I mean it, literally, as a premise for a story to learn about ourselves. A couple of months ago, I wrote about subtle science fiction, in which human nature was explored by changing some aspect of human nature and seeing the results, rather than the more common juxtaposition of human beings in novel or extreme […]

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Science in Science Fiction

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

In response to my post about science fiction as a science blogger, which I wrote in response to the upcoming discussion about using science fiction to promote and teach science at ScienceOnline09, I got an interesting response From a Sci-Fi Standpoint as part of a post titled “It’s science fiction, not science class.” Yeah, but […]

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