Yearly Archives: 2007

Basics: Biological Clock

Considering I’ve been writing textbook-like tutorials on chronobiology for quite a while now, trying always to write as simply and clearly as possible, and even wrote a Basic Concepts And Terms post, I am surprised that I never actually defined the term “biological clock” itself before, despite using it all the time.
Since the science bloggers started writing the ‘basic concepts and terms’ posts recently, I’ve been thinking about the best way to define ‘biological clock’ and it is not easy! Let me try, under the fold:

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The Cultural Politics of Sleep

Nicole Eugene recently defended her Masters Thesis called Potent Sleep: The Cultural Politics of Sleep (PDF) on a topic that I find fascinating:

Why is sleep, a moment that is physiologically full and mentally boundless, thought to be a moment of absence and powerlessness? Where did this devalued notion of sleep come from and how can we situate sleep studies within a continuation of a historical processes and economic infuences? In other words, how does sleep effect and exist within systems of power? To answer these questions I turn to a range of scholarship and theoretical studies to examine the complexities and dynamics at work within the cultural discourses on sleep. By creating a genealogy of sleep I am able to track the way notions of sleep have changed and evolved over time. I develop a theoretical framework to examine how the Enlightenment effected notions of sleep by strengthening a cultural disposition for logical, rational and phonomenological modes of knowledge. I find that the advent of modernity is signified by the moment in which sleep, darkness and unknowing become negative while being awake, light and knowledge become positive. To understand how sleep (and sleep studies) operates in contemporary situations I examine them within the economy of time in which clock time is conflated with money. Here I also visit the way sleep functions in relation to work in a neo-Taylorist management era. I offer an account of sleep’s connections to passivity within the patriarchal systems of thought. I determine that the cultural politics of sleep and sleep disorders point to a rift in the Western Self because of a presumed simultaneity of thinking, acting and being. I have engaged in a range of disciplines and use theory, historical studies, textual analysis , and autoethnography as methodologies to outline some of the major cultural discussions that surround sleep.

And she is not the only one in the world interested in cultural, social and political aspects of sleep. I wish someone would pay for me to go and liveblog the Workshop: New Directions in the Social and Cultural Study of Sleep to be held in Vienna on 7-9 June 2007:

This international and interdisciplinary workshop aims at exploring new directions in the study of sleep from the perspectives of the Humanities, Social and Cultural Sciences. The aim is to raise awareness of the social, cultural, political, and environmental influences on sleep behaviour and to describe in detail variations of sleep patterns in different countries and social groups as well as the meanings people attribute to their sleep and sleep-related behaviour.

Once I read the 191 pages of Nicole’s thesis (and I’ll have to find some time to do it), I will post my thoughts on it here, so stay tuned.
(Related)

I always like it…

.. when someone rips PETA a new one
Added later: Jill and Chris have more (and watch all those disccussions in the comment threads on all three posts!).
Added even later: Archy has a great analysis of this.

All the cool folks are doing it….

I am:

Robert A. Heinlein

Beginning with technological action stories and progressing to epics with religious overtones, this take-no-prisoners writer racked up some huge sales numbers.

Which science fiction writer are you?

Science Under Attack II – blogospheric response

There are also more responses to the U of California lawsuit described by Sara Robinson the other day.
See what Amanda and PZ Myers have to say about it.
Edit: and Mike

Science Under Attack – blogospheric response

More and more science bloggers are chiming in on the story about a nasty PR campaign against open-source publishing. See Revere, Alex, Steve, Tim and Corie for a taste and several more are linked from here. Also, read David Biello in Scientific American who wrote an article about it: Open Access to Science Under Attack
Update: Now WaPo chimes in here (thanks Alex).
Please go to discuss this on the SciAm blog.

Quotidian

The Merriam-Webster Word of the Day for January 27, 2007 is:
quotidian • \kwoh-TID-ee-un\ • adjective
1 : occurring every day
*2 : belonging to each day : everyday
3 : commonplace, ordinary
Example Sentence:
As an employee, Fiona is gifted at solving the difficult problems that arise from time to time, but she is often careless about the quotidian responsibilities of her job.
Did you know?
In Shakespeare’s play As You Like It, the character Rosalind observes that Orlando, who has been running about in the woods carving her name on trees and hanging love poems on branches, “seems to have the quotidian of love upon him.” Shakespeare’s use doesn’t make it clear that “quotidian” derives from a Latin word that means “every day.” But as odd as it may seem, Shakespeare’s use of “quotidian” is just a short semantic step away from the “daily” adjective sense. Some fevers occur intermittently — sometimes daily. The phrase “quotidian fever” and the noun “quotidian” have long been used for such recurring maladies. Poor Orlando is simply afflicted with such a “fever” of love.
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

Sort of like “circadian”. Perhaps one day I’ll use ‘quotidian’ in a paper instead of ‘circadian’ just to see what reviewers say…

My picks from ScienceDaily

Fish Can Determine Their Social Rank By Observation Alone, Study Finds:

A male fish can size up potential rivals, and even rank them from strongest to weakest, simply by watching how they perform in territorial fights with other males, according to a new study by Stanford University scientists. The researchers say their discovery provides the first direct evidence that fish, like people, can use logical reasoning to figure out their place in the pecking order.

Genetic Evaluations Help Breed Better Bossies:

Breeding dairy cattle is an inexact science, so many gene-linked traits must be considered. Some of the major ones are quantity of milk produced, its fat and protein content, mothers’ pregnancy rates, calving ease and, most recently, stillbirth rate. Such evaluating of genetic traits has allowed dairy farmers to increase milk production to all-time highs.

Living Near A Highway Affects Lung Development In Children, Study Shows:

Children who live near a major highway are not only more likely to develop asthma or other respiratory diseases, but their lung development may also be stunted. According to a study that will appear in the February 17 issue of The Lancet and now available online, researchers at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) found that children who lived within 500 meters of a freeway, or approximately a third of a mile, since age 10 had substantial deficits in lung function by the age of 18 years, compared to children living at least 1500 meters, or approximately one mile, away.

Clock Quotes

There is never enough time, unless you’re serving it.
Malcolm Forbes (1919 – 1990)

We agree again

After a very pleasant dinner on Saturday where we discovered we agree on pretty much everything (e.g., religion, evolution, etc.), I am pleased that Larry Moran and I also agree on yet another thing.

What Is It Like to Be a Bat?


I am not surprised at all.
Read more on Splintered Mind and Cognitive Daily (check the comments on both)

This aired too early in the day for my adolescent brain…

I was too busy with the conference so I missed the NPR Morning Edition story on one of my favourite subjects: Adolescent Sleep, which was followed by two more stories on the same subject! I am glad to see this topic becoming this prominent.
Hat-tip: Mind Hacks

Pollan Alert

In this Sunday’s NY Times Magazine (not available online yet), Michael Pollan will have the cover story: “The Age of Nutritionism: How Scientists have Ruined the Way We Eat.”
Looking forward to reading (and perhaps blogging) it.
Update: You can now read it here.

Carnivals

Write about science and get exposure – send your stuff to carnivals.
Calls for submissions have been announced for Tangled Bank, Grand Rounds, Skeptic’s Circle, Mendel’s Garden, Bio::Blogs, Encephalon, Circus of the Spineless, I And The Bird, Philosophia Naturalis, Change Of Shift, Radiology Grand Rounds, Four Stone Hearth, Festival of the Trees, Oekologie, Teaching Carnival, History Carnival.
And you just missed submitting to the first Carnival of Postdocs as it just went live today, but you can apply to host the next one or submit your posts to the next edition.

Back to the Classroom

This is what I will be doing tomorrow morning again. I have so much fun!

Serbian Citation Index

SCIndex is a new online project that provides a searchable database of scientific publications in Serbia. Some papers are in Serbian language, others in English (and they all tend to have at least the Abstract in English) and all papers are available as PDFs for free download. KoBSON has more information about the project.

Hooked on Hooking Up, Or What’s Wrong With Conservative View Of Marriage

Hooked on Hooking Up, Or What's Wrong With Conservative View Of MarriageThis is two years old (February 16, 2005) but still as provocative….(also my belated contirbution to the Blog For Choice Day) and I’ll repost the second part of it next Friday.

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I Dream Of Jeannie

Comparative analysis of sexual dreams of male and female students (PDF)

The subject of research is analysis of connection between sexuality as instinctive function and dreams with sexual content as cognitive function. The sample consisted of 656 students, 245 males and 411 females. Research showed significant difference between genders concerning sexual dreams their appearance, frequency, image of sexual partner, and content subjective emotional experience during dreams and talk about sexual fantasies. Based on the obtained data, the authors believe that dreams with sexual content are not learned behavior, but biologically determined sexual behavior, and that cognitive elaboration of contents and objects of sexual fantasies is secondarily environmentally conditioned.

The article is in Serbian language, published in the journal ‘Psihijatrija danas’ (2000, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 227-242) by Stanković Miodrag, Zdravković Jezdimir A., and Trajanović Ljiljana (all from Klinika za zaštitu mentalnog zdravlja i neuropsihijatriju razvojnog doba Kliničkog centra, Niš).
If you are interested I’ll take a look and translate important parts to quote and see if it is any good.

My picks from ScienceDaily

As always, put the press releases under the dissecting microscopes:
Thinking With The Spinal Cord?:

Two scientists from the University of Copenhagen have demonstrated that the spinal cord use network mechanisms similar to those used in the brain. The discovery is featured in the current issue of Science.

More under the fold…

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Clock Quotes

There is a time for many words, and there is also a time for sleep.
Homer (800 BC – 700 BC), The Odyssey

Question to my readers

My SciBling John Wilkins is regularly updating the list of ‘Basic Terms and Concepts’ posts (which you should check dilligently every day!), at least until a more permanent repository is made.
Today, he included my Lecture #13 on Current Biological Diversity on the list, though my reposting of it was a part of my regular Thursday noon series of educational posts, not intended specifically to be picked up for the ‘Basics’ series (though I believe it belongs there).
On one hand, I feel silly to repost stuff that I just reposted a month or two ago (moving it from the old blogs to the new one). On the other hand, I have written in the past a number of posts I considered “basic” and perhaps they should be brought out to light again (and also relieve me from having to write too much new stuff and spend more time on the Dissertation).
So, should I, for the sake of the “Basics” series, quickly (i.e., over the next week or two) repost everything I think is a “basics” post? If so, which ones truly are ” basic”? Or just forget the whole thing?

Wordmeister is back

Just in time for “Best Writer” Koufaxes (LOL), Lance gets back to business: Why we don’t like him
Seriously, that is exactly the way we all feel. And Lance knows how to put it in words. Perhaps even words that Republicans can understand.
Update: Amanda comments

Do-it-yourself Biology

When I was a kid, there was no such thing as “do it yourself” biology for home. Sure, you could do observational stuff, like go out in the woods with a butterfly net and a magnifi\ying glass, or plant some seeds, or look at stuff under the microscope, but it was hard to do real experiments in biology.
My favourite trio of childhood science books (recently reissued) were “Between Play and Physics”, “Between Play and Chemistry” and “Between Play and Mathematics” – see, no biology there!
But the world of science has changed since then and there is much more stuff that one can do at home that is real experimental biology – especially molecular biology.
These days, you can run a gel in an electrophoresis setup built out of Legos or extract your own stem cells from a placenta (if you can get hold of one), or a whole bunch of other stuff. Even more sophisticated ready-made stuff, e.g., science kits, are not that expensive any more.
Perhaps someone should write “Between Play and Biology” one of these days.

Gay Sheep in the New York Times

Speaking of the role of blogs in science communication, today’s NY TImes has an interesting article about the way a sloppily reported story about research on gay sheep got all out of proportion: Of Gay Sheep, Modern Science and the Perils of Bad Publicity (also mentioned by Dave this morning).
Apparently, the media reporting was heavily influenced by PETA, and much of the blogosphere fell for it, except for a couple of notable exceptions, including ’emptypockets’ who is a co-blogger on Next Hurrah and a Diarist on Daily Kos who focuses mainly on science topics.
His analysis of the way story spread through the blogosphere is very insightful and informative.
Here at scienceblogs.com, the story was picked up by Pharyngula and Gene Expression, from where it spread through the science blogosphere, but the PETA version spread more rapidly via LiveJournal and MySpace to the LGTB blogs which took it at face value.
What is the difference between the two opposite accounts? The use of a single word: “control”.

The release quoted Dr. Roselli as saying that the research “also has broader implications for understanding the development and control of sexual motivation and mate selection across mammalian species, including humans.”
Mr. Newman, who wrote the release, said the word “control” was used in the scientific sense of understanding the body’s internal controls, not in the sense of trying to control sexual orientation.
“It’s discouraging that PETA can pick one word, try to add weight to it or shift its meaning to suggest that you are doing something that you clearly are not,” he said.
Dr. Roselli said that merely mentioning possible human implications of basic research was wildly different from intending to carry the work over to humans.
Mentioning human implications, he said, is “in the nature of the way we write our grants” and talk to reporters. Scientists who do basic research find themselves in a bind, he said, adding, “We have been forced to draw connections in a way that we can justify our research.”

Yes, when information from the environment alters the pattern of activity of a portion of the nervous or endocrine systems which results in a change of activity of another organ, we say that the function of that organ is “controlled” by the brain or hormones. The brain and the hormones control many other aspects of physiology and behavior. This use of the word is not at all problematic.
Other biologists may use the term “control” in a bit more problematic way, when speaking about genes controlling physiology of behavior, but even this usage in no way implies that scientists, or business, or government are iching to control anything.
Ah, the power of language and its distortion (see my previous post below for another example)!

Those with money to lose will fight against freedom of information

While the world is moving towards an Open Science model of exchange of scientific information, there are, as expected, forces that are trying to oppose it. Whenever there is a movement to change any kind of system, those most likely to lose will make a last-ditch and nasty effort to temporarily derail the progress. So, in this case, the Big Science Publishers have decided, instead of joining the new world of Open Science and using their brand names, their know-how and their infrastructure to become the leaders in the new system, and instead opted to go all mean and nasty. Once they finally lose, they’ll lose for good and it will not be pretty:
PR’s ‘pit bull’ takes on open access:

Now, Nature has learned, a group of big scientific publishers has hired the pit bull to take on the free-information movement, which campaigns for scientific results to be made freely available. Some traditional journals, which depend on subscription charges, say that open-access journals and public databases of scientific papers such as the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH’s) PubMed Central, threaten their livelihoods.
From e-mails passed to Nature, it seems Dezenhall spoke to employees from Elsevier, Wiley and the American Chemical Society at a meeting arranged last July by the Association of American Publishers (AAP). A follow-up message in which Dezenhall suggests a strategy for the publishers provides some insight into the approach they are considering taking.

And since they have no healthy arguments to put forth, they will use the trickery with language in their efforts to slander the Open Source and Open Science organizations and online journals, taking their cues from the Frank Luntz textbook of Republican War On Meaning.

Current Biological Diversity

Current Biological Diversity The latest re-post of my BIO101 lecture notes (this one originally from June 05, 2006). I know I will have to rewrite everything about the Three Domain Hypothesis, but you also tell me if I got other stuff wrong or if this can be in some way improved for the classroom use.

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Do you think you know how to fix the Global Warming problem?

If you think you can easily come up with a workable set of policies to stop and reverse global warming, think again. Or try playing this (very addictive) BBC game that will help you figure it out:
The science behind Climate Challenge:

A game where you are president of the European Nations. You must tackle climate change and stay popular enough with the voters to remain in office.

(Via)

My picks from ScienceDaily

How Fishes Conquered The Ocean:

Scientists at the University of Bergen, Norway have deduced how bony fishes conquered the oceans by duplicating their yolk-producing genes and filling their eggs with the water of life — the degradation of yolk proteins from one of the duplicated genes causes the eggs to fill with vital water and float. This is the major solution realized by extant marine teleosts that showed an unprecedented radiation during the late Cretaceous and early Paleogene Periods. The work is a unique hypothesis that integrates the cellular and molecular physiology of teleost reproduction with their evolutionary and environmental history.

More under the fold….

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New mammalian species described

Scientists Discover New Species Of Distinctive Cloud-forest Rodent:

A strikingly unusual animal was recently discovered in the cloud-forests of Peru. The large rodent is about the size of a squirrel and looks a bit like one, except its closest relatives are spiny rats. The nocturnal, climbing rodent is beautiful yet strange looking, with long dense fur, a broad blocky head, and thickly furred tail. A blackish crest of fur on the crown, nape and shoulders add to its distinctive appearance.
Isothrix barbarabrownae, as the new species has been named, is described in the current issue of Mastozoología Neotropical (Neotropical mammalogy), the principal mammalogy journal of South America. A color illustration of the bushy rodent graces the cover of the journal.

Clock Quotes

We must use time as a tool, not as a crutch.
John F. Kennedy (1917 – 1963)

The Elephants of the Atlantis

I love it when Archy blogs about mammoths and the latest post is perhaps his best yet!

New Treatments

Which of the two I am interested in for entirely scientific reasons and which one for more personal reasons, you guess:
Spray Could Offer New Front-line Treatment For Men With Premature Ejaculation:

Patients with premature ejaculation who used a topical anaesthetic spray were able to delay ejaculation for five times as long, according to a study in the February issue of the urology journal BJU International. Researchers from the UK and Netherlands studied 54 men with premature ejaculation, randomly assigning them to a treatment and control group. Both groups reported that without any therapy they normally ejaculated an average of one minute after vaginal penetration.

Recently Licensed Nicotine Receptor Stimulant Trebles Odds Of Stopping Smoking:

A recently licensed nicotine receptor stimulant trebles the odds of stopping smoking. The new anti-smoking drug varenicline was first licensed for use in the UK on 5th December 2006. An early Cochrane Review of its effectiveness shows that it can give a three-fold increase in the odds of a person quitting smoking. Varenicline is the first new anti-smoking drug in the last ten years, and only the third, after NRT and bupropion, to be licensed in the USA for smoking cessation.

Are you a science blogger?

So, you’ve written something about science lately? Then send the permalink of your post to Ouroboros for the next isntallment of the Tangled Bank.

Confessing Canadian Science Librarian reviews RWOS

John Dupuis wrote a review of the Republican War On Science by Chris Mooney.

Earthshaking events while I was gone? Nope.

Too busy these days with the conference and the anthology and getting my life back afterwads to pay too much attention to politics, but I heard that Hillary Clinton is running, Bill Richardson is running, John Kerry is not running and that there was some kind of a meaningless speech the other night that everyone is talking about.

Organic Farming against Global Warming

Every farm that converts from conventional to organic farming is the equivalent to taking 117 cars off the road

Green Birds

I and the Bird #41 is up on A Snail’s Eye View
Carnival of the Green #61 is up on Clay and Wattles

Secular Question of the Day

Is there a good secular equivalent of ‘Amen’?

Welcome a new SciBling!

Go say Hello to the REAL Dr.Dino: Darren Neish at Tetrapod Zoology

“What God Created on the Fourth Day?” is not an SAT question, sorry!

Most of our anti-Creationist battles are over efforts to infuse Christian religion into K-12 education. One common battlefield is the courtroom where our side has (so far, until/unless the benches get filled with more clones of Priscilla Owen) won. But another place where we can stop them is the college admission office.
Sara Robinson of the Orcinus blog (which everybody should read daily) revisits, in more detail than I ever saw on any science blogs at the time this first started, the legal battle between the University of California and the Calvary Chapel Christian School over what constitutes permissible educational standards:

The battle started back in late 2005, when UC reviewed Calvary’s courses and decided that several of them — including “Special Providence: Christianity and the American Republic and “Christianity’s Influence on America,” both history courses; “Christianity and Morality in American Literature,” an English course; and a biology class — did not meet their curriculum standards, and would not be counted toward the admission requirements when Calvary students apply to UC.

Sara goes on to say later on something that I expect our resident science philosophers, historians and ethicists to chime in on:

When it comes to the history and English courses, they’re absolutely right. We all look at language and history through the filters of culture. The subjects lend themselves to multiple interpretations, depending on your perspective. Understanding this, and being exposed to the full range of perspectives in these fields — including religious ones — is an essential part of secondary and undergraduate education.
But nobody, save the Christian schools, teaches science or math that way. There is no African-American or Latino or feminist or Jewish or Russian science (Hitler and Stalin notwithstanding). There’s just a method, and a group of techniques, and the skill-building and knowledge base required to use them well. Scientists do their best — with varying degrees of success — to uncover their cultural biases and move beyond them. The greatest ones regard bias as a dangerous source of error: it can blind you, and lead you to draw the wrong conclusions from the observed facts. For that reason, any textbook that starts off by telling you to believe a 2,000-year-old religious scripture over your own lying eyes is not teaching science. It’s putting students on the path to a Christian version of Lysenkoism.

But the whole essay was prompted by Sara’s initial sense of despair she felt before discovering this case:

I’ve been saying for a long while now that the power to end the Intelligent Design fiasco, firmly and finally and with but a single word, rests in the manicured hands of the chancellors of America’s top universities. The message is short and simple: “Teach what you like, it’s all fine with us. But if you put ID in your science courses, we will not accept those courses as adequate for admission to our campus.”
Making this kind of public statement would be one small step for a university chancellor; and one giant leap for American science education. Somebody, somewhere, needs to set a firm standard. If our universities — which bear responsibility for training our professional scientists, and maintain the labs and faculties responsible for much of our best research — won’t stand up and draw that line, then we really are well and truly lost.

Well said. Feel free to add comments either here or over on Orcinus .
Technorati Tag: teaching-carnival

Nursing blogging of the week

Change of Shift: Volume One, Number Sixteen is up on Emergiblog

A really nice write-up about the Conference

In the Inkling Magazine: Science Bloggers Avoid the Spinach Dip Brush-Off, by Eva Amsen.
I am really happy to see how real-world conversations that started at the conference are now continuing online. Check the latest updates on the bottom of the posts here or here.
Also, the people who have ordered the blooks first, have now started receiving their copies (and commenting about their beauty on their blogs). The updated list of people blogging abot it is at the bottom of this post.

I really needed a cathartic moment today….

Mormon Missionaries knocked on a wrong door earlier today. I think their heads are still spinning…

Anton’s summary of the Conference

You have to read Conference thank you by Anton – the final word on the Science Blogging Conference, the behind-the-scenes commentary and the plans for the future! Go say Thank you to Anton – without him no conference would have happened last week in Chapel Hill. Anton also runs the Blogtogether site, where you can leave comments.

EduBlogging of the week

The Carnival Of Education: Week 103 is up on Education Wonks
The Carnival of Homeschooling Week 56 is up on The Thinking Mother.

BREAKING: Democrats Form New Science Subcommittee

Rep. Brad Miller, familiar to Daily Kos readers from his frequent posting here, will play a critical role in a new subcommittee formed by House Democrats to investigate allegations of GOP science and policy abuse. The new Science Oversight and Investigation (I & O) subcommittee will report to the House Committee on Science and Technology. The parent committee has jurisdiction over non-defense Federal spending. That includes agencies such as NASA, DoE, EPA, NOAA, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, just to name a few.
Miller, who won reelection in a 2 to 1 landslide last November against Republican challenger Vernon Robinson, had these exciting details to announce:

Read the rest of the interview here!
Subpoena powers, bay-bee! Can’t wait to tune into C-Span in the near future and watch the Republican War On Science unravel in front of our eyes!
I just saw Rep.Miller at the after-conference dinner on Saturday and I was asked to keep mum about this until it is finally announced – so here it is! Please follow the link and ask additional questions – Rep.Miller is a very blog-friendly guy and is likely to read your comments and perhaps respond.
You can hear more about the news on BlueNC (the North Carolina version of DailyKos).

My picks from ScienceDaily

‘Terror Bird’ Arrived In North America Before Land Bridge, Study Finds:

A University of Florida-led study has determined that Titanis walleri, a prehistoric 7-foot-tall flightless “terror bird,” arrived in North America from South America long before a land bridge connected the two continents. UF paleontologist Bruce MacFadden said his team used an established geochemical technique that analyzes rare earth elements in a new application to revise the ages of terror bird fossils in Texas and Florida, the only places in North America where the species has been found. Rare earth elements are a group of naturally occurring metallic elements that share similar chemical and physical properties.

[more under the fold…]

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Clock Quotes

Any one who has common sense will remember that the bewilderments of the eyes are of two kinds, and arise from two causes, either from coming out of the light or from going into the light, which is true of the mind’s eye, quite as much as of the bodily eye; and he who remembers this when he sees any one whose vision is perplexed and weak, will not be too ready to laugh; he will first ask whether that soul of man has come out of the brighter light, and is unable to see because unaccustomed to the dark, or having turned from darkness to the day is dazzled by excess of light.
Plato (427 BC – 347 BC), The Republic

Veterinary Medicine Blogs?

For quite a while I was aware of two blogs written by vet techs, and recently I discovered a couple of more written by veterinarians or vet students:
All But One Species
Vet Techs
Pet Connection
Diary of a Depressive Veterinarian
The Happy Healthy Horse
Dogged Blog
Discovering Michelle
Ambitiously Inquisitive
Not all of them write about animal health all the time, but, hey, if you go to a Xena Convention and get to interview Lucy Lawless and Renee O’Connor, of course you blog about it and post pictures of them and get, like, a million hits from Google the next day. You can always go back to dog nutrition tomorrow….
Do you know of any other blogs by vets and/or about animal medicine?

Blogrolling

The Barcode Blog
My Biotech Life
The Happy Tortoise
A Natural Scientist
Greg Laden
Gaddeswarup’s blog
Balyblab