Yearly Archives: 2007

Stem Cell Experiment in The Scientist

On The Scientist website you can find their new experimental feature – an article with questions to the public that will be used in forming the articles for the print version of the magazine next month. Go see Special Feature: Stem cell cloning needs you: In a unique experiment we’re inviting you to participate in a discussion that will help shape our next feature on stem cell research and post comments:

We’re inviting people to give us their thoughts and questions on whether we need to rethink the scientific and ethical approach to stem cell cloning to help shape a feature that we’ll be running in the June issue of the magazine. […] we’re treating this more as an experiment in user participation, which we’d love to do for more articles in future if people respond to this.

The three main questions are:
Is the nuclear transfer challenge one of understanding or technique?
Is it time to reevaluate the ethics of stem cell cloning?
Does stem cell cloning need new terminology?

So, go there and post comments. So far, there are only 17 comments and the thread has already been hijacked by embryo-worshippers. It would be really nice if people could go there and actually address the issue and try to answer the questions. Adding a comment is easy with no special registration hoops to go through. Hey, if you don’t have time to write multiple long comments, you can always blogwhore: post links to your posts in which you have already answered these quesitons in the past.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Ewwwww! UCLA Anthropologist Studies Evolution’s Disgusting Side:

Behind every wave of disgust that comes your way may be a biological imperative much greater than the urge to lose your lunch, according to a growing body of research by a UCLA anthropologist.

The Delayed Rise Of Present-day Mammals:

It took 10 to 15 million years after the dinosaurs were wiped out before modern mammals – including our ancient human ancestors – were able to diversify and rise to their present-day prominence across the globe, a landmark new study has found. The surprise finding overturns the widely held belief that the ancestors of modern mammals were able to quickly evolve and spread to fill many of the empty niches left behind following the mass extinctions of dinosaurs and many other large animals when a huge asteroid crashed into the Earth about 65 million years ago.

A High Beef Diet During Pregnancy Linked To Lower Sperm Counts In Sons:

A mother’s high beef consumption while pregnant was associated with lower sperm counts in her son, according to a study led by researchers at the University of Rochester.

Transplanting Organs From Animals To Humans: What Are The Barriers?:

Given the huge shortage of donor organs, researchers have been trying to find ways to transplant animal organs across different species (known as “xenotransplantation”), with the eventual aim of transplanting animal organs into humans. The major stumbling block, says Dr Muhammad Mohiuddin (US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute) in a paper in PLoS Medicine, is that the immune system in the animal receiving the organ tends to reject the transplant.

ClockQuotes

If time were the wicked sheriff in a horse opera, I’d pay for riding lessons and take his gun away.
– Wystan Hugh Auden

Who gets whose Last Name at the Wedding?

Times are changing and the variety is endless. See what Anton and Erin, The Woomers and Jenny F. Scientist ended up doing and why.
Then, read the posts and comment threads by Amanda and on Chaos Theory.

AnthropoBlogging of the Week

The latest edition of The Four Stone Hearth is up on Afarensis

Open Science On Marketplace

And in the marketplace. Jean-Claude Bradley was one of the people interviewed for a segment on Open Science on NPR’s Marketplace this morning. You can read the transcript and hear the podcast here. Thanks Anton for the heads-up.

EduBlogging of the Week

Carnival of Homeschooling #65 is dedicated to Charles Darwin and Evolution, up on Alasandra.
112th Carnival of Education is up on Education Wonks.

Liberal Blogging of the Week

Carnival of the Liberals #35 is up on Framed.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Migratory Birds: Innocent Scapegoats For The Dispersal Of The H5N1 Virus:

A review to be published shortly in the British Ornithologists’ Union’s journal, Ibis, critically examines the arguments concerning the role of migratory birds in the global dispersal of the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1. Ecologists of the Station Biologique de la Tour du Valat and of the GEMI-CNRS in the Camargue (France), Michel Gauthier-Clerc, Camille Lebarbenchon and Frédéric Thomas conclude that human commercial activities, particularly those associated with poultry, are the major factors that have determined its global dispersal.

Common Fungicide Causes Long-term Changes In Rats’ Mating Behavior:

Female rats avoid males whose great-grandfathers were exposed to a common fruit crop fungicide, preferring instead males whose ancestors were uncontaminated, researchers from The University of Texas at Austin have discovered. Their research shows that environmental contamination could affect the evolution of wildlife through changes in mating behavior.

Dark Chocolate, Nicotine Patches Examined For Impact On Heart Function:

Genetics and family history play a large role in a person’s risk for heart disease, but factors in diet, lifestyle and the environment are also thought to influence susceptibility to the disease. A number of studies presented recently at the American College of Cardiology’s 56th Annual Scientific Session look at how health-related behaviors can influence a person’s risk for cardiovascular disease.

ClockQuotes

Times change and men deteriorate.
– Gesta Romanorum

Science Blogging of the Fortnight

Tangled Bank #76 is up on Balancing Life.

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds Vol. 3, No. 27 are up on MedViews

Belgrade Zoo needs to move!

Long time ago, I mentioned here something about the Belgrade Zoo. The power of Google brought a Belgrader, Sonja, to my blog, who alerted me to the dire conditions in which the Zoo is right now and the existence of her website (made by her and her students) called Zoo SOS whose goal is to force the City government of Belgrade to move the Zoo from its present location to a better place outside town (not having to deal with the Animal Rights terrorists there, they must have placed a link to PETA by mistake – they do not know the distinction between Animal Rights and Animal Welfare. Update: The PETA link has been removed.).
Belgrade Zoo is located on Kalemegdan, the most ancient (from Roman through Turkish times) part of Belgrade. The zoo is small, and most of it is on stone and concrete. You can see some pictures of it here (just keep clicking on “Next” until you see them all).
Belgraders love their zoo. It is one of the favourite spots to spend a weekend. But it is also depressing to see animals crowded in small cages. It is especially painful for those of us who have seen modern zoos, like the one here in Asheboro, where animals are free to roam over many acres of land specifically designed to mimic their natural habitats.
The Belgrade Zoo is better called a ‘menagerie’ than a Zoo. It is an old-style city zoo, where the main goal is entertainment, while conservation and education play small or no role. It is not affiliated with any international zoo associations, so the nasty conditions in which animals live are cannot be addressed in any way by the rest of the world.
From its very inception, 80 years ago, there was a talk about moving it outside of the stony fortress and onto a bigger, nicer piece of land. Of course, that would make it less accessible to the citizens and tourists, thus probably reducing the revenue. So there has always been a tension between the people who did and people who did not want to see the Zoo moved.
After decades of neglect, Belgrade Zoo got a new Director in the mid-eighties: Vuk Bojovic. The relationship between the citizens of Belgrade and Vuk is quite schizophrenic – some love him, some hate him, but most have a strange love-hate relationship with him.
He is, in person, actually quite a pleasant fellow. But working for him is horror.
He loves animals and has a nice ‘touch’ with them. On the other hand he does not know anything about animals and is not prepared to listen to the experts.
He loves the attention he gets, but that also brings attention to the Zoo, so nobody is really sure how much of his posing is self-love and how much is a Zoo-promoting stunt.
He built a legend around himself as the only person who could pack medication into the tooth of the elephant Boy (who died a couple of years later, just to be replaced by an unwanted, man-killing female ditched by a Dutch zoo). Unlike his predecessors, elephants Tasa and Mita who were sweethearts (I remember feeding them peanuts by hand when I was a kid), Boy had a nasty temper, so the regular elephant feeders gladly let Vuk take the job and the spotlight – just one less dangerous elephant duty to do every day.
Vuk also brought in the first, one and only chimpanzee that the Zoo ever had – Sammy. Sammy was a smart guy so he made it a routine to escape from his cage and go galivanting around Belgrade. On one hand, that demonstrated that the Zoo is incapable of housing a chimp. On the other hand, he became a media darling – showing up on TV every time he escaped. Again, Vuk built a legend around himself as the only person who could approach, catch and recapture Sammy. So, TV crews often had great fun filming 40-something bearded Vuk climbing a tall poplar trying to lure Sammy down.
All those stunts brought interest of Belgraders back to the zoo after many decades. People started coming in. Money started flowing in. And the money was used to make the Zoo pretty – for people. Nothing was done to make the life of animals much better.
Now, that marketing strategy – painting the buildings, opening a new restaurant, offering pony rides for kids, etc. – may have been OK if it lasted the first year or so until enough money is collected to actually start using it for the benefits of animals. But, after 20 years, it does not sound so smart any more.
Then, the 90s came and the wars and sanctions ruined the economy of the country – not to mention the psyche of the people living there, painted as pariahs by the world, painted as villains in the movies, and not given any help to actually get rid of Milosevic (not to mention to retain Kosovo, and get rid of the Al Qaida HQ located there – aiding the KLA terrorists)…
There was no money to feed people, so who had the money to feed the animals? And as the war spread throughout the country, many small zoos had to be evacuated and all the animals brought to the Belgrade Zoo. Already lacking space and resources, the Zoo had to accept dozens of wolves, bears, wild boars, deer, etc. They all had to end up in tiny little cages because there was just no space for them. Yet, although hungry themselves, Belgraders donated meat to the Zoo to feed the animals.
In the 1999, when Belgrade was bombed, electricity would run out and all the meat would get spoiled in the freezers – good only for vultures and hyenas. Water was fouled. There was not enough water to keep the pools for hippos, polar bears, sea lions and penguins full. Eggs of rare birds rotted in the incubators. Daily bombing turned even the calmest animals into psychos – one tiger started chewing his own front toes!
During all that time, Vuk started doing some shady business, including smuggling of exotic animals (he almost smuggled in another elephant!). And now – he is the most vocal opponent of the move to the periphery of the city.
The initial idea was to relocate the Zoo to the Veliko Ratno Ostrvo, a large sandy island in the middle of the Danube at the spot where river Sava flows into it – that is: smack in the middle of Belgrade, but away from any regular streets (they would have built a bridge for the Zoo – right now the only way to get there is by boat).
Right now, the new proposed location is in Surcin, between Sava and the airport. It is not as big as Asheboro Zoo – not even close – but it is much bigger land than what the Zoo has now and it is not all stone and concrete! It would definitely be an improvement and, being built from scratch, it would be built in the most modern way possible, keeping the welfare of animals first and foremost as the goal of the entire operation.
As the Zoo is not part of any international association, and Serbia is now not a signator of any international agreements on regulation of animal keep and trade, and as the Zoo Director himself is the most vocal opponent of the move, the only people who can do something about it are the members of Belgrade city government and the mayor. And those people need LOTS of pressure to move on any matter, not just the Zoo. Most of that pressure has to come from locals, but we can help, by signing this petition, by writing about it and spreading the word. So, do it.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Chimpanzee Facial Expressions Are Helping Researchers Understand Human Communication:

Behavioral researchers led by Lisa Parr, PhD, director of the Yerkes National Primate Research Center Cognitive Testing Facility and Chimpanzee Core, have found understanding chimpanzee facial expressions requires more attention to detail than researchers initially thought. Correctly interpreting the subtleties within chimpanzees’ facial expressions may be key to understanding the evolution of human emotional communication.

Continue reading

ClockQuotes

We all find time to do what we really want to do.
– William Feather

Pediatric Blogging of the Month

Pediatric Grand Rounds: Vol 1 Issue 25 is up on Musings of a Distractible Mind. The theme is Tom and Jerry.

Intelligent Timekeepingism

This is, after all, A Blog Around The Clock, so, I guess I should be a strong and vocal proponent of the Clock Theory aka Specified clockplexity. After all, nobody’s ever seen a clock move! So, I should start fighting against vile, rabid, Atheistic Blindtimekeepingism:

Atheists often level a strawman at Intelligent Timekeepingist (hereafter referred to as IT) views. They force you to stare at a clock for 5 minutes or so and claim vindication when the big hand of the clock moves. But DTists all agree that the big hand moves! This is simply microtimekeeping, and it does not go against ITist views. The problem is that these movements of the big hand are just as likely to give an incorrect movement as they are to give a correct movement. There is no new information about the current time added by these microticks! *Nobody* has ever seen the little hand of a clock move. This is what we refer to when we say macrotimekeeping. It does not really matter if the current minute is 13, 14, or 15, but it *does* matter what the current hour is. Are we to believe that billions of people show up to work on time every day due to chance?

Have you nominated a post for the 2007 Science Blogging Anthology yet?

First three months of the year are almost over and… we have only 14 entries so far for the next Science Blogging Anthology!
Everything written and posted since December 20th 2006 is fair game. Have you written something really good since then? Send it in. Have you submitted something to a carnival this year yet? Send it in. Have you hosted a carnival and received some really cool posts? Send them in. Have you discovered a great new science blog that you think everyone should know about? Pick their best post and send it in.
It’s easy, just use the submission form or click here:
Openlab 2007
Help spread the word by placing the button (code can be found here) on your own sidebar.
Also, I am wondering if there are some enterpranurial people who will assemble anthologies of the best MedBlogging, EduBlogging, EnviroBlogging, Skeptical blogging, Godless blogging, Liberal blogging, etc…. Start a whole new industry and bridge the gap between blogs and blog-shy folks by presenting our best to them in the format they are used to and they trust – the printed-on-paper books.

Homer Evolving….

BrainBlogging of the Week

Encephalon #19 is up on Peripersonal Space

Blogrolling

Medlar Comfits

The Anterior Commissure

Greta Christina’s Blog

George Bristow’s Secret Freezer

Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog

GeneticArchaeology

The Webby Way

Triangle Blogging Teach-ins

If you are in the Triangle area on these two dates (Saturday, April 28 from 10am to noon and Saturday, May 5 from 10am to noon) and want to get some help starting your own blog, or at least starting a WordPress blog, come to the Durham Library and we’ll help you.

A high-school science blogging contest?

Alvaro of Sharp Brains (in a comment here) links to a high-school student’s science essay that he posted on his blog and asks:

Why couldn’t we approach a number of websites where science teachers hang out and propose some kind of essay contest for high-school students, with winning essays published in our blogs?

What do you think?

How Elephants Walk on Hot Coals? By Having Hot Feet

Russ noted that someone is using thermography to study thermoregulation in elephants:

Wits University has just completed studies on how elephants cope with high African temperatures and how that influences their behaviour. In African savannahs, elephants are exposed to high environmental heat loads during the day and low ambient temperatures at night and yet these animals are able to cope quite adequately.

Animals that run the risk of losing energy by dissipating heat often deal with this via regional heterothermy, i.e., wading birds have cold legs so there is less of a heat loss when they are standing in cold water. This is often accomplished by using counter-current setup which I explained in detail before. Elephants have the opposite problem – overheating and they solve it by heating the periphery (e.g., ears) and letting the heat dissipate. They also deal with walking on hot ground by heating their feet, it appears.
Or, if you’d rather look at basic principles than biological details, you may just start by assuming an elephant as a sphere. Bigger the sphere, smaller the surface-to-volume ratio and harder it is to lose heat. That is why penguins in the Antarctica are bigger than penguins living further north on the coasts of Africa or New Zealand (this is also called Bergman’s rule in ecology).
Also, deviating from the shape of the sphere increases heat loss. That is why desert foxes have longer ears, snouts and tails than Arctic foxes (this is called Allen’s rule in ecology).
Since the elephants at the NC Zoo are about to get a new house with a pool, perhaps this can be a good place to study elephant thermoregulation as well.

The First Annual Blogger Bioblitz

During the National Wildlife Week (April 21th – 29th), if you can, please participate in the First Annual Blogger Bioblitz:

Pick a neat little area that you are relatively familiar with and is small enough that you or the group can handle – a small thicket, a pond, a section of stream, or even your backyard – and bring along some taxonomic keys or an Audubon guide, or if you’re lucky enough, an expert in local flora and fauna. Set a time limit. Try to identify the different species of organisms that you find as well as the number of each species that you find. Take pictures if you have a digital camera, compile your numbers, make observations, set up your post however you wish as long as you include your numbers in a digestible fashion (I’ll have more details on that later) – then submit it to me and I’ll include it on the list. We will also be tallying total numbers of each species found, and then a grand total. There has also been talk of coding an interactive Google Map with distribution information, geotagging regions with a blogger’s submitted information.

Bruno has all the necessary additional information on how to participate (and why).

My picks from ScienceDaily

Salamanders Suffer Delayed Effects Of Common Herbicide:

Pollution from a common herbicide might be causing die-offs in stream salamanders, according to biologists who say findings from their long-term study raise concerns over the role of atrazine in global amphibian declines.

Continue reading

The Iraq War is four years old…

…yet even at the start of it, back in March 2003, The Onion understood the dynamics of war and the psychology of defenders of war better than almost half of Americans and all of GOP today.
[Hat-tip, commenter Lindsey]

ClockQuotes

How strange is the lot of us mortals! Each of us is here for a brief sojourn; for what purpose he knows not, though he senses it. But without deeper reflection one knows from daily life that one exists for other people.
– Albert Einstein

A question regarding dog training

We’ve had a few dogs over the years and housebreaking them was never a big problem. But now we got my mother-in-law’s puppy labradoodle – who is a real sweetheart – for a couple of weeks to see if we can housebreak him because she was not successful.
My wife turned out to be a better animal psychologist than I am and figured out what the problem is. This is not a case of a little puppy who is not yet housebroken. This is a case of a puppy that was inadvertenly trained to poop inside the house and not outside. What we think happened is either that the dog got yelled at when he soiled the carpet, or something unfortunately scary happened when he was doing it outdoors. He seems to be worse about it now thahn he was two months ago. Now, he appears to be afraid of doing it when a human is watching. And out on a leash-walk, a human is always watching. Indoors, there can always be a moment when one can sneak away and do it in the bathroom (or wherever the door is not closed at the time).
He’s been with us for a week and he managed to poop outside only once – for my wife – and promptly got rewarded and fussed over. But once is not enough. Only once I managed to catch him in the act and, without any anger, I quickly took him for a long walk during which he did NOT do it!
Now, if I had a fenced in yard, I’d let him out – it’s been in the 80s here lately so it is warm even during the night – and keep an eye on him through the window so, if I saw him pooping outside, I could get out quickly to give him a big reward. But I do not have a yard at all – we live in an appartment complex, so even tying him up on a very long rope is out of the question. Perhaps getting one of those super-long leashes would do the trick as he could get 20, 30 or 40 yards away from me (forgetting the whole training on how to walk properly on a leash) and do his tricks without me hovering over him – perhaps one of those fancy leashes with the button to haul him back for a reward afterwards.
I will have him for another week. After that he has to go back so we can thoroughly clean the house and wash the carpets in time for the Passover dinner (perhaps he can come back for a second course afterwards). And I am out of ideas.
I don’t know if Christie still reads my blog, but I assume that some of my readers have some experience and knowledge and good ideas about what to do. Shoot them in the comments.

If everything but Britney Spears is boring, why are you here?

On the heels of my last week’s post, it seems everyone is writing about journalism, blogging, and how to move back from infotainment to actual journalism, as in “information + education” which a populace needs if the democracy is to flourish. So, check out Brad DeLong, Ezra Klein, Matt Yglesias, Greg Anrig and Dave Neiwert on the subject of “boring” journalism and why the GOP does not want you to think policy wonkery is interesting.

NC Blogging of the week

Tarheel Tavern # 109 – One Bourbon, One Scotch and many a Blogger! Beautifully edited by the first-time host Olive Ridley Crawl, an excellent local blog which covers many of the same topics that I do as well some others and should be of interest to my readers so look around while there.

EnviroBlogging of the Week

Carnival of the Green #70 is up on Camden Kiwi

My picks from ScienceDaily

Studying Snail Slime Substitutes:

A team of engineers have set a small robot climbing walls in order to compare how natural and artificial snail slimes work. A snail’s slime acts as both a glue and a lubricant, allowing the snail to crawl up walls and across ceilings without falling off. The snail pushes until the structure of the glue breaks, at which point it glides forward. When the snail stops, the glue structure reforms – sticking the snail safely to the ceiling.

Continue reading

How to use a Squat Toilet

squat-toilet.jpg
It’s been decades ago, but yes, I have done it myself. Detailed instructions. Do not read around meal-time.

Medical Imaging of the Fortnight

Radiology Grand Rounds-X (that is tenth edition, not the X-ray edition) are up at MidEssexRay

On the shifting public discourse about religion

Ed Cone’s today’s column addresses the changes in the way we talk about religion, particularly in the sphere of politics: from James Dobson to Pete Stark, from Mitt Romney to Amanda Marcotte – The last taboos in politics:

But there seems to be something bigger afoot, a willingness to challenge the traditional eggshell-walking practiced around the beliefs of others, and a self-confidence about frank claims of disbelief in the broader culture…

Yes, we talk more about it, due to the vocal atheists and their books, and the debate that started with the focus on the authors has now shifted to religion itself. This can only be good in the long term.

ClockQuotes

Dreams are nothing but incoherent ideas, occasioned by partial or imperfect sleep.
– Benjamin Rush

More on Elizabeth Edwards

On Thursday night, I posted a large linkfest about the press-conference by John and Elizabeth Edwards and the revelation that her cancer has returned. Those were mostly first responses. There have been literally thousands of blog posts written since then, but I chose to link only to a couple of dozen that really deserve your attention due to quality, novel perspective, or information content (scroll below).
While there were certainly some very nice posts coming form the Right, wishing Elizabeth well and agreeing that the decision to continue campaigning is none of anyone’s but the Edwards’ business, most of the Right-wing blogs voiced their wish that he would quit the campaign (of course – they are afraid of him) and, in the process, revealed a very medieval view of marriage with the husband someone who is supposed to be the decision-maker in the house and the wife as someone who is to be put up on a pedestal and fawned over (especially if she’s sick). They could not fathom that the Edwards’ actually make decisions together and that his word may not always be the last one in the house (they would feel emasculated if that was the case in their own households, I guess). Another underlying emotion there is the profound fear of death (aren’t they mostly religious folks, believing in afterlife and stuff? Why fear?) and the wish not to watch someone they erroneously consider as good as dead every night on TV. Analysing their responses is quite telling about their worldview and their fobias.
Also, try to watch the Edwards’ on ’60 minutes’ tomorrow night.
So, here are the best links of the past two days on the topic:
Jeffrey Feldman: Frameshop: Cancer and Character in American Politics
The Stinging Nettle: The steel orchid
Talk About Cancer: Elizabeth Edwards: The New Face Of Cancer
Jim Buie: Elizabeth Edwards, Living Life to the Fullest
Darksyde: When Good Cells Go Bad
Pharyngula: How many times has Limbaugh hit bottom, only to sink lower still?
AJ WI: The Elizabeth Edwards Debate
Firedoglake: Sick People Make Him Uncomfortable
Nyceve: If you support John & Elizabeth, stop the media distortion now
Ana Maria Cox: Re: Re: The Edwards Question
Persiflage: I was with John and Elizabeth Edwards the night before the press conference
Eschaton: Freak
Dean Barnett (yes, him!): Thoughts on John and Elizabeth Edwards
Dr.Who: The Edwardses: Profiles In Courage
Olvlzl: Elizabeth Edwards’ Choice
Iowa for Edwards: John and Elizabeth Edwards on 60 Minutes
Ollieb: The Politics of Cancer
Movin’ Meat: That didn’t take long
The Carpetbagger Report: The conservative push-back against Edwards starts quickly
Random Thoughts from Reno: Presidential Notes
Corrente Wire: The “Liberal Media” Discusses Compassionate Conservatism
Dominant Reality: About the Edwards Family Decision
Conglomerate: Elizabeth Edwards, or What Would You Do With the Rest of Your Life?
Slate: How Bad Is Elizabeth Edwards’ Cancer
The Moderate Voice: Edwards Doesn’t Withdraw: John Doe Weighs In
Johnalive: Criticism of Edwards backfiring….
Blue Gal in a Red State: John and Elizabeth Edwards
Cold Flute: The Remarkable Elizabeth Edwards
Jo-Ann Mort (TPM Cafe): The Personal and the Political: Elizabeth Edwards as Icon
Linda Milazzo: Why I Love Elizabeth Edwards
Neil the Ethical Werewolf: My Hero
Orient Lodge: ‘There’s a trick to being strong…’
Chaoslillith: Presidential diseases aka Relax about Elizabeth
DC Idealist: Running to be worthy of Elizabeth Edwards: It’s a Whole New Game

The Tar Heel Tavern – last call for submissions

Next edition of the Tar Heel Tavern will be hosted tomorrow by Bharat of Olive Ridley Crawl, a turtle-friendly blog. Send your entries ASAP to: theoliveridley at gmail dot com

Medical Genetics Blogging of the Fortnight

Gene Genie is a new carnival and it is already on its third edition, hosted by Hsien Hsien Lei on Genetics and Health blog.

Christocentrism

When a newspaper publishes a column about religion (in their Religion section) that takes into account only the Christian point of view, someone is bound to object.
When the newspaper rectifies the error by publishing an article by an atheist, then, of course, some Christianists are going to object as well.
Discussion follows – kinda basic, embryonic and naive compared to informed and sophisticated discussions we often have on atheists blogs – but a discussion nonetheless, involving local (Greensboro NC) readers of the paper.
Hat-tip: Ed Cone

ClockQuotes

There will come a time when you believe everything is finished. That will be the beginning.
– Louis L’Amour

Greenbridge Developments

Treehugger interviews Tim Toben who is building the NC’s first LEED Gold Mixed Use Project in Chapel Hill, NC.

Easternblot

Eva Amsen was interviewed in The Blogerati Files series on BlogTo.

Feministe

Jill started blogging on Huffington Post yesterday. Check out her first entry about the The Miss USA Pageant.

The Owls Of The World, Unite!

Apparently, in Denmark, the ‘larks’ (early-risers) are called ‘A-people’ while ‘owls’ (late-risers) are ‘B-people’. We all know how important language is for eliciting frames, so it must feel doubly insulting for the Danish night owls.
Today, in the age of the internets, telecommuting and fast-increasing knowledge about our rhythms and sleep, retaining the feudal/early capitalism work schedules really does not make sense.
And owls are by no means minority. Among kids and adults, they comprise about 25% of the population (another 25% are larks and the rest are in between). But among the adolescents (roughly 14-30 years old), owls are the most prevalent chronotype.
So, the Danes decided to organize, to eliminate being frowned upon and deemed “lazy“, and to change their society.
You can check out The B-Society website both in Danish and in English:

Why do we still get up at cockcrow and when the cows moo,
when only 5% of the population work within agriculture or fishing?
Why does everything have to take place in the same rhythm and pace,
resulting in a huge problem with our infrastructure?
Why has the societal framework primarily been arranged to suit
people working from 8 am to 4 pm?
Let the tyranny of A-time end. Let us create a B-society.
Let us create B-patterns in our work and in our families.
Let us have quiet mornings and active evenings.
Life is too short for traffic jams. Let us have more all-night shops!

Hat-tip: NBM, frequent commenter on this blog.

Denialism

Chris and Mark Hoofnagle have recently started a new blog – Denialism.com which I warmly recommend.
Wanna know what denialism is? Check out their definition, or even better, their article: The Denialists’ Deck of Cards: An Illustrated Taxonomy of Rhetoric Used to Frustrate Consumer Protection Efforts

Local Paper

The first issue of Carrboro Citizen is now available both in hardcopy and online. [Background here]
Update: Brian is gushing over it….

My picks from ScienceDaily

Bird Sex Is Something Else:

We’ve all heard about the birds and the bees. But apparently when it comes to birds, they have an unusual take on his and hers — and the difference is genetic. Species with differentiated sex chromosomes (X and Y in humans, for example) get around the fact that males and females get different-sized portions of sex chromosome genes with a balancing act geneticists call dosage compensation. But research published today in the Journal of Biology shows that birds are extraordinary, because some bird genomes can live with an apparent overdose of sex-related genes.

Why Are Male Antlers And Horns So Large?:

Why are male ungulate antlers and horns so large? Darwin, when proposing his theory of evolution and sexual selection, suggested that the size of male ungulate antlers and horns may reflect male individual quality, and thereby be used by conspecifics as an honest signal of male sexual vigor, health, strength, hierarchical status, or ability to fight.

Continue reading

MathBlogging of the Fortnight

Carnival of Mathematics #4 is up on Evolutionblog